Mike,
I always thought it was because he was Jone's biggest competitor, the only one of that era who could really beat him out for a job. I only have gotten a glimpse of Jone's personality from having seen and dined with him a half dozen times, and never really considered that deeply.
Interesting point. I can't even imagine that Jones wasn't a passionate architect, at least when younger. What happens when passion leads to success, and then you have to become a businessman to sustain you in performing your craft? I can say, even from my modest success in the biz, I went from starving artist to supporting the staff by finding the next job pretty quickly. I still have a notepad page with my "business plan" on it. The point I remember most is, "Design at night, when everyone has gone home." Even then, it was hard not to delegate the basic designs (or associated grading plans) to someone else once you got past one big project at a time.
BTW, I noticed you mentioned the "drafting board" in another post. Have you given up on Vectorworks?
Yes, wary would have been a better word for you to describe our first meeting, LOL. I stand corrected.
In the end, I don't think we vary too much on the basic thought process. All design is a combination of experience, personality type, etc. We just seem to like approaching it from the opposite end of the spectrums in
describing it. And, you tend to emphasize the exceptions that prove the rule every time I mention the possibility of a rule. That's fine, but to me, it still proves the rule....After many posts in another thread, your last one did admit most of us had copied or adapted other ideas, which was my simple point all along, one that seems so obvious that I don't have problems admitting it. I get starting from the viewpoint of questioning everything.
Like your analysis of courses, I still do it to learn. For instance, in the last year, I used a digital level to see what % of slope on a tight cut Bermuda fw would still hold a ball up. (8%, BTW) I also used one on my own project to see just what slope on the edge of a green puts it on the edge of drying out and/or mowing stress (Coincidentally, also 8%) so I don't make the same mistakes again, only new ones, LOL. Again, supporting my view that many people can conceptualize a golf hole, but we get paid to deliver on the details that make it really work for all involved. It doesn't mean I don't start design on a conceptual level, even if that is not what I choose to focus on here.
I have seen you espouse limited multiple tees here, but build them in real life. I wonder what's more conceptually pure - me accepting they are necessary (as a general rule) and incorporating them. Or you saying they aren't necessary, but acquiescing because the client wants them? Ditto with cart paths, avoiding blind shots and a few other hot button issues where you have done well pointing out the contrarian view.
Yes, in part, I come here to provide a more "practical" look at design for the gca fans here. And, to gently tweak you and Mike Young just a bit, hopefully within the confines of friendly banter. Who was it who thought refraining from the frank discussion of others' work wasn't a good thing?