War story. My home course, Carolina Golf Club course in Charlotte, just hosted pre- and final qualifying for the Quail Hollow Championship that begins tomorrow. In pre-qualifying on Thurs., April 22, the pin on no. 7, a par four, was tucked on the left just over the false front, the most dreaded location for club members. The hole is listed at 448 yds., but it's a dogleg and plays much shorter (although uphill to the green). Average score Thursday was 4.63, the highest relative to par of any hole on the course that day. I watched any number of approach shots. Anything in front of or near the pin ended up 10 to 20 yds. back down the fairway. The only way anyone that I saw approach successfully dropped the ball dead 15 feet behind the hole, with no spin, and let it trickle back down a slope toward the hole from there. I'm sure any number of qualifyers were playing the hole for the first time, and I marveled at those who could get the shot right. Pro, amateur, the challenge is the same. By the way, Billy Mayfair closed with birdies on 7, 8 and 9 (he had started on the back) Monday to lead all qualifiers with a 65. The pin was friendlier on Monday and the average score was 4.23, not the hardest hole that day.