Tom:
You're right about 17 behind the bunker at TOC. I have played there but never with the pin dead behind the bunker (I've only played there twice). And for me if the pin was there I'm not sure how much I would enjoy it. Are their many others like that one though?
It was there last time I played there back in 2001, and I LOVED it. I drove into the wispy left rough and had I believe 173 yards remaining, with a small left to right breeze that wasn't helping or hurting, on a cool but not cold day, pretty benign conditions for TOC. I knew the odds that I could pull the shot off were nearly zero, but I had to try it. My caddie was telling me to aim about 20 yards right of the bunker, I let him talk but wasn't listening, I already knew where I was going, directly at that pin in its most evil back left location, straight over the center of the Road Bunker! I'd played the hole once before and hadn't been in the bunker or on the road, I was ready to enjoy either or both of those this time if I wasn't destined for the sublime achievement of hitting directly over the Road Bunker and holding the green next to the pin.
I took a 7 iron because that's the club I needed to carry to just short of the pin if I hit the ball square, knowing full well that a mishit would probably drop me in the Road Bunker, because there was no way I'd hold the green with anything less than a well struck shot. I did hit it well, very high, and right where I aimed. I simply could not have landed it in a more perfect place, just over the bunker but on the flatter part of the green, rather than the downslope side of the bunker where it would have immediately shot forward. It took a couple bounces on the green and then started rolling and for a John Kirkian moment it appeared I had succeeded, but the ball just kept rolling and fell off the back of the green and ended up on the blacktop, only 20 feet from the hole. Again my caddie annoyingly was encouraging me to take the safe way by putting off the road away from the hole down towards the front of the green where I had more margin for error. He just didn't get why I was there. I chipped a 4 iron off the road into the bank, the ball popped in the air and rolled up a foot from the hole for a tap in par, to the scattered applause of the 15 or 20 odd people hanging around in one the best places in the world to watch great and terrible golf shots.
Do I care that I really couldn't fire my approach shot at that hole? Hell no, that didn't bother me a bit. And it wouldn't bother me a bit on a no name crappy muni either (actually, I see those kind of unattainable pin positions on no name munis a lot more often than at expensive CCFADs, those guys always way overwater their greens) Not only does it not bother me if I can't get close to a hole, it doesn't really bother me if I can't even keep the ball on the green. If it were impossible to keep the ball on the green from anywhere that might be a bit extreme, but if it is just because on this day you've got a following wind and its not possible with a following wind, or you hit your drive in the wrong place and have the wrong angle, well, that's not the fault of the firm green or the architect now is it?