I played in the qualifier at Yale on Monday and you can add another to the list of people that love the course. I'm still not sure whether I'm more disappointed that I played poorly or that I couldn't get out for another round that afternoon.
As others mentioned, the wind was up and it got stronger as the day went on. The course was playing relatively firm, particularly for an inland American course, and the hole locations were quite tricky. The greens were quick and true, and overall I thought the course was in very good shape.
The design is really interesting, fun to play, and of course challenging. As I'd heard before, the scale of the course is large, particularly the greens and surrounding bunkers.
The use of partially blind and fully blind shots throughout the course was really interesting and adds a considerable mental challenge. (Disclaimer: I don't mind blind shots at all and think they can be used very effectively to vary the challenge of a course.) Three, eight, and 12 are really interesting examples of blind shots. From all of the tees you can see the majority of the hole, but you cannot see the specific areas you are hitting to: the landing area for the drives are blind and the greens are blind from those landing areas once you get there. I can't recall seeing this design characteristic used before where you can see the shape of the whole hole, but not the intermediate points that you need to use to get there. 10, 11, 17, and 18 also have blind landing areas for the tee shots; on all of these you can see enough to know what the correct general direction is, but certainly not enough to be entirely sure of yourself.
In fact, I found the driving challenge presented at Yale much more interesting than most courses. There's the partial blindness mentioned above, but also holes like four and six where water hazards come well into the line of play. Both of these were very well positioned for someone of my length to present the choice of challenging or laying up. One, two, and 16 were the only relatively straight forward drives out there.
Being on my way back from Royal Dornoch, the sharp dropoffs on the left, right, and back of the fifth reminded me of 10 there (though, the 10th green at RDGC is half as wide as the fifth at Yale). The 14th at Yale also somewhat reminded me of the 15th at RDGC since I ended up with a short pitch to an elevated green that I needed to hit very well just to hold the green (my drive hit a rock on that left mound and ended up just 50 yards short of the green). The obvious difference is that 15 at RDGC has a lot more options for how to play the shot.
The ninth being so long makes the shot to back hole locations really interesting for me. For long players it's probably not a problem to land and stop it on the back quickly, but I have a relatively low ball flight and wasn't sure if I could stop the ball if I landed it back there. Thinking about where to try and land the ball, the trajectory required to run it through the swale, and the likelihood of actually landing where you want within it was a lot of fun. I imagine I could stand on that tee with a bucket of balls all day and have a LOT of fun. The striking thing about this hole is that getting to the correct portion of the green seems like the hard part, but once you get up there you realize that there's still a lot of work left to two putt if you're on the wrong side of the hole (as I was).
I've played a few Redan holes and, if my memory is not failing me, this one seemed to have the most countour in the green that I've seen. The slope on the front right of the green seemed like it would send a lot of balls right of the green as well as feeding them down left onto the green. This certainly makes accuracy important when playing for that slope since you could easily end up on the other side with a very difficult chip or putt onto the green. The very back of the green slopes back to front severely which also puts a premium on distance and trajectory control since if this long shot gets away from you and you run just off the back, as I did, you have one hell of a pitch shot left.
Anyhow, those are my comments on the course for now. I really hope to have the opportunity to get back out that way so I can play the course again.