Craig: re handicapping of holes, the idea is, where does the higher handicapper need the stroke the most? In general, the longer the hole, the shots he hits, and the more he needs the stroke. Yes, it's exactly the opposite when you think of where the low 'capper makes the most bogeys, but that's not the point... On the vast majority of par 3's, the low capper can get on in 2 - there's less time to screw up - so he doesn't need the shot as much, especially when you realize the low capper screws up MORE on said holes, given he has a generally longer shot to the green on any par 3 than he does for his 2nd on a par 4 or 3rd on a par 5.... This illustrates a big misconception so many people have re handicap stroke holes - they do NOT measure the hardest holes, necessarily - they measure where the high handicapper most needs the stroke in a match. My feeling is many golf courses do them wrong, due to this misconception....
Re closing par 3's, East Lake's is perfect for championship play, I think - it absolutely exemplifies what Darwin says, because it puts a wood or long iron into the hands of these guys for an approach shot... VERY few par 4's would do that these days....
TH