"Trials In Renovation"

Country Club of Farmington (

Sometimes we forget the arduous task of conceptualizing, selling and executing a golf course restoration, particularly with the number of successful projects and satisfied courses.

So for those thinking of pushing to get their older golf course restored, I’d recommend reading about the experiences and lessons learned of Geoffrey Manton, a radiologist and Green Committee Chairman at Country Club of Farmington.

Not everyone will understand what we’re trying to accomplish by restoring the golf course, and maybe that’s not their fault. After all, everything is relative. There is a dominant feature on our golf course, a former sand quarry, that has been overgrown for over a half-century. Our consulting architect created computer generated imagery of what a restoration of this feature might look like. “Can you imagine, it looks like Pine Valley!” said one member to another. “What’s Pine Valley?” replied the other. Some detractors have been more direct, like opposing green expansions, citing the atrocity of having a sprinkler head on the putting surface or calling for tree planting to replace those lost from the emerald ash borer. Each member has their own perspective and as I’ve been informed – “I pay dues. I have a right to complain.”

Some things in golf never change!

Anyway, it’s worth a read over at LyingFour.com whether you are a budding Green Chairman or just dreaming of becomin gone. Manton’s also posted some images at Twitter showing off the finished product.

Cookie Jar On Bushfoot Golf Club

Sigh…I drove by this one in 2019 going between Portrush and Giant’s Causeway without stopping. Maybe in 2025! Bushfoot sure looks like a model 9-holer for the community as well as a nice spot for a morning or late nine if you should be so lucky to play Royal Portrush. And hit the Causeway too.

From the Cookie Jar golf team:

George Peper's "Rant Against Golden Age Golf Architects"

Links editor George Peper filed “A Rant Against Golden Age Golf Architects” in the latest issue and while I suppose a backlash was inevitable, he also makes a few points that warrant a Golden Age defense.

The old architects are certainly getting a lot of ink these days and no matter how many old photos we turn up showing their courses were just better, there will be a subset that just wants to be living in a better time. And another subset that needs to be living in a better time for their self worth.

But in making his case, Peper ignores when key trait of the restoration movement results and deification of the old architects. First, this attempt at suggesting they are overrated:

If, as one of today’s leading designers Tom Doak has astutely observed, “the best architects are the ones who get the best clients,” then maybe the individuals we should be venerating are not the Golden Age designers but the Golden Age owner/developers, the gentlemen golfers with deep pockets and a simple, steadfast vision that began and ended with the creation of an outstanding golf course: Dick Tufts (Pinehurst No. 2) rather than Ross; Clifford Roberts (Augusta National) rather than MacKenzie; George Crump (Pine Valley) rather than Colt; Robert Moses (Bethpage Black) rather than Tillinghast.

With the exception of Crump, the architects were the difference between having a nice development and a masterpiece. Though Crump famously relied on many opinions besides Colt’s and the overall collaborative nature ended up spawning several successful design careers.

In Roberts’ case, he attempted to redo MacKenzie’s 8th green and turned it into a flying saucer that was rebuilt a short time later. If not for Bobby Jones and Alister MacKenzie, the Augusta National would not have been the success it was. (And contrary to the prevailing narrative MacKenzie spent a great deal of time at Augusta during key stages of construction. Which we know from David Owen’s book.)

The truth is, the early golf architects were not particularly revered or famous during their own lifetimes or for decades thereafter. Indeed, as recently as 50 years ago, if you had asked a member of just about any club in the world who the designer of his golf course was, he would have been hard pressed to tell you.

Not sure about the lack of fame part. Having flipped through thousands of magazine pages from the era, the household name designers were covered pretty thoroughly, featured prominently and praised for their work transforming rudimentary courses. And fame does not translate to timeless design, as Rees Jones and Tom Fazio prove over and over again.

Suddenly, belonging to a club with a course designed by an A-list Golden Ager became a badge of honor. More than one layout of 6,500 theretofore nondescript yards rebranded itself overnight as “a great old Donald Ross course” and a coterie of insufferable poseurs arose, boasting of their familiarity with MacKenzie bunkers, Macdonald templates, and Raynor greens. I know this because I did some of that boasting. Let this be my mea culpa: “I’m George and I’m an archaholic.”

Name dropping has always been part of the elite golf world. The difference now? After playing a course people can tell the difference and like any other kind of connoisseurship, seek more because of the satisfaction derived.

I guess what got me riled about this Golden Age regurgitation is the pretentiousness it’s fostered in some circles.

Except that successful restorations have led to more enjoyable golf, newfound respect for a course, increased value of memberships or land, interest in reclaiming once-grand public courses, and an appreciation of architecture that is fun to play merely serving to move lots or punish bad shots.

While the occasional pontificating that comes with the Golden Age reverence may not be progress to all, I’ll take the doses of pretentiousness if it means more people are enjoying the courses they play. After all, that is ultimately the point of good architecture and something that the old masters and their restorers keep reinforcing.

The Fried Egg On America Great Remaining Golf Course Restoration Opportunities

A split screen of Riviera’s 6th with Tommy Naccarato’s proposed restoration of bunkers and barranca next to today’s lamentable eclair bunker tongue and permanent temporary green.

I can’t find a thing to quibble with most of Andy Johnson’s list of great restoration opportunities, though I have no idea how World Woods got in there. But setting aside an unnecessary rejuvenation of yet another overrated Fazio, Johnson’s top ten includes the last three courses the aforementioned salesman is consulting at and making worse, along with other gems. Sadly, my man George Thomas lands three in the top 15 and southern California remains a hotbed for necessary restorations.

The list does not include courses were a restoration plan is at some stage and hope remains for a happy architectural ending.

The top ten: Augusta, Riviera, Pebble Beach, TPC Sawgrass, Ojai Valley Inn, U. of Michigan, George Wright, Kankakee Elks, Timber Point, Sleepy Hollow (Ohio).

He also includes important public courses Griffith Park, Santa Anita and Sharp Park.

Significant Augusta National Design Artifact Up For Auction

The Golf Auction is offering this rendering with MacKenzie commentary.

An early Amen Corner rendering features Alister MacKenzie's handwritten notes and is up for auction.

Here is the listing at The Golf Auction.

Readers who have committed my Golden Age of Golf Design to memory will recognize the plan from page 163. For reasons I don’t recall and apologize in advance for, we did not include a similar rendering of the fifth hole that appeared with the auction item.

In this Quadrilateral post, I explore its authenticity given efforts in recent years to fraudulently pass of MacKenzie and Tillinghast drawings, plus consider its importance in the small world of great architectural renderings.

R.I.P. Neil Regan

Christian Hafer/Golf.com

He set the gold standard when it came to club historians who picked up every nugget imaginable to better understand the Winged Foot story. And Neil Regan was always helpful to anyone pursuing the cause of golf history or architecture, forever shaping Winged Foot by documenting and sharing so much about the place. And he was just a super person who left us too soon on November 28, 2021.

You can hear Neil from last year discussing Winged Foot with The Fried Egg’s Andy Johnson and read about him in this lovely Tim Reilly story at Golf.com that included Christian Hafer images of the upstairs archive and Neil.

A few of the tributes, including a video of his signature putt from the fairway.

Askernish: "This was and is golf in its purest form. Raw and wild."

Much has been written of Old Tom Morris’ recaptured links at Askernish, but it was still nice to see it captured in this BBC episode of Scotland From The Sky. Golf architect Gordon Irvine is interviewed about his role in resurrecting the links and the pesticide-free maintenance approach.

You can watch via the BBC media player or in the Tweet below:

Video: Beautiful Look At North Berwick's East Links From Above

As much as many believe North Berwick’s West Links is easily the course they could play every day and never tire of—put me down and then some—the other links in town deserves more attention than it gets. I’ve written about the North Berwick East Links here—excuse me, aka The Glen—and even highlighted in a McKellar Journal piece how its name as a strange thing holding it back from becoming a staple of visitors to East Lothian.

Anyway, enjoy this drone footage just posted by the pro there, Fraser Malcolm and try to book a round there. I’m hard pressed to name many better 36-hole days in golf. Extra points for walking through down with your clubs!

Fried Egg Podcast: Talking George Thomas

As part of his series on the great golf architects, Andy Johnson had me on the Fried Egg podcast to discuss George Thomas, aka The Captain who I wrote a biography of in (gulp) 1996! Hope you enjoy.

The Apple podcast link.

The Google podcast link.

Today In Strategic Alliance News: Jack To Facillitate The Next Phase Of Gary's Career

Our deepest sympathies to Josh Sens for having to take out the 8 a.m. Golf news litterings with this “strategic alliance” “news” of 86-year-old Gary Player joining with Jack Nicklaus’s firm for design resource assistance.

Essentially the Nicklaus plan factory will churn out whatever stuff Player is paid slap his name to. Sens writes:

Under the arrangement, Player will enlist the resources of Nicklaus Design to help him launch his reborn Gary Player Design business. (Nicklaus Design is an affiliate of GOLF.com’s parent company, 8AM Golf.) That business has been largely inactive over the past two years, held up by a legal dispute between Player and a company run by one of his sons.

Family.

With that dispute now behind him, Player said he was eager to get back to designing and building courses around the world, and that the relationship with Nicklaus Design would be key as his own design company starts afresh.

“When I get a course to do, it will be great to have Jack’s people be part of the design,” Player said. “They’ve had so much experience with top courses around the world.”

In a statement that accompanied the announcement, Nicklaus said that the arrangement meshed with his own goal of providing “the expertise and resources needed to develop and support the people who will design the courses of the future.”

In this case, Nicklaus added, he and his colleagues were “happy to be in the position to facilitate the next phase of my dear friend Gary’s career.”

"If only you could break away from the constraints of having someone else tell you how many holes you must build."

CNN’s Sean Coppack filed an excellent story and video feature on “how Iceland could reshape the world of golf". I could not embed so you’ll need to hit the link to watch.

There are some amazing reveals and scenery, but this on a course called Brautarholt, whose founder Gunnar Palsson shares words of wisdom about 12 holes. Or whatever is the right number for a site.

"This used to be agricultural land, but that had been declining," Palsson tells CNN Sport. "This land has been in the family for hundreds of years and there were some generational shifts and we decided to build a golf course."

Opening originally as a nine-hole course in 2011 before expanding to 12, Brautarholt was designed by renowned Icelandic architect Edwin Roald.

Roald has attracted plenty of attention in recent years with his "why 18-holes?" movement, a philosophy that suggests golf course design would be improved if architects worked to create the best course for the space they have, rather than cling onto the "antiquated" notion that every course must be 18-holes long.

"When you have limited resources, you are forced to use what nature has given you," Roald told Links magazine in 2017. "If only you could break away from the constraints of having someone else tell you how many holes you must build.

"It is the same as writing books, or making movies. Imagine if all books had to be exactly 200 pages, or a film had to last 95 minutes. Would they be as good?"

A Year Later, Cleeve Hill Hosts A "Not Closing" Party

Just a year after facing closure, the wild hilltop links that’s seen design work by Old Tom Morris and Alister MacKenzie celebrated its salvation and future of better care thanks to “Nick & Sam” of Cotswold Hub.

Congrats to all on saving this spectacular place in the game and for enjoying your work. A short video from the day by Cookie Jar Golf, who brought attention to the courses plight with a mini doc (embedded below).

Satellite Images Of Trump Aberdeen Show Dramatic Changes To Dunes System

Business Insider’s Thomas Colson looks at Maxar aerials from 2010 and 2021 to spot changes in the dunes system. At the time Donald Trump vowed stabilize the dunes system but scientists now say they’ve been damaged by the introduction of golf:

Despite warnings in 2008 that the construction of an 18-hole course would destroy the sand dunes around it, Trump had pressed ahead, saying: "We will stabilize the dunes. They will be there forever. This will be environmentally better after it [the course] is built than it is before."

But as conservationists predicted, the part of the highly sensitive ecosystem on which Trump International Golf Links was built was largely ruined. Officials announced in December 2020 that the coastal sand dunes Trump's the resort would lose their status as a protected environmental site because they had been partially destroyed.

You can see more images and close-ups at the story link.

All Hail Yale! Restoration Of The Macdonald Masterwork Finally Set To Happen

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Longtime readers know we’ve been through many ups and downs over Yale Golf Course, which, despite the university in question and many other factors that should prevent its masterful CB Macdonald/Seth Raynor design from ever falling into disrepair, has been a total soap opera. It’s doubly painful since the course hosts tournaments and has actually been a more affordable option for good players in the area.

Finally, after horrible changes by Roger Rulewich and overall decline, an agreement has been reached to do a proper restoration. Bradley Klein reports on Gil Hanse getting the gig to rejuvenate Yale Golf Course.