Pat,
Since you already knew the answer, why then do you pose the question?
I gather you have never played Mackenzie's Midwest masterpiece and the #1 ranked course in the state of Michigan.
You would then understand, and not blindly try to refute, the point I made about front hole positions being equally adept at defending par. A player can land short and spin down the hill, or be long and have a treacherous putt that can indeed roll off the green. I encourage you to play some of these as it would add, not detract, from your knowledge. Tom Doak will confirm should he read this.
And, since any grounds crew member will only place a pin on a back shelf (or at the front perhaps once a week), it is a push, just like if he placed a pin directly over a bunker with a drop off on the right.
I'm sure you would be wise enough to hit well away from that.How many MacRaynors have I played? Did not think this thread was about them, but this week I played 36 on a Raynor. Is that OK? Five CBM rounds this summer, multiple Ross, etc. Played Piping Rock, NGLA, but that is irrelevant here. The more relevant question would be: how many courses have I played that influenced CBM/Raynor to do what they did...?...
The originals, not just the US template versions.
To answer another one of your queries, I would be obliged to give you 5 a side, assuming your 8.2 index (from NJ) is accurate and not padded....
Yikes!
Our 18th hole on our home course (Flynn) has a back shelf where the pin is set once a week. If the pin is at the front and you over-club (or miss-hit)and land on top shelf, you will be hard-pressed to hold the green on your first putt. When the pin is on the back, as it has been during club championship finals matches when I am up 1 going into 18 against a player who has played in multiple USGA and British amateur events, I would NEVER try to get to the back shelf and gladly 2-putted from 30-35' to win.
I dont care about MPCC in this thread as this is not about one course or one GCA per se. although I look forward to playing there later this fall.
Your thread is more appropriately bifurcated into two camps: those who can lag well uphill and up slopes and those who cannot. You apparently do not fear downhill sliders - I do. But, you appear to doubt your ability to lag up slopes for a 2-putt while I do not and based on my history, I'm confident in this strategy going forward. Over the green on a back shelf pin (especially if some deranged GCA put a bunker behind the green (Eww!!), that is death.
Cheers,
Ian