I was up in Dornoch on Tuesday/Wednesday, and amongst other things took a walk out to the remodeled 3rd hole to see how it looked on the ground compared to the plans. I was hoping to play the hole, but noting the 30+ mile wind in the face and 35 degree F temperature, I wisely chose to walk. As for the hole, from the back tee the changes are not completely obvious. The 4 right side fairway bunkers seem to be in roughly the same place they were before, but if your memory kicks in you notice that they are now completely visible rather than only intimated, as they used to be. Also, the left hand side of the fairway and light rough are now invisible due to gorse planted on that side. The most effective strategic intent for the golfer of the original architect's (Old Tom's) design is preserved (i.e. "drive at the bunkers with a draw"). That the bunkers are now located 15-20 yards from where they used to be, making the hole more obviously a dogleg, enhances the golfer's perceived need to hit a strong draw to get to position A.
Walking down the you notice at about 200 yards two significant features. For one, the hump that was in the middle of the fairway is now astride the left hand semi-rough. If you can only carry 200 yards a shot slightly left will end up in rougher rough and require an escape and then a pitch and a long putt to get a par. If you carry it longer than 200 and go further left you will be well advised to hit a provisional ball from the tee, as the left hand side of the hole is now a newly planted gorse farm. Observant players will remember the consequences of playing such a shot and will naturally gravitate to a more rightish shot in subsequent plays. All that being said, the gorse plantations on the left only seem to extend to 280-90 yards, and I will not be surprised to see elite players (or those with more length than skill or sense) trying to take the long left line which might or might not give them some advantage, depending on the pin position du jour.
In the middle of the fairway, down at the 250 or so yards from the tee spot where most mortals will (hopefully) find their drive, not much has changed. Plan and negotiate a 2nd shot taking into account the sharp L-R contours short of the green and you'll have 2 putts for a par. Go for any pin with a lot of spin and proper line and length and you'll have a putt for birdie. Do neither and you'll struggle for par (or even bogey). Taking the rabbit line off the tee (short right/high wide and not very handsome), you have pretty much the same options as you did before (play the hole as a par 5).
The one significant issue I have with the hole is that moving the fairway bunkers to the right seems to have left a channel near the middle of the fairway which might inhibit poor drives from drifting into the bunkers. Let's see how the ho;e plays when it is grown in and the ground is firm.
Finally, possible future changes? I spent some time looking for the old (c 1980) 3rd tee, and while I couldn't find it, what I did find was a potentially great future tee 30 yards past and to the left of the 2nd green. This tee would be elevated vs. dug-in (the current one) and would seem to not cause any health and safety problems, given that it would be angled significantly to the right, and the homes who have complained about the current tee, live on plots which would be angled sharply to the left (and completely safe) from this new tee. It would be one helluva par-4 for for the elite players and a challenging reachable par-5 for the rest of us. Maybe some day....
Rich