I was there on Sunday. I'd only seen Congressional on TV but the new version looks absolutely nothing like I remember. And it looks great. It's a very good piece of land for a golf course; hilly, but never too hilly such that it's difficult to build a good hole. There are awkward spots on a few holes (blind layup on 6; no good place to lay up on 9), but most of the holes looked pretty good to me.
I disagree with Ben's brother about the 15th hole--I thought that the obligatory blind approach added variety to the course. There's plenty of room to land the ball short and run it onto the green. It's just that the course had become quite firm by Sunday and some of the ladies I saw didn't land it far enough short of the green given their low trajectories. The exception was Lexi; I was standing on the left side of the fairway halfway to the green and when she hit her shot, I could tell that the trajectory was high enough that even though it was going to carry closer to the green than her playing partners, it'd probably have enough bite on it to hold. It did.
So it's a hole where you really need to understand that if you don't put a lot of spin on the ball, you may have to land it well short of the green. But there's plenty of room to do that and I thought that it was one of the best holes out there.
Here's a photo from the left side of the green:
Overall, Congressional looked to me a lot like some of the new courses and renovations of recent years, but especially demanding. It's heavy on fairway bunkers, usually on both sides but almost always staggered. There are also a lot of bunkers around the greens.
But some of the most challenging shots around the greens are from the short grass hollows that surround them. There aren't as many as on some of the newer courses but they're especially difficult because (1) the shaping around the greens tends to be abrupt and you have to come up some pretty steep slopes and (2) these were the tightest fairways that I've ever seen, so you have less room for error. I wasn't surprised to see Lexi do what she did from where she was on 16. She and Hye-Jin also left their second shots in nasty spots short-right of the tenth green.
The hardest one of all is over the back of the 7th green. Lexi also hit it there and I thought did well to get her next shot about 15 feet from the hole. The shaping at the back of the 7th green bothered me because while it's a par 3 in the 140-160 range, it's uphill and the green is very shallow. Lexi hit what I thought was a good shot that landed near the front of the green, but it still kicked through the green. Regular golfers would have a hell of a time with that hole.
The approach to 10. Lexi and Hye-Jin were short and right of the greenside bunker. Not the best place for a front-right pin:
The back of the 7th green. Like a lot of the chipping area on new courses/restorations, this one would be better if it were half as deep:
My takeaway is that the course looks great and is very interesting, but it's very hard. There are a lot of places where you just can't miss it around these greens, but you should be able to avoid most of these if you're careful. And the course is designed to host major championships, so it should be difficult.
I thought that the shaping around the greens and bunkers was a bit abrupt and I would have preferred it to be a bit more rounded to match the broad, rolling style of the property a bit better. But that's more a personal aesthetic preference than anything wrong with the course.