Friday, August 8, 2014

5. Four Local Tracks...MA and RI...July 28-August 6, 2014

The old body was not really interested in big travel plans after the round-the-world trip and the Rockies trip.  So, after sorting my "Top 100" spreadsheet by region and state, I realized there were a bunch of local tracks that I should go see and play.  Net net...was a good decision.  Apologize for dirty of pictures.

Shelter Harbor GC (RI) July 28

About a 100 mile drive from our house in Milton, MA, in the southwestern corner of RI lies Shelter Harbor (SR).  Course is just under 2 miles from LI Sound as the crow flies, but the water is not visible from the course.  Course was completed in 2005.  Designed by Michael Hurdzan and Dada Fry (Erin Hills WI...20157 US Open venue, Devil's Pulpit...outside of Toronto, and Hamilton Farm NJ, it first appeared on GW in 2012, and has steadily climbed to #105 on GW's merged list (#46 on GW's 2014 Modern list).  Par 71, plays to 7,006 yards from tips and I played from 6,205.  Club also has a nine hole par 3 course, but I did not have time to play it.

Put simply, this one is underrated in my opinion.  While it is certainly not a USA Top 50, I would consider it to be a solid top 70-80.  The fairways are some of the widest I have ever played or seen...but they are interspersed with well positioned fairway bunkers (often near the center of the fairway...giving the player the choice of laying up, flying it over, or playing a left or right fairway...decisions that would vary depending on wind direction and pin position).  Favorite holes were:

#4 par 3 205 yards Biarritz hole...and a wild one.  Makes #7 at Yale look simple.  Green is 63 yards deep with some wild humps generally not found on Biarritz greens.  see pic




#7 par 4 363 yards.  Downhill turning right.  Deep bunker bisects fairway and is 243 to reach and 260 carry from back (201/218 from my tees).  Hitting slightly downhill into tiny green (32 deep and probably 16 wide at widest) perched on hill (was moved last year from right lower position...major improvement).
#9 par 5 533 yards.  Turns R-->L then L-->R and uphill to small 2 tiered green.  Eleven fairway bunkers all over the place that guide you through hole and define your options.  No green side bunkers and none needed w false front and green slopes back to front.
#13 par 4 367 yds.  Flat dogleg left.   Carry of 267 to clear bunker in corner of dogleg, and 315 to reach bunker on right side of fairway on same line.  Bunkers front right of green makes you want to leave tee shot as close to left side of fairway as possible...but do not come up short.  Green slopes sharply back rt to front left.
#14 par 4 462 yards.  Flat and turning slightly left from back tee, then slightly uphill to raised green, with huge dune bisecting back of green from behind it.  Difficult and superb par 4 from back tee and blur tee (437 yds), but because of wetlands, white tees play from 331 yards and hole not nearly as interesting.
#17 par 3 194 yards.  Flat excellent par three with water left and in front, bunker right of green protecting bail out zone (and green slopes away from bail out zone).  see pic.


First rate club.  Love course design...and played quite well (40-38-78)...wish I had putted that was on Saturday in Club Championship...but that is another story.  Real story of Club Championship though was Pat's securing TCC's Woman's Super Senior Club Championship, winning the final 2 up on 18.  Well well done, my sweet!!

Conditions were a tough soft but fair amount of rain in past few days.  Close to a hidden gem.

Taconic Golf Club July 30

All the way in the northwestern conner of MA in the Berkshires is the town or Williamstown, MA, home of Williams College.  About 160 miles from our house here in MA.  Have been wanting to play this track for the last few years but it is a bit of a haul.  Pat was scheduled to play in a woman's invitational Aug. 4-6, so like a good hubby, I did the long trip and came out to scout the course for her.

Taconic is an old Donald Ross track, par 71 6808 yds from tips.  Built in 1927 and designed by Wayne Stiles, it is a very good course and fun to play, with some very very interesting and tough greens.  Was #85 on merged GW list in 1999 but has slipped to #192 today.  Course is on land owned by Williams College, serves as the home course for Williams' golf team, and operates as a semi-private club.  Best holes are #12 and #13, bot of which have greens that can leave you talking to yourself.  Course is fairly hilly.  and in good shape, but too soft.  All I can tell you is "stay below the hole", which is what I told wifey, but it didn't do much good.

Longmeadow Country Club August 5

Located outside Springfield, MA (100 miles from our home) near the old headquarters of Spaulding...one of the leading manufacturers of golf equipment 60-90 years ago (not to mention Spaulding Hi-Bounce balls that dominated the stickball market in the 1950's and early 1960's).  In times past, the greats of the game would regularly visit Longmeadow to test the new sticks produced by Spaulding, and Bobby Jones was a member of the club.  It remains is a very very good club and is a great old Donald Ross track.  Clearly, Taconic and Longmeadow are the two premier tracks in western MA.  Plays to par 70, 6756 yards from the tips.  Has not been on a true Top 100 list but was on GW's Top 100 Classic list in '97 and '98.  Played with two members, one of whom is a Golf Week rater whom I met playing Rich Harvest Farms (IL) in 2012.

Strongest part of course, not surprisingly is its Ross greens.  Best holes are #3 (excellent par 5 down off tee then up to crested green), #4 and #16 (both superb short par 3's), #8 (very tough long dogleg left par 4 whose tee shot reminded me of tee shot at #4 at Hirono GC in Japan), #15 (mid length par 4 with two tiered green sloping from left to right and a frightening small landing area on the green), and #17 (par 4 with green in a depressed area lying about 30 feet below fairway level.

Course was very soft, but that may have been a function of heavy rains in MA over prior 2 weeks.  No question that both Longmeadow and Taconic are wonderful layouts which one could play every day!!

Oyster Harbors Golf Club August 6

Had heard a lot about this track over the past eight years, and finally got down to the Cape to see what it is all about.  First first class in all regards.  Plays to par 72, and only 6807 yards, this Donald Ross track went through an extensive renovation by Tom Doak about 4 years ago, and continues to make progress along Doak's Master Plan for the layout.  Simply put, it is a wonderful layout, with some of the best and most interesting greens I have encountered.

Played with Kevin Patterson (former tournament director for Mass Golf Assoc, now ex dir of International Seniors Amateur Golf Society), Alex Duhamel (ass't ex dir of ISAGS), and Doug Mayo (GM go OHGC).  Started at #10, a bear of a starting hole, 207 yd par 3 with green that has too many superb pin placements to count...and wicked run offs.  Best other holes are #13 (uphill par 4 to infinity green w false front, 442 yds), #17 (175 par 3 to well bunkered and small green with wonderful segments), #2 (short par 5 491 yards straight and flat to a green sloping from left to right, but with ledge along the left...easy par 5 but wonderful test of shotmaking).  Played so so well...40-35-75.  Felt totally comfortable on the course...could feel the options on most shots and throughly enjoyed the way there land moved.  Great great play every day track.  Firm and fast conditions make golf so much better.

Only negative is that course is in the middle of an island surrounded by water...but almost no views of the water...home sites on perimeter and layout in the center of the island.  Too bad...can't even imagine what it could have been.  Not as good as Eastward Ho! but superb in any case.

Wrap-up

Well, four good to superb tracks..all fun to play (none of which are championship tracks...but who cares), that I had never played before, and all within 160 miles of home.  But, on the other hand, the four day trips racked up about 830 miles...still a lot of driving.  Have six other MA courses I want to see before we disappear in the fall:  Worcester, Hyannisport, New Seabury (Ocean), Sankaty Head, Whitinsville, and Vesper.




Friday, August 1, 2014

4. NE Golf--The Dismal River Club (Doak) and The Prairie Club (Dunes)...July 14/15, 2014

After taking a cart around SHGC to get the pictures in my last two posts, I headed over to The Dismal River Club.  DRC is located about 8 miles west of SHGC as the crow flies, but getting there by car is more like 30 miles (and about 45-50 minutes).  The last 19 miles used to be a gravel road, but most of that has now been paved (but is mostly one lane...but as you can imagine, not a ton of traffic even in "rush hour").  I arrived at a rather empty DRC around 4:30pm, registered and went to my room, which was very nice.  A good shower and a nap were much appreciated.

DRC first course was designed by Jack Nicklaus and opened for play in 2006 and stretches to about 7400 yards.   It is Jack's first design in this type of geography, and many have said it is far too extreme.  Word is he went fro hating blind shots to going overboard with them.  Who knows, but based on this input (which was remarkably consistent) and a tight schedule for this trip, I decided not to play the Nicklaus course.  It should also be noted that the Nicklaus course never cracked any of the Top 100 lists.

Last year, the second course at DRC opened.  It is known as the Red Course or also the Doak course, since it was designed by Tom Doak.  As the club sits on about 3,000 acres, they were able to squeeze in the second course.  It was highly anticipated and opened last summer.  Rating wise, only one Top 100 listing has been released since its opening, the Golf Week USA 2014 list, and DR-Doak came in at #86 on the merged list (#39 on Modern list).  Course has no rating (neither does SHGC), and no tee markers, just posts for the back, regular, and front tee areas.  Stretches to 6994 yards (par 71) and I played from 6334 yards.  All yardages below are from back (except where noted)

While having dinner Sunday night, I met Chris Johnston ("CJ"), who runs DRC and is one of several investors who purchased DRC prior to completion of the Doak course.  This group is the third owner of DRC...not surprising given the downs (and slow ups) of the US economy since DRC first opened.  I did not realize it when I was at DRC but one of the investors is Charlie Mechem, former LPGA commissioner who I had the pleasure of playing two round with at Bandon Dunes in 2003.  Small world once again.  In any case, CJ is an interesting guy who seems to be devoted to making Dismal River a success...and, for what it is worth, I think the Red or Doak course is a major step forward in that process.  Quite simply...it is superb...and I think as it gets tweaked over the next 5 years or so (as happens with all new courses in their early years) it will get even better.  I do not think it is in Sand Hills' category, but that is hardly an insult.  To my mind, there are less than one handful of tracks in the USA that are.

One of the first things I noticed at DRC, is how different the terrain and sand Dunes were compared with the area around SHGC (just 8 miles east of DRC).  DRC sits in a valley with huge (400') dunes around it, and its final three holes are close to the Dismal River (which also runs through SHGC...but near the clubhouse and cabins...which are over a mile from the layout).  You may notice the difference in some of the photos below.  During dinner, CJ and I of course discussed golf architecture, etc and mostly agreed on things (especially on our mutual love of Camargo, outside of Cincinnati...his love benign much longer standing as he was a member there, whereas i have only played it once).  He did give me some hints regarding what i would see the next day.  First, Doak insisted (and CJ acquiesced) on having the 18th green some 500 yards from the 1st tee.  Actually, given that the 1st tee is about a mile from the clubhouse, it really make no difference (except in a match play if you need to go extra holes).  Also, with only one road going trough the property, Doak insisted on having the 9th hole cross over the road.  Again, no big deal, and think about the number of fabulous tracks with a roads crossing one of more holes (e. g., Cypress Pt, Old Course, Shinnecock, The Country Club)...and remember the tee shot from the back tee on SHGC #5 goes right over the 4th green...and SHGC has even more land!!  CJ also asked if he could join me (just walking) for part of my round.  I of course enthusiastically said yes.

After a good nights sleep, breakfast, and packing up my stuff, it was off to the range to hit a few (trips like these i spend little time on the range...hitting too many balls already), and then to the first tee.  I needed to play DRC to complete all three USA Top 100 lists and knock off another bucket list.

#1--535 yard par 5, starts flat then slightly uphill for last 150 yds and turning slightly right.  Good starting hole.  Big wide fairway...strategic track of course.  No obvious problem for opening drive.  Bunker in center of fairway 115-125 from center green needs to be negotiated for any layup second, and bunkers and dune right of green must be carefully avoided by anyone going for it in 2.  Green sits in natural amphitheater and angles LF-->BR, slopes to front and has two tiers...upper tier to back right.  Excellent opening hole.  Pics from tee and about 140 from middle green (note bunker and dune right).  CJ joined me for third shot in (got up & down from right dune)


 #2--472 yard par 4...slightly uphill and turns left...to green on top of crest with deceptively string false front.  Blowout bunker on left of fairway to be avoided off tee (230 to reach and 310 to carry) and a any layup must avoid left bunker 50-75 yds from middle green.  That's CJ's Bernese (spelling??) in the picture...you will also note the winterkill damage in the fairways.  Remember, this was very young grass last winter going up against some of the worst global warming in history.  Very tough hole and tough green to hit.

#3--195 yd par 3--slightly downhill.  Pic from back tee...regular tee is to left and has easier angle.  Obviously, best to avoid deep deep bunker on left front.  Tee shot requires fade but green slopes slightly L-->R


#4--388 yrd par 4--uphill and straight.  Fairway split by bunker in middle, leaving player with important strategic choice.  Narrow part of fairway to to the left of bunker, and leaves open shot to green.  Lots of room to right of bunker but two problems with that choice.  First, you MUST hit tee short far enough to carry big hollow on right...or your drive will roll back 20-40 yards.  Second, that angle forces your second shot to clear two bunkers carefully guarding right front of green. In strategic sense, hole very similar to #1 at Rock Creek Cattle Co. (also a Doak).  Unfortunately, the picture is worthless!!

#5--261 yard par 3 (no typo)...and 239 from regular tee...into prevailing wind.  And look at this bunker built (by nature) into the dune protecting the right side of the green.  Frankly, I think this hole is unfair for all but the best golfers.  It goes down into a valley and then moves up to the green, with only 5-8 yards of relatively flat land before the green (remember the length and prevailing wind), so almost impossible to run it up.  One of only two holes I didn't like.  In any case, put tee shot into bunker and got out and onto green...2 putt for heroic bogey.



#6--326 drivable par 4.  Slightly downhill and turns left.  Very good risk reward hole.  Bunker protects front right corner of green and large bunkers protects whole left side of green.  Several fairway bunkers and exposure tom wind makes player think carefully about how to play any layup off the tee.

#7--442 yd par 4...straight, downhill off elevated tee then uphill sharply to crested,  2-tiered green.  Tee shot protected by two bunkers (255 to carry), and send shot must carry large bunker right and short of green.


#8--554 downhill par 5 with green angled LF-->BR an sloping sharply L-->R.  Tee shot must avoid fairway bunkers down right side and approach must carry bunkers built into dune 80 yds out from green.  Dune also makes any third shot from  right side blind to entire right side of green.   2 tiered green with upper tier on left and hollow to back right.  You do not want putt from upper tier to hollow.  Wonderful green setting.



#9--374 yard par 4... turning slightly right to small angled green (angle from LF-->BR with large bunker protecting right and small bunker protecting left side.  This is hole where drive goes over the entrance road.  Excellent "sleeper" hole...looks very easy, and player must concentrate to maintain focus, and avoid a "stupid" bogey.  Overall hole is flat but important to hit drive about 250 to reach crest of fairway.  Green is "infinity"and small...and look at that dune which is way in the background...that is on the other side of the Dismal River and is about 500-600 yards past the 9th green.  Nothing like it at SHGC 8 miles away.


#10--546 yard par 5.  Elevated tee, then downhill and uphill to green (from 150 short of green next shot is totally blind).  Three sets of bunkers along right side.  First set not in play, second set 300 to 335 off back tee, and third set 75 -100 from center of green.  Two bunkers and dune protected left side of green.  Green is deep and narrow (20 yd wide and 40 yd deep) and spores sharply L-->R and back of green slopes toward back.  See pics from tee and left front of green.  Superb hole and the start of a magnificent back nine.



#11--174 yd par 3...flat to narrow deep green (but front of green angled to back right...making for much longer carry over junk to right side of green).  3 bunkers protect front and right side.  Green is tiered and has 3 sections...back left (highest point of green), back right, and front (lowest section).  Pin was in back left, hit ok 5 iron that ended up about 3' and got my birdie.  Despite this bit of good fortune, a super hole.


#12--430 yard par 4.  Blind tee shot uphill and then downhill to green...something I have seen very little of on this trip, and really enjoy (think #4 at Pine Valley).  Deep, narrow green protected on left and in back.  

#13--Very tough, spectacular and even fun 496 yd par 4.  Uphill off the tee then downhill to green and doglegs right.  Two sets of fairway bunkers guide right side  First is 300-300 off tee and second is about 60 from green.  Large dune at corner of dogleg  Approach shot is spectacular...with  "bison run" over dune about 500 yards behind green as aim point...see pics first from tee and second of approach shot:



#14--419 par 4---turning left, and slightly uphill to raised green.  This is the second hole that i think needs some changes (other one was par 3 #5).  Dune on left side of fairway and bunker on right side (both about 155-165 to green) leave a gap between them which is only 20 yards wide....a gap which is too narrow (in my always humble opinion).  Especially from at least 160 yards out, to a raided green protected by a bunker on left front of the green.

One side note...I had trouble figuring out where 14th green was (lack to tee markers contributes to this) and saw what i at first assumed as the 14th hole...and thought it was the best looking hole on the course from the tee...but it turned out to be the par 3 16th green that I was looking at...see below



#15---start of a fabulous finish...315 yard drivable par 4...downhill and straight.  Two fairway bunkers  on left (carry leaves you 200 to green) force you to think a little about layup (as you would prefer to layup on the left side of the fairway).  Large dune with 4 bunkers carved out protected right side of shallow green (21 yards deep)...and there is a very sharp drop off on the left side if the green, and getting up and down from the bottom of that drop off is a tough chore (trust me anything left will run off at least 30 years from the green)...but probably easier than going for the green and putting it in the fescue on the right hand dune or one of the 4 bunkers there.  Great strategic hole with lots and lots of choices/options.  Think your way around this one.

#16---166 yard par 3 to seemingly large green divided into 3 sections...like a three leaf clover.  Front left of green protected by a bunker.  Two bunkers on front right, two other back left and one back right..total of 6 bunkers around this sucker.  Lowest portion of green is front of it (to right of for mentioned bunker), highest portion is back right, and missile height portion is behind front left bunker...three very small greens.  Behind green (but not close to in play) is the Dismal River and behind river  is a towering (400' I would guess) sand dune...see picture below.  2nd pic from back of green.  Spectacular and wonderful golf hole.


#17--454 par 4...blind drive to top of huge dune (probably 50-60 in height) and then tumbling downhill and from left to right to green sitting near Dismal River, same huge dune mentioned on 16 to right across river. Very simply, the most fun hole on the entire trip (perhaps because i played two spectacular shots to about 15'...but you guessed it, missed the putt).  Seriously, just loved this one!!  At first had trouble figuring out what line to hit my drive, but them spotted the cattle's skull on top of the hill.  See pic below..line is to left of big bush middle left (click on picture and zoom it out...line is just right of left tee post (there are two...one is far right) just over rough just ahead of this back tee...that is where i played from...411 yards).

In any case, I guessed right and was in perfect position on top of the dune.  Fairway is very very wide up here, but too far left and hole much longer...to far right and go back to the tee and reload.  Wind was behind me and I had 215 to pin.  Hit 3 hybrid...planning (to be honest...hoping) to run it in.  Hit career short and put it 15' behind back pin.  Green is narrow (26 yd) and deep (39 yards)...20' further and I am in junk.  So so much fun watching this shot tumble down and onto green and come to rest so close.  See these pictures from various spots on top of the dune.  BTW...that is the clubhouse on top of the hill in the distance.




#18...447 yard par 4, downhill slightly and dogleg right.  Tee shot has to carry some marsh (I played from 420 and no problem carrying it...but had following wind)...and if the wind is against, you can play tee shot further left for a shorter carry, but of course this leaves a longer approach.   Here is tee shot from back tee (green is directly below 4 cabins on hill to left of long clubhouse:





If you choose to lay up, you need to negotiate patches of marsh and one fairway bunker in middle of fairway.  Green angles from back left to front right and slopes strongly in that direction.  Spectacular and tough but playable (and fun) finishing hole.  I put my approach back left and had an 85' long putt for my birdie...missed it but sunk a 6 footer for par and a 40-37-77 to complete all the current USA top 100's!!  See pictures of approach shot and green along line of my 85' putt.  Trees beyond green in last picture show where Dismal River runs, and clubhouse is behind the photographer in the last pic...about a mile behind.


Summary of DRC--I was surprised by the greens...very tough but much tamer than early Doak tracks (e.g...Ballyneal and Barnbougle Dunes).  Don't know if he is becoming more conservative, or if owners (like CJ) are successfully putting a "leash" on him.  Whatever, it is working.  Greens are very tough but on average I overplayed the breaks...how often does that happen on early Doak greens.

Layout has a wonderful flow.  You always know where you are, and the finishing holes are simply great.  Who cares about the distance between 18 and 1...and the road that the tee shoot on #9 crosses doesn't exactly have much traffic.  Besides...that is the insurance carrier's problem.

No question these eras conditioning issues due to this past winter.  As i wrote earlier...this had to happen with young grass (course opened about 13 months ago) and the winter.  I am fully confident that these problems will be easily fixed which will also enable the fairways to be cut lower and become even faster.

am also sure the course will evolve over time (see my comments on #5 and #14) as it gets more play...and with proper management (I think that is in place) should be able to rise to a top 20 USA track with ease.  It is really really good!

One last thought...Sunday night as I made my way back to my cabin, the sun had set but the sky above the huge dune was still 'warm" with light.  As I looked up on the sand dune, I saw a solitary tree at the peak..on the horizon.  Incredibly beautiful.  There was not enough light to get a picture with my iPhone...but here is that tree as it looked Monday afternoon:



To Next Stop; The Prairie Club--after lunch, drove about 75 miles (18 miles east to state road, then 60 miles north) to The Prairie Club outside of Valentine, NE, just south of the South Dakota state line.  Prairie Club is back in the Central zone.  Arrived around 4pm.  Prairie has two 18 hole layouts (Dunes course by Tom Lehman and Pines designed by Graham Marsh), and a 9 hole par 3 course.  Located at the northern end of the Nebraska Sand Hills region, its terrain is again different than that of SHGC and DRC.  Less dramatic dunes, and much thicker fescue (very much like Muirfield in Sclotland after a wet spring season...mote like hay).

I was scheduled to play Dunes at 7:20 on Tuesday morning, but figured I would be better off playing the back nine Monday afternoon and the front nine early on Tuesday.  So, feeling pretty good after a 10 minute rest, took a few swings with my trusty orange whip, and drove on cart about 3 miles out to 10th tee.  It was 5pm and sunset was at 9pm.

Course is 7583 from tips (par 73)...I played from 6838 yards.  In terms of ratings, Dunes is currently rated #86 on Modern course list by GW...comes out as #169 on the merged GW list so not really a top 100...Pines never made any list.

Course winds its way throughout the fescue (hay)...over fairways which roll in every direction.  Very natural in feel, but not compared to SHGC and DRC (Doak).  Best holes on back are 15 and 17 (602 yd par 5 uphill left dogleg...and 457 yard par 4 uphill right dogleg respectively.  Pics below are 10, 11 and 15.





Played front nines early Tuesday morning.  Best holes are 2, 4, 5, 8 and 9.  Course is beautiful but suffered severe damage from winterkill.  Many greens and fairways with major damage...do believe it will come back but will be a tough road....they have already started but so much work to do...

I found the course fun to play but tough...lots of choices on shots but certainly not in the class of DRC Doak much less SHGC.  But, it is tough to have them as you "neighbors" and stand out in the crowd.  And the real truth is that I was anxious to complete the trip and get to Omaha for my flight.  Would like to return in about 2 years (assuming conditioning improves and my game does not deteriorate too badly).  In any case, had a 79...so finished trip strongly!

Left Prairie Club at about 10:30am leaving what I thought was tons of time for drive to Omaha.  Turns out drive took longer than shown on Google Maps (construction along the way).  Caught my plane (Omaha-Chicago-Boston) but it was touch and go.  Flight from Chicago a little late...and it was so so wonderful to get home!!

Trip in Retrospect

Some thoughts on this journey:
1.  It was exhausting.  Actually tougher than the world wide trip in May, because of all the driving and different hotels.  Drove about 1900 miles in 9 days...and stayed in a different hotel for the eight nights of the trip.  Me is getting too old for this type of schedule.  Or did I use the wrong tense here, perhaps it should be: Me is too old for this type of schedule.

2.  Incredibly beautiful sights along the way.  Had never been to ID, MT or WY and this is a big country.  But big means long distances.

3.  Interesting how golf architecture has changed in last 30 years.  In the first third of the 20th century ("Golden Age" of golf architecture in USA), there was wonderful land available for golf courses near large cities...and having wonderful land is critical to creating (either by building or discovering) a great track.  Then after WW II, when golf course building restarted in the 1950's, there was a paucity of good land near urban centers...so a lot of courses were built from 1950-1990 on bad land (for example...the CA and AZ desert, the swamps of FL, etc.).  Starting probably with SHGC, developers stopped worrying about location (based on the unheard of assumption that if you build...or discover...a great course, they will come) and the likes of SHGC, Bandon Dunes, DRC, Prairie Club, and dozens of others were (mostly) discovered and the new "Golden Age" led the by the likes of Coore/Crenshaw and Doak was underway.  This meant, for folks like me...some fabulous new tracks to discover, but some very remote places to get to.

4.  It is great to get my three bucket lists under my belt.  There are many other potential ones, and I need to be judicious in selecting them and which to go after.

5.  OK...now for comparisons of the layouts on this trip:

Best 18 hole courses:  1.  Sand Hills  2. Old Macdonald   3.  DRC--Doak   4.  tie--Gozzer Ranch & Rock Creek (note...when DRC Doak recovers from conditioning damage caused by this past winter...it may move ahead of Old Mac)

Most Fun:  1.  Bandon Preserve  2.  Sand Hills  3.  Old Macdonald

Biggest disappointments: 1.  Sanctuary  2.  Black Rock...so so over watered  3.  Shooting Star

Biggest positive surprise:  Gozzer Ranch by far

Next???
1.  Rest
2.  Some local tracks in New England
3.  Figure out next bucket lists
4.  Get my short game back
5.  Rest

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

3. Sand Hills GC back nine, and overall comments--July 13, 2014

OK...now for the back nine:

#10--472 yard par 4...downhill and straight.  Tough hole to say the least.  Fairway lined with 3 well placed bunkers and the fairway pinches about 100 yards from the green.  Fairway rolls through a series of hollows to the green.  Green lies slightly below fairway level.  There is a fairly dramatic slope down to the green from the left side...and the smart player will use this slope to bounce the incoming shot toward the center of the green.  Right side of green protected by bunker.  Pics show from tee,  long approach shot (note slope on left of green), and down to green from top of slope.



#11--about 410 yards, par 4, downhill from an elevated tee, then back uphill to green...dogleg left.  Feels like you can see the entire hole from the tee...but watch out buddy...especially you long hitters...you could be fooled.  Here is (in a lousy photo) the view from the tee.  The green is just to the right of the three bunkers you can see on the far left.  The fairway starts out down the middle of the photo, then goes down the hill, and then turns left.  You can see clearly 2 fairway bunkers on the right side (the ones through the fairway, not the first two on the right)...they are 300 and 350 off the back tee.  Now you can also see a thin line of white sand over the corner of the dogleg...be back to that in a minute.  If you hit a big drive say 300-320...you better be right down the middle (just left of those two bunkers thru the fairway).

If you hit that perfect drive, you will be left with this uphill approach to the green...not easy but certainly doable.  But be careful...while you can see three bunkers left of the green from the tee, they are not visible from here...and they for sure protect the entire left side of the green.  Also, if you aim too far right, it will kick off the green and into a swale to the right.

 
OK...so you want to know why to avoid cutting the corner of the dogleg?  Just look below, at the fairway bunker on the left side, just past the dogleg, that is just a sliver when you look from the tee...these C&C guys are real devils...that is a BIG bunker that is not fun to visit:
 and here is a closeup of some of the smaller ones on the left side of the green.

#12--417 yard par 4 straight away and "basically" flat.  Flat that is, except for the fact that fairway is a "hog-back" with the hog's spine running from tee to green...so the wide wide fairway with no fairway bunkers (easily 75 yards wide) runs off to deep hollows on both sides from which the approach shot is totally blind.  So you better be straight off the tee.   If so, approach to green is fairly simple except for a monstrous bunker on the right (sorry no pic).  Green slopes mostly back to front.

#13--216 yd uphill par 3 to infinity crowned green and totally exposed to the wind (if it ever blew in NE!!).  Me thinks this is the best par 3 here.  Green is protected just a bit...large dune to left of green, large deep bunkers front right and front left, and small bunker right.  Green has false front, falls off in back, and otherwise goes left to right (coming off the large dune).  No problem at all...just a piece of cake (arsenic cake i think).  Oh, and by the way, if you happen to birdie it, don't tell anyone, since there is plenty of room for another back tee going back to about 240, and at a tougher angle from the left, bringing the dune more into play.  See these pics...in order, from back tee...btw do NOT be in that right bunker, from left side (and angle if they build another back tee to the left), and from back of green.



 #14--Having just played a par 3.5, it is time for a bit of a rest with a par 5 (perhaps 4.5 if you are careful) that bends left off tee and then right to green 508 yds and slightly uphill to green.  Two problems here.  First are fairways bunkers that pinch left side (see first bunker on left in first pic below) and one on the right, and require a carry of 260 to clear (because you do not want to visit them...as they convert hole to a par 5.5).  Second problem is the very small green (24 yds deep and only 17 yds wide at its widest point...and front 6 yards and back 10 yards are much narrower) very well protected by bunkers front right and back left.  Green slopes back to front and left to right (off dune where back left bunker is set).  That back left bunker is not a nice beach.  It slopes down the dune and stopping a shot out of it ain't an easy task


#15--Here is another par 4.5 (except the card says 4)...469 yards uphill plays L-->R off tee and R-->L to green.  And what a green...large (29 wide and 35 deep) but slopes to center from both sides but to edges front and back, with front being a severe false front.  Green also protected by large dune (with, of ours a large blow out bunker) to left and short of green.  Off tee it is vital to avoid the huge fairway bunker right (215 carry uphill) and smaller one right (285-300 off back tee)...and to see the green well for you approach, your drive should favor the right side.  Tightly mowed areas all around the green  make for a good test of your shot game nerves.  Pics below are from tee (note two fairway bunkers on right side, and one on top of dune to left of green), then from approach shot, then from right and short of green.



#16--a whale of a par 5...612 yards..downhill and turns left.  Tee shot MUST avoid huge blow out bunker left 270 carry, and fairway narrows after that bunker...but on the other hand, it runs sharply downhill...here again risk/reward tradeoff at its best.  Lots of room right off the tee, but that means a true 3 shotter and a tough second shot over bunkers at the left corner.  These bunkers extend from 120-190 yds from center of green and are to be avoided..I can vouch for that, as these did me in in 2010.  Take your choice, but you better commit off the tee and play right if you lay up (as most metals will have to do).  No bunkers around green which can be approached on long 2nd (if you are long and gamble off tee) by playing off small dune to left of green.  But if you are hitting a short iron in,  an approach off the left side will probably stay left on the downhill leaving a very delicate pitch onto the green.  Narrow green slopes B-->F and L-->R.  Not many better par 5's anywhere.  Pics from tee (see huge blowout bunker left of fairway), then 2nd shot (note array of bunkers left), then green from  about 90 yds.



#17---par 3 150 yds.  This is the one you see in all the photos.  Tiny green on top of a dune...surrounded by bunkers in almost very direction.  Perfect short par three.  Another thing...ever notice how many bad uphill holes there are?  Seems that uphill homes are often not very good...but when they are great, they are very special.  Think about #11 at Shinnecock (actually makes 17 at SHGC almost easy) or great uphill par 4's with infinity greens (#2 and #10 at Fishers Island).  Well. the back nine at SHGC has two world class uphill par 3's (13 and 17).  Catch theses pics, and btw, i got it up and down from the oft back bunker...knew you wanted to know that.


#18--par 4, 467 from tips, uphill, turns left.  Two huge bunkers down the left side...the first with carry of 240, and the second expending from 145 yards from center of green to 20 yards to center.  Yes, those are the definition of huge...and they are as deep as they are large.  Approach shot feels way uphill to narrow, deep green that has a false front and slopes B-->F and inward from both sides.  Only phrase that would describe it appropriately is "a fitting finish."

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This report would not be accurate if i did not point out that the brutal winter of 2013-14 did impact SHGC's conditions.  A few areas were still recovering from winterkill and the greens have a little poa coming in.  And the fairways were a little long most likely to allow the recovery to complete in a short time.  Compared to other tracks I have seen in New England, the midwest and the upper plains this year, SHGC came out of the winter very very very well.  

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How does one sum up a course such as SHGC?  Think of the variety and stark contrasts...tiny and massive greens, gorgeous beauty in such a stark setting, massive fairways and massive bunkers, uphill and down hill holes combining for an easy 18 hole walk, fescue all over the place but thin enough to allow you to find and try to play your ball, a first tee about a mile from the clubhouse (and not visible from anywhere on the layout...to minimize "clutter" when you are playing, a totally natural linksy track with no ocean within 1500 miles, possibly the best course in the country (and certainly one of the top 10 in the world) built where no one (other that the genius Dick Youngscap) could have imagined a course 25 years ago, etc etc etc.  In fact, if one could eliminate history from consideration in evaluating layouts (much much easier said than done)...one could easily argue that SHGC is the best track in the USA if not the world

Other things about the club:

--Perfectly simple clubhouse...nothing even "close to the top" much less "over the top";
--Basic simple rooms available with furniture right out of a Motel 6;
--Best hamburgers in the world at Ben's Porch for lunch;
--Best steak you'll ever have in the clubhouse...and that includes Peter Luger's;
--A framed piece of paper in the clubhouse with C&C's 130 discovered holes in stick figures, criss crossing each other...and the actual 18 highlighted;
--A small highly appreciative membership of about 160 who have a deep love for the game, the club, its founder and its staff, and finally...
--As fine a staff as I have seen at any club...friendly to all (including each other), always helpful and never never fawning over members and guests...simply superb.

Not a bad place.  Brilliant and special in so many ways.  If you have the opportunity to get there...do not pass it up (unless it is in February).