Mike,
How does that relate to his 1 iron from 235 at Baltusrol in, I believe, 1967?
Jim,
"I took out my 1-iron. By my calculations I was some 230 yards from the green, all carry and slightly against the wind. I didn't know if I could fly a 1-iron that distance, but that was the club I wanted to play. I have a great deal of confidence in it - much more than I have in my 3-wood - and I felt certain I could carry the ball far enough to at least clear the hillside bunker and that I could hit it straight enough to stay out of the bunkers to the left of the green. "
"As a left to right player I was in luck here, for the ideal way to play the shot was to bring it in from the left; both the landing area before the green and the green itself fall off to the right."
"I doubt I have ever hit a better 1-iron.
I know I never hit a longer one. It carried the bunker, landed a few feet short of the green, hopped onto the green, and finished 22 feet from the cup." - Jack Nicklaus
This, from the acknowledged longest player in the game in his prime.
Jim, whether I agree with you that the new back tee on the 4th will improve the hole (I don't think I do), the fact remains that the supposed reason(s) for the change are built on a faulty premise.
The fact is, the hole will never play for today's top players like it did in the teens, 20s, 40s, 60s, 70s, or 80s, nor will any other vintage hole.