Hole #8 - par 3 - Biarritz
Back tee - 181 yards
Middle tee - 170 yards
The 8th hole is the third par 3 on the front side, which plays to a par 34. The odd par tends not to be noticed until one is facing the bear of a par 37 back nine and trying to make a score. Our first time around, three of the four players broke 40 on the front nine. None broke 40 on the back nine.
The biarritz is a beautiful hole from the tee box. It also serves as a great hole to test the effects of a brush tee against a traditional tee. While I did not take part in the experiment that unfolded here, I will say that the results were convincing.
The area between the elevated tee and the green consists of a strip of fairway that can also be used for the 7th tee shot followed by a small valley of light rough (as much as anything can be deemed rough here) with another slight incline up to the putting surface. The rough section has a mound on the left side which can obscure the view of a small portion of the green, but won't render any pin positions blind as long as the resort continues the practice of only pinning the rear section of the green. Even on the front hole location, the pin would have to be pretty extreme left to be hidden from view.
The green is an example of one that isn't trying to follow the template to exact specifications as much as provide a new and fresh interpretation of a template idea. Both the green and the swale are massive. It doesn't feel like the swale is anywhere near as deep as the one at Yale, though perhaps it is the sheer size of the green that leaves the golfer with that impression. Instead of deep, it feels and plays more stretched out as if a pin could be placed in the swale without being as gimmicky as it would seem at Yale. The swale also has several back and forth movements which could influence a shot left or right.
I think it will be a shame if they don't pin the front of the green at least some of the time. In downwind conditions as we faced, the front pin would be extremely challenging. Almost every shot I saw struck on Opening Day, in my group three times around, as well as some groups in front of us, ran through the swale to the back portion of the green. With the fronting incline to the green and the unpredictably bumps in the "rough" fronting the green it would be a great challenge to strike a shot with precision to the front portion of the green without having it roll through or stop short.
From the tee
Several looks at the marvelous green
The swale from the right (with the 15th green in the background)
...and from the left
A look at the hole from the 9th tee
Looking back on the green with the 7th in the distance