I was just watching Playing Lessons With The Pros with Jim Furyk. He made an interesting point about the course he was playing. He called it "a good, demanding driving course," while his home course was more of "a second-shot course" with challenge primarily in the greens.
It got me thinking about whether all courses could be so categorized. It certainly is true with respect to two of the great public courses in New England. Taconic is a very demanding second-shot course, with very fast, sloping greens. (It is far less of a challenge off the tee.) Conversly, Crumpin Fox is an extremely tight driving course that puts a premium on accuracy off the tee. It is not, however, an extremely difficult second-shot course.
If this categorization holds up, do the great courses of the world fall predominently to one side—or is there an even distribution? Augusta, I think, would be a classic second shot course (at least in its original construction). Perhaps Pinehurst could also be labeled as such. But what about Pebble? TOC? Cypress?