TD,
Agree that there are many ways to see things, of course. I don't know that the post WWII gca's picked a model, in the sense Pete Dye picked Scotland, for instance. I believe, from everything I read, that after the depression and WWII, all design forms looked to create a new, distinctly American model. The word "streamlining" was used in railroad and jet design, etc., and RB Harris mentioned it in some of his writings. Perhaps they picked McKenzie circa 1935 vs Mac circa 1925? Or, perhaps the awards and social media trends had us focusing even more on the difficult and top end courses than before, which could also be viewed as the wrong model. [size=78%] [/size]
It's hard for me to think that entire generation made a mistake. Yes, lots of them, including my mentors had decided that what golf needed most was more easy and easily accessible courses for the masses taking up the game, sort or recreating the Bendelow models of 50 years before. But, whose to say they are wrong? That was their one of many ways of looking at things.
I agree maintenance costs drove a lot of design then, adapting to the machine mowing that was becoming prevalent. From what I see, it still is today at 80% of courses, and perhaps the 1890-2006 era was more like the Golden Age, in that great design, damn the costs, was a result of the great stock market and economies of the era.
As to the comparison of maintenance attitudes of GBI vs US, lots went into that, including regionality and of course, the generally more progressive (not always great, but present) attitude here in the US. So, little doubt it went too far, or, possibly just popular culture always is looking for something new. I don't really know.
I guess I generally believe most things happened as they almost had to, including Pete coming along to question the model. It's always easy to pick the flaws of any model, but they did get a lot right. At least, I'm not the type to throw everything under the bus.....even if that would be a better marketing strategy, LOL.
In the end, maybe its like that Simpson's episode where they conclude the moral of the story is, "It's just a lot of things that happened."