Ian, a very clever exercise. The one piece of information I think we would have needed, and was critical to the speculation is the dimensions and slope of the green. It was hard to detect the space between the first tier of bunkers on the left, above the golfer's in green jacket shoulder, and the back tier ramping up the hill in the back left. If there is indeed a significant space there, with a swale flowing or sweeping off the left side and down forward, and the green behind the first hump is canted high left to down right, and there is more pinnable space behind the right bunker and mounds, I think you have a sort of variation of a NADER, where as Mike comments, you can get a carroom off the left side just over the first nose, and/or off of the back left rear to roll down to pins tucked extreem right rear. Therefore, bunkerless on the right nose is very elegant, or a very small low profile bunker at the base of the front nose or even behind on the backboard hill up to left rear works good in my opinion.