EAF:
The 2nd is a simple and very boring hole. The green is a flat disc and fails to enhance the experience in playing the Black. A major makeover for the hole would be appropriate and long overdue.
The 18th is a big time dud. The changes made by Rees didn't do much except for the bunker complex to the right of the green.
The professionals do not drive the ball deep enough to take on the elementary bunker complexes that flank the fairways. In so many ways it looks like the predictable right and left bunker scheme that Rees father used at Oakland Hills.
Guys like Tiger routinely hit iron off the tee to eliminate the bunkers and then followed with a pro forma iron to the green. Ho-hum -- boring puhleeeze.
Change the hole to make a much more exciting finish. The 18th at the Black could be way beyond the lackluster closer that it is.
Matt-
The 2nd hole at BSP isn't that bad. A player can use the birdie or par there, and I like the idea of ebb and flow to the holes--a relatively easy start followed by an ass-kicking most of the rest of the way through.
Like 14. Yes, it could be a little tougher--maybe slightly redesigned to bring the large greenside bunker more into play for the tee shot, or changing the nature fo the green complex to direct a mishit approach into the bunker, but it does provide a respite before the final turn of the screw when one crosses the road.
What do you think could be done to 18 to make it more challenging? Kyle Harris and I discussed a few alternatives a few weeks ago out there. The thing is, the natural topography in the immediate area is basically flat--think about 1 Red, 18 Black, 1 Black, 1 Green-all relatively flat fairways.
Some of my thoughts:
-Angled cross bunkering/cross hazard similar to a "reef" hole, tempting the golfer to bite off a lot to have a shorter club in? Slightly reposition the green to encourage the use of angles?
Kyle Harris had said the 18th on Red was very good...the fairway twists a bit, and the fairway is not level ~160 yards out from the green, where both of us hit drives. Kyle, am I correct?