Michael,
Having just played there this past weekend for the first time since the 1970s, I was thrilled to see both the restoration and renovation of a club that left me with fond memories. Back in my high school days, I'd played two of my most memorable matches over on Underhill Rd and always had a fondness for the place (and it's great split hot-dogs at the shack!) You and membership should be rightfully proud of successfully navigating the club into the 21st Century.
That said, the 5th hole left me a bit perplexed and my assessment was tame relative to others. My member hosts downright despised it. The caddies issued fearful warnings and the member foursome in front of us departed the green shaking their heads furiously in unison. Walking down the fairway, before seeing the green, I innocently postured that a short and strategic four-par is a charming feature of character and style!
While I ALWAYS look forward to a challenging short four par (and made an extraordinary par* that day), I too walked off the green thinking that this hole was inconsistently difficult and unyielding. For us, the pin was in the far left "finger" quadrant and thus very, very difficult to approach from anything other than an attack-style 270+yd tee shot steered fearfully over the right fairway bunkers. Anyone unable to make such a shot was left with a very, very,very slim chance of making par and a highly elevated chance of bogey (even with near any decent tee shot in the fairway).
The green is certainly of interesting shape and form, but also unquestionably difficult to hold when maintained at firmness and speed comparable to the other 17. Surely, the chipping area over the back helps, but the narrowness of the side (especially the left) "fingers" make recovery shots way too difficult for most all levels of amateurs (making those like Riveria's #10 or Oakmont's #17 seem enormous!!).
I laude the bold and adventurous style of Mike DeVries work here and as stated before, think the entirety of the job is a huge, huge win, but I just couldn't get that hole out of my head and after listening to a group of members (inc. two single-digits) moan about it, I'd have to agree it is just a tad too harsh for what was intended to be strategic, fun, and potentially rewarding. Btw...I loved the work on 11 and the connected tee to 15.
* 260yd drive center of fairway, lob wedge to just over back of the green, chip to center (20 feet away from pinned finger)....bomb putt!