I may have suffered more heartbreak at OCC than any golfer, LOL. I did a 9 hole routing expansion plan, that was never implemented, and some various one day consulting gigs. When it came time for the big renovation, in the early 1990s, they called me and Ben Crenshaw, who of course had the advantage.
I didn't help myself - Arriving on site, one of the green committee pulled me aside and said that the one thing everyone was in agreement on was to keep the tree near the 4th green, so I should propose to save it. Seemed easy enough. Then I got there, and it was a Cottonwood with its attendant debris on the green, on the east side causing shade problems, and even a few roots showing under the green, which had to be an incredible hazard to lining up putts. It also blocked circulation from cart path to green. In short, it may have been the worst located tree I have ever seen on a golf course.
Then the expected question came up, "Mr. Brauer, do you think we can save that tree?" My answer was, "Sure, just tell me where to stack the logs." I lost the job at that moment, at least from the looks on their faces.
I also interviewed when Keith Foster got the job, also a tough sell for me because Keith was at his height. He interviewed one day in April and I was scheduled the next. It snowed overnight, and he had walked them around the course, pointing real details. My site walk in the snow was much less enthusiastically received, and in the post interview recap, they mentioned that I just didn't have the intimate knowledge of the course that Keith did. I have been a victim of a few snow jobs before, but that was the only time I was a victim of a real snowstorm, LOL.