In my opinion, the defense of par has very little, if anything at all to do with golf course design.
I sympathize with Ron Fream's concerns about the abilities of the modern ball, and the threat of further advancements in play equipment technology and the potential effect an even longer ball will have on golf and golf courses.
But Fream's obsession with the "defense of par" only serves to exemply an attitude cultivated by Robert Trent Jones more than a half century ago; an attitude that has been detriemtnal to the art of golf course design and its advancement.
My personal concern is designing and building holes that are INTERESTING to play for golfers of varying abilities. History has proven that attempting to "defend par" is a futile endeavour.
Fifty years ago, Trent Jones renovated Oakland Hills South in an attempt to "defend par". Ben Hogan improved his scores with each round during the 1951 US Open, and managed a 67 in the final round to win. Nice try.
These days, the USGA tightens the fairways, grows the rough, saturates the approaches to rock-hard greens and Tiger still shoots 18-under, or whatever it was at Pebble Beach.
The pros are going to shoot low. Thus, defending par is a futile attempt. Making golf holes infinitely interesting to play -- for pros and all others -- takes the talent of a Mackenzie, a Ross, a Tilinghast or a Colt.
Cypress Point isn't necessarily difficult, particularly for a world-class pro, but it's infinitely interesting to play. Same goes for Seminole, San Francisco and Swinley Forest.
Good players posting good scores is to demeaning. It's going to happen.
We need more INTERESTING golf courses, not more difficult ones. There's a difference.