Most people love Torrey Pines for its amazing coast line views and great conditions for a muni. It puts people in a mesmerizing state of joy, something many courses can't ever do. This along with the full tee sheet and never ending celebrity demand prove the greatness Torrey has to offer.
None of that is architectural.
I think its a great piece of land routed as good as the land allows. The course is a championship design at 7700+ yards and provides extraordinary variety. You can use almost every club in your bag on the first 9 alone. The course does have narrow fairways (like Bethpage and Crooked Stick) putting a premium on accuracy and club selection off the tee, a part of the game not many good / average course provide anymore. Strategically placed bunkers, as opposed to doglegs, force players to think off the tee and play draws and fades. The course demands just about every shot you have providing endless variety. The green side bunkers are also challenging as they are designed for the ball to roll back to the middle. I am not sure what kind of grass the rough is but I found myself being punished by flier lies at Torrey Pines. I assume the city just doesn't put whats required into the rough to make it hard to get out of but its okay for me as I really haven't found to many courses where the penalty seems to be so many fliers. What's not to love about variety and uniqueness in challenge? The greens have some undulation and are a bit more predictable than the subtle break you would see at bethpage.
I highlighted the few words there that
try to speak to the
architecture of the course (sadly, flier lies do not), but they're used so generically along with generic stuff like "use every club in your bag" that it ends up demonstrating quite a bit about how little you truly know about architecture.
And trust me, I'm not saying I know much of anything about architecture, but that's one of the reasons I'm here: to
learn about it from those who know it inside and out.