As mentioned above, I spent the week inside the ropes...a few thoughts:
1. On balance the players seemed to like the course - most of them nominated a couple of greens or features which they thought were excessive or unfair, but were happy overall. Building greens like he did required Mike to take a lot of risks, and IMHO he got it right with almost all of them.
2. Kikuyu is a terrific fairway grass because it makes the course play longer, but it is a disaster around the greens. It removes the option of a bump-and-run or putt, because the kikuyu is too flukey. My player used a 52/56/60 wedge for all but one of his short shots (on Saturday he chose to putt from behind the 15th green to the back right hole, and barely made it on to the green - blame his caddy for the bad decision!), which is unusual for someone who grew up on the sandbelt and is very adept at a variety of chips and pitches.
Kevin, while the rough on the banks of the 13th green was inexplicable, it made no difference to the playability of the hole. It wasn't long enough to hold onto a ball which run off the green (as we found out on Friday!) and no player would attempt to run the ball up the banks if they were shaved.
It would be a significantly better golf course if they could somehow have couch around the greens...the design around the greens is terrific but the golf is one-dimensional.
3. What on earth were they thinking with that bizarre strip of rough on the rhs of the front of the 3rd green?
4. The greens weren't quick but would be unplayable if presented at normal Australian Open speed. They were noticeably quicker and bouncier on Sunday. The course will be a very different proposition next year if it doesn't take a bath leading up to the tournament.
5. 11 and 17 gave us fits on all four days, trying to decide upon the appropriate strategy for the second shot. Even if you don't go for the green, selecting the best place to lay up is difficult...and the pitches aren't easy. Terrific par-fives for a tournament. Obviously with 14 being very short (approaches hit with 4, 7, 8 and 5-irons) going for the green wasn't ever in question, but deciding where on the green to hit it was challenging. With a 5 being a shot lost to the field, there was real pressure to leave an easy two-putt.