When I was a lad at Uni the local course had a par 3 that was between 105 and 120 metres (115-130ish yards), depending on the markers. The tear-drop green was tiny - about 16 metres deep and at most about 9 wide, with a narrow tongue in front. A small round bunker right, and a green-length bunker left. A swale before the green, and steep drop off behind and to the right. A good short hole....
Then the club built a new tee from a different angle, but lengthened it to 150 metres from the back tee, with the resultant increase in 2 clubs hit to the green. With a tiny green to begin with, it became a terror, demanding pin-point accuracy.
I've always felt the club made a wrong decision to lengthen the hole.
Can a green be too small regarding the clubs being hit into it? Are there any examples on well-known or regarded courses?
Andrew
PS...it is the site of my only "ace" - renovating the old tees before changing the hole, it was about 80 metres, also in a period of drought. Declaring I could throw the ball onto the green, I heaved it long and high, and with help from a few big bounces it reached the green and rolled into the hole.