The CSGA Links Volume 3 Issue 1 March/April, 2015 | Page 38

ARCHITECTURE A Proud Past The ASGCA has proudly served the golf industry since 1947 D ustin Johnson never considered the spot where his tee shot landed on the 72nd hole of the 2010 PGA Championship to be a bunker; but Pete Dye, ASGCA Fellow, did. To make Whistling Straits in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, Dye’s design scattered bunkers throughout the course. Nearly 1,000 of them, to be more precise; including the patch of sandy ground under Johnson’s feet that would prove to be his undoing when he grounded his club – a two-stroke penalty that kept him out of a playoff. When asked after the tournament if Johnson’s situation might lead to changes at the course Dye said in a humorous manner, “I think it needs more bunkers.” Besides providing an unfortunate occurrence for Johnson – who later admitted he had failed to note the course rules posted in the clubhouse – that tournament shined a new light on golf course architects. The work of a golf course architect today is both an art and a science, continuing a legacy that reaches back more than a century. 38 | CSGA Links // March, 2015 The members of the America Society of Golf Course Architects (ASGCA) design the great majority of newly-constructed and remodeled golf courses in the United States each year and have branched out to also design courses worldwide. And in each instance, ASGCA members produce these challenging and interesting layouts while enhancing the environment unique to each course. Since the days when Donald Ross started laying out the courses at Pinehurst Resort in North Carolina early in the last century the profession of golf course architecture has blossomed in the United States. But it wasn’t until 1947 that 14 of North America’s golf course architects gathered in Pinehurst for their first official meeting. They determined a society of golf course architects was necessary to promote the professional, ethical development of the finest golf courses possible.