I was there for a day and a half and the wind grew from pleasant, to difficult, to only the club professionals in the groups being able to break 100.
I generally understand and think the post is perfectly sensible, but I do want to push back on the high-wind playability issue generally. Only for this reason: modern golf tech has changed golf in such a way, that players are hitting the ball farther, and they do that by hitting the ball higher.
I've thought for a long time about what can be done to bring the ground game back into fashion, and the thing I keep coming back to is wind, and high winds. Where this becomes an interesting problem for golf culture is specifically the
hedonic treadmill that is pushing the tees back (and boy have they been pushed back!). In high winds, however, suddenly that new TaylorMade
BallDestroyer™ (that justifies a 500 yard par four) is worthless because an artisanally crafted launch angle is actually a disadvantage in high winds.
To me, the way to approach courses like that is to throw out the modern clubs, grab a driving iron, play the "silver" tees and approach with a long bump and run. I like this because it's a different and interesting way to play. I learned to play this way along the Firth of Forth in grad school, and every club tournament I've won, has been in 20-30+mph winds, simply because I could play in them while most folks can just moan about them.
In addition, one of my favorite strategic features is (intentionally placed) trees that block or redirect prevailing winds, which opens up different lines of play and to reward players who see the flight of the ball in a more complex way.
Now do I care that the raters rank courses with "unplayable" conditions lower? Obviously not, because rankings have a lot of expectations I disagree with and I think they are silly anyway. What I do find disappointing is how this position seems to
de facto endorse this modern version of ideal-launch-angle golf.
Perhaps high-wind courses should have suggested tees based on wind conditions, or at least explicitly encourage/warn players that modern golf sensibilities are intentionally being eschewed and to expect conditions that are hostile to hybrids and 460cc drivers (like how the sign at Bethpage warns people to
expect to get their butt kicked). Still, as someone who likes the idea of giving people a reason to throw a 1 iron in their bag instead of another 3 hybrid, "unplayable" windy courses seem like the only way to make that an actual advantage.