Kevin 2 questions:
1. With the topic being Tour Players, the average player thinking long par 3's are boring maybe, however their tee box is probably 20-40 yards ahead of the back tees or more so play the appropriate tee box perhaps?
2. Also having played Plainfield CC, which is my favorite Ross course behind Pinehurst No. 2, how do you play hole 11 low with the false front and green sloping front to back? Or maybe you were using that as a Segway into your point about options on short holes?
Having caddied for five years, I often use my dad as the barometer for what a "long hole" is when compared to a "short hole." I went down to Streamsong with him and had the pleasure of playing all three courses, the blue being his favorite because it was more scenic and more enjoyable to play when compared to the Black course in particular. If I remember correctly, it is the 16th hole that plays over 200 yards from the silver tees (under 6300 yard total) that he played from. He was playing the right tees, and loved the hole because the ball could be run up to, and played to be effectively a reverse redan. He managed to make par while I struggled with a double bogey. The disparity in score showed that there are numerous ways to play the hole, and my strategy was poorly executed resulting in a poor score, while my dad's did not.
Compare that to our home course, Montclair. The third hole on the third nine is really an atrocious hole. Straight uphill, nowhere to miss, and an extremely severe green that serves to penalize the lesser player more than the better player. From the member tee which my father plays from, the course plays between 6200 and 6300 yards, which is where he should be playing from, and the hole is question plays about 190 yards. It's simply far too difficult from that distance, and proves to be a challenge to people who play from the ladies tees at a mere 140 yards. It's just a bad hole, and due to its length it only compounds its flaws.
Based on this, I'm not arguing that there shouldn't be long holes, but rather that, like the third at Montclair, they are often one dimensional, incredibly difficult, and leave a bad taste in your mouth when leaving. But, when longer par threes with interest, like the 16th at Streamsong Blue, they should be implemented because they have the architectural intrigue that holds the attention of even the passive golfers like my father.
In regards to your second question, to be fair, the last time I played Plainfield must have been five years ago. I remember hitting a shot fat and getting stuck under the lip of the front bunker, but still having a blast. What I meant by going in high or low is if, say the pin is back, should you try to challenge the false front and let the green take the ball to the back, or fly it to the hole and hope it holds? Additionally, I remember the green overall falls from the ridge right of the green, but I could be completely wrong. If it's the case, that's just another dimension to the hole that is asking the player to play it off the ridge or go at the pin. At Rock Spring, where I used to play, the sixth hole was a 130 yard par 3 "Short" template. It was loads of fun to play, and it had so many different ways to approach the hole. Rather than hitting a stock gap wedge, I would play my "Rock Spring flip" with a pitching wedge instead, one hop to the hole and stop it. Plainfield just happened to be the first example that came to mind when comparing short par 3s to long par 3s.