Mike,
I think your memory is failing you a bit, 16 is not a double dog leg. Its a gentle dog leg from the tee that favors a draw, but the approach in from the fairway is straight. Go check Google Maps again.
As for #7, to say its "a simple tee shot except for the width" is kind of like saying a 5 foot putt on #8 is easy, except its above the hole. Once again, consult Google Maps....that fairway is half as wide as any other fairway on the course
I will be the first to concede that my memory is failing.
I said it was "like" a double dogleg because it was a draw tee shot and a fade second. I will concede that you can hit a straight second shot, but the way the green angles left to right, and the big bunker on the right begs for you to hit a fade into the green, especially a back tier pin, which is the way it has been on four of my five plays.
As for #7, it is a simple tee shot because there is no penalty for getting it wrong - no OB, no unplayable, no gunch and lost ball, and no water. If I can hit an iron off the tee, and still get to the green with a short iron, then it is a simple tee shot. But how many people have the patience to hit a 5 or 4 iron off the tee? I understand that some people cannot hit a 200 yard 4-iron like I can, but hopefully you have a 200 yard 3-wood or 5-wood in your bag, and if not, then maybe you should be playing up another set of tees (although on this hole there is no break in distance for the change of tees
).
But let's break the hole down. The hole is only 335 yards from the middle tees. I could hit two 6-irons and possibly two 7-irons from the middle tees and get to the green. So when I say a 5 or 4-iron, it is only so I will only have a 9 or 8-iron to the green; a 5 or 4-iron are the longest clubs in my bag that I am supremely confident I can hit the fairway with. But even a shorter hitter, playing from the proper tees, has no reason to ever hit driver on #7. So, if a hole is giving
you - Kalen - a shorter hitter, the opportunity to hit a long iron or hybrid off the tee and that conservative tee shot will leave
you a short to middle iron to the green, doesn't all of that make the tee shot simple?
Ask yourself this: based on the length of the hole, what would we say about the hole's tee shot if the corridor was wider? Out of place because it is too easy? What is a reasonable width when you can hit a long-iron off the tee? Or is it the inability to move the ball left-to-right or right-to-left because of the height of the trees that is so off-putting?
None of this analysis changes the fact that the trees loom over the hole, and I don't like them one bit. They make me feel like they are staring down on me like some kind of sentinel of giants. (And I agree with whomever said they were probably planted for safety, and they detract versus add anything to the strategy or playability of the course.)
By the way, I have played this course from the middle tees on every one of my rounds. No reason to punish myself.