I'm down some in recent years, but I still get 25-40 loops in at WF per season, and I get to see both courses in all types of season and all types of competition from top amateur, to premier member tourneys, to member-guests and hacker outings.
1. One thing that's "in spades" at #18W, which is fitting as a conclusion of the West's entire character, is its "boldness." The "audaciousness" of the golf tasks and shot vistas, the contours, the strategic carries, is/are really maximized for an inland course. While it doesn't quite have the "enormity" found in so many CBM-SR-CB Template holes/courses, the massive, erupting shoulders and greenside swells make each task, each green target something monumental in the mind's eye, just like many of those holes/courses.
2. I think this is one of a handful of reasons for why so many deem it "fair" though extraordinarily tough on a medal score... On just about every hole, the demand looks so "mighty" that I think many golfers contemplate that they might not execute it, and realize the frank problems with not doing so...the vexing greens, cavernous bunkers... cunning, bold, fast greens...somehow a golfer expects problems if they don't pull off quality shots on WFW...and so are not as annoyed or dismayed at their outcomes. And of course, most golf at WF is at match play, and there is the hope/amusement that your opponent has to overcome similar failings. I can't think of a course more exacting in the dynamics of match play than both WF courses...having a ball safely in play or on a green is damn calming to oneself and damn troubling to an opponent who hasn't yet played; and this is felt most acutely when the tasks are as frankly "mighty" as they are there.
3. Pat is justly descriptive to include the fairway ridge (at the narrowing corner of fairway 165 to 135 out from the green) as a nuanced feature of this hole, as it really affects the flight properties of that (again) monumental approach, as well as the precise lie from which its played. Not only can it tilt you for slices and hook actions, but the ironic conundrum in greatest part is that the closer you get the more the lie is uphill. And thus paired with a shorter club for a shorter distance, the precise ratio of impact that the lie will have for a shot that is all carry is confounding...(I'm 152 to the pin, normally a 7-iron...but the lie may balloon my flight....do I go up to 6-iron, which, if I cream it, will sail to the back, which is better than the front, but no bargain...let me step on the 7...ugh)
4. An idea of green contour up close and personal...look at photo 2 of JCs below (widest angle from behind green)...See the outline of the tree shadow that encompasses the pin?...If you were unlucky enough to come to rest back there, the putt would break increasingly hard, right to left, almost on the outer margins of the tree shadow...complicating it more is that this putt must be judged down a severe speed ramp and then emerge from the lowest point, with enough delicate up-ramp brakeage, so as to take the full measure of borrow and settle by the cup (GREEN LINE), but not so much as to skate right on by...and back down the fairway (RED LINE)...and not so little as to wilt away to the left, where it can lose itself in the central depression in the surface OR lost outside too soft and leave a treacherous downhill 12 footer...
Green = perfect 50 footer, down, around and up
Red = perfect line, too much speed, right on past, and likely off the green, 40 yards back down the enormous slope
Yellow = too soft on proper line, gets gobbled up to the left, too soft on a pushed line leaves treacherous 12-14 feet stuck up on the rim of the green slope
There's more, but that's enough for now.
cheers
vk