I was thinking about a few courses with generous fairways where everything is not exactly as it seems.
On one golf course, on the first tee, an elevated tee, it overlooks what appears to be an exceptionally wide fairway.
In fact, the fairway is very, wide.
Most golfers take pride in hitting the fairway, but, on this hole, the large green is angled/slanted from far left to near right.
When the hole location is to the left side of the green, a section guarded by a large, deep and dangerous bunker, drives hit to the left center of the fairway are seriously disadvantaged.
Many, if not most golfers will end up in that bunker, usually on their way to bogey or worse.
Drives hit right must contend with a dangerous fairway/DZ bunker, but, if successful, they have an ideal angle into the green, AND, the putting surface is favorably configured to accomodate/accept approaches from that angle.
In essence, the architect has lulled the golfer into a false sense of security with the wide fairway.
It's my limited observation that MOST golfers DON'T look at the green to see where they should attempt to hit their drives, they only look at the wide, generous fairway and are content to hit it anywhere in the short grass.
I've observed this configuration of wide fairways and angled greens and find it to be a great deceiver.
And, golfers don't seem to learn from repeated play, they just see the fairway and nothing else.
What courses present this seemingly benign configuration that ends up eating your lunch ?