I've been writing a lot about Canadian golf for an upcoming Top 100 on Beyond The Contour, and one thing really began to stick out: the very exclusive golf courses in the country (Memphremagog, Oviinbyrd, Redtail, Goodwood, etc) are usually among the more interesting golf courses in the country from a pure design standpoint and the features they seemingly built or designed. This doesn't have anything to do with the vibe or the experience or whatever, but simply the architecture presented. Of course, there are ~better golf courses in the country than these four, but very few are modern examples. Rod Whitman builds better golf than those four, and the classic stuff from Stanley Thompson or Colt ranks higher, but they didn't have the same restrictions or rules made up for them when designing golf. They simply tried to build the best golf possible, and I'm wondering if at those very exclusive/elite courses, the mandate was the same, rather than having to consider other outside agencies like pace of play, safety, budget, crossovers in the routing, etc.
At Goodwood, Martin Ebert & Tom Mackenzie took a Donald Steel routing and designed some insane greens with some of the most severe slope of any golf course I've seen, Canada or elsewhere. They are pretty interesting, but I imagine they were able to push the envelope a bit more than a public golf course or even a resort, where concerns about pace of play or "fairness" would be a considered topic in designing the golf course. Secondly, Goodwood is largely a "golfers club," with some of the smarter golf minds in Canada being a member there. There are obviously average guests who know a member and they get out, but generally, those who are going there know what they're looking for given the club's intent to be a true golf club. The way BTC's top 100 comes together is people check off a Top 200 list and their placement for the courses submitted is weighted against that for those who have seen the most in the country to have more input, and I don't think it's any surprise Goodwood only has ballots from the eight panellists who have seen the most + the 11th and 13th most travelled (of 27, for context). With an exclusive golf course, you can largely control your demographic, and in the instance of Goodwood, I imagine those who like the Cog Hill's and TPC's of the world would probably complain about the greens being too severe... but because the clientele is selective, that's rarely a criticism heard because those who have played Goodwood are usually the well-travelled, or better understanding in the country (not always of course).
Memphremagog, Redtail, Oviinbyrd, etc are all the same. At Magog, the greens are by far the most severe of Thomas McBroom's career, and I would argue the most interesting, too. Redtail, the size of the greens is in stark contrast to Goodwood or really any other modern golf course in Canada, and Oviinbyrd has some pretty wild green locations against rocks that maybe wouldn't fly elsewhere (Muskoka Bay is public and has some of this too, but not nearly as frequent as Oviinbyrd). I doubt any of these features would fly at public golf courses in the country, and in McBroom's example, if he could have built these greens elsewhere, I imagine he would've (he was pretty busy up here around Magog's opening).
The point is, the pattern jumped out when compiling the list and I'm happy to open up the floor to see if there is any merit to what I'm seeing, or if it's just a Canadian trend? I would assume there would be some flexibility in being Tom Doak or Gil Hanse or Bill Coore in the same way Kendrick Lamar can take five years off and go against music-industry standards, in that hiring Doak/Hanse/Coore comes with a certain level of golf architecture IQ or understanding of what you're getting into. Maybe it's just for the second-tier of architects, those who don't have their name on a Dream Golf property or credit on a World Top 100 list, but I coud be wrong.
Part of why I respect Bandon Dunes or Cabot is because they're not afraid to really maintain or explain the features to the general public: on a walk around Shorty's last year with Keith Cutten and Ken Nice, Ken said their philosophy has always been "you build what you want and we'll figure out a way to mantain it." Cabot Highlands' 2nd course has some crossing holes, and Karoo's greens are among the most intense/large anywhere, even bigger and more dramatic than Old Macdonald I think.
After all that, my question is: does exclusivity allow architect's to freely build what they want and simply forget about other things, essentially freeing their minds in a way the golden age architects were simply only worried about building the best quality golf? They wrote a bit about returning nines or other things in an "ideal course," but they all broke their own rules (Jasper Park Lodge doesn't return to the clubhouse after nine, neither does Cypress, and CPC features back to back 3's and 5's!).
I'm not sure if I need to say this but I'm not vouching for exclusivity, but this is the internet so I should clarify.