The other half of my post to get people discussing the architecture of the Best New courses, instead of arguing about their rankings.
Since I worked on both of these, I don't need to say too much, and will just solicit others' opinions.
I will say that I'm not surprised the GOLF DIGEST system favored Pinehurst #10 [7000 yards par 70] over Sedge Valley [6100 yards par 68]. GOLF DIGEST has supposedly eliminated such categories as "Resistance to Scoring," but they still have a lot of the same panelists who have been rating things the same way for decades, and old habits die hard. Plus, in America, most people think more = better.
If I had a rooting interest, it would have been the other way around, because I've been dying to see how a really good par-68 course would be accepted in America since I started in this business. It's like comparing your younger sister with her big brother . . . I guess it was a bad year to build a 7000 yard course in the same category
The funny thing is that while our clients in Pinehurst left us to do our thing during the construction of the course, their reaction once it was finished was that it was harder than they expected . . . I think they expected "shorter and fun" out of me, and they certainly didn't ever talk about wanting to host tournaments there, although now their USGA friends are thinking about it. In truth, it just wasn't that kind of property. It's a big piece of ground with some real elevation to it, and the routing stretches out considerably to get up the hill at 9 and back down to 10 green and all the way back around from there, so it was either going to be long, or have long walks from green to tee. I've left the door open for the designers of #11 to go the "shorter and fun" route and make me look dumb, but that's the piece of property for that approach.
For Sedge Valley, the real comparison in my mind is not Pinehurst but High Pointe, which feels very similar in its surroundings, but is very different in terms of green sites and recovery play. Sedge Valley is tighter off the tee [like The Tree Farm] and has more bunkers in play around the green; High Pointe is wider open but has much bolder green contours, some of them a leftover from my original design.
Both Sedge Valley and Pinehurst #10 are examples of trying to narrow things back up off the tee for the long and wild hitters . . . at Sedge we left more existing plant materials, where at Pinehurst we had to go back with centipede and Bahia sod. I'm really pleased with how they played and also with how mature they looked after year 1.