...I hit a really solid drive just to the right of the center fairway bunkers only to see it roll back 40 yards. I then hit a solid iron into the green, saw it bounce up onto the putting surface, only to see it reappear rolling off of the front of the green and back down the fairway 30 yards. Still don't know exactly what happened (? hit flagstick). Silly to hit two really solid shots and be penalized over 70 yards. ...
When did hitting solid shots and having the hole accept them become the criteria for good golf? Now if you had told me you hit two intelligent shots and the hole rejected them, you might have a case.
Perhaps I failed to embrace the logic of the hole. I only played it once and obviously haven't had an opportunity to try out different tactics. But from my humble perspective, there were no other obvious "intelligent" options presented by the fourteenth hole that were vastly superior to the approach that I took on that hole that day. I just thought the hole was harsh. It seemed to me that the main rationale for running the hole up that steep hill was to a) reward the players with a nice view of the rest of the course and b) allow for the dramatic tee position on fifteen. I suppose one could make the exact same argument for seven, but for some reason I didn't mind seven, probably because the landing area for the drive was flat, the view at the top was so great, and it was the first hole of that kind of the course.
Re other potential stragegic options on fourteen: Driving the ball to the far right reduced (but did not eliminate) the steep slope of the landing area for the drive but it also significantly increased the distance into the green on the second shot. It did offer a somewhat better approach angle to the green, but the tradeoff didn't seem very enticing to me.
One of our caddies pointed out what I thought was perhaps the most attractive and interesting strategic plan for attacking the hole, which was to hit one's drive to the left of the bunkers in the left center of the fairway and then come in to the green via a left sided approach. The main objection to this plan (and why I didn't pursue it) is that it required that you purposely hit your drive into unmaintained "rough" rather than fairway and I didn't want to take the chance of getting a terrible lie as a reward even if I hit the ball exactly where I wanted it. I think the hole might benefit if they extended the fairway to the left to allow that approach as a sensible strategic option.