FWIW, Johnny Miller votes to change the architecture.... http://www.golfweek.com/news/2010/aug/18/johnny-miller-whistling-straits-pga-dustin-johnson/?BLOG-TourBlog
Yes Johnny, the course would be much more interesting with unplayable grass replacing 1,000 bunkers. I know it's much more exciting to take an unplayable lie drop, hack out sideways or re-load because you can't find your ball. Sand is exactly the type of hazard that is great for the game. It causes difficulty and there's a chance there will be a horrible lie, but doesn't necessarily eliminate the possibility of a great recovery. But since some guy got lost in the moment and didn't connect a) "that's a sandy lie" and b) "I hear there's 1,200 bunkers here", we must take the knee-jerk over-reaction to fill in the sand. So Johnny wants the "interesting" hazard replaced with something unplayable and boring?
Or is Johnny suggesting that the rough 40-50 yards off the fairway be mowed to a playable height so Johnson would have had a perfect lie on trampled down grass? That sounds like a much better idea than accepting you may actually draw a nasty lie in sand for spraying the ball.
I've seen plenty of courses with the areas between holes filled with unplayable long grass - do we really need one more?
Seriously, other than the fact that the bunkers weren't "born there," what is the basis for the architectural angst of "too many bunkers"?
- One one hand, people complain that "they never come into play." OK - so what's the problem? I'd rather look at a background of sand that blends in with the "theme" of sandy coastal dunesland. Why is it preferable to fill that area with non-bunkers? All that would do is make to 100 or so bunkers seem even more out-of-place with the rest of the property.
- On the other hand, people are complaining about the number of bunkers that come into play. So what's the beef here? Are the bunkers not perfect looking enough? Are they unplayable? Is there no way to avoid them? Please, someone explain what the issue is here.
OK - so Johnny only has 60 bunkers on his courses. And that's good because.......
? How many times have we heard here "you've got to play that new Johnny Miller course!!!" I'm really baffled by this notion of "it's overbunkered." I'd argue that more courses are "overgrassed" in comparison. Would we all feel better if every one of the excess bunkers were replaced by trees?