1. I don't believe that #3 and #11 could possible take away from Crag Burn's recognition factor. I would attribute it to the fact that 90% of the GCA faithful have NOT played the course. Show of hands, please...how many of GCA have heard of and how many have played Crag Burn in East Aurora, New York?
2. The short par fours begin to balance the image of monster-builder that RTJ seemed to cultivate. It seems that he mellowed with age (until Roger Rulewich started building all the courses) and his final solo designs had a greater playability to them. When I look at a course like Bristol Harbour in central New York (also finished in 1972, the same time as Glen Oak and Crag Burn) I see what others disregard about Senior. Here's a throw-away from one of their hole descriptions: "Just another great Robert Trent Jones dog-leg carved out of the Bristol Hills. " That means that one dog-leg is indistinguishable from the next, or that all his holes dogleg and reduce options, especially on the short par fours. Trent typically and brutally narrowed his shorties (through sand, water, or woods) as they approached the green, eliminating the drive-the-green option for the stronger player and doing the same for the approach shots of the average and weaker players.
2A. Another of his courses that I played two years ago, the Heather at Boyne in Michigan, lacks a single short par four. At Threetops, also in Michigan, his 15th hole claims to be driveable; at 363 it had best be downhill to afford that option for most!
3. Number three is a tremendously-balanced hole from tee to green. It is played through close quarters, with the trees on both sides and the bunkering never too distant from a fanned or pulled driver, but with ample fairway space to accommodate any sort of lay-up. The second shot is the key, as the green is so tiny (letter-opener size for the postage-stamp crowd), so crowded by bunkers, that any lateral deviation results in a trip to the beach. With the gentle fall-off to the back-left portion, the putting surface offers at least four unique pin positions.
4. Number eleven, I'll admit, I did not fully appreciate until this year. Unlike the front nine, which winds its way through the woods for the most part until it emerges partially at eight and completely at nine, the majority of the back is played on the moor, at the mercy of the winds. Eleven is a good driver hole from any tee as the big club tends to bore more and hold its line better. The fairway is wide in the direct line to the clubhouse and will accept less-than-perfect strikes, although angle and distance home will be affected. As indicated before, I'd rather have a full club in, so the idea of an awkward pitch up (with less spin on the shot) holds no attraction for me in competition. The closer you get to the far edge of the fairway, the better the angle in. The green itself is something to behold and the water along the left is always closer than you imagine. Most balls that miss left find their way to Davy Jones' Locker. With the bucket left-front, the ridge along the right edge of the green, and three flattish hole options front right, back left and back right (although this last one falls off), two or one-whacking your way around this carpet means you've struck an especially-accurate approach or you are cool and collected with the flat stick.