No. 5 Par 4, 498 yards &amp;lt;p&amp;gt;&amp;lt;p&amp;gt; This hole played at 457 yards during the 1998 Open, which helps explain why Venturi arrived at the back tee, peered down the fairway and mumbled, &quot;Unbelievable.&quot; The new tee brings trees on the right into the equation. This is another hole featuring what Johnny Miller called a &quot;reverse-bank dogleg&quot; - where the hole turns one way and the fairway slopes the other way. &amp;lt;p&amp;gt;&amp;lt;p&amp;gt; No. 5 veers sharply to the right, while the slope of the fairway sends balls to the left. Several trees on this hole have been removed since '98, when Lee Janzen's tee shot disappeared into a tree in the final round - and, fortunately for him, eventually fell to earth. Janzen made par on his way to winning the Open. &amp;lt;p&amp;gt;&amp;lt;p&amp;gt; Venturi: &quot;Again, you won't get anyone teeing off on the right side, because there's no way you can go over the top of those trees. So the ground will be worn out over here on the left side. ... There definitely will be a lot of action in the left rough. And when you get down there, the green sits for a slight right-to-left approach shot. &amp;lt;p&amp;gt;&amp;lt;p&amp;gt;  &quot;This was always one of my favorite holes. The second shot and the bunkers were perfect, the whole thing. There's a nice flow to it. And you can run up your second shot onto the green; I very much like that design feature. The thing about the old courses like this - and ones designed by (A.W.) Tillinghast, (Alister) Mackenzie, Donald Ross - those guys built courses for the golfer, not for housing developments.&quot;