Brett
Given the forced carry to 7 green, I can see guys going long left when the course is keen. I am not dead set against mounding, but I think a better job could have been done.
Ciao
Although I also liked it for aesthetic reasons, a big part of the reason why I liked the simplicity of the 7th green was because of the difficulty of the approach. Shorter hitters will have to run something into the green because it's difficult to carry it up that hill and hold it on the green. It was also very easy to miss a little left because of the (formerly) lost ball hazard on the right. So, danger to those on the eighth tee aside, I thought that leaving the left side open made sense because the approach is difficult and there was a lot of reason to hedge left.
But also, if you hedged left and were strong with the approach, your ball could run out pretty far because there was nothing stopping it. If you missed a little left, the pitch was tricky, but not too hard. I just thought that it was a perfect setup because it gave everyone (who could carry the fairway bunker) a shot at the green and left you room to miss, but also gave you rope to hang yourself if you played safe and were too aggressive.
The mounds with their heather increase the penalty for playing for the green and being a bit inaccurate. So now on the long approach--which is most people because of the forced layup off the tee--the only miss is short. I haven't played the new version and maybe it's alright, but I though that the version that I played made a lot of sense and I loved it. It was probably my third favorite hole after 9 and 12. It was also the moment where the course really came alive for me and after some reservations on the first few holes, I knew that I was playing a great course.