PhilB:
I don't know if what I'm about to say makes any sense to you or even to me!
I can kind of see it but it's just hard to say.
It seems to me that one of the undeniable and perhaps unavoidable fundamentals of the early "strategic" architects was the FACT that the weaker or less good golfer should be given "a way around" BUT that that type of strategy, in most cases, should come with the expectation of playing any hole in at least one more shot!!
On the face of it that remark and thought may seem simple or unimportant but I believe it is incredible important and those early architects understood that and so did far more golfers back then than seem to today.
Over time some factors have clearly eroded or even corrupted this reality and perhaps fundamental of golf and architecture and it has come to very much confuse things in golf and architecture via golfers' expectations.
The fact is that in more recent times far more golfers of differing levels of abilities are expecting to somehow get to the same places in the same amount of shots.
And what is the biggest contributor to this modern perception?
Probably the reality of multiple tees compared to the old days.
I do not believe that many golfers will ever come to understand the true beauty and temptation of risk until they can see more clearly the perhaps numerous ways to avoid it but with a greater expectation of paying a stroke at least for it in what they can clearly see is a more conservative strategy of their own choice.
This is a perception in golf (and architecture) that has been slowly lost over time that the old architects understood so well and frankly depended on in what they designed and made and how they designed and made it.
This probably makes little sense to you but anyway.
This kind of fundamental concept is also why I admired so much the intent of say Geoff Shackelford in his concept of the 12th hole at Rustic Canyon.
He was almost trying to force golfers into thinking in a "whole hole" risk/reward context rather than in an incremental and single shot risk context.
The beauty, and sophistication of that particular hole is that it is a very short one and most any golfer should see they could reach the green on their second shot even if their tee shot placement which had not been directly penalized put them in a most difficult position for the next shot.
The reason the 13th at ANGC is such a great hole, even for the great player, is not exactly the shot value of the shot of going for the green in two but how beautifully balanced that high shot value shot is in a risk context with the option of laying up and perhaps expecting to play the hole in an additional shot.
Let's face it, ANGC's #13 is a beautifully designed hole in many many ways but it could never be what it is if what is fronting that green was not only water but of a certain penal water design that even comes down to the height of the water level in Rae's Creek.