Okay, I feel the need to throw in my 2 pence worth:
In September of 1997 I spent 2 weeks in Scotland, playing 20 different courses in East Lothian, Fife, Cruden Bay, and the Moray Firth area, including just about all the courses in this thread.
I *really* liked Muirfield. The weather was absolutely terrible - huge winds, rain on and off, a "classic" links day. It rained so hard in the afternoon we walked off after 14 holes with our 2-ball match undecided.
I thought the routing was great - how the holes go all differrent directions, the wind seemingly blowing in a new direction on every hole. The traditional "out and back" routing of so many links courses in big wind is just not fun.
There are very few blind drives and no blind approaches, the fairways are much more level than most links, the greens not overly undulated, but the course is still a stern challenge.
My caddy was getting all pissy with me, kept handing me driver on the tee, and trying to get me to go for the greens from 200+ with a 3 wood. I was watching the other members in my group hacking away in the long wet rough, it was a truly ugly site, I wanted no part of it. I hit lots of 2-irons off the tees and lots of lay up shots, made lots of bogeys, but kept the ball out of the gunk. My score wasn't anything great but I sure had fun.
The question was raised here, can players of different skills play and enjoy Muirfield? My answer is yes....if they can swallow their ego and play the shots that the course and conditions dictate. If you don't have some kind of tee shot that goes pretty straight and is somewhat reliable what the heck are you doing at any quality golf course? The big American driver swing and high trajectory shot just doesnt cut it at a links course...Muirfield just makes sure you pay the price for these poor shot choices. To quote Dennis Miller: "about as useless as a lob wedge at Carnoustie".
I enjoyed the Muirfield routine : a shower (the best showerheads in Scotland
) after the morning 4-ball, jacket and tie for the awesome buffet, the lunch conversation about nothing but golf with people from all over the place, the afternoon 2-ball with the caddies pushing us HARD to finish, another shower and the jacket and tie again for drinks in the bar overlooking the 18th green.
A day I will always remember and an experience that any golfer who appreciates British golf should experience.
Bill