I was at Crooked Stick yesterday with some old friends for Alice Dye's memorial service. In the morning I went out with one of the members and made a tour of the course, and after thinking about it some more on my way home, I have to say I don't think Crooked Stick ever got its due as a groundbreaking design.
I'm not a huge fan of the course as it is today. I saw it first in 1981 when it was still more or less intact, and I was there in 1986 when Mr. Dye started rebuilding the greens and introducing some elements that look more like his then-contemporary work at PGA West, and my goodness it's much different today, because Pete never stopped tinkering with it. But it's mostly a matter of priorities [or, a matter of taste] whether you think it's better now or the way it used to be, and I don't want to argue with Nick R. over more than one course at a time.
What I wanted to point out is that regardless of how you like its style, Crooked Stick, started in 1964 and completed in 1967, was perhaps the first golf course created via large-scale earthmoving. It was a cornfield to start, and all of the abrupt elevation changes you see there today were created by machine. When I was there with Pete in 1986, he took me over to the right side of the 12th fairway, and showed me how he had dug a small volcano to bank up the outside of the dogleg.
In an era where Mr. Jones and his peers were still just building green complexes and fairway bunkers and ponds, Pete Dye came along and made ten-foot cuts and fills to give life to his fairways and to contain views across the property to just what he wanted you to see. And he was doing that 50+ years ago, on a course basically funded with his own money and that of his friends, pretty much before anybody else had even thought of doing it.**
But if Pete hadn't shown me a little bit of that, in person, I would never have guessed how much work was done there, and even then it took me thirty years to realize just how revolutionary it must have been at the time.
Pete was not willing to settle for the land he had, if he could figure out a way to make it better. That's not my style, but one of the reasons I sought to find a different style was that I did not think I could ever compete with Mr. Dye at conjuring golf holes from nothing. I'm not sure anyone else did, either.
** I suppose someone is going to respond to this by saying "Lido", but that's not the same at all. Anybody could dredge material to build up a flat site, and copy templates. Crooked Stick may or may not have been a better course than Lido was, but it was certainly much more creative.