Best New: How it's Done

Reader Virgil Burmaster of Fort Wayne wants to know how we compile the list of Best New courses featured in the January issue.

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I read with great interest the article in January about all the new and rebuilt courses. My question is where do you get all this information? I am always looking for a new course to play and am especially interested in new courses in the state I am planning on retiring to in a few years. I have searched the internet many times but unable to come up with a web site that tells me any of this information!
It's not easy, Virgil. And there is no such web site (although golfclubatlas is a great place to talk about courses). The fact is, Ron Whitten, our architecture editor, collects the candidates directly from the architects who designed them. The architects, in effect, nominate their work. Rankings Editor Topsy Siderowf then sends the list, which has hovered around the 200 mark for the past several years, to our 700-plus "panelists", who evaluate the courses on a set criteria. In short, golfdigest.com is the web site...and you've found us.

--Bob Carney

(Photo of Best New Public Spring Creek Golf Club by Stephen Szurlej)

12.27.07

A Mainely Great Idea

There was not a great deal of golf in our Maine family vacation, but we played one round and wished we'd played another. The round we played: Point Sebago Resort, a sturdy, natural-looking layout, a little rough around the edges, close to Sebago Lake, near Portland.

The one we wish we had: Clinton Golf Course, a nine-hole track about 25 northeast of Augusta and south of Bangor. Here was its ad in the Bangor Times:

Clinton Golf Course

Play at Your Own Pace

Tee Times Every 1/2 Hour

Being a stickler for pace of play, that last line got my attention. I called and spoke to Brandy Brown, who with her husband, Mike, a coach at Maine Central Institute during the winter, runs the place. "Was that a misprint?" I asked. No, said, Brandy. "We try to give people a relaxing experience." And you really keep to pace? "We run into problems once in a while when we have someone playing 18 (and making the turn)," she said. "Then it may be more like 15 minutes. But for the most part it's half an hour."

The golf course opened in 1994 and was built by Brandy's in-laws, Paula and Steve Brown, a real estate exec who owned the land and loved golf. It was literally built by hand by the family and neighbors. In 2001, the Browns opened Clinton to the public. They encourage charity events, and give the course over to the Mid-Maine Homeless Shelter once a year with all proceeds that day (and some others) going to the Shelter.

CGC is beautifully maintaind ("Some of the neighbors still work on it. Paula has planted gorgeous annual and perennial gardens," says Brandy) and is a haven for families and beginners who don't feel comfortable at some "big" courses. Still, whether you're accomplished or not, the pace of play is right: "It's about an hour and 45 minutes walking and a little faster by cart," says Brandy. The course measures 3265 yards for nine, 6400 yards, 18.

The price is also right: Nine holes, $25 walking, $35 riding; Eighteen holes, $50 walking, $70 riding.

That goes for weekdays or weekends. They want you to have a relaxing experience.

--Bob Carney

Clinton2_2

08.12.07

Planet Golf

"Always keep in mind that if God didn't want a man to have mulligans, golf balls wouldn't come three to a sleeve." Dan Jenkins

For a mulligan on our course rankings in the May issue check out John Huggan's re-ordering of our international lists in the Scotsman today. John, Golf Digest's European Editor, nonetheless finds some of our numbers inexplicable.

Top of this year's rankings is the links of Royal County Down in Northern Ireland, which has bumped the Old Course at St Andrews down to second. Third is Royal Dornoch, with Royal Portrush fourth. Muirfield is a surprisingly lowly fifth, with the top ten rounded out by Royal Melbourne's composite course, Ballybunion, Turnberry, Carnoustie and New Zealand's Cape Kidnappers.

Having played nine of the magazine's top ten (not Ballybunion), I am somewhat qualified to comment on the real order, which should read: 1) Muirfield; 2) St Andrews; 3) Royal Melbourne; 4) Royal Dornoch; 5) Carnoustie; 6) Royal Portrush; 7) Royal County Down; 8) Morfontaine; 9) Sunningdale; 10) Portmarnock.

What I find inexplicable is that Huggan has not played Ballybunion. It's in the Top 5— anywhere.

—Bob Carney

04.29.07

Questioning the 100 Greatest

"Fifty percent of the fairways we play on today are better than ninety percent of the greens we played on thirty years ago." Jim Ferree, in the Gigantic Book of Golf Quotations


Our course rankings in the May issue continue to stir the pot. We've received a bunch of letters about the Best in State lists, the latest from a reader in North Carolina decrying the fact that Tanglewood Park, site of the 1974 PGA Championship did not make the Best-in-State list. (It simply did not have the numbers).

Now, from across the Atlantic, comes a provocative column by the London Daily Mail's Derek Lawrenson on the impact of lists such as ours. We like to think our lists have caused golf courses to make themselves better over the years, raised the standards, if you will, and that's good for the average golfer. Derek takes a shot (not posted) at that reasoning.

GOLF DIGEST'S annual survey of the 100 best courses in America caused its usual fuss, including the arguably slanderous tantrum from Donald Trump that the only reason his venue wasn't there was because he hadn't spent big bucks advertising in the magazine.

Far more interesting to me, however, than the usual playground arguments these lists provoke, was the publication's explanation as to why some courses had made dramatic leaps forward. Pointing to the millions these venues had spent, they pompously concluded: 'If you ain't improving, you ain't moving.'

No doubt this was music to the ears of all those involved in golf design and excavation. But I would venture to suggest that most golfers are happiest when their course barely changes from year to year.

Haven't we had enough of seeing greens that had remained flat for decades suddenly altered to resemble an elephant's burial ground?

A bit of a straw man there. Is that really what most renovations are about, adding undulations to greens? We can buy an argument against unnecessary bunkering, bunkers and mounding that don't fit the design, ridiculous lengthening, but elephantine greens? Not a big problem here. But Lawrenson is just warming up:

The millions spent have worked to the extent that they have a place in that all-important top 100. But for a seven-handicapper like me, in terms of simple enjoyment of playing the game, there was no comparison, and that's without taking into consideration value for money.

Give me the course that ain't moving every time.

Not so sure. Our point is, as the poet said, "He not busy being born is busy dying." In the end, it's how the renovation is done. At a nearby Tillinghast layout that has hosted four USGA championships, and is not on the 100 Greatest list, a recent re-do: leveled and added tees, removed trees that didn't belong (firs, high-rooted hard woods, etc.) and re-configured a few bunkers. I think the course is stronger, healthier and tougher because of the refurbishment. Could the club have done without it? No doubt. But the renovation was done without changing the character of the course and most members are pleased with it.

The fact is, a lot of average golfers are pleased they play at courses that strive to make our lists (100 Greatest, 100 Greatest Public, Best-in-State and our reader ratings, Places to Play) because those courses at the very least maintain and condition their courses well.

Love to hear what you think.....of the 100 Greatest and Mr. Lawrenson's view of it.

—Bob Carney

04.26.07
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