Tommy,
No, I don't consider the 17th at TOC a stupid hole. I have played TOC about 10 times including a couple of rounds in the St. Andrews Links Tournament--a stroke play event just prior to the Amateur Championship. The reason I mention this is because I think I have a very good perspective of TOC--I've played it (mostly) for fun AND under tournament conditions when every stroke counts.
Anyway, there is no way the hole depicted is similar to 17. (Thank you Garland for pointing this out as well). The 17th at TOC does present a daunting shot over OB on the tee shot IF YOU CHOOSE to try and get a much better angle into the green. There is PLENTY of room to bail left away from the OB. I guess there is still a slight carry but the fundamental diffrence between the two holes is that there is NO ROOM on your picture while there is all kinds of room given a player on #17.
Also, the second shots are completely different. The 17th at TOC actually rewards a low running shot coming in to the right of the bunker. There is a cool funnel effect that sweeps the ball into and left on the green. Of course, a shot played too hard will race over the green and onto the road but perfectly judged, the ball ends up remarkabley deep into the center of the green. Most players lay up short and right and see this effect on the long lag putt.
Anyway, the mystery hole has a mound at the front right that seems to deflect shots (maybe more like the mound short on hole #4 at TOC?). Anyway the "mystery mound" seems pretty harsh--you have to carry between OB short and right and a gulley on the left and anything just short can hit the mound and go anywhere.
17 at TOC at least allows a conservative short shot or run up option.
#17 at TOC = room to make choices and bail out
The mystery hole = no room between OB and unplayable on the left.
(My one caveat is that I do not know the precise width but it looks very, very narrow).
I am aware that in 1964 the Links Trust converted Par from 5 to 4 at TOC. Do you think it's the same??? Is DECREASING par on a 461 yard hole from 5 to a 461 yard par 4 in response to a more modern game the same as INCREASING par on a slightly downhill 400 yard hole from 4 to 5 in your mind
I really, really don't get your point. In fact, you seem to be making my point--that the hole at 400 yards was so riduculous they added another stroke for "expert play"?
I understand some of the hang-ups over "par" and this is no doubt due to the fact that, more and more, stroke play has become predominant over match play, BUT...
The Rules of Golf specifically address situations where the competition is based on "par"--Rule 31, Bogey, Par and Stableford Competitions. Moreover the USGA defines par as "...the score that an expert player would be expected to make for a given hole. Par means errorless play under ordinary weather conditions, allowing two strokes on the putting green..."
Unless the corridors of the mystery hole are far more generous than I think, yeah, it's stoooopid