This hole kicks arse, to begin with, as it heads back toward the Niagara escarpment in the distance. Parallel to this hole, albeit a mile to the right, is the Niagara gorge as it descends from the Falls, through the whirlpool, on to Lake Ontario. The meeting of the waters was a hugely strategic space during the first years of this country, as it connected the region with the St. Lawrence seaway. In the fall, when the leaves are ablaze, the view up the escarpment is haunting.
And the golf hole...Mark hit it on the head. This is the kinder, gentler RTJ2, the one who had an epiphany around the time of Chambers Bay and now seems to "get it" as we on this forum like to say. I feel like he is Luke, redeeming his father's villainy. But I digress...
The hole lulls you toward a bogey or worse. There is a fall off to the back and the false-front sand has a way of attracting you. Notice the space between the front pit and the green; just clearing it won't guarantee a putt. This is one of those holes where hitting the green is key. As a wise man once said, every hole location is accessible from the center of the green. The 9th is a tremendous par five that serpentines this way and that to a deep double green, shared with the 18th.