John:
Appreciate your response.
Wind is a factor and since Bandon usually has seasonal wind you can plan accordingly for a proper course set-up. Keep in mind the wind pattern at Bandon does have cross wind holes unlike the near north - south direction of Pac Dunes.
Still, personally, I'd like to see the big boys handle the 5th and 6th at Bandon from the tips and let them sweat a little. I guarantee you there will be plenty of tour pros, possibly including Tiger and Phil, htting a driver "off the deck" in order to reach the 5th in two blows. Miss slightly right or left and its BYE BYE BALL and HELLO TRIPLE OR QUAD!!!
Too much of tour golf is predictable stuff because tournament organizers want low scores to be part of the process / keep audiences in front of the tube. I cited previous exmaples (1988 PGA / Oak Tree, the majors at Medinah circa 1990, 1999, World Cup / Kiahwah).
If "these guys are good" then let's push the medal down even further and see what happens. I'd be curious to know what is the course record at Bandon from the tips?
John -- keep in mind that daily conditions are part and parcel of the game. You cannot separate them. As a baseball fan and Yankee rooter I hear all the time about the short right field porch in the Bronx. Bottom line -- the Yankees adjusted their team to the field dimensions. And if you play them at Yankee Stadium you better be able to do the same.
Golf conditions are what separates the men from the boys. All of links golf is based upon weather conditions. Those who tee erly in the BO before the wind comes up might have as much as ten stroke advantage over those who play in the afternoon. To Bandon's credit the wind direction is about the same day to day during the summer (from the north) and winter (from the south) periods.
When people say "what if" the wind doesn't blow ... well "what if the queen had balls" ... she'd be the king! This "what if" stuff is "woulda, coulda, shoulda mentality. The wind does blow routinely at Bandon and each time I go there I know what's at stake and what it's going to take to score reasonably well.
Ask the pros who competed in the 1992 Open at Pebble ... especially the last day. Pebble is only 6700 yards and everyone of them was sweating big time bullets over every shot. The wind that Sunday was vicious and required ultra patience. Yes, Pebble has smaller greens than Bandon and are more protected but Bandon is considerably longer than Pebble and probably provides an even faster turf surface so that unpredictable bounces would be in play comparable to what you see at the BO.
One last item -- as far as Hazeltine is concerned I agree it is difficult. I played the course as a media member prior to the 1991 Open and could see it for myself.
However, please don't use the month of April as a fair example. In April the turf is still wet, the air still dense and the rough nearly impossible. I can easily play Winged Foot in the metro NY/NJ area and get the same desired result.
I believe the only fair way to say a course is legitimately hard is to play during the prime playing season months. Don't get me wrong -- Hazeltine is no pushover in June thru September. I just don't think it is harder than Bandon -- particularly if the USGA changed the final hole at Bandon to a 475-490 par-4.
Just a humble opinion.