I agree on Shoreacres and perhaps most Raynor courses, just because I like the bounce in shots, etc. So much so that I put a lot of them in my designs. Only problem is, getting people to realize that you can aim 20 yards right of the green and still get there. Some good golfers hate that.
And most average golfers only discover it in a sequence like "Oh, crap, I sliced it....Oh crap its going right....Holy Crap, that ended up PERFECT!" After that, the course is kinda fun for them.
Jeff,
I don't have the clipping with me, but there was a really interesting blurb in the Edmonton Journal about Blackhawk Golf Club earlier this summer. Basically, it was a simple report that there had been an extraordinary number of eagles and 2-3 hole-in-ones made there over a period of a few weeks.
I think this a credit to some of the interesting slope and contour in and around the greens, there, at Blachawk. When holes are cut in certain positions, less than perfect strokes are repelled. But, when flags are placed in certain other spots, this same slope and contour tends to funnel balls toward the hole, resulting in eagles and occassionally a hole-in-one (or two!).
I guess what I'm saying is, interesting slope and contour in and around greens makes the game more challenging certain days, but also more fun on others... when holes are cut in more easily accessible spots, where balls tend to funnel toward.