The 18th green on the Dinah Shore Tournament Course that unexpectedly took a starring turn in the 2020 ANA Inspiration will again garner attention this week, but this time for reasons that aren’t likely to invite controversy.

For the second straight year, the ANA Inspiration that begins tonight (Australian time) will be played without spectators and thus without the grandstand that, pre-pandemic, was always erected behind the 18th green. Last September, a structure, dubbed by Golfweek‘s Beth Ann Nichols as “The Great Wall of Dinah”, was put there to replicate the grandstand.

Several players, including the winner Mirim Lee, used the structure as a backstop for their second shots on the par 5 to prevent their golf balls from running through the green and into the water behind it.

The structure is not there this year, which will force longer hitters, at least, to decide between laying up short of the water or going for the green in two and running the risk of the ball reaching the penalty area.

“When they have the tee back, I won’t be going for it, especially with this wind, with it being into,” Lexi Thompson, a past ANA champion, said on Tuesday. “But once they move the tee up, if I get a good number, I hit 4-iron in today and just placed the ball there and it stopped. It has to be a really good number for me to go for it.”

Sponsor signage that appears to be immovable has been erected behind the 485-yard (443-metre) tee at 18, and word is that the hole will play at that length or shorter all four rounds. Wherever the LPGA decides to place the tees, they are likely to create even more interest on a hole that already has historically proved interesting.

The greens there this time of year play firm and fast, adding to the challenge.

“It’s pretty firm,” Canada’s Brooke Henderson said of the 18th green, “so I think 3-wood is definitely out. If I can hit maybe a high 7-wood into the wind it will hold and a hybrid will hold for sure.”

Nelly Korda, who had a chance to win last September but fell to Lee in extra holes, summed up the dilemma based on her practice rounds this week.

“You’re definitely going to think about going for it,” Korda said. “I hit a 6-iron just short of the green and it rolled up to the middle and then I also tried to hit like a little 5 yesterday to land it in the middle of the green and it went over. So it definitely is going to be very hard to hold.”

Last September, Lee used the backboard to stop her second shot there on the 72nd hole of the tournament, then chipped in for eagle to erase a two-stroke deficit. In a playoff with Korda and Henderson, Lee again used the backboard, leading to a winning birdie.