Thanks, gents.
I still don't GET this hole.
You're screwed if you drive it to the right. You're saying your prayers if you're short left. You're dead if you're over.
I've just reread Ran's description ("14th hole, 325 yards; Perhaps the most merciless hole that Coore & Crenshaw have ever designed, the student of architecture (more so than the golfer!) delights in seeing them push the design envelope with this sliver of a green complex. Especially on a public access course, one might have thought that they could have tempered its severity one way or another. Perhaps the green could have been bigger than its 4,000 square feet, much of which does not readily afford usable hole locations. Perhaps the bunkers right didn’t need to be so deep or the fall-off over so abrupt. Maybe the chipping area left could have been made more conducive to getting the ball up and down. The fact that they stayed the course speaks well as to how Keiser and Coore & Crenshaw interacted. Like the 8th at Pine Valley Golf Club, there is simply no way to insure one gets a par, no matter how defensively or ‘smart’ one plays the hole. The golfer simply must execute a very crisp wedge shot or the resulting score could be anything. Indeed, it would be interesting to compare the scoring average of the 14th here and the 8th at PVGC during a four day stroke event: no telling which would be higher. Thanks to its unique green complex seemingly clinging to the side of the hill, both Ben Crenshaw and Mike Keiser volunteer this as their favorite hole on the course; few golfers who have just tripled it will tend to agree!"), and I still don't see how one is best advised to play the hole.
Maybe it's just that nobody has described the hole well enough ... yet.
I'm not criticizing the hole, obviously. I haven't played it! If/when I do, it might be my favorite hole at the resort!
I am sorry that I won't get the chance to play it as the architects intended it.