Maybe this is why I love Ross courses, not just because of the defense of par at the greens, but the fact that the bunkering is often a shorter distance from the tee. Ironically, older courses with fewer tees actually possess more interest/options for the shorter hitter.
Thompson's St. George's in Toronto has bunkering of all shapes and sizes, as well all different lengths off the tee. For me, terrain or bunkering challenged the tee shot significantly on ten of the long holes, which is at least half a dozen more times than at other venues.
One problem of the multiple tee theory is that I often have no choice, as I play a large amount of tournament golf. Our local golf association has a knack for playing junior tournaments from the championship tees. In a qualifier for the Junior Matchplay Championship, the course we played was so long, the personal par for me was 82!!! I played well to shoot 84, which included two holes where I made double bogeys without hitting a single bad shot, including one hole where, due to a 200-yard carry off the tee, forced me to hit 7 iron-5 wood-5 wood--to a par four!!! I missed by two shots, without three-putting once or hitting more than half a dozen loose shots. Point is, the architect should have to consider options/strategy for all players from one or two tees. Multiple tees are just a poor excuse for bad architecure.