Hole 10: Par 3, 186 YardsKind of a straight forward par-3, but the peak in bunker short of the green creates a very cool visual, making the green look like it is a wave.
Hole 11: Par 5, 548 YardsThis is a GREAT par-5. Lots of choices on the tee shot. The centreline bunker is perfectly placed, about 240 yards to reach and about 280 to get over -- you have to make a decision to lay-up or challenge it. If you lay-up, the second shot is completely blind. Challenge it successfully and you find a downslope, leaving you with about 230 into the green. Playing up the left leaves the better angle, but the longer approach.
Now this is where the hole gets great. If you want to lay back to 125 yards, there is tons of width. But, if you want to get near the green in two, you better pick your line carefully. The bunker well short of the green catches shots that bail out and leaves an almost impossible recovery. Even shots that miss just left of the green leave a really tough shot.
After a perfect lay-up, you look straight up the throat of the green. Open in front, but note the crowned nature of the green.
The chipping area left of the green seems like a good place to miss, but it is really tough to get up and down.
Hole 12: Par 4, 481 YardsThis is another very strong hole. There is tons of room to bail right, but the ideal line challenges the water/bunkers on the left.
The view after a tee shot up the right. From here you must carry the false-front and back-right pins are not accessible.
The view from a drive up the left... look up the throat of the green.
This pictures give some idea of the wild contouring on the 12th green. Really bold.
From right of the green shows what The Faz was saying -- missing right to a back pin is an easy chip. What he doesn't say is missing right to a front pin is just dead.