Vander Borght, #6 Seed, Pacific Dunes, Hole #17, 208 yards
From Time Bert - The 4th and final par 3 on the back nine rounds out one of the finest sets of par 3s I've played. The summer wind is usually coming against you from the left side. It has played as both primarily a cross wind and a head wind on different days. I've played just about everything from a 3-wood to a 7-iron on this hole, depending upon wind and where they've got the green tee on any given day. The surrounding area from the tee is something to behold. Much of the natural beauty comes from the gorse-filled dune behind the green that drifts into more of a natural looking sand dune further left in the distance. (Side note: Is that dune being used as part of OMD and if so, will it retain its natural appeal or is it being shaped into something else?)
A ball struck to the right of the green really wants to feed onto the green, though depending upon the strength of the wind this can be hard to properly accomplish. Ideally for all but the most extreme left pin positions I think one would want to aim at the right-center or right portion of the green, allow the summer wind to take it slightly more to the right, and then have the bank run the ball back to the putting surface. The bunkers guarding the front of the green can be difficult, and in the strongest winds many of the gorse patches short, right, or long can come into play. We've lost more than one ball off to the right side where there are some mowed down strips between rows of gorse.
The 5th, 10th, 11th, and 14th all have a lot of appeal to me, so it is hard to rank this hole individually ahead of any of the par 3s that have preceeded it, yet it is also difficult for me to believe this is the worst par 3 on the course. I'll simply refrain from ranking them, but I'm interested to hear others thoughts on the order of preference.