Wow! I leave for an hour or so and I miss this great exchange. Oh well, great stuff, all of you.
Shivas - I hear what you're saying, really I do pahdnah. But I also think there is a definite benefit to going right - as these regulars explain - which at the very least makes it worth considering! And Dave is right - it's not just a can you issue, it's a should you. That alone makes it not the cut and dried affair you state. Just the fact quite a few very experienced golfers are debating here would seem to prove this to me: these are not simple choices going on on this hole.
I think Dan G. just explained it very well also... you also must factor in which shot you prefer... Then on top of that, the competitive situation would add to the deliberation also... by that I mean, if I absolutely need a 4, and 3 isn't desparately required, then I start favoring the left more. If I must have a 3, I go right for sure because I can't see making many threes from the right. Then if 5 is gonna kill me, I go back to favoring left, like I said before. All this adds to the evidence that this is not a simple decision.
Then you factor in what David M. just wrote, and wow, there's even more to it... I can understand all of that... Man I find this a very tough decision.
Anyway, to Tommy, all of the above just speaks to this one hole, which on which I find maddening choices to be made. And yes I do love it. And yes there is a LOT of this going on at Rustic Canyon, which makes it great. And whereas I do believe that courses like this that have maddening choices are the best, the most fun to play both once and repeatedly, well... You do also understand that I have only played the course once, right?
I do think courses - and wine - that reveal a bit more each time one plays/drinks them are the best, for sure. But I'm also not ready to say one can't get a pretty damn good feel for a course in one visit, if one is aware and trying to do so. Not the BEST or MOST COMPLETE sense of the course, without a doubt... But enough to know if they want to come back, or if they would recommend it to their friends, or enough to come up with a number for a rating system, especially taking into account the fact that it's not very realistic to expect anyone to play the course the VAST number of times required to get this full understanding, in order to make these assessments.
Long live #7! And yes, it remains a drag we won't get to "prove" all this in a few weeks. But hell, there is so much else there to try to figure out, discuss and dissect, we'll live without the tee shot on 7.
TH