Everg generation fancies itself the enlightened one. Looking at the top 100 rankings, several courses were non existent until (incidentally) after GCA came to existence. The most striking example is Fisher’s Island, which didn’t appear in the Golf Digest Top 100 until 2000 and has acheived top 10 status in meteoric fashion.
So, who is right? The golfers of the 60s-90s, or the golfers of today? How could previous generations have been so wrong as to miss a seemingly clear top 10 course?
A. In general, the golfers of today are right.
1. Raters are more widely traveled.
2. Raters are more sophisticated and knowledgeable.
3. Larger sample size of raters suggests a better overall ranking.
B. Modern conditioning affects the ratings. Thoughtful restorations and renovations increases competition for the top 100 spots.
1. I played Shoreacres last fall. I had a wonderful time. The golf course was in spectacular condition, with greens rolling at 13 feet. The course is built on a flat plain, with some interesting "internal contouring" that is well used in the course design. However, I am not convinced that Shoreacres would be ranked in the top 30 in the U.S. (on most or all lists) had it not been for the expensive and exquisite conditioning. If the greens rolled at 9 feet, it wouldn't be as popular. By the way, I pulled my November 1993 Golf Digest out in case I needed to use it. Shoreacres is not in the GD top 100 in 1987, 1989, 1991 or 1993. And there probably goes my chances to ever play there again.
C. There are a lot of appealing new golf courses. Many are built in pristine native environments and give the player the elation of playing in the great outdoors.
D. The principles that we as a group generally embrace — ample width, challenging green sites, strategic bunker placement, minimalist construction, the lack of artificial water hazards (especially ponds), few if any planted trees — in essence, a return to Golden Age construction methods, still apply. The standard argument that golf course architecture and construction lost its way for decades, perhaps in an effort to create something new, or to maximize profitability, is a legitimate argument that has yet to be seriously refuted.
I'll close with a funny scene from the movie "A Hard Day's Night", in which George Harrison visits a "taste maker" who wants his opinion about his newest clothing line. To the best of my knowledge, Roger Ebert and I are the only two people who think "A Hard Day's Night" is one of the greatest movies every made. It probably wouldn't even make the GD Top 100. Huge oversight.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QREeweMWTZk&t"The new thing is to care passionately and be right wing."