Tom P:
Yeah, I think 13 is so difficult because even though most better players can have a wedge in, the target is so shallow. The percentage play for me was usually just to hit it a few yards long and hope the pin wasn't cut against the back fringe so you had a chance at the flop and at least 10 feet of roll to get close for par. I believe 13 might be the only hole on the course I've never birdied, strange for a 350-yard par 4 (I do only have a single birdie on #3!).
I love the give and take at Myopia, and the previously mentioned half-par holes:
#1, 274 par 4 (par 3.5)
#2, 480 par 5 (par 4.5)...this hole is downhill too
#3, 250 par 3 (par 3.5)
#4, 392 par 4....among greatest holes of its length in world?
#5, 415 par 4
#6, 260 par 4 (par 3.5)
#7, 410 par 4
#8, 475 par 5 (par 4.5)...usually with the wind as well
#9, 130 par 3 (par 2.75?)
#10, 375 par 4
#11, 330 par 4 with tough green
#12, 455 par 4 (par 4.5, wow tough with tiny green and lots of fescue)
#13, 350 par 4 (par 4.5 with shallow green and ~60 feet uphill)
#14, 400 par 4
#15, 525 par 5 (par 4.75?)
#16, 172 par 3 (par 3.5 with ridiculous green?)
#17, 400 par 4
#18, 420 par 4
I only count 7 "medium-challenge" holes. Few courses have so few holes that fall in the dead middle of the challenge spectrum, and even 3 or 4 of these (4, 7, 17, 18) can give pause especially with F&F conditions.
I do hope IBF does make a senior tour run, as he seems to be tearing up the "old American layouts" on his various visits...or maybe he will just start a more interesting design business. I know Lee Janzen makes an annual visit to Myopia through the Isleworth connection with assistant pro E. Sorensen and loves his couple rounds/year. They have discussed a Tiger visit when he's in town for the Deutche Bank, even to the point of finding a helicopter landing spot (closest polo field), but I doubt it will ever happen...