I haven't read the whole thread, so apologies if this is repetitive.
If that is the case, the second shot at Pine Valley #15 deserves another plaudit. Because of that second shot, I think #15 is the single best par 5 ever built (#14 at Pebble is a close second because of the third shot).
The second shot at Pine Valley #15 is so wonderful because, for all mere mortals than aren't going for that green in two, it must be aimed at the left woods - anything hit towards the center of the fairway will roll into the trees on the right. Even a properly aimed shot that is cut just a wee too much will come to rest in the right woods.
Even if the tee shot is up the left side with a straight line towards the far-distant green, the second must hug the left tree line in order to come to rest in the fairway short of the green. It is psychologically demanding (especially if your usual "miss" from a fairway lie is a hook) and, if you tend to slice, you must really take dead aim at the pine trees.
Actually, the "easiest" play is for the medium handicapper who is willing to trust his slice (how many can do that?).
We have had previous threads on great par 5's and #15 at Pine Valley is always my vote. As often as I have played it, it is so hard to trust your aim as being correct and swing aggressively with confidence that the left woods are far enough away that your shot will land short of the tree line and bounce into the fairway (unless you hook at all or cut/fade/slice too much.
I noted something about ANGC in another post. Perhaps this is repetitive, but here goes.
For the Masters participants and very long hitting amateurs that get to play there, 13 and 15 are marvelous second shots for all the reasons we know. However, for the average club player, including the members, the second shot is a lay-up. Driver, 6-8 iron, wedge - not so thrilling, is it?
As an aside, the par 5 fourth hole at Merion during the U.S. Open was "better" from the "normal championship tee box" because going for the green in two was much more do-able by almost all the players. The new tee box that lengthened the hole by 30 yards resulted in many lay-up second shots short of the creek by all but the longest hitters after near-perfect drives. In fact, Mike Davis put the tee markers on the "members' championship tee box" on two of the four days.
While the second shot on #14 at Pebble is also a lay-up for the best players, the third must be so precise to that green - even more than on the back nine at ANGC, that I forgive that part of the hole. Besides, for the average player, the second on #14 is not a lay-up AND the placement of the second shot requires precision - pretty much the opposite of #'s 13 and 15 at ANGC for thee and me.