TE Paul
His list:
#1 –shot to green, #3- shot to green, #4- second shot to green (par 5, so this does not count to me), #7- shot to green, #9- tee shot and shot to green if pin is right, #10- tee shot, #16-tee shot, #17 –tee shot.
Speaking of Indiana -Go Colts
As Tom P & Forrest indicated, these aren't what is normally referred to as blind shots - I like Forrest's term of blind surfaces. Particularly in the case of calling #9 approach to a right pin, wow, that's calling any pin behind a bunker lip blind.
I think also that you must mean 15 & not 16 tee shot, as 16 is a midlength par 3.
Most of the blind surfaces are not fronted by bunkers, so I think that at least partially mitigates the blindness. #1, 3 and 10 this is true, 4 & 7 mostly true. 4 isn't blind for most mortals, as not a lot of us will go for the green on a 617 yard par 5.
I definitely wouldn't call the approach to #3 blind. If so, one would be calling any uphill approach blind. I guess it's more blind if you drive it to the right off the tee, but my recollection is that a tee shot to the left side of the fairway allows one to see the green. Of course, Trip Keuhne drove it over the ridge, a carry of reputedly some 320+ yards, to ensure that his approach to #3 wasn't blind - though I think he only did this in the practice round.