[size=78%]Jay,[/size]
Thanks for posting this. I owed you a phone call from my trip to Pinehurst. It was a whirlwind of golf to say the least!
Ah, Mid Pines. This is the hole you asked about. Honestly...I played the hole and didn't even notice it? I hit it left-center and made a yawning par. The other 3 in my group made par, par, bogey. I'm a 3, one of my guys is a pro and shot 70, another guy was a 6, and my last player was a 15.
I didn't pace it, but at 22 paces (fairway), that borders on not-fun for 14 + handicaps. I see your argument and I believe Tom just made the correct point which is, "would you plant it again, in that exact place if a storm came through"? The answer is probably not. We all hit driver which is probably not everyone's play but anything less with a fairway that leans right most likely makes for a tedious par. I believe Ross defended par with great greens, not trees. This is one of the better ones (greens), but the tree in question at least has some options. Having only played Mid Pines once, I would like to camp out for half a day and watch the average person negotiate the hole before saying chop (and I'm an admitted tree hater), but with a narrow fairway that leans right (further shrinking the effective width) and a great green - I would say remove...and remove all but a couple of the cluster to the left.
Always a great debate..."well, I don't know that I would plant another one there...but it's been there a long time...we should probably keep it, wait until it dies and then not plant another".
"So are you saying it should go"?
"I believe only God/Nature/Allah/Termites should remove trees (jerk)".