Sean:
My central criticism of the Carnoustie set-up in '99 was that it appeared to be too narrow, with really thick hay too close to the fairways, to be a fair test of golfing ability for a links course subject to strong winds.
I may be wrong about the winds, but I do know the course played at 7,316 yards in '99, pre-ProV1 and some other technological advances in the game in the past several years. That kind of yardage, on a par 71 course, was a really, really long course back then -- arguably longer than this year's 7,412-yard set-up, given technology advances. To my way of thinking, and looking over the course, the length in '99 virtually forced players to use driver on many, many holes, and subject them to very narrow landing targets and considerable, sometimes unplayable, stuff not far from those targets. I think that's why some scores in '99 were just off the charts -- mid-80s and even 90s. That to me was the chief distinction between the Carnoustie set-up and the Hoylake set-up. Hoylake was browner, granted, but one could tack their way around the course without resorting to driver that much (Tiger, yes, but others did it as well). Tiger I think was quoted as saying that Hoylake last year effectively played at around 6,000 yards, and thus he felt no need to use driver. Carnoustie in '99 demanded driver off many tees because of legitimately long holes, and thus brought ridiculously high scores into play. To me, the set-up was severe -- too severe, in my view -- for a course at that length, subject to winds.