John:
Okay, I won't ignore it.
In general I think Kelly is right; there are too many architects now building flashy bunkers, and I for one am getting sick of seeing them.
But I don't think he is right to single out Sutton Bay. The surrounding landscape is steep and rocky; if they don't spend money irrigating it, it appears that the natural grasses become very thick and unplayable (once the cattle are off). So, I think it was a good decision to build a fair number of very large bunkers as a buffer between the playable and the unplayable. I suppose they could have opted for big and rectangular Seth Raynor bunkers, but I don't think it would have looked as good in that landscape as what they've done. Perhaps someone else here could prepare some sketches of something more in harmony? In the meantime I'll say I think the golf course is quite beautiful.
One interesting fact of many of the newer and striking courses (Sand Hills, Sutton Bay, Cape Kidnappers, The National of Australia, St. Andrews Beach) is that before golf they were being grazed by sheep or cattle or horses, and grazed down they all had a wonderfully different look. But as soon as you fence off the animals you get that long grass "look" which I think Kelly is objecting to more than the bunkers.
I really think Cape Kidnappers would have looked better and played better if we could have left the sheep out there. Unfortunately, though, I have yet to find any of these clients who are willing to build a high-end course and then tell the members (or paying guests) to watch out for the sheep dip!