Ran, I have just the course design for you. Close, anyway. I posted about it several times before, and generated so much excitement, I got a grand total of...
... zero responses.
But being tone deaf, or a glutton for punishment, I'll give it another go. We can build a course that measures well under 7000 yards (probably 6500-6700), that challenges the pro's and is a blast for average golfers. The course will require the world's best to play every club in their bags, including hitting long irons and even fairway metals to reach some greens in regulation. It will also give bogey golfers a fighting chance to score well, while having a great time on the course.
One of the keys (for the pro layout) is to have six par 3s, four par 5s, and 8 par 4s. We load up with par 3s, because they are the toughest holes against par for pro's, yet the easiest for bogey.
Two of the par 3s can be short, in the 130 to 170 range. Two should be ultra-long, 250+. The other two should come in between 190 and 220. All these distances are from the tips.
One of the ultra-long par 3s should be in the mold of #16 at CPC. A long heroic shot to reach the green off the tee; or a short, safe route that does not go for the green and turns the hole in a par 3.75.
Already the pro's must hit long iron or fairway metal to reach the green in regulation -- twice. For bogey golfers, either turn these holes into par 4s (which brings the course back into the typical par 72 alignment)... or keep them as par 3s with shorter tees.
Make at least one par 5 like 13 or 15 at ANGC. i.e. a par 4.5 where the wrong choices or shots can lead to double. We can also build one true 3-shot hole for the pros. The others should require long iron or fairway metal to get home in two.
The par 4s run the gamut, from driveable (but dangerous like Riveria #10) to some 500+ yard monsters. The more half-pars the better, on both sides of the equation.
I don't know much about green sizes. If we want to make a CBM-style short hole, would probably need a real large green there. Overall, I'd want someone like Tom Doak to design the greens, to build challenge (and challenging hole locations) for tour players while keeping them fun for bogey.
6700 yards for pro's, maybe 6000-6200 from the next tees up. Par 70 (or 71 or 72 for bogey). Fast and firm. Half-par holes galore, with greens that can drive the best crazy, if they hit to the wrong spots or play their drives without thought. Even better if located in an area with plenty of wind that regularly changes direction.