I do want to compartmentalize it. It makes no sense to judge links golf on a standard of "softness" more applicable to a "mudder" track in central Florida.
Given the difference in scoring on Sunday, "it would be foolish to suggest" that the soft conditions weren't "by far the main reason why the winning scores were so low."
Yet, you wrote: "The major reason scoring at Castle Stuart was low was because of the design and how it was set up, simple as that."
So then how does your theory explain the far higher scoring on Sunday? With just a bit of wind on Sunday, and slightly drier (but still not "brick hard") conditions, then . . . what happened? Did the designers sneak out and redesign the course in the middle of Saturday night? I don't think so. If anything, the tourney officials seem to have set up the course to play a bit easier on Sunday, yet the scoring was much higher. And the angles seemed very much to matter, and the shots became more interesting, and the course was hardly a pushover.
Don't get me wrong . . . there are aspects of the design which are obviously conducive to low scoring: the "par" of 72, the relatively short total yardage, the four potentially reachable par fives, two very reachable par 4's; and a few others which could be reachable or close depending upon the conditions. Obviously the course wasn't designed for a sluggish US Open type tournament featuring long irons to impossibly narrow fairways, but I say thank goodness for that.
You've been trying to sell this notion that the course is a complete pushover where the angles and choices off the tee never matter, buy my own eyes (albeit watching on television) suggest that your interpretation is flawed. Even on television, I see compelling and exciting golf where the angles matter very much. And even on television (which tends to underplay such things) I see interesting movement on and around greens, apparently placing a premium on angles and choices going back to the tee. And rather than curtailing interesting approaches, I see the width as very much enhancing the course.
For just one example, did you see Oosthuizen on the 14th on Friday? From the tee he drove it no more than ten or fifteen paces short and right of the green but still in the very wide fairway. He left himself a very short approach from the fairway, but it would have taken a brilliant shot to get it close from there. For his second he tried to run up a chip, but the ball didn't quite make it to the green, and it rolled back well past where he was, leaving a longer but similar shot. For his third he did the same thing. For his fourth shot he was still further away than he was for his second shot, so he switched approach and tried a putter. His ball rolled over the green into a small swale back and left. Fifth shot, putter, up onto a green but stopping probably 10 feet from the hole. Sixth shot he made the putt for a double bogey.
He had blasted away from the tee with a driver, and while he found fairway he didn't find the correct angle, and it took him five shots to get down from there. And this was on Friday, when it was plenty soft. And I could be wrong, but to me the 14th looks like one of the least interesting holes out there.
I hope they keep the tournament there long enough for them to get some breezy weather in a year not so inordinately wet and calm. The course makes for terrific viewing, and I cannot wait to see how it plays under more normal conditions, even if only on television.