An example from Day One of the Jacob's Creek that illustrates what is so right about the place. The third hole.
For what many consider a difficult course, RA has a comparatively easy start. A shorter par 4, an par 5 that, depending on the wind, can be reachable (but with great startegy) and then the third, a 290 yard down hill classic without a bunker. Von Nida took 12 (I think) in an Australian Open there. This story illustrates the importance of flow - not the hole in isolation but in context of what precedes it.
I quote from todays local paper 'The Advertiser'.
" Stadler looked to be steaming into the tournament lead when he birdied his 11th hole (the 2nd) to go four under. But, with the wind blowing from his right and the pin set back left, he took the bait and went with driver on the ultratight 3rd. Turning it over into dense rough pin high, he still could not reach the green with his second and was lucky to escape with bogey. "I hadn't even hit driver in practice on the 3rd, for good reason. It's a three-iron, sand wedge hole. But I'd just birdied two straight so I thought 'what the heck'. It won't happen again," he declared.
I saw the tv replay and he did really well to take a bogey. His up and down from the greenside rough was a good outcome.
IMO, RA's layout seduced Stadler into an unbelievable play on the day. By contrast, consider his practice rounds where he resisted the urge of the everyday player to just have a lash at the green because it is there. I'm going to the golf tomorrow, and plan on seeing him play some shots somewhere.
Personally, I recall starting birdie, birdie, birdie at RA once - and shot about 80 or more
. I can't reach where Stadler went on the third, so the challenges for me are a little different. But the third is still a key decision for the tee shot for me - play short of the crest/saddle and play a blind wedge from an uphill lie, or take the risk and play to the bottom of the crest to a narrower fairway, and risk an inaccessable pin from a shoter second on such a short 'birdie' hole because your teeshot meandered left.
James B