David,
You're correct.
The idea that this hole is a pushover or easy par for a 15 handicap is pure fantasy.
Just because the best golfers on the planet can birdie or eagle it doesn't mean it plays soft for the 15 handicapper.
It's a harder hole than it looks
Getting into position for a 15 handicapper is no easy task.
In order to get past the trees, a 15 handicapper would have to thread the left and right trees by hitting a 334 yard drive.
Just to get to the trees is a 282 yard drive.
Any drive left of center is now faced with having to thread the trees on the second shot by aiming to the right side of the hole, either fairway or rough. That leaves him an incredibly awkward angle to a green that is narrow that falls away from him, that has water on three sides.
I'd love to sit and bet a 15 handicap on hitting the green from that location.
Given enough 15's, I could retire by season's end.
Take a look at Google Earth and lay out the angles for a second and third shot, for a drive left of center.
Alternatively, if we accept that most 15's slice the ball, now visualize play from a 220 drive sliced into the right rough.
When I played the hole a number of times, in the same years I was good enough to qualify for the USGA Senior Amateur, that hole was far from a pushover or an easy birdie or par for a low handicap player, so I don't know how the claim can be made that a 15 would easily par it.
And, if I add in the element of pressure, in terms of medal play and financial consequences, that hole becomes very difficult for anyone.
What many can't see from the aerial is the very difficult visual that the golfer sees as he's standing in the fairway and looking at that narrow sliver of land, in between two very visible bodies of water.
It's a very disconcerting view