Ed,
The fairways are wide enough (40 yards plus)to where the better golfers place it on one side or the other based on certain hole locations. Plus, there are frequently places where you can/should miss the green to be left with an easy up and down. In those two senses, the course is strategic and a delight to play if you are a decent golfer.
However, when the wind howls, the course becomes a matter of survival and just hoping to hit the fairways and being near the greens. Scores for even the David Egers ratchet up quickly and on those days, the course comes across as far more penal than strategic.
I don't know what % of the days the afternoon winds blow to the point where it becomes un-fun (un-fun because there is no recovering from marshes) but my understanding is the vast majority of the mornings are a delight.
Unfortunately, Norman hasn't left well enough alone and a lot of Dye's interesting green contours have been snuffed out with time. Plus, as Pat notes, more changes have occured this past summer, so who knows what course we are talking about?