Tiger,
While I like Sand Hills a great deal, I don't share your views regarding # 4.
I think a lower green would have been more appealing.
I'm not enamored with the highly constructed 4th green in comparison with all of the other greens.
The higher, constructed green, certainly makes the hole harder, placing a premium on the approach, and a substantial premium on recoveries.
Neil Regan,
That's certainly a neat bit of artwork.
In fact, the first thing that hit me was the dual green concept on the 9th hole at Pacific Dunes.
It's one of the many features that make that course unique.
And, in the context of the dual tees on # 10 at Pacific Dunes and their relationship to the green used on the previous hole, I sort of like the notion of a green to the left of the huge bunker on # 4 and the use of the tee on 5.
I wonder how many who have played Sand Hills walked back to the top of the dune behind the current 17th tee to look at a tee sight that transformed the cute little 17th hole into a rather diabolical par 3.
The only thing I found disturbing about the 17th green was the large pebble that deflected Ran's ball, as it was traveling at the speed of light, back on line and into the hole, which needed substantial repair by virtue of the damage done by a ball that hits the hole at 186,000 miles per second.
TEPaul,
The reason I was green was from the dye from all of the cash that Ran, Tom Huckaby and others paid to me while at Wild Horse and Sand Hills. It just naturally rubbed off.
I believe we also felt that the 4th and 15th greens had a similar feel as one approached them even though # 4 was elevated higher and more of # 15 was hidden by the fronting dune.
Did you notice that Ran thought he was in Bermuda and thus he wore calf high socks, or were those shin guards he wore to ward off the snakes as he looked for his ball in the high rough ?