George Pazin said:
"Anyway, I think the best way to learn about a hole is to sit and watch multiple groups go through during a tournament. You see how people play a hole under pressure, you see multiple ways of playing a hole, you see a multitude of recovery shots. Really, would I, as a 20+ handicap, learn more from playing the hole even once?"
GeorgeP;
There's no question that your completely right about that, even if I'm certain many on here will disagree and deny that. The reasons that's so true should be obvious. The problem is how many people can actually do that with various golf courses?
My ideal way of really coming to understand a golf course is to walk around it and look at it carefully first (before playing it). Then go play it alone and hit as many shots here and there as you can. Then play it with as wide a spectrum of player levels as you can find---and definitely with at least one who's good.
But how many people are actually able to do that. I've only done it completely that way on basically one course and certianly not more than 3-4 but I sure did learn a lot about it's architecture that way.
Most can only play a course once or twice before forming their opinions of its architecture and obviously a lot about it can be missed that way, even if they'll never admit it.
Even an architect as observant and knowledgeable about golf architecture as Tom Doak will admit that and has. A few years ago he said on here he learned a great deal talking to a tour pro (I seem to remember it was Steve Elkington) about how he looks at and approaches architecture and Tom said he was amazed what he picked up and you may've seen what Tom said he picked up from Nicklaus at Sebonack that way (the perspective on architecture from the back tees which Tom said he hadn't really concentrated on that much).
I'm fortunate to have so much of this opportunity with the officiating that I do at class "A" amateur and Open tournaments but again, how many do that? It definitely does teach you a lot about holes and courses though---what's possible and when, what's not and when etc. And then, if possible you need to take it from the top level back through the playing levels.
But who really gets that kind of opportunity with any golf course other than perhaps their own?