Hey, I hit driver to the middle of the lower fairway on 7 at Wolf Run about a month ago during a casual round with a steady breeze off the right that made it seem feasible. No divot bottles down there!
Of course, I then chunked the pitch...
It's a tough hole for me to judge. I love the setting, and the wedge approach to the tiny green hits all the right notes. But the tee shot really just sucks. There's no real need for the fairway to be so tight, or for a full third or more of it to be blind, or for all those trees on the right. What should be a very cool risk/reward shot where hugging the stream gives an advantage on the approach shot instead just becomes a really penal and straightforward play.
On a similar note, I really liked Jason Topp's answer on page 1 about the worst short 4s being holes where everyone takes basically the same strategy. And while his answer focused on the length of tee shot played for and whether everyone pulls the same club or not, I think the same applies to the variety of lines taken off the tee. If everyone's aiming in the same direction, the hole probably isn't very good. You could probably judge most short par 4s based on the number of different spots people aim for off the tee, and the degree of variation between them. The more aiming points and the greater the distance between them, the better the hole. Maybe the same rule works for every type of hole, really.