TD -
I don't think being continually engaged means being continually challenged. But I do think 'fun' should be a natural byproduct of good golf course design and not its primary goal.
Fun for me emerges out of an architect's intention to keep me on my toes -- sometimes by a range of recovery options and demands, sometimes by hole locations that can't be directly accessed, sometimes by beauty, sometimes by fearsome hazards, sometimes by a series of half par holes that alternate between brutish and benign, etc.
I think this is right and goes part way to what I was aiming at.
In essence, I’m saying that the “best” courses (in terms of Top-100 rankings) should be ones that can keep you engaged in your scorecard from the 1st tee to the 18th hole; rather than ones that just provide a series of individual “fun” golf shots but don’t necessarily keep you tuned in to your overall performance.
I don't understand why having a card in hand is a necessary qualifier.
Ciao
Because in the end, playing golf has an element of competitiveness. Matchplay is one side of that but Strokeplay / Stableford is the other.
If a course doesn’t hold your attention enough that you frequently want to “score the best you can”, then it just becomes a practice field.
This is just one take on it. But when I think of people rating “best” golf courses, I don’t think that messing around and inventing shots just because the ground contours offer that, has any place in the adjudication of how good a course is, unless those shots are options that you would pull out regularly in a medal play round…
I also think that courses that offer up too many crapshoots and / or compromised shots in order to score well do not hold some golfers attention in trying to post a medal round….
I agree when ranking “best” courses that challenge shouldn’t be at the forefront and that engaging interest should (see Peter and Tom). Playability for a higher handicapper is key but I also think playability for a low man is something that isn’t often discussed, is a different consideration and is almost as important. Short courses can be very playable for a low man (Gullane 3) or they can be frustrating (Corballis) to the extent that they are better used as practice fields rather than competitive golf courses.
None of the above should be taken as me advocating “championship” golf courses over other types (although I am still confused why the word “fun” seems to automatically be set against “championship” when people compare. Fun can cross all types of golf).