Ben,
Agreed. On many occasions I have used a TOC style valley of sin type green. Often asked "What's up with that?"
I ask if the front right or left was guarded with a sand bunker, wouldn't it really be the same hole? Usual answer: "That's not a recovery shot I practice."
I have received phone calls or emails from local golfers saying such things like "When the pin is near the front of Green X, I can't hold it near." Yeah, so play short and bounce it up.
One of the funniest things is hearing Jack Nicklaus describe that he likes two tier greens on longer downwind par 4 holes, and he uses a little less spin to run the ball up the tier as the highest percentage shot. Once, in a presentation I mentioned that as the reasoning behind such a hole and still got an argument. I guess Jack Nicklaus suggesting even using a slightly different shot to max out chances of getting to the pin isn't an authoritative enough reason for some golfers not to standardize.
In general, yes, the trend has been to standardization of shots over time, due to standardized clubs, all meant to swing the same way. And, again, the bigger picture (same as in the target thread) does design accommodate the modern mindset or try to force players into an older way of thinking? I know what the prevailing mindset here is, but can also see that most golfers really don't like it, or being forced into it. So, is that a good thing or a bad thing? Or, just is what it is?
Or to bring it back to discussion of this hole, is it a good or bad thing on this hole? (Hate to critique others work, but it seems to be fair game.....)
You have a forced carry over water at 175-200 yards. I don't have measurements, but it seems a moderate size green for that length shot, and a third of the green seems non receptive, with an internal swale directing balls off left, and what appears to be a tier with pretty steep slopes above as well. I know from a thread here long ago that any ball coming off that top tier takes at least 14 feet to stop, and the area between the bottom of that tier and the collector swale isn't a lot more than that from the photos.
It's pretty difficult shot overall based on length and green severity alone, not to mention surrounding hazards. Should architecture create a challenge where just hitting the green is doable by the metrics of most golfers, and that alone allows a possible birdie putt beyond many if not most golfers? Or it is okay to force hitting to a target area within the green that gives the possible birdie or easier two putt?
Too difficult? Interesting or "unfair?" Obviously, room for all opinions over 15K US golf courses, even based on the same set of "facts" about the physical nature of the hole. (I realize I am discussing theory without having played the hole)
Well, that would vary from course to course, golfer to golfer and designer to designer. If, as portrayed here, a small percentage of balls end up off the green, then probably not. It seems from the Owners POV that it draws more golfers than it drives away, since by all accounts the resort is a success and building a third course. That is probably the ultimate architectural judgment. The Owner might track repeat rounds of play on the multiple courses over time to gauge how popular it is with customers.
Those are the kinds of questions most architects have asked and answered different ways. Long live the differences of opinion, no?