Tim;
Perhaps you missed the following in my original post;
"A good example of this is the 4th hole I played of his the other day. It is an uphill par four of 410 yards, with land sloping from left to right, and the hole turning that way. On the right inside corner of the dogleg are two nasty bunkers, and further right is death."
"However, if one challenges those bunkers succesfully, they are left with an oblique angle of approach which is full carry over a very deep bunker."
"If one bails away from the trouble on their drive, they are left with an open approach, albeit slightly longer."
"So it went all day. I was left wondering if this isn't perhaps a purposeful style of Fazio's, and perhaps somewhat original in concept, whether you agree with it or not."
Geoffrey later mentioned the 9th hole, and said that he was sure I'd never challenge the bunker on the left side again. I'll explain what he meant.
The 9th hole is a 370 yard par four, moving slightly right to left. On the inside corner of the turn is a nasty bunker, and the left side is wholly fraught with trouble, as a wetlands hazard is further left of the bunker running almost the length of the hole. There is plenty of room on the right to bail out, and friendly containment walling on the far right off the fairway to direct balls back into the fairway if they bail too far (which Geoffrey took advantage of
) to the right.
At the green, the wetlands snake in front of the green, and the green is oriented completely to be played to from the far right side of the fairway. In fact, there is a deep bunker front left, and the green is VERY shallow and oblique approached from the left hand side.
Visually, the hole would suggest just the opposite. It would seem that challenging the left side successfully should result in some type of reward. I hit the ball very well, barely carrying the bunker down an aggressive route, and was left with a 70 yard approach that would have required Mickelsonian short game skills. Geoffrey, on the other hand, after one of his rare poor drives that was pull hooked off the containment wall on the right, was left with the optimum angle, green depth, etc.
It left us scratching our heads at why anyone would ever play the hole in any manner but safely away from the trouble.
I could provide many more examples, starting with the 1st hole, but this is the type of stuff we saw all day long that made me think that Fazio's design philosophy is quite different from classic strategic dictums, and hence, this post.
I agree with the rest of what you wrote.