Got to watch this today, I was expecting to see very narrow fairways, and "tricked" up
From the TV perspective, fairways seem very ample to me, but these players are 100% not use to this. They are accustomed to courses being catered to them, where that 290-330 drive could miss a fairway and very little trouble. And, not practice anything but full swing drivers.
Listening to some commentators on Golf Channel and ESPN radio, they just dont play great courses like this anymore. One reason they all sneak away and play "great courses" during their Tour Schedule (Adam Scott playing Pine Valley on Tuesday). The only time they see great courses is on their own "dime/vacation". They play Doral, Arizona etc.. When they get (or ever get) to classic courses, they dont have 4 days of low scores.
Riviera I think is a good example. Scores are never "that low" by one player for 3-4 days, nor is the final score that low ever that would turn people's heads. Actually TPC sawgrass (not saying a great course) shows this as well. Someone showed stats here a few months ago, that scores have not gotten lower/better over the years, as you have to "think" and cant bomb it off the tee without massive trouble missing the fairway.
Today the 13th, was a TWO shot swing with Phil and Stricker. 115yard par 3. That one little hole, no water like TPC 17th, brought a 2 shot swing. Nothing tricked up about that hole at all. Amazing green, but miss it, and suffer....as you should.
I think that's the entire course as whole. Miss fairways, the best of the best players on earth only need to hit 250 yard tee shots, and they aren't use to that. It takes more then 3 practice rounds to remember how to hit a 2-3 iron after a year of hitting driver....I dont find that tricked up, nor too narrow, they are pro's and the best, they should be able to hit 2-3 irons in the fairways. They aren't use to it in my opinion. Miss greens (even from 115yards per above) and suffer.
I find at times people like "wide open" and say it uses strategy, recovery shots etc... but it doesn't penalize "the miss" as much as the rough can. And a missed/bad shot should in fact be penalized.
Brilliant!