North Berwick is now ranked #30 in the world. I knew that it has made a sustained climb up the list in recent years, so I checked an older version of the Golf list to verify. In 2001, North Berwick was not on Golf's Top 100 in the World list. Given there are many new courses (16-17 based on a quick count, with 4 new courses ahead of NB) on this list, that's quite a change in perception.
I played it once and was very impressed. The front nine was not as visually dramatic as the back nine, but it played beautifully.
The course is only 6550 yards from the back tees, and perhaps this represents a greater consensus approval for shorter courses, despite the fact the modern ball travels further than it did twenty years ago.
John--What you are seeing with this is the effect of the media on "hidden gems". And North Berwick did not get there until 2007!!
I first saw North Berwick and Royal Dornoch in 1981...and after returning to NY asked every golfer I knew what they knew about these courses...did not find a soul who had ever heard of either. In retrospect I now realize that back then very very very few US golfers knew about any GB&I courses except for the then Open Rota courses and Sunningdale.
Royal Dornoch was "discovered" as a result of Tom Watson's first visit in the early 80's (I thought in '81 but Wikipedia says '82)...and being quoted by Herb Warren Wind saying something like "Never had so much fun playing golf in my life".
There are 216 courses that have ever been on a GM World Top 100 list (or Top 50...as the first three lists in '79 '81 and '83 were top 50). And of the 216...only 41 are in GB&I (19.0%). Through say 1999, only 28 from GB&I had made it...out of a total of 162 or 17.3%. So a number its of courses got "discovered" by raters (probably from USA) after 1999...because GB&I has probably had less in the way of new course construction than any other world region in the century...so most of the 13 additional ones added 2001-23 were built before 1999 (the only "new" ones among the 13 are Kingsbarns (opened 1999), Trump Aberdeen, St Patrick's, Castle Stuart, and Ardfin. The other 7 were "undiscovered" over the past 25 years (North Berwick, Swindley Forest, Prestwick, St George's Hill, Waterville...which was renovated I think in the 90's, Machrihanish, and Royal Cinque Ports).
People are traveling more and further than ever before...and this trend continues post COVID