Having no shortage of great golf holes, obviously there will be some at Riviera that get passed over to talk about those of greater note (4, 6, 10, 18 etc...)
In my few trips to the Nissan Open, I always made a point to see the 10th and the 18th, and once I walked down to the 6th green to see what all this fuss about a bunker in the middle of the green was about.
I came away from my recent round being perhaps most pleasantly surprised by this seemingly forgotton hole tucked into the Northwest (I think...) corner of the property.
I don't believe it's the best hole on the course, but when reading Ran's profile I was shocked that it's been completely skipped. I felt the 5th deserves more than that, and so here I post.
At 434 yards for the pros (I don't have the card in front of me so I can't quote the yardages for mere mortals) it features an intimidating (especially if you prefer a fade) tee shot which must be played either long enough or far enough right to open up the view of the green.
The green complex itself is redan-like as it slopes severely from right to left, though I don't recall if the general slope is front to back for the length of the green...the high point of the green is the front right corner, though.
As you can see in the photo below, a large grass mound appears to block the ideal right to left approach shot. Michael Robin informs me that even despite the kikuyu, a long iron approach that hits short of the green between the mound and the front-right edge will play nicely, but a high-flighted short iron will stick in the hill.
What this leaves is the option to either (1) play long off the tee and take the aerial approach to any pin, knowing you must land the ball at your desired finishing point, or (2) shorter players or those who choose to lay back off the tee have the added element (or safety net) of knowing that a shot played with a longer club short and right of the green may find its way to the pin.
I'm also told that exceptionally long players (Vijay did it) have driven the ball from the tee into the second lower fairway, leaving a flip wedge into the green. While certainly not how the hole was intended, this seems to be another viable option.
Why doesn't the 5th get much ink? Is it because it's sandwiched between two world-class holes? Or do others truly think it's just not that good?