The green is not large relative to the length of the tee shot, but rather when one has a putt from one end to the other.
Huh?
Dave is not that big of a hitter. Stating that he is will hurt your street cred.
Kyle,
Well Dave must have lost a lot of length since he has become deskbound and/or married. Last time we played at St Andrews Beach he had a ping at the 14th green, all 276 metres away from the tee. And it wasn't lack of distance that resulted in his failure.
However, the very best architecture tempts players to bite off more than they can chew, imo.
That's one way of looking at it David, but the very best architecture is more nuanced than that. It also gets into the mind of a player when faced with something different or unexpected and challenges them to think of all the possible consequences and options rather than a simplistic Can I?/Should I? carry or flirt with a hazard.
The balance between risk and reward is at the heart of golf course architecture. My opinion would be on this hole, the balance is less than optimal.
It would be interesting to see if the balance changed if the vegetation was done properly. To be wide right in a wonky lie with a shot possibly from or behind a thick tuft of grass over a bunker is a bit much. The bunker shot from the right looks a lot more difficult than it is.
After a tough couple of holes, the 5th is a welcome relief. In my experience it is the most birdied hole on the course (by a long way) and defintely the easiest green to putt on.
Looks like we disagree again.
In my experience 1,17,7 and 18 have more birdies, and 1, 4, 7 and 13 are definitely easier to putt on.
The 5th is a relatively easy par, difficult to bogey unless careless, but difficult to birdie because there is a lot more slope and subtle movement to the green than most realise. Unless the pin is back left, it is also difficult to get close to.
There is plenty of room to drive out to the right, but here you are hitting into an upslope and the ball doesnt get anywhere near the same run. From out here, all of a sudden the shot in gets 20+ yards longer.
There is no real preferred angle to approach the green from and the generous contouring at the front of the green makes alot of pins very accessible.
If there is no preferred angle it is because the pins are never changed enough. You get a better look at a left flag from the left part of the fairway, but that means hitting over the bunker onto the sharpest downslope. If you go right, you have a longer shot in, but can take away most of the downslope and run the ball down with more control.
The right hand pin is very good, because you need to be left off the tee in order to hit into the slope of the green, but misses long and/or wide right can be a nightmare up and down.