I think a lot of people want us to do more with this shot than they ought to want.
The second shot for a long hitter on any par-5 now is aiming at the green. So you've got to design the green to accept a very long approach. This is appropriate, since a lot of regular golfers will have a long third shot [or fourth shot] to get home.
It's the idea that everyone else needs some interesting hazard to negotiate on the second shot, that gets me. If we put a bunker 100 or 150 yards from the green, most of the people who go in it are going to make six or seven, because the good players will be well past all that. So why do you need much of anything there? Just hitting two solid shots up the fairway, and avoiding losing distance in the rough, is the primary objective for most.
If anything, I would put bunkers +/- 50 yards short of the green, to catch the player who thinks he is trying to go for the green in two, but really can't. Even pros would be wary of bunkers in that position, if they weren't 100% sure of getting past them.
Interesting take, and in many ways I agree. I mean, if we have 14 repetitive tee shots where the basic goal is to hit is as far as you can, why would the second shot on 2-4 par 5 holes be the first thing a gca fixed? To TD's point, probably the hardest club to hit is FW wood "off the deck" and for most average players, maybe that alone is the challenge of the second shot on a par 5, providing the middle and forward tees on a course allow reaching most if not all par 4 holes with something less than a full 3W.
No doubt the second shot on a par 5, for most, is inherently the weakest strategic shot. Tee shots set up the approach, and the approach shot is key on any par 4, setting up a strategic relationship in an efficient minimum of 2 shots. It's hard to set up a shot to set up an approach shot, but not always impossible. It's just that a lot of golfers don't like it, and of course, its one more chance for a golf hole to go haywire, sometimes taking an entire round with it.
Over the years, I have had several ideas.
I tend to think the centerline bunker, with a wide green, may work better on second shots of par 5 holes than on a tee shot. It gives the 4 way option on the second hole, depending on it's distance from the green and hole length.
Perhaps more rolling ground contours from the front of the green back to 140-160, where it is flat isn't a bad strategy.
The Pete Dye (and others) of having the tee shot draw/fade setup and the second shot set up for a fade/draw seems like a nice well rounded test for a par 5. Add a green that is shallow (at least for the Sunday pin) and there are 3 distinct shot tests.
Larry Packard always put a double dogleg, or zig zag par 5 on each design, as well as one double dog leg in the same direction, maybe even one each in opposite directions. Again, while the second shot might not be anything special, the par 5 is the only type of hole you can execute that kind of hole pattern. Maybe the fourth par 5 would have been perfectly straight.
I always liked the 6th at Muirfield Village (it may be changed now) where the par 5 was gently uphill, and Jack staggered bunkers all the way from LZ 1 to green. Looks great on the right land, and instead of saying "let's not punish average golfers" it gives each distance level something to zig zag towards the green, not unlike the Mac Prize winning hole.
I also like a reverse slope green, a la Ross on 14 at Oakland Hills for a reachable par 5. It makes landing over any cross bunkers 50 yards from the green as TD postulates, a bit trickier, and hopefully, still playable by others approaching on the third shot with a short iron.
Perhaps one with trees or bunkers on both sides for accuracy, one "locked up" either right or left, etc. How about an open second LZ, paired with a very rolling green?
I always try to group those 3-4 second shots and try to make sure each has some distinct characteristic. While again, maybe not the most special shot, at least it is a unique challenge.Also, I recall working with PGA Tour player Notah Begay III at Firekeeper. The 11th is a par 5 of 540 yards, so I used an "Eleanor's Teeth" type green. He reminded me that at a 286 driving length, and no more than 255 second shot, that 540 yards was at the long end of reachable for him. Larry Nelson had about the same statistics in his heyday, and directed me to make those length holes with a narrow ramp into the green. He figured Norman would be flying a 2 iron in, and all he asked for was a chance to get on that green with his accuracy, so many of my par 5 holes feature what I call the "catwalk" approach to the green.The average drive on the PGA Tour is still "only" 295, perhaps making 560 yard holes unreachable for at least the bottom half of the players on Tour, and they are still the "best of the best" with only 1% of amateurs anywhere close to their distance. Short version, I believe designing anything other than an annual TPC or Tournament course for the two dozen 320+ drivers is ridiculous, and disregarding how the other 99% play is not a great design.