There is just so much to talk about on the 9th hole, which many have touched upon:
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Routing - Like Jonathan, Jim & Carl said, I love the fact that this hole allows you to recap the entire front nine with a view of every hole at some point along the ninth. As I mentioned earlier, the land on the front has a near mystical quality for me, and I still get goosebumps every time I cross Pitzer Road. It's neat that the longer trip to the first tee gives you a great preview and closes with the vistas along #9.
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Drive - I am in the same boat as Jason, as this is one of the more uncomfortable tee shots for me. Depending on the tees and wind conditions, I can hit anything from from full driver to needing to throttle back on a hybrid. The good news is that the left area is more vast than you think and can contain even very big pulls or snap hooks. The bad news is that you can draw a very bad lie on the hillside which could make it difficult to even carry the first FW bunker and attached rough (i.e. get within 200 yards or so). As for the right side, I've found and played numerous recoveries from the cliff-side over the years, usually amusing Andy Hughes in the process. But you're better off missing by a lot than a little, as I've played second shots from the 8th tee several times.
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2nd Shot - The toughest aspect for me is that most lies in the fairway seems to be either slightly downhill or below my feet, unless you can flirt with the cliff and end up on the right side of the fairway. This makes for a very uncomfortable 2nd shot for me, as it is blind, and the lie almost requires you to hit a fade (and usually off a very tight lie, as well). Combine that with a normal head wind or cross wind and the pronounced left to right slope of the landing area, and this is one shot on the course I wish Lester would reconsider. The fairway is 35 yards in the 200-100 yard range, but the lies on the left are very random & severe and the right is a severe fall-off.
Even if you lay up just short of the FW bunker, you still need to to hit a shot ~ 200 yards to get to the very wide areas (again, off a tight uneven lie and into the wind). For a shorter hitter, this is a very difficult 2nd (and for a longer hitter as well). If the left hillside were a little more predictable and routinely could be used as a kickboard, I'd think this was a fairer shot. However, I have seen balls stop dead on the hill while others have kicked back to the fairway as expected. Perhaps this left side is an area that will change over the years as the erosion control rough is softened.
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Approach - I haven't been as intimidated by this approach as others. Perhaps it's because I hit more stray shots than Tommy (no doubt about that), but I've discovered just how much forgiveness there is on the left side of this green. I've hit shots that landed even left of the greenside bunker that have found their way back to the putting surface (this hillside has generally been more predictable). Also, if the pin is on the lower right, you really don't have to fire anywhere near it (and flirt with the more severe right greenside bunker). There is a left-to-right slope on the left middle of the green that can be used to bring balls back to the lower right. Also, as far as greenside bunkers go, the front left bunker has enough slope that balls tend to collect in the middle, leaving a relatively straightforward explosion.
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Green - This is one of my favorite features of this hole, as I love using the slopes and contours as backstops and playing unusual recoveries. Any time there is a lower pin, I inevitably ignore the distance to the hole. I am always looking to play a running shot that will go up the slope and then come back to the hole. I'm amazed how many times I see people who are 20-30 yards short of the green trying to hit a gap wedge or lob wedge that will land just on the front of the green and roll up to the hole (from an uphill lie). So many times the ball pops up more than expected or is heavy, lands short and rolls all the way back to them. I much prefer the margin of error of a bump and run (or putter), with my only goal to ensure the ball gets past the hole. If it goes 10 feet past the hole, it usually comes back 10 feet from the back slope. If it goes 20 feet past the hole, it usually comes back 21 or 22 feet.
Carl mentioned that putts from the upper to lower level can roll 25 yards down the fairway, but that's only if you simply consider the traditional "die it at the crest" direct route to the pin. The best way to get a putt close from the upper-to-lower level is to aim at the left middle of the green and use the counter-slope there.
From the upper tier, the traditional "die at the crest" approach (Red Line) will often run off the green as there is not very much counter-slope on the front of the lower tier. But if you can die a ball anywhere left middle (Yellow Line), it will trickle down to the lower level with less velocity somewhere in the middle of the tier, which will leave you a reasonable chance for a two putt.
The Blue Line shows my preferred method of approach for shorter shots into the green.