Is Bandon Dunes (the resort i.e. all 5 courses) overrated?
I ask this because it is the only resort in the world with 3 / 4 / 5 courses continually knocking on a World Top-100 list? It’s clear that the courses are uniformly excellent, even great. But does the fact that most people consider them reasonably close in quality and difficult to separate result in the feeling that “if one is Top-20, they must all be Top-100”?
Ally:
That's a good question and I am not sure anyone can really answer it. There is certainly a large divergence of opinion as to how resort guests rate the five, and that might drag up the rankings of the 3rd or 4th best course at the resort, whatever it should be. For certain, the initial ranking of Bandon Dunes by GOLFWEEK as the #2 modern course [which, most would agree now, was an overrating] made it easier for Pacific Dunes to get to where it is, because if the panelists liked it better than Bandon, there was only one place it could go.
The truth is that for most panelists, there are many "games within a game" going on in their head when they try to rank courses. Many of them have unwritten quotas for how many courses they should vote for in a particular state or country or region; what is the ceiling for any particular architect, and so on. [And you've got to, to some extent: anyone who put fifteen Seth Raynor courses in their top 100 would be rightly accused of having a narrow vision of what's great.]
You can verify this by noting that when I have a new course enter the top 100 [St. Patrick's], some of my other courses fall a few notches, on the theory that if St. Patrick's is their favorite course of mine, then Pacific Dunes must not be quite as good as they thought before, and Old Macdonald maybe shouldn't be in the top 100, even though nothing about those courses has changed to warrant their moving up or down.
So, a background question in the rankings for the courses in Bandon is whether Bandon Dunes is one of David Kidd's best courses; whether Bandon Trails and The Sheep Ranch are two of Coore & Crenshaw's best; and whether Pacific Dunes and Old Macdonald are two of my best. My guess is that's probably why three of them [one for each] wind up in the top 100 in the world, and the other two only in the top 100 in America.
[Old Macdonald, funnily enough, also gets compared to the best of Macdonald and Raynor's work, and the fact that it's also a real links course and the only one in that class bumps it up a bit. I suspect the same will be true for Lido once the votes are in.]
I have always wondered if there were a blind taste test of all these courses, with no architect labels and no concerns for geography, how places like Bandon Dunes and Barnbougle and Lost Farm and Paraparaumu Beach would stand up against not just Dornoch and Lahinch, but Machrihanish and Deal and other British links that don't make the top 100 lists. Supposedly, that's what the lists are all about, but I have heard too many panelists' rationalizations for their votes to think that it's all just one big playing field.