John:
No problem -- but you still artfully tapdanced around my question to you in providing clear shots / holes where play is so limited at WC.
I'm still waiting for those details ...
No tap-dancing at all on my part. You diverted the discussion to Pine Valley (and my lack of experience there). I didn't see the relevance, and clearing this up took all my posting energy.
Now, if you actually want to talk about Wolf Creek, I'm glad to do that. If it helps you to know, I haven't played Fishers Island, Shinnecock, or Merion either. Maybe you can work those into invalidating my next Wolf Creek comments.
I have played two rounds at Wolf Creek. Both were on the same day and under similar conditions in Sept 2006. I was there as part of a group of eight guys and played with a different group in the first round from the second. Our handicap-levels (since not everyone has USGA handicaps I'm going to guess) ranged from around 3 up to 25. In the first round, we played from tees that were maybe 6800 yards (I don't remember exactly). In the second round, we moved up a set of tees to something nearer 6500 yds.
Working from this background, I made the following comments on the course.
1. Wolf Creek is a fascinating course.
2. I think there is room in the golf world for it and I'm glad to have had a chance to play it.
3. I don't think that it's a great course, but it is definitely unique.
4. The biggest flaw in the course is that every hole is essentially bounded by a hazard. I don't have the scorecard anywhere handy, but as I remember it pretty much any ball that is hit off the grass has to be treated as if it's in a hazard or environmentally sensitive area and abandoned. You cannot go retrieve the ball and are not permitted to play from the red sandy area, even if it might be possible to play a really fun recovery shot. Contrast this with a place like Coral Canyon, where you can go out and try all sorts of weird shots.
5. This lack of recovery options turns what should be an entertaining, quirky course into one that's not much fun. Sure there are some wild-looking shots and hair-raising cart rides, but I just found the golf itself to be mostly target golf.
6. Wolf Creek is worth seeing, but I don't have any real desire to play it again.
You are asking me to provide clear examples of holes where play is limited. I wish I could do that from memory, but cannot. My comments were based on a general impression of the course played under the conditions described above. I did not record specific observations because I did not have any reason to. Unfortunately, my memory is not good enough to give you the kind of detailed commentary that you have asked for.
I don't think details are warranted. I was only sharing my basic impressions from the course. This was pretty much a consensus of the group that I played with. Perhaps none of us are good enough golfers to appreciate the Wolf Creek playing corridors. I can assure you that the numbers of bad golfers far exceed those of good ones, though.
From what I can recall, one guy lost 6 or 7 balls in a single round, but he was definitely spraying it around. I think I lost one or two balls in each round. The vivid impression was of a ball laying in plain sight in a playable lie that couldn't be played. This happened to almost everyone in our group at least once. While I realize that golf is not "fair," this situation did leave a negative impression.
Is there enough width at Wolf Creek to accomodate decent play? Probably yes in most cases. But that doesn't mean players are going to be happy abandoning an accessible and playable ball. It's as much psychology as anything else. There are some memorable holes on the course, but unfortunately the memory of a golf ball laying in the sand, with retrieval prohibited, pervades.