Yeah, but Dave, that little stream is pretty far up in front of the front of the green -- what, maybe 25 yards? And there's a slight upslope in front of the green there too, so a play to just in front of the green leaves room for error and lets you stop the ball with a decent shot. I agree that the little stream is troubling for a truly whiffed approach. To tell you the truth, though, it didn't factor into any of my decisionmaking on any of the rounds there because for me, it's a driver and really short iron from either the middles or the back tee.
Once again, your embarrassingly narrow range of ability limits your understanding of a golf hole.
I agree that the stream
should not come into play on the approach. The creek is nowhere near the green. For a golfer like you it
should only come into play on the drive. And for the rest of us it
should be nothing but a slight psychological hazard (and a beautiful one at that.)
Nonetheless, from personal experience I assure you that it does come into play for the duffer, especially after a less than stellar tee shot.
Don't get me wrong. I love the location of the stream, for exact reasons I described. It worries the big hitter a bit off the tee, and worries the weaker player on the second shot. But I also love that at RCCC this type of hazard is not overdone. Given the nature of the landscape, I suppose other modern designers would have utilized approach hazards with abandon. While this would have greatly increased pro shop ball revenues, it would have greatly decreased the quality and playability of the course.
But back to your interesting question about the hole that played the hardest and why . . . I wouild imagine the creek got some action in the member guest, especially given that the course was new to almost everyone.
How about with the six pack of players you saw butcher the hole? I'll bet the creek came into play with at least of few of these, or more.