I have a question for the architects here.
I'm always curious about how to encourage/get/force players to play low shots, but one place I've see it done:
#6 Corica Park: North Course (Marc Logan), it seems to be achieved by overhanging trees at the tee box. I don't know if this is intentional or not, but from some positions, a high shot to the green isn't feasible. I really enjoy the hole, but I've heard folks complain about not being able to hit a high shot there.
Now, I definitely understand the concern between an architect forcing a shot verses encouraging a shot, but it seems that architects force shots all the time, especially on doglegs, simply by blocking out certain routes with trees or unplayable rough.
Is there a heuristic for how to frame a hole, especially when limiting certain times of shots, to make the hole less frustrating for players? Or is it just accepting that some people who want to hit certain shots will always be mad.
Another way to ask this, is there a way to shift
the overton window such that players accept only being able to hit certain shots and not others without getting angry at the architect? I know some of the architecture books I've read suggest the more natural a hazard looks, the less people will moan, but is there a way to apply this to shot type, rather than hazards?
Edit: changed the title because I didn't think it accurately represented the question