With an elevated tee, a really wide fairway on a straight hole becomes effectively quite a bit smaller. I think that 99.9% of golfers that have played the hole are hoping to hit the fairway somewhere. Garland can play it from edge to edge with his huge slice which is why he liked it. I hope Brian Colbert sees this and chimes in how he played it in the Us Am.
I have played it more than most here and played it with high cappers and top level am's. If you think non pros are truly aiming to a certain side of this fairway I think you are mistaken. They may hit it there based on a preferred ball flight but they are not aiming that precisely...
Sean,
That's really surprising, but you have the experience so I'll defer to you. I only visited CB once, back in the summer of '08. It just seems hard to believe that with a fairway that massive, 99.9% players were just "hoping" to hit fairway.
I'm hardly a better player, and not particularly accurate, but I chose to play well left off the tee. Maybe it is because I was already a GCA nerd (if only a lurker) by then and I knew that with a lion's mouth green, the play is to come in from the same side as the hole location. I thought the hole worked when presented that way. I guess I'm a member of the .1%
Look, what has been done hasn't necessarily turned the hole into an abomination or a poor hole. In my opinion, they messed with a simple strategic approach that worked and altered it under the guise of increased difficulty (assumption). They went from less is more, to more is more.
Matthew Essig,
I understand what you are saying about the choke point, but I think it may come into play more often than you suggest. In those firm conditions, with an elevated tee, a 265 shot (from the middle tees) wouldn't seem that outlandish for many players. Prior to the neck in the fairway, there still seems to be plenty of width, but that would require laying up for many, not necessarily a majority, but still a considerable number. Laying up isn't inherently bad, but I don't think it was really a consideration in the hole's original iteration.
Regarding your point suggesting we embrace the change and move on - I certainly agree to an extent, but if we didn't complain about and nitpick changes we aren't thrilled with...well, what else would we do here
?