Happens to me all the time. Usually they say, "This is a good par four."
I always say, "Well, it's a HARD par four."
Once I even had a guy respond, "That's what I said, it's a good par four."
I have asked people to explain their thinking enough to conclude that "good" has become a synonym for "hard."
I think it's all the numbnuts TV announcers saying things like, "This is a good driving hole," or "This is a good par four," when all they mean is that it's demanding, difficult, or unrelenting.
I have lately taken to telling them that good and hard are NOT interchangeable, and that it's easy to make a golf course hard, but it's hard as hell to make on that's interesting.
K
I agree with you.
But, most golfers (GCA dorks and otherwise) love the challenge of the game.
Like it or not, it's a score-driven game and making a par on a long par 4 is an opportunity to rise up and meet that challenge, if only for one hole, irrespective of whether of architecture is any good. Most amateurs don't make that many birdies, so parring a tough hole is as good as it gets for most of us.
I'm a 10 handicap. I'd rather have good architecture than a course that punches me in the face, but I do feel damn good if I can make a par on a tough hole.
If the TV announcers are equating a "good" driving hole with one that provides sufficient challenge for the pros, then by sliding the scale for relative ability, most airport runways would be a "good" driving hole for the average weekend hacker.