John Conley,
I have a great deal of respect for Brad and love his writing, and continue to enjoy his writing and look forward to seeing his design work, oh wait, he had nothing to do with that one, my bad. My questioning is out of lost respect and sadness at seeing a potentially important ranking being tarnished.
How do my questions become a personal vendetta because I question how a course gets ranked after a panelist outting includes free wine and free (expensive) golf balls? (I'm not even addressing the order-what-you-want-lunchfest at Cascata, which is for another thread). As for my original post question, one person has addressed the architecture as mediocre, no one else has stepped forward to talk about the merits of this course, which was my point.
I think it's a problem when there is the potential perception that the person running the ranking might be using the list to his advantage. If I were running the list, it would be very simple. Any course I'm involved with is NOTEVEN ON THE BALLOT. Why can't Golfweek have such a policy to protect the integrity of the list and the reputation of panelists such as yourself who I'm sure take the process seriously and want to have your efforts respected? How can a Pine Needles vote in coming years be taken seriously? Or if Wittonbury is really good as some have said, doesn't it's appearance and Dr. Klein's ties to it undermine the credibility of the list?
Michael,
Thanks. I was let off the panel (thankfully!) when I started writing for Golfdom five years ago, as Dr. Klein and Dave Seanor couldn't have someone from a "competing publication" on the panel. I was disappointed at the time that they put magazine politics ahead of building a diverse panel and was thrilled to be part of what started out as such a promising ranking. But I would have quit anyway once I became involved with Rustic Canyon as I thought Golfweek was correct not to have architects or consultants voting (they've since changed this policy to my surprise). I couldn't afford to be a panelist now, with the once-every-two-years required appearances at outtings (despite the freebies and cheap hotel rates), nor could I stand Big Brother looking over my shoulder wondering why I voted for some courses and gave not so great scores to others.
Cos,
Dr. Klein has defended the panelist outings in correspondences to me, so either you have it wrong or he is not being completely honest with me about his feelings on those events and their role in the rating process. Either way, he was present at the outing that I found to be the most questionable, and didn't do anything to stop the appearance of impropriety (accepting freebies) from what I understand.
Geoff