Dave,
You're falling into the trap that for a course to be great, every hole needs to be a hard-core strategic challenge and an ass-kicker hole. You've fallen into the trap of looking at the course in pieces vs. viewing it as a whole.
The merit of #18 is:
- OB right, left and long (don't laugh at left, both Tiger and Phil both almost went there last week)
- OB long on the approach
- Short par4 (remember, some people think that's a cool concept) that allows you to go for the green or layup.
- Going for the green might put you on the green (few guys actually finished on the surface), might put you in the VoS, or might put you 30-70 yards from the hole.
- Do you putt or pitch from 30-70yds from the hole? This would cause Shivas great mental stress because his wedge is his kryptonite and the broom-handle is not adapt at long lag-putting.
- You have the pressure of playing in front of the R&A clubhouse, and anyone walking along the streets.
...but all of that aside, let's get to the real merit of the hole...
The Scots are a people that understand that golf is just an aspect of life, and hopefully something to be enjoyed. After spending 3hrs on TOC, and probably not making 4 on #17, they realized that it would be uplifting to the spirit to have a chance to redeem yourself and make you feel better about yourself as you head to the pub. So they created the 18th hole to be only moderately challenging, but still somewhat challenging as it requires short-game skill and the weather could be a factor. So it allows you to potentially make 2, 3 or 4 and feel good about yourself for the rest of the day.
And that my friends, is the lesson of life and golf that TOC teaches us and that we should consider adopting for the game we play at home. If only traffic at the end of a long work-day was so enjoyable....