Funnilyy enough, when we played this hole into a slight wind, David Kelly and I both felt we hit fairly good drives up the RHS, only to find we were hitting 4i for our second shot. What say the locals? Is there a slope up there that kills the roll?
Yes, there is, Scott. But if you two had a 4 iron in, it was also very windy, or they weren't that good a pair of drives in the first place.
8 and 9 are a really cool combination. 8 is going to be either downwind or into the wind, and calls for a very precise tee shot to open up the small green fully.
9 is usually played into a cross wind of sorts, and it appears you have plenty of room to lash out from the tee, but it is surprising how many drives end up in the bunkers at the base of the slope. I do think the second one is superfluous. The second shot, if the pin is at the front, needs to be very precise if you want a simple putt. Plenty of short game options if you miss. On a course full of original and unique greens, this might be the best.
Larry Lambrecht took a photo of this hole from behind in the morning, with the valley full of mist and wondrous shadows over the green. Brilliant image.
The 9th has one of the best green complexes on the course.
Screw that, it has one of the best green complexes in the country. The National has the views, St Andrews Beach the muse.