We had a discussion at my club yesterday. About 16 people were in the room, among them a golf pro, a GM, a superintendent, two men who have served as club president, a contractor, an Australian woman, a mid-handicap woman, a chronically sunburned man, and a guy wearing purple pants.
During the discussion, we talked about pin placements. Our course is 91 years old and our Golden Age greens are largely intact. They have huge slopes and small shelves for pins, and run at modern speeds. As a result, we often cut the hole within three or four paces of the edges of greens, as we have large areas of unpinnable slopes in the interior of a few of our greens.
The golf pro made a comment to the superintendent regarding our 9th hole (470 yard par 4 with a huge, heavily contoured green with a severe fallaway on the left side):
"I'm just passing along something I've heard. On number 9, with the pin back left... well it's really hard. Some of the guys get upset because if they hit a good drive, it leaves them maybe 170 or 180 yards out. They can't go at that pin though. It's hard to get a ball back there and you can't really get it close. What if it's the last hole of your match that started on 10 and you're one-down and you need to make a birdie? Is that pin really fair? I mean if you land it on the downslope you can't stop it before it rolls off the back edge."
Roughly 15 other people were in the room. Guess the reaction.