I hold a distinctly minority opinion (maybe of one in the entire world), which is further buttressed by the fact that I've never seen Pebble in person, only on TV. That said, it surprises me that so many people regard #8 as world class, either for pro's or average golfers.
First the pro's. They hit a mid-iron off the tee, and then a short iron to the green. The second shot has plenty of peril around it and is dramatic. But why does a par four that dictates play (very few real options here)... that calls for a mid-iron followed by a short-iron... rank as one of the best par 4s in the world? The explanations I've heard don't quite clear this up for me.
Now for average players. Real short hitters (200 yard drives or less) face a hell of a challenge there. A blind drive, followed by one of the hardest second shots they'll ever face. Carrying the gorge must be impossible for them. What do they do? Pitch the ball through the rough along the cart path? Hard to see how they can engage the architecture, other than to admire the beauty.
Average golfers who hit the ball 230 yards or so have a better chance, but still real tough. Requires two excellent, long shots. Don't pull them off, and you likely lose a ball (or several).
Even the pro's have trouble scoring there. Can hardly imagine what bogey golfers average. That difficulty, added to the lack of meaningful options, make me think it's not a world-class hole, however spectacular the setting.
George, that's a roundabout way of saying I agree with you!