Take for example number 9 at Pine Needles.
Great. A specific example, and one we can talk about a bit more specifically (there are still going to be modifications based on player strengths, the tees they play, any "fears" or great weaknesses they have, etc.).
Here is the hole from the yardage book:
https://share.getcloudapp.com/kpuA1p0yHere it is from Google Earth with some measurements on it:
https://share.getcloudapp.com/jkuAgz5bA few statements were made:
The fairway is wide
Ah, but it is not, really. At about 245 or so, it's a little under 30 yards wide:
That's significantly less wide than the average golfer's shot dispersion. In fact, shot dispersion is still about 60-80 yards for a wide range of players. As they get better, they hit it more "accurately" (by degrees from center), but also farther (2° offline at some distance will be just as far from center as 3° at a shorter distance).
The corridor, from the second image linked to above, is only about 55 yards. Let's be generous and call it 65 yards, and pretend that you don't mind playing off pine straw and sandy scrub areas too much.
Just establishing some measurements.
and there is no hazard that needs to be played away from.
There are no "hazards" but there are hazards. See below.
But if you are coming in from the right, it is a significantly more difficult shot than from the left.
Let's assume that Ira is correct and that playing from the left side of the fairway is easier than playing from the right. (I actually prefer to be right so I can hit away from the swale to the right of the green, not to the left hitting toward the fall-off, but let's go with the "left is best" approach here).
There are basically no golfers alive who should be aiming here if they want to score their best on that hole in the long term:
Because, as I kinda said above… there
is a hazard that needs to be played away from on this hole: the freaking TREES. They're on both sides of the fairway, and it's not worth it for almost anyone to play to a "side" of the fairway for the
small fraction of a stroke an "easier" approach shot might save him by risking
whole strokes hitting it into the trees more often.
The advice, the "strategy" here, is to aim down the middle of the alleyway (which may not be the exact middle of the fairway). When you find yourself to the "bad" right side, you say "awww, shucks, I rolled a 5 this time, but at least I'm in the fairway" and you try to hit the green. And when you find yourself to the left, maybe that's the time you say "ah, variance fell my way this time" and you feel good about having rolled a 6 on the dice that time. And then you try to hit the green.
This all ignores that whether a golfer is right or left in the fairway, they're probably going to score about the same. It may change how you feel about the approach shot, but… it probably won't affect scoring all that much. The fairway is not wide, nor is the corridor itself all that wide. You should not "pick a side" of the fairway to hit here. You should aim down the corridor and let your Shot Zone or pattern fall where it will.
Kyle's been saying the same things, too. Thank you, Ira, for the example. Specific examples that we can all look at and be on the same page allow us to talk in more specifics.