A quick chat with Sully yesterday brought up a point he made to Pat Mucci many moons ago about just finding the fairway being enough. Then we started thinking some more. I mentioned 1, 12 and 13 earlier. My advice would be hit it over the corner on #1 every time not worrying whether it ended up in the rough or bunker. Having wedge or nine iron to that green is so much better than sitting in the fairway 170-180 out. Contrarian maybe but surely less big numbers and more birdies.
On 8 and 12 I'm in favor of hitting it as far as you can as Tom Watson and particularly Jay Sigel agreed with. On #8 you might have a twenty yard uphill pitch or even a bunker shot. On 12 the further you hit it the better , opening up that skinny green dramatically.
On #13 you have to be careful not to hit it too far and get blocked out and the green is big enough that even a longer iron or rescue doesn't seem too perilous. Can't be left either as the fairway doesn't hold anything that's hot.
There are lots more little nuances that impact the player there, and once you get a comfort for them your advantage over other players is huge. A really good player named Bill Shean from Chicago almost committed Harikari before he figured the place out and once he did became a formidable foe there. Really nice guy and shot some great scores.
Then there is putting ....you could write a book on those greens.