If you take away the fact that is your final hole on The Old Course -
If you take away the fact that you are hitting your drive in the general direction of the Royal and Ancient Golf Club -
If you take away the fact that you have just played the Road Hole, and are thus eager for the easier hole -
If you take away all the historical moments that have taken place there, the memories of all who have crossed that bridge, the ghost of Old Tom Morris, the fact that the VOS is actually KNOWN as the VOS................
etc etc etc.......If you take all that away, I do not believe that you are left with one of the great holes in golf. Don't get me wrong - I like the hole a lot, but I can't get out of my head the fact that a lot of the reasons I like it are because of the things that I mentioned above that have to be taken away to assess the hole on its own architectural merit. Personally, I like the notion of a bit of a breather at the end of a round, either allowing interest in a match or just a break on a day when I might be playing poorly; I like the notion that a hole that seems easy might reach out and bite me (or better, bite my opponent du jour); I love a bunkerless hole with such incredible ground movement around the green........
But really, is it one of the great holes in golf? What hurts me is having to use a word like "mediocre," because despite the real meaning of that word, it has come to imply a perjorative, a negative term. It is the finishing hole on one of the great courses in the world, so calling it mediocre seems.......disrespectful. Am I allowed to fence-sit, and call it a hole that exists at the less-than-great end of greatness?