Tom Doak stated: "[/color]Where I argue with all of you is the idea that the Intent was for the course to require certain shots for a certain level of player. If they intended this, they certainly did not understand how the game would likely evolve."[/size]
[/color]Tom, I disagree with this as Tilly certainly did design his courses with that intent. This can be shown in a January 6th, 1936 interview he did with the Boston Post, where he stated: [/size]“‘The one shot that tells the story in golf is the shot to the green, and if you conceive of golf as a game of animate attack and inanimate defense with regard to that shot, you have my theory of design in a nutshell,’ he summarized, and then sank back to finger his pointed white moustache and seek adequate explanation [bold mine].
“‘All my courses are designed on the principle of the master trap guarding the green [bold mine], just the way the hands might guard the jaw. To play them successfully, the drive must be so placed that the second shot can be hit from the one good strategic position in the fairway [bold and underline mine]. And then the approach to the green must still avoid this one master trap. You see now, I hope, my theory of inanimate defense against the animate attack of mid-irons, mashies and niblicks.’”
He further stated: “‘Just this, If that master bunker remains by the green, the par golfer will always have his troubles. But nearly all the fairway traps can be removed. They only harass the dub, who will have trouble enough without them. They do not affect the par golfer, who is seeking only to place his drive on the right side of the fairway and get a good shot at the green.”
[/size]He is clearly stating that he designed his holes to challenge the better player differently than the lesser one.
[/size]As I stated earlier in this thread, he also expected his courses to change over time, both in the short and long-terms, primarily due to equipment changes and the ability of players improving, and gave the two examples of SFGC & Brackenridge Park. I do agree with you in that neither Tilly nor any other architect from that era would expect the game to evolve as it did for every level of player, yet even with that evolution of the equipment and player, which is what primarily changed, his design intent still meets those challenges when properly applied to modern golf courses, whether by reconstructing them or building them new.