There’s subjectivity / individuality in this as well (like there is with any made-up criteria for ranking, including fun, strategy, variety, playability)… but a few courses where I can imagine myself giving up on the desire to hold a medal round include:
- Askernish
Ally: I am a fan of Askernish, and I was disappointed to hear a recent report on the course that was not good at all. [The rabbits are taking over!]
The rough can be brutal, but of course it varies with the season and varies from one year to the next, so it is very hard to quantify. I sometimes wonder how raters are supposed to think about things like that [or like the green speeds at Oakmont or the wind at Cape Wickham, to cite other examples]. It doesn't seem like it should disqualify a course, but it doesn't seem like you should ignore it or assume better conditions, either -- the key is how does it affect play on the day and the enjoyment of same. The best approach would be for raters to rate it based on the day they were there, but some seem to go with an agenda in place.
There is no way Askernish is getting votes for the top 100 based on how much anyone enjoyed stroke play. It is getting votes based on its uniqueness and "story" and the fact that it has some all-world holes in the mix -- it is being set as an example that golf should not require more trappings than that. But, you could argue the same for Brora or Cleeve or Westward Ho!, and then you have to rationalize why you are including some of them but not others, and it turns out that many raters have mental quotas for all of these different categories and different designers and the like.
But everyone makes room for Pine Valley, even though it needs the same sort of exception for 75% of all golfers.