The key to this issue is designing holes of 250-300 yards (250-350 yards in truly fast and firm environments) which have a lot of interest for the strategist in the last 50-100 yards to and including the green). I would call them all "par" 4s and give the hackers a chance for a "birdie" but confound the elite players who have a chance for a 2 but also think that a 3 on such a hole is their god-given right.
One of my in-laws is an ex-Euro tour pro who is easily the most talented golfer I have even played with (and I've played competitively with two guys who were talented enough to make the 36-hole cut at Majors) and one of the most thoughtful (regardless of handicap). His favorite course these days is Western Gailes and I asked him why at a family party over the holidays, and his response was, in effect:
"I play the course mostly with my friends, off the yellow tees, and there are so many greens I could drive that tempt me to try, but far too many times that I do try I find myself pin-high but absolutely f**ked and strruggling for par, particularly when the greens are fast. It makes me think, and often try to manufacture tee shots with irons just to put it in position A, even though the back of my brain is telling me to go for it. When I do, my freinds are already at positon A having played their driver or 3-wood and I have to hit a great shot to stay in the game, since I'm giving massive numbers of srokes."
I think that to him, courses like Western Gailes or Dornoch or TOC or Cypress from the front tees are like playing the 10th at Riviera almost every hole in a quasi-Groundhog Day sort of moment.
What a moment that would be.....
Rich