Phil, I certainly see your point and I'm sure it was the prudent play given the conditions yesterday. The point I was trying to make is that it wasn't just yesterday. Ever since they lengthened the hole and added the trees making that tee shot even harder, this hole is very boring to watch as a spectator.
Tom mentioned Raymond Floyd's heartbreak on that hole. Given the holes current state, it would never happen these days because everyone bails out to the right on the hole. He hit a bad shot and paid the price. At least he was in a position where he could play to the green. I'm a Masters fan and love the saying that the Masters begins on the back nine on Sunday. I love the excitement and the players that make the great shots we'll remember for the rest of our lives. I just don't think the 11th hole provides that opportunity these days.
Pat, I'm not an expert on the hole to speak about it from an architectural standpoint and whether the hole is better today than 20 years ago. I'm sure Hogan's comments about playing out to the right served him and some others very well over the years. I believe it was also Hogan that said he would never play to the green on Winged Foot's par three 10th hole. He'd prefer to lay up in front, chip on and make his one putt par. A strategy that worked well for him. However, I don't recall too many players doing the same thing when the PGA and US Open were played there in recent years. It's just a different game now with the technology and how these pros can hit the ball a long way and control it so well. The 11th at Augusta is a very hard hole and nothing wrong with that, but I'm just not a fan watching a majority of the field taking three shots to put the ball on the green.