I believe Bob Jones would think the confining trees that have been added need to go. Given his apparent agreement with Behr, he may not have liked the rough. I personally don't think it is bad and certainly not overly penal. Some of the playing corridors are too narrowed (11 and 17). The 7th is too long and I'd be surprised if he would approve of that lengthening.
While some might think the course is too firm and the greens too fast, I don't believe that is the entirely the fault or the committees nor is it ruining the event. Nature is causing the exceptionally firm conditions. It has been extremely DRY in Georgia. It is also quite cold. I don't know when they could have watered the greens to manage the firmness. They were watering a bit after play but that wouldn't effect conditions the next day. Temperatures were under freezing the past two nights. It was in the 20s overnight. I don't see how they could water the greens or approaches to manage playability. The combination of very firm, very dry and very windy makes any golf course tough. When you throw in some of the pin positions being used, it was perhaps the most difficult golf course I have ever seen. It would not have been unwelcome had they adjusted some of the pin positions to account for the conditions.
The greens are amazing...it is going to take me a few days to consider them. While many spoke of how considerable are the elevation changes, we're used to stuff like that in Pennsylvania. The drop to 10 green is considerable but not unlike holes at Eagles Mere. The effective rise of 18 isn't more than a number of holes in this area. There is a big drop below the tee, but my guess is the tee isn't more than 20-30 feet below the landing area. The rise from the LZ to the green wasn't what I expected either. However, the GREENS are sprctacular, every one of them.
The ultra firm conditions caused a number of players to play ultra conservatively thus reducing the scoring spectrum on individual holes. Players weren't taking risks. Each day, maybe 5 players or less were trying to reach 15 green in two for instance. However (and I have to think this through a bit more) wouldn't some strategy be enhanced by conditions inducing a player to take more club off the tee and have a shorter shot in? Wouldn't it require shaping shots and altering strategies by bringing the ground game into play more on some holes given the wind and the firmness?
Tom Paul and I stood by the 14th green late in the day on Thursday and we started to see the greens firming up and aerial approach shots bounding over the green resulting in precise recovery requirements. Some of the players figured it out and used the ground game but bogeys outnumbered pars by a wide margin. I think out of 10 groups of 3 we only saw one birdie, a nice 20-footer by Vijay. You could foresee at that point that things were going to get very difficult.