BTW, thoughtful course set-up taking the wind, weather, and ground conditions is a very good solution to courses with repetitive 3s. A couple of courses in the Houston area actually have alternative tees which can change the angle of approach by as much as 90* (the walk is typically not worth it).
That assumes that the guy setting up the tees that day is a knowledgeable golfer, and not some college kid paid burger flipping wages to mow the teeboxes given instructions to "move the tee markers to somewhere with fewer divots". My dad is always griping when he finds tee markers that don't point down the fairway (I say you aim where you want to aim, regardless of where the tees point you, but as a long time golfer, he has come up with many ways to blame outside causes for his bad shots
)
Good example is on my aforementioned home course, with the two back tees on one par 3 and two tees and two greens on the other. At the beginning of the season, when everyone is very rusty (this is Iowa, the course is typically open Apr 1- Oct 31) and the prevailing wind is from the north, and thus strongly into your face on both par 3s, we always play the entire month of April with the far tees on both and the far green on the double island.
Bringing your rusty winter swing to a 210 yard shot from an elevated tee playing into a 2-3 club wind to an island green smaller than TPC's 17th is a bit of a challenge, to say the least! Come summertime and it is split about half/half between playing the longer or shorter setup on both, and the holes are often getting some nice help from a summer southerly breeze. Doesn't make much sense, but that's how it is.