Editor's Blog

100 Greatest Courses

"Golfers love punishment. That's where I come in."
--Pete Dye 

Your May issue of Golf Digest will land shortly, and right smack in the middle of it is our 100 Greatest and 100 Greatest Public rankings. Early copies to the courses themselves and to members of the media have set off the usual flurry of comment and ruffled feathers. Lively discussions are taking place on both Shackelford and golfclubatlas. Interesting comments on Shackelford about Riviera’s drop and whether its renovation contributed to that fact. On golfclubatlas, "Bob" had this to say about renovations: "What is it with restorations/redoes these days that all the bunker borders look so....I don't know, so....tumescent?"

Tumescent. I like that. After her face lift, Gladys' cheeks were tumescent. He's right. Lot of golf courses look like that after facelifts, too. Is it too much to suggest that some of the opinions about our list border on tumescent as well? I’m always amazed at the cynicism in these discussions about how our (or anybody’s) rankings are for sale, as if there were really ways one could advertise or buy their way on our list.

Three things to say about that: First, the process is transparent and rigorous. It’s done by ranking the courses in categories such as Resistance to Scoring, Design Variety, etc. Our 800-some panelists assign numbers in each category to thousands of courses. The numbers rule. The best numbers get a course on the list. Two, it takes a specific number of evaluations to qualify. Therefore, a course can miss because its numbers aren’t high enough or because not enough panelists (40 ballots are required) see that golf course. In time, they will. Finally, while I think ours is the strongest and most influential list out there, I don’t think it’s perfect. Would I place Yale higher on the Connecticut Best in State ranking than our panelists do? You bet I would. But that’s not how we do this thing. We try to make our panel the most informed group we can (holding conferences to educate them, for example), and then we let them make their ratings. In the end, the strength of the list is that we have low-handicap, well-traveled golfers giving us their varied opinions.  It’s not Ron Whitten, our Architecture Editor’s list. It’s not Jerry Tarde’s list. It’s not our advertisers’ list. It is the 100 Greatest, created by our panelists. And they do a pretty fair job.
-- Bob Carney

 

Comments

Archived Comments (5) Click to expand

I love your lists! However, how is WeaverRidge #61 for public courses? I have played it along with Purgatory, Farmlinks, Capstone Club of Alabama, The Shoals(Fighting Joe), and Silver Lakes(Backbreaker, Heartbreaker). All five of these other tracks are better than WeaverRidge- quite easily I might add!!

Posted by Adam Joyce April 1, 2007 1:55 AM

I'm a bit confused by the list. Is there a reason why a public course would be higher than a top 100 public course on the state list and then not appear on the top 100? Or a top 100 public course appear not appear on the state list if lower public courses appear on the state list?

Posted by John Maciel April 3, 2007 2:42 PM

I just read your listing of America's 100 Greatest Public Golf Courses in the May issue. I can't understand how you missed Gold Mountain in Bremerton, Wa.?? Last summer, this course was the site of the U.S. Publinks Tournament and was a huge success! Last year we were ranked on this list, so why did we get left out? In this same article, you mentioned the six departures and Gold Mountain wasn't mentioned here either. Sincerely Yours, James A. Hassett

Posted by James A. Hassett April 7, 2007 11:37 PM

The Dunes Club in Myrtyle Beach is not really a public course, although some limited play is allowed if you stay there, they refuse to let you on the course otherwise. Two other public courses to maybe consider for the top 100 are Atlantic City Country Club, which was redone by Tom Doak and Beechtree Golf Club in Maryland, which is an original course also by Tom Doak.

Posted by Rick Sides April 20, 2007 2:03 PM

Are you going to rank the Myrtle Beach courses every 2 years, to update your Myrtle Beach top 50 courses?

Is it possible to get the points for the top 100 Public or Top 50 Myrtle Beach courses, like you published in the magazine for the overall Top 100??

Posted by Art Stipo June 1, 2007 9:50 PM
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