Bob,
(Edit - I deleted my previous post because I thought I had figured it out before you could respond...)
OK, I think I've got the methodology now. If the UP/OP or (UP+OP)/P is >1, you just invert it, right? So the 200 comes from an equal number of UP, P, and OP scores. If so, then...
Using the data from the 2003 Masters (all 4 rounds), the highest TEP scores are:
64 (7th hole)
59 (13th hole)
48 (3rd hole)
39 (8th hole)
Small targets, hit 'em and birdie is likely, miss 'em and bogey is likely.
and the lowest TEP scores are:
9 (1st hole)
9 (18th hole)
13 (11th hole)
14 (5th hole)
Tough par 4's with few birdies.
From just the 4th round only,
the highest TEP scores are:
64 (13th hole)
56 (3rd hole)
46 (16th hole)
37 (7th hole)
Small targets, hit 'em and birdie is likely, miss 'em and bogey is likely.
and the lowest TEP scores are:
3 (12th hole)
7 (2nd hole)
7 (18th hole)
13 (15th hole)
Par 5's that most everyone birdies, the long par-4 18th, and the 12th where everyone plays left of the Sunday pin and makes par or worse.
Thoughts about the TEP score:
(1) I don't really think you can calculate a reliable TEP score for an entire course, because it is possible for a course to have a high TEP number while at the same time every hole on the course has a low TEP number. For example, if you have 9 really hard holes with scores skewed over par, and 9 really easy holes with scores skewed under par, then the course will have a high TEP score, which would indicate a very strategic course with no strategic holes!!
(2) Does the TEP score rely too heavily on par? Take a 490-yard par 4 and, because of its length alone, it will probably have a low TEP score with few birdies. But lengthen it 10 yards and make it a par 5, and all of the sudden all those pars become birdies and the TEP number changes. Better example: take #13 at ANGC...change nothing but the par from 5 to 4 and the TP number changes from 50 (for the 2003 Masters) down to 1, because only 3 3's were made there. I'll bet the TEP number would indicate very few great "strategic" long par 4's (or 3's).
(Sorry to get overly statistical, but it's a fun exercise for a former stat guy like me!)