Like Clinton, I feel every attack must be met with a response. (Obviously I like political anologies. But please calm down; I'm just trying to add a little humor to the discussion. If I've failed; at least I tried.)
Obviously, I think "resistance to scoring" is an important part of golf course architecture. I guess I'm not alone. The dummies at Augusta have been planting trees (#'s 11 and 15) to toughen things up lately too.
I'm a very ordinary 7 handicap. 20 years ago at the four pars at RG I hit 5 iron into 1, 5 wood into 2, 6 iron into 4, 7 iron into 5, five wood into 6 (a par 3), 5 wood into 8, five iron into 11, wedge into 12, 5 wood into 13, and 7 wood into 15. I SUSPECT THIS IS HOW FLYNN DESIGNED THE HOLES TO BE PLAYED! Now I hit 9 iron into 1, 8 iron into 2, wedge into 4, wedge into 5, six iron into 6, eight iron into eight, nine iron into 11, wedge into 12, eight iron into 13, and 7 iron into 15. I'M SORRY, THIS IS NOT WHAT FLYNN INTENDED.
30-40 years ago, a few pine trees were planted to the right side of four so a big slice would not leave an open shot, to the right side of five so a big slice would not leave a wide open shot, to the right side of seven (a 475 yard par 5) so a big or small slice would not leave an open shot, and to the right of 12 (a 350 yard par 4) so a small slice would not leave an open shot. THESE TREES (ALTHOUGH ADMITTEDLY AESTHETICALLY UNAPPEALING) DO PUT A PREMIUM ON ACCURATE DRIVING. Is that so bad?
Your choices aren't limited by the addition of the trees; they're different. With the trees, you can try to hit over or around them to get to the green, or you can go sideways. Without them, you have one choice - hit for the green with an unobstructed shot.
As for whether PV is obsolete at 6,600 yards, it may be. But if it's not, the last time I played there and missed almost any fairway, I was hitting out sideways, not going for the green.
For those of you who have never played RG, don't get the wrong impression about the trees we're talking about. This isn't White Manor or Overbrook where there are hundreds of bad pines choking the course. This is 15 or so now mature pines that eliminate easy bail outs. Yes they're ugly, and it's ashame they aren't oaks; but they aren't. And the course is better because of them. If we take them down and replace them with another challenge (like the proposed bunker on 7), ok. But to take them down for the sanctity of Flynn's memory, no thank you. And I truly believe Flynn would say no thank you too. He wanted to build a championship course, not 18 postcards.
Prettier doesn't mean better, any more than harder necessarily means better. But, at least in my opinion, when a course gets too easy, it loses its charm. Denuding RG may turn it into a prettier course to photograph; it will not turn it into a more satisfying course to play.