Mike Whitaker calls it "The question mark hole", in the Confidential Guide Ran (I believe) refers to it as "a buttonhook par five", my own reaction was that from above it resembles a boomerang.
Whatever you call it, there's no question that this was a template hole that Mike Strantz repeated from place to place, and the method in which it was applied also seems very deliberate:
- At Bulls Bay (2nd hole) and True Blue (5th), it's on the edge of the property and at Tobacco Road (11th) it's essentially on the edge as it flanks the driving range (albeit in the middle of the property)
- The ratio of card distance to tee-green direct line is in all cases between 1.49 and 1.68 (531/356 at Tobacco Rd, 548/359 at True Blue and 601/379 at Bulls Bay)
- In all cases the green is angled perpendicular to a direct line from the tee
- In all cases a thick grove of trees prevents play down the wrong side of the hazard around which the hole bends
- In all cases the green is obscured by trees from the tee
I'm not sure if this was the direct inspiration, but a lot of its features echo the 6th hole at Arnie's Bay Hill in Orlando.
My experience of the hole was mixed. I loved the 11th at Tobacco Road, was pretty unimpressed by the 4th at True Blue (hence the lack of pics below which are all I took) and unfortunately had 10mins of driving rain arrive as I played the 2nd at Bulls Bay, though I liked the trees inside the dogleg off the tee as a go-for-broke option to try to get home in two.
The green on the 4th at True Blue felt a bit sandwiched between the lake and the road, leaving nowehere very good to miss around the green, which the Tobacco Road and Bulls Bay holes offered more interesting misses and recovery options.
Tobacco Rd has easily the most dramatic putting surface of the three, which fits into the land it is built on and also the fact that it's the only one without water guarding the layup and green.
I also liked that the Tobacco Road and Bulls Bay versions offer a wide bail-out area on the drive and lay-up that allows you to play away from the hazard but sacrifice distance and angle in the process. The True Blue version felt like a bit of a tightrope walk the whole way.
An aerial and some pictures of each hole:
TOBACCO ROADBULLS BAYTRUE BLUE