"I have no idea".
Jeff,
That sounds much like my thoughts on some "genius" holes vs. "genius" literature. English profs/teachers analyze to death some of the "great" works of literature, saying they know the writers' intent for this alliteration, that symbolism, blah, blah, blah. Horsepucky. Did the author specifically leave notes saying so? If not, it's your
opinion, and maybe I just enjoyed the story told, not the symbolism you interpreted.
The architect's intent is certainly up for analysis and interpretation, but you can't say for sure, without documentation, what the architect truly was trying to do (I'm sounding like Mucci). Maybe it just felt right for the architect. Maybe it's just "I know it when I see it." Maybe it just looked the best from the topo map the architect used because he never set foot on site, but turned out great due to the view he couldn't see on paper. Maybe #18 at Yale was the most direct route back to the clubhouse from the previous 17 great holes
and a better hole just left too long a walk....