The firs to back-to-back par-3s, the mid-iron 13th offers little from the tee. A perfect foreshortening bunker sits 40 yards from the green, giving the appearance of a green that requires an aerial approach, but there is ample room to miss short of the green (and really, this is the
only place a golfer can miss. The green falls sharply from the back and is surrounded by three of the deepest bunkers on the course left, right and long.
Called plateau, but clearly resembling a redan, the 190 yard 14th requires a well-thought tee shot. The land falls from the right and the fall-off left of the green is far more dramatic than first appears from the tee. Especially on downwind days, golfers will be looking to play a runner from the right and will be entirely satisfied with any tee shots that ends through the green, leaving an uphill chip.
Continuing in the same direction, the 15th is a stout par-4 where once again the golfer wants to play to the land's high side. Bunkers protect the short line to the green, but a tremendous advantage is given to golfer's that can play near or over them as tee shots drawing left will likely run all the way to the left rough. Amplifying the advantage is a series of bunkers protecting the left side of an otherwise open green.