Rich:
Part of the appeal of The Old Course has always been that many holes offer a safe way to avoid the trouble, but usually at the cost of a stroke, unless you are very consistent getting up and down from thirty yards with your putter or a chip shot. The second hole was the clearest example of that philosophy on the whole course ... if you didn't want to deal with the moguls at the front of the green, you could play as safely wide of them as you wished.
Two gentlemen have decided to change that philosophy and "tighten up the hole for better players." That is my principal objection to ALL of the works carried out and still proposed ... that modern design philosophies should not be imposed on this, the most ancient of courses. We can go hole-by-hole about it if you want, but it's going to be the same argument nearly all the way around, so why bother?
There are millions of potential ideas for improving any course, but the older and better the course, the less likely those ideas are to succeed and not to clash with the original design. The idea that nothing in golf is sacred and that everything is subject to change by the powers that be, is what scares me. I enjoy trying to build new courses that compete with the best of the past, and I would never begrudge any architect the same opportunity; but when working with older courses I do my best to preserve their design, not to insert my own biases.