I'll nominate the 17th at Beverly CC in Chicago. It's 200 yards from the regular tees, 240 from the back, to a very tilted back to front and left to right green that is protected by one bunker on the left and three on the right side. The green itself is so difficult to put and so hard to hit that many great players purposely hit their tee shot short and just left of the green in order to have a fair pitch to the hole, hoping to make par but definitely to take double or higher out of the equation. When the pros played Beverly in the Western Opens back in the day, most of the field took this approach. And that was when greens were only running at 9 on the stimpmeter. Its position on the routing, after two murderously hard, long par-4's and just before an extremely challenging 600 yard par 5, adds to the compliment to the architect that most everybody in the "field" is happy making bogey on 17!