by Frank Delicious » Mon Aug 04, 2008 8:53 am
The holes are mixed, you start out on open holes, both 1 and 2 are about 350 that you can go straight at or take an extended hyzer at. There is rough on the left side that is brutal and a road on the right that is OB on both of them.
3-5 are short technical wooded shots all between 250-300, the fairways are pretty wide right now b/c the volunteers got a little overzealous with the pruning but off the fairway is still super thick, if you get off the fairway on any of those holes you could easily be looking at a bogey or more.
Holes 6-8 are must birdie holes that are all under 260. 6 and 8 are open holes and 7 is a wooded hole but only a 240ish straight shot.
Hole 9 is a tight uphill shot that starts in the woods but comes out into the open for the last 80 ft or so and the pin is up on a sharp hill. After throwing this hole a couple of times I concluded it is impossible to tell what the wind is doing near the basket from the tee.
Hole 10 is the signature hole that starts out in the open on a elevated tee. You must hit a 40 ft gap about 100 ft in front of you and carry a gentle anhyser the whole way to the basket. guardian trees make this nearly impossible.
11-14 are all technical wooded shots around 300 with no two shots the same, there is a gentle anhyzer, a gentle uphill hyzer and a sharp anhyzer.
15 is only 230 ft long and it is about a 60 ft drop to the basket. The basket is only about 10 ft from the back rough and that stuff is so thick you can only be two ft in and have no putt.
16 is a sharp uphill anhyzer that is only 270 but plays about 330. The fairway is wide but the rough is ridiculously punishing.
17 and 18 are open shots where wind is always blowing. 17 is a gentle anhyzer into a constant headwind and 18 is a long shot into a headwind with the tee at the top of a large hill making for a very difficult deuce.
I would say this course is like Cedar Hills the most, lots of birdie opportunities but to shoot really well you will have to be on your game big time. I was talking to Jay Pontier, the co-designer of the course, and he already has plans for putting in some gold tees. When those go in that will be a hell of a course.