Tim,
I probably shouldn't do this, but I will offer my thoughts on DR White as it seems to be the time to air opinions that were left unsaid.
-In my mind, the Nicklaus course is routed poorly. It negates the walking golfer. Hikes are made to prominent points in order to get a view. If you're going to site a course far away from infrastructure in a bid to get to the best land, why not create a walkable golf course?
-It's true that very little dirt was moved at DR White. This is a negative in a few places. Sometimes getting it right involves doing something with the land. It's through the severest part of the property and without earthmoving, it becomes a severe course unnecessarily.
-Having a "bowl" in a green is fun. But how many times can you revisit that idea in one round?
-Revisiting severity, several holes are severe enough to warrant questions of remaking them. 5, 6, 10, 13 come to mind. I don't buy into the idea that there is something special and unique about these holes. Instead, I think they offer very little in the way of variety and playability.
-A few tee shots (2, 9 and 11 come to mind) are arbitrary shots of chance. This isn't to say I hate blindness. The counter-intuitive flow of some fairways causes results that aren't consistent with the shape or camber of a hole.
I will say that there are some shots at White that are quite good (approach to 2, tee shot on 8, tee shot on 15, approach on 16), but it's not enough to negate what I think is an unrealized opportunity on great sand hills land. I also want to emphasize that there are many people that think Dismal White is the bees knees. They paid a lot of money to join a club that takes a lot of effort to play. And my analysis is just an opinion of course architecture and certainly not a foreword for the amount of joy that should or should not be provided by the golf course. Like I said earlier, I'll likely regret being honest and get flamed here shortly.
As for DR Red, sometimes I gravitate to analyzing golf courses that I think are very good by examining its weakest 2-3 holes. For me, 16 is probably the weakest hole at DR Red. It's in a beautiful setting with a green that's a little odd. Sort of a three-leafed clover on flattish ground right by the creek. I think a better par three could've been made by using the sloped terrain about 80 yds on a 190 heading from the current 16 green. That would've provided a conundrum for 17, which I love. So all in all it works. The second weakest hole on Red to me is probably 12. But the green site has changed from what I saw originally, so I can't comment with any validity.
I think it's a genius routing. It's been explained elsewhere why I think this way. I do wish that Tom would've thrown caution to the wind and built that 19th hole. The finish at 18 will prove to be epic I think. But he's left us panting before on 13 green at Pacific Dunes. You've still got 5 holes to play there!
--EDITED for syntax and subject-verb agreement, not content--