I just got back from two weeks in Florida, mostly travelling around seeing many of the new golf courses that either just opened, or are under construction. I feel like, as long as I've been paying attention to golf courses, there's always "it's better than Seminole" as a metric people use to hyperbolically uplift their favourite golf courses in the state, be it Calusa Pines, Jupiter Hills, even Coore & Crenshaw's McArthur, etc—but they're always being compared to Seminole, which speaks volumes to me, and as much as we all hate rankings, nothing has even come close to being ranked near Seminole on Golf Digest, Golf Magazine, Top 100 Golf Courses, etc etc etc. LINKS just ranked Seminole behind Calusa Pines on their "LINKS 100," but whatever.
Anyway, when I was touring High Grove, I, too, compared the property as probably the best piece of ground I've seen in Florida other than Seminole. High Grove is primarily dominated by rolling sand, and it's hilly, so that gives it a true advantage in Florida where most of the golf courses are pretty flat.
My question: in our lifetime, will we see a golf course overtake Seminole as Florida's top dog? Is that even possible? The combination of elevation change and next to the ocean brings a slew of benefits nothing in Hobe Sound can re-create, no matter how much talent is there—but that doesn't mean someone couldn't build a golf course at Seminole's equal. Ross' routing is superb, also—if it's possible, it would be a bona fide masterpiece. I'm sure there's a property out there that has similar advantages Ross got to use nearly one hundred years, but
Is there another state with such a wide gap between the 1st and 2nd best?
Edit: this is a timely thread with TD's thread on groupthink!