On the "Jack's screwy results" thread, some observers suggest #17 Pebble Beach is a badly designed hole. Bob Crosby says the pros played it purposely into the bunker, up and down for par.
Surely the setting is great-heading back out to the ocean, protected by water left and behind. If the wind is up, this ~180 yard hole can play alot longer.
I recall like most of the greens at Pebble, this one is smallish. Though based on the picture below, the green shape seems to have changed from what I remember--my last play was >10 years ago. I once saw a player chip (and take a divot) from the front part of the green to get to the back, because there was a bunker between him and the pin.
Would you change it? If so, how? Would a larger green sloping toward the ocean work here?
Would you make the fronting bunker smaller but more penal?
How about tempting the risk-taker to hit a low cut starting toward the ocean left that, if successful, could run up to the green?
If you sloped the green from back to front, would that go against the "breaks toward the ocean" grain I remember at Pebble, confounding the unprepared?
Has all this been settled here before??