rgkeller,
I think invoking the original is a desparate attempt by some to reclaim a starting point, sometimes the beginning of the course, before historically incompetant members began the process of correcting the architect's vision, or upgrading the course to meet the modern. And i do not mean desparate in a disparing way, but it is desparate in the sense that there are many more members whom impose their knowledge on a course in a bad way, and there is a minority that when weighing the original with all of the many changes that have happened can simplify the thinking by going back to a point , sometimes the beginning of the course, and use that as a benchmark to start the discussion as to what the course should be, otherwise you get into judging the merits of each change over the 100 year period. It is much easier to go back to the beginning, and that is worthy to do. The original design is as worthy an alternative as all of the cumulative changes. The course is at a point where it needs direction, it needs a vision for the next 100 years, and every course whose architect is dead, needs to find a live architect to help them through the next 30 or 40 years, they need someone whom has the interest of the golf course, not the members deep in their heart. Crazy as it sounds but the architect should be working for the golf course, not the membership, because left to the members it typically because a very sad process of destruction. Every course needs a live architect. How do you find the right architect, it can be painful, but as a member of a club I would much rather take my chances on hiring the right architect as comapred to trusting the chairman and the committee. And, depending on the quality of the course, the architect would do well to put forward a very simple master plan, here is the vision for the future of your course, here is our beginning point, and that is the original design. Whether you like the design or not, whether you like a particular shot, or green, the membership has no right whatsoever to deviate from the original design, none. You crack open that door, just a bit, that leads you into modifying the original architect's vision, and you end up allowing the door to be knock done by a lot of incompetant amateur architects. The hole is there, that is the design, you figure out how to play, does not fit your style of play, can't keep the ball on the green, find a way to over come it, find a way to moderate the impact on your score, but do not start the campaign for change, bring in the dozers. It says a lot about a man's character as to how he faces a challenge, how he preceives life's tough bumps along the way and golf is a little micronism of that. It is so easy for some to throw money at something, to disparage something they find unfair, but it is much too difficult for most to face the truth to move beyond the little bumps, the unfair pin positions, bunker placements, to look beyond it, and enjoy the overall experience, to see it as a battle of skill and mind, rather than an excuse for poor performance or lack of charater in the face of adversity.