Tim:
I wonder how you'd handle the 2nd Hole at Galen Hall. The second shot drops over 100 feet and it's possible to roll a very short club a very significant distance. Sounds like you may have faced the same situation. You picked Lob Wedge. What if you had punched a very soft 4-iron and let it roll?
Did you consider any non-full shots with different trajectories or did you immediately pull the LW because it was the shortest club in your bag?
Kyle--
The layup you suggest is imprudent to the point of impossibility at the hole in question at Callaway Gardens. The fairways yesterday were dormant, sparse brown bermuda--very, very firm and fast. From the 150 marker, the ground slopes away toward the water that fronts the green. If anyone had tried to lay up with that punch 4-iron, their balls would have found the water. The only way to keep the layup on dry land within 150 yards of the green is to hit a wedge or short iron, depending on how far back you are off the tee, in such fairway and rough conditions. The hole at Galen Hall, judging by the picture on the club's website and the Google Maps view, looks much easier than the hole at Callaway Gardens.
Jim Kennedy--
I wish going for the green had been a viable option on that hole, but there was effectively no room for error. I don't think the 3 wood Hunter Mahan hit on 13 at TPC Scottsdale on Sunday would have held that green from 240 yards out. The only play was to lay up, and with a gap wedge, for me.