Sean,
To answer your questions,
1) Do you mean why no love for '10'? Benjamin's glowing description of 11 at the end of page 1 is the best I have ever read. In fact, on this round, my first there in a very long time, the two holes that far exceeded my recollections were 9 & 11.
2) In 1981, I drove the ball as far as The Open winner. In 2016, I drive the ball farther and can now be nearly ~100 yards behind this year's Open winner. It's the way the game has gone and a nest of bunkers protects the inside of the dogleg as a single bunker no longer can. Remember, the standard footprint of a bunker in a windy locale is smallish out of necessity, yet protecting the integrity of the dogleg is in everyone's best interest. The club had three options: 1) grow up the rough 2) add bunkers or 3) let the tiger bomb it relentlessly over the solitary one. I agree with Tony and am glad they chose #2. My picture shows well executed work IMO.
3) see point 1
4) I could almost write 'Seeing a ball swim off those high banks around the 4th putting surface is more interesting than not seeing it dance at 15' but that would HERESY, so I won't.
5) No idea why 2 doesn't get more raves. In 1999 playing there with Dad, I remember thinking how dumb it was that there was a right greenside bunker as it ruined the reward of playing right close to the sea but in fact, that bunker is a goodish amount short of the putting surface. I do wish the fairway was wider, especially along the right but I generally wish all links fairways were 40+ yards wide.
In regards to many of the other posts, I think the rise in NB's stock may be tied to our having emerged on the other side of an era where the name architects built north of 200+ courses. I don't care how good you are, at those kind of numbers, you are bound to be repeating things. That boredom has helped foster a renewed appreciation for all the singular, one off courses like NB, Brancaster, Prestwick, St. Enodoc, Westward Ho! and indeed courses where the architect isn't even known.
On a personal note, years ago Ralph Livingston gave me the club below.
It is a Redan iron made by Ben Sayers with a slightly shut face, according to Ralph. Well! The Mickle blasted to North Berwick ahead of me and transported it like a scepter. His group used it first and the results will shock you (I'll let him tell the story). A couple of us in my group hit better shots with it than we did with our steels and I pulled a Norman at Troon/17, 'over pured' it, sending the ball over from where I failed to get up and down. The cool factor of hitting THAT club devised by THAT man on THAT hole was off the charts. It was my last round as a single Ran
- no better place and no better company for such an event.
Best,