When the wind blows hard on the Plantation course in Hawaii it plays extra games with the world's top golfers.
The long course works through the lower slopes of the West Maui mountain range and when the nearby ocean breeze is gentle the course feels more manageable. When it puffs up, it's a struggle and a lottery for most.
Not for Dustin Johnson though, who melted the field in the opening PGA event of the year as he pounded and putted his way to an eight-shot victory.
The highlight of his triumph were the two eagles he made at the weekend on the par-4 downwind 12th which measured 433 yards (396m). He wedged in from 60m for his first then in the final round battered his drive over the blind hill and down the slope, to leave him with a 15cm putt for eagle while his rivals were hitting wedges to the green.
Commentator Brandel Chamblee caused plenty of controversy, and was quickly shot down, when he went as far as saying it was the greatest shot in golf because of the distance and precision of the drive.