Garland please post where Patrick said he removed the ocean from consideration? You can't (remove it from consideration, that is) I said the course would still be great without the ocean and identical land forms, but you can't evaluate the holes without taking into consideration the ocean. Possibly not as "ocean" but as the very least as a hazard.
Here's the whole thing, which strangely only the people who haven't played the course are talking about, with the course being wet during the spring and such. The course drains fairly well on the surface. I played in late January once, the course was not as firm and fast as it was in August when I played, but it was playably firm, no standing water, no mud balls and such, all in spite of it having rained the day before. Pacific Dunes drains as well as it does because of numerous natural factors, and not because Mr. Doak magically engineered the drainage out there to work miracles. Tom can set me straight on that if he wishes (and if I'm wrong), but the fact that the Bandon area could likely receive 2 feet of rain in a 24 hour period and still be firm is not, IMO, because of how he designed the course, it is because of how well water will flow through that sandy soil; I grew up near where Doak's Riverfront was eventually designed and play it when I make it back home, I've played that course the day after a rain, in spring, and it was a mud hole. You can't design the kind of water drainage you see at Pacific, Old Macdonald, TOC, etc., thats just nature.
That is what you are not understanding here, because you either haven't played the course at all, or haven't played it off season after a rain.