It was about 45℉ when I left home around 6:15am but when I teed off at 8:15am it was up to 55 and would rise another 15-20℉ by mid afternoon. Hope Valley was founded in 1926 and its course was designed by Donald Ross and since has undergone renovations by Perry Maxwell, Dan Maples, John LaFay, Brian Silva, and most recently Kris Spence (who renovated CCNC's Dogwood course in 2016). Byron Nelson won the fourth of his incredible 11 straight PGA Tour victories here in April 1945.
The land Hope Valley sits on is fairly hilly, and by my count fully 12 of its holes have an uphill approach to the green (3 down hill and 3 flat). For Donald Ross, the greens appear fairly flat and subdued, but they sure do not putt that way. I three putted two of the first three holes until I became accustomed to them. There are also in perfect condition and very very quick...even on uphill putts. I liked the back nine much more than the front (and my play reflected that shooting a 46 - 38 = 84). The last 3-4 holes remind me of Mid Pines GC in Southern Pines and that is a strong compliment. Visually the bunkering could use some updating both in placement and design. At 6720 yards from the tips the course is long enough for most players and certainly for me. Overall routing is good but almost all the fairways are lined with homes and the course crosses several roads.
Hope Valley first appeared on the Golf Week USA Top 101-200 Modern list in 2016 at #101, and then reappeared this year (note that I could not locate the 2017 and 2018 lists) at #172...those two listings translated to #201 and #372 respectively on my Merged GW Top 400 which combines Modern and Classic courses.
On 10/30 I left early for a trip to surprise an Australian friend..."Aussie John." Pat and I met John and Kay (his now wife and then SO) in 2012 in Melbourne, Australia, where John plays at the brilliant Kingston Heath (Post #34). They visited us in Boston the summer of 2012 and we have seen them in Australia and the USA a few times since. In May 2014, I was concluding a round-the-world trip to finish my first Golf Magazine World Top 100 and Aussie John surprised me by welcoming me at Dublin airport on my way to my 100th course, The European Club (no...he did not fly from Melbourne to Dublin for that...he was in England as he and Kay were exchanging vows a few days later near Manchester...but I was still blown away by his doing that). John was scheduled to play Augusta National GC on this day to complete his first (actually I think his first 4 or 5 GM lists). He was scheduled to play Palmetto GC in Aiken, SC the next day and then drive north to Pinehurst to stay with us (and play more golf) before heading back "down under."
While ANGC's rules kept me from being able to surprise him there, I planned to drive to Aiken on 10/30 and surprise him at the dinner we had set up for him with Jill and Charlie B., friends from Boston who live in Charleston and also belong to Palmetto. Soo, I figured "why not leave early and play some course in SC on the way?".
I left home around 5:15am (this is getting to be a habit) and arrived at Spring Valley GC in Columbia, SC (the state's capital) just before 8:00am. Spring Valley opened in 1961 with an 18 hole course designed by George Cobb and then was renovated by John LaFoy (who also did some renovation work at Hope Valley) in 1999. From the tips today it is 6,791 yards. In both 1966 and 1967 it was included in Golf Digest's USA 200 Toughest...but for sure that "toughness" is not obvious today. It was fairly wet and soft from recent rains and I played fairly quickly (2 hours 3 minutes) as I was trying to play 36 holes in Columbia before the forecast rains arrived. Given the softness, I chose to play from 5559 yards instead of 6049 and I scored pretty well (39 - 38 = 77). Course is very flat on the front nine but had some better land on the back. The morning round was designed to knock another off my GD 200 Toughest bucket list and my guess is that many of the 81 that I have left (as of 11/23/44) will be of this ilk. As I have written before, those two lists are the earliest "Top" or "Toughest" lists ever, and certainly do not represent a collection of great or tough tracks. But, of course, a list is a list begging to be conquered.
Columbia Country Club, October 30, 2019: After a drive of 10 miles I was at Columbia Country Club, which encompasses 27 holes. Columbia opened in 1962 with 18 holes designed by Ellis Maples (who designed CCNC's Dogwood course and Grandfather G&CC). Like Spring Valley, Columbia was included on both the 1966 and 1967 GD 200 Toughest lists...and like Spring Valley is not deserving of such notice. But it is certainly superior to Spring Valley.
Sometime after 1967 a third nine was finished. The original course encompasses the Ridgewood and Tall Pines nines...and the third nine is known as Lakeside. The Ridgewood/Tall Pines course totals 7150 yards today, and I played it from 5679 yards. Like Columbia it was a little soft and wet but I was able to finish in 2:06. Had a 41 - 41 = 82 and was pleased to have finished before the rain.
After the round I headed straight to Aiken...no word yet from Aussie John on the status of his round. As I arrived in the town of Aiken I received a call from John...round happened, he was done and relieved and was looking forward to getting over to Aiken and meeting Jill and Charlie B. It sounded like the surprise was still working. I congratulated him and told him we were looking forward to seeing him in Pinehurst the next afternoon.
About 90 minutes later, he walked into the dining room (35 minutes late I must add) at the Willcox Hotel in Aiken and was quite surprised to see me and no Jill or Charlie at the table. We had a great dinner and then headed back to our respective hotels with plans to play Palmetto early the next morning. Was special to "return the surprise."
Palmetto Golf Club, October 31, 2019: I first heard about Palmetto about 10-15 years ago from Steve Hinshaw, a very special member of CCNC who belonged to Palmetto as well and passed away about 5-7 years ago. I played it for the first time on March 15, 2011 (no previous posts...as these were pre-blog days) and simply loved it. It was a few months after I had become a Golf Digest Panelist and it was the 5th course I ever evaluated.
Palmetto was founded in 1892 and its golf course initially was comprised of four holes designed by founder Thomas Hitchcock. These holes were located where the practice range and holes 16-18 now sit. Shortly thereafter, Herbert Leeds, who designed Myopia Hunt Club (Post #56) north of Boston, designed and built five more holes giving the club a full nine. Three years later Leeds and James Mackrell, Palmetto's first golf professional, added nine more holes to complete today's 18. The Club believes that Donald Ross installed an irrigation system in 1928 and in 1932; Alister MacKensie (who was building Augusta National Golf Club some 25 miles to the west) converted Palmetto's sand greens to grass and made additional alterations including lengthening the course. From the late 1980's through 1995 Rees Jones made some bunker renovations and from 2003 to 2005 Tom Doak oversaw a series of bunker renovations to bring back MacKensie's design characteristics. Presently, Gil Hanse is the club's architect of record. Today the course plays 6713 yards with a par of 71. And the clubhouse was designed by Sanford White, who also designed the clubhouse at Shinnecock Hills. Leeds (Myopia Hunt), MacKensie (ANGC, Cypress Point, and Royal Melbourne), and White for the clubhouse...amazing combination.
When I played it for the first time, I was well into the building of my "Top 100 Spreadsheet" and was astounded to note that it had never been included in a World or USA Top 100. I remember thinking that this had to be the quintessential "hidden gem", a designation that I firmly believe still applies today.
The bunkering and greens here are nothing short of fabulous. Best holes are probably #3, #4, #5, #7, and #13...at least according to guys named Rudovsky, Jones and Hogan. I had a 44 - 41 = 85 (bogeying each of those four favorites). Did not matter...coming back here is so very special no matter what one shoots.
After the round, John and I started our drive to Pinehurst (about 3 hours 30 minutes). We had two cars as John would need a car to take him to Charlotte Saturday night for his flights home. John had GPS so while he would follow me most of the way home, it was not necessary for us to stay together on the road. After getting from the club to I-20 (about 10 miles) we headed east on I-20 for about 80 miles, and then would have to take smaller roads for the last 100 miles. About the time I exited I-20 I called John's cell and was transferred to his voice mail...and this happened again 2-3x...and then calls would not connect. Now I started to get worried. I pulled over and waited 5 minutes but did not see his car pass by. I thought about heading back to I-20 but that didn't seem to make sense since he could have gone past the exit and have been re-routed by GPS. Soo, I called 911 and was connected to South Carolina's Highway Patrol. They reported no accidents in the area and would alert their patrols in case he stopped one to ask directions. I checked in with Pat but she had not heard from John either. Then I continued on my (not very merry) way wondering what had happened, but knowing that there was not much else I could do.
As I came within a couple of miles of our house, I called John again and all of as sudden got through. He was sitting in our driveway (Pat was out). Turns out his cell phone had frozen but retained the GPS map showing the way from I-20 to our house. When he got to the house he rebooted the phone and everything came back on. Made for a long afternoon but all was well that ended well.
Dormie Club, November 1, 2019: John had never played Dormie and wanted to see it and I wanted to see if it continued to improve. We played with Steve S. of CCNC and St. George's in Toronto. I had last played Dormie in February of this year and was very presently surprised by the improvement in its condition. Just looked for my last Post regarding Dormie and it looks like I did not post that round...so the last Post covering Dormie is from 2016 (Post #60). Deep apologies to my loyal readers!...(all 12 of you!!)
In any case Dormie had opened about 10 years ago as Coore-Crenshaw's only original course in the NC Sandhills. It never got traction (for a variety of reasons) and 3-4 years ago it was starting to really show the effects of deferred maintenance necessitated by poor cash flow. About two years ago a group that owned 4 courses at that time (and with deep pockets) purchased Dormie and named its collection of courses after it. More importantly, they have put their $$ where their mouth is and really cleaned up the place, including rebuilding all the bunkers this past summer. Lots more to be done, but clubhouse construction is scheduled to start soon and the outlook is looking real good!! Happy to see it.
To get to the 7th tee at Dormie you must walk around the 14th tee. To keep folks from playing #14 in error that tee has a wonderful sign pictured below:
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Sign on 14th tee at Dormie! |
I played fairly well shooting a 42 - 40 = 82 with double bogey 7's on par 5 holes #6 and #10. Played even par for holes 12-17 and three over on holes 7-18 (including the double on #10)...no complaints.
Dormie was listed as #185 in USA on GD's 2015 list and made my GW merged top 200 from 2012-14, but then started falling followed by a slight uptick in 2019...reflecting the recent improvements. I would expect continued upticks in the near future (note that ratings generally "lag" actual playing conditions).
Old Town Club, November 2, 2019: It was up early on Saturday as we had a drive of 1:45 to Winston Salem, NC to play Old Town Club, which sits right next to Wake Forest University. I first played OTC in 2006 which was in a US Senior Amateur qualifier (I didn't come close). In 2013 a good friend told me he had played OTC and that the Coore-Crenshaw restoration of this Perry Maxwell masterpiece had literally transformed the course...and how correct he was.
Including the round on 11/1/19, I have now played OTC eight times and love going back there. It is fun, challenging, relatively easy to walk, and something beautiful to behold. I have two previous posts regarding rounds there...Posts #65 and #104. Dunlop W. is the greens chairman who pushed through the restoration. Dunlop is highly regarded throughout the golf world. Prior to his efforts at OTC, he directed a highly successful restoration of Donald Ross' Roaring Gap Club (Post #21) which is about 70 minutes west of OTC.
John and I played with OTC's Director of Golf, Charles Frost, a very impressive player and person. I had a poor front and good back nine 45 - 40 = 85. The course was in excellent shape even after some heavy rains that kept the fairways and greens a bit slower than normal.
If you are interested in a wonderful description of OTC, go to
http://golfclubatlas.com/courses-by-country/usa/old-town-club/ for Ran Morrissett's beautifully written description of OTC and its history. Aside the fact that I am tired and getting lazy at this point, Ran's far superior command of the English language and an admittedly finer eye for architectural features make his write up far superior to anything I could produce.
I would, however, like to add one historical point to what Ran wrote. OTC was one of the very few great courses built during The Depression. Most major industries and companies were literally on their knees and few private clubs had the resources to build new courses during this period. Winston Salem and the Reynolds family (of Reynolds Tobacco) had such resources as consumers continued to purchase cigarettes and other tobacco products even during these extraordinarily difficult times. Fascinating to this former economics major.
After the round, we had lunch with Charles and Dunlop and talked about OTC and the state of the game. Finally, and a bit tired, I said goodbye to Aussie John and climbed back into my car for the 1:45 drive home. Five rounds in four days...plus about 640 miles of driving was taking its toll and it was good to get back home to see Pat and get some rest.
Cape Fear Country Club, November 6, 2019: You may have seen some media reports this past June regarding a golf pro from North Carolina who completed playing all the venues that have hosted any of the four Men's Majors. That pro is Joey Hines, head pro at Cape Fear CC located in Wilmington, NC (about 135 miles east of Pinehurst). You may also recall that on June 12, 2018 I completed the same list when I played Birmingham Country Club (MI) (Post #111).
I contacted Joey to congratulate him and compare notes and stories. In one fundamental way, Joey's achievement exceeds mine, as I have had the advantage of being retired for the last 11 years, which tends to give one a little more free time. Joey has a full time job at Cape Fear and his time constraints far exceed mine.
We had a fun discussion including talking about some of the NLE (no longer exist) clubs and courses. One would think that the list of courses that have hosted a Major are pretty well defined. Not quite, for example:
--Prestwick GC in Scotland has hosted 24 Open Championships...15 on its original 12 hole course and 9 on its 18 hole course. The 12 hole course is an NLE and the 18 hole course was built on the same plot of land. Is this one venue or two?
--Baltusrol GC (NJ) has hosted 9 Majors (7 US Opens and 2 PGA's)...one (1903 US Open) on its original 18 hole course, one (1915 US Open) on a revised version of that original course, one (1936 US Open) on its present Upper Course, and six (4 US opens and 2 PGA's) on its present Lower Course (in the early 1920's the original course was plowed under and 36 holes built by A. W. Tillinghast utilizing all of the land that encompassed the original and revised course). Is this two venues or four?
--The Country Club (MA) has hosted three US Opens and will host a fourth in 2022. One Open (1913) was held on its Main course, two (1963 and 1988) on a Composite course incorporating some holes from TCC's Primrose Nine. and the 2022 Open will utilize a Composite course with one different hole than the '63/'88 version. Is this one, two or three venues?
--In 1942, and until WW II concluded, the USGA did not conduct any US Championships; however, in 1942 a Hale America Open (held to raise $$ to support the Navy Relief Fund and USO) was held at Ridgemoor CC (IL) and run just like a US Open (btw...Ben Hogan won it). Does this count as a Major (US Open) venue?
--Shinnecock Hills GC hosted the 2nd US Open in 1896 on the "Dunn" course and then four additional US Opens from 1986-2018 on the "Flynn" course. The Flynn course incorporates only 5 holes from the Dunn course. Does this count as one or two venues?
There are at least another 10-12 questions of the above nature where answers are far from obvious. Joey counted 118 venues and I count 130...but I could also count as many as 132. One point that I need to make clear...I did not play Ridgemoor CC (IL) (site of the 1942 Hale America Open) until July 23, 2019, and Joey had it on his list of 118. So if you include that one, he did it first. I think Joey and I would agree there was a tie!!
In any case, Joey invited me out to play Cape Fear when we returned to NC. I left Pinehurst at 5:30am and arrive at Cape Fear just before 8am. Joey was already at work and we talked for about 20 minutes before I teed off. Cape Fear was founded in 1896 as a gathering of some men to enjoy the new game of golf in a public park. The club moved a couple of times and retained Donald Ross to build its present course in 1926. The building of a new clubhouse in 2005 necessitated replacing the old par 3 10th hole with a new par 3 14th hole (the old holes 11-14 became holes 10-13 in the process) which was overseen (along with other renovations) by Kris Spence (who renovated CCNC's Dogwood course 3 years ago). Last year Andrew Green started a renovation project that was just completed and restored many Ross architectural features to the course. Green has become a very hot commodity in the golf architecture space of late. His restoration of Inverness (OH) has been received with tremendous praise and he is working now on restorations at Congressional CC (MD), Oak Hill CC (NY) (Post #82), Scioto CC (OH), and CC of York (PA) (Post #139). Talk about a full plate!
The course features wide fairways, very well placed fairway bunkers, cross bunkers, and greenside bunkers...all featuring well implemented "cut lines" (the fairway runs to the front edge of the bunker allowing misdirected shots to run into the bunkers...as they were designed...at all too many courses, bunkers are fronted by high rough, which keeps the ball from running into the hazard). Tree removal had opened up the course to wide vistas thereby allowing the grass to receive necessary sunlight and constant air flow. Turf conditions were excellent. Hard to judge without have seen the "before" but the "after" looks very special.
My favorite holes were # 4, 5, 9, 11, 13, and 16. Think this one will move up in the ratings over the next 5 years. Not a USA Top 100 but should be in Best in State and possibly 101-200 grouping.
Played well...finally put two good nines together for a 39 - 39 = 78. Avoided double bogeys and 6's and that always helps. Fun meeting Joey who has been at Cape Fear for 30 years!
One final note: Cape Fear brought my courses played total to 1199.
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OK...Texas. You will recall I have a group of primary bucket lists (and some behind those) that I am working on, and the major areas that needed work are Texas and Oregon/Washington. The latter is not the place to visit this time of year (lots of rain and cold rain) but Texas is usually good this time of year and a review of Pat's calendar and mine showed an opening for November 11-13. With a concentration of courses to play in the Houston area, I figured this should work especially since Houston's weather is normally good in November (average high of 70 and low of 54...only 6 days of rain).
So I received permission and booked flights departing Sunday night 11/10 and returning Wednesday night 11/13...and was able to set up games at six courses I needed to play (the 7th, River Oaks was rebuilding six holes damaged during flooding and would not be finished until late March earliest). With only one of the six courses outside metropolitan Houston, 2 courses per day looked pretty doable, even with shorter daylight hours in November.
Then ten days before the trip I looked at the weather forecast which called for very cold temps and heavy rain all three days...but I figured that would probably change and my tickets were already booked. Over the next 6-7 days the forecast became slightly more positive (really slightly less negative) with rain Monday afternoon and very cold Tuesday and Wednesday. I left Pinehurst Sunday afternoon 11/10 saying to myself that I will be lucky to get in three rounds and might only get in one.
Memorial Park Golf Course, November 11, 2019: Memorial Park started in 1912 as a 9 hole course with sand greens in Houston's Memorial Park. In 1935, architect John Bredemus expanded the course to 18 holes and it reopened (with grass greens) in July 1936. Bredemus had previous designed the likes of Colonial CC in Fort Worth and Garden Glen CC (also in Fort Worth). If the latter rings a bell it is where two young men by the names of Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson caddied and first played the game.
Over the past few years money was raised and Tom Doak oversaw a major renovation of Memorial Park that was "completed" (quotation marks to be explained shortly) about a week before I played it. The PGA Tour's Houston Open will be conducted at Memorial Park in November 2020. Please note that I had never played the "old" version so cannot accurately comment on the changes (of course that rarely keeps me from commenting).
I played with Leigh E. (a friend and GW panelist from Houston), Greg T. (a fellow MIT alum from Houston), and Dan K., a friend of Greg's. David W. (a friend and GD panelist from Houston) walked along with us, but did not play as we ended up as a 5-some due to miscommunication on the part of Greg and moi. We were the first group off at 7:30am..and the weather for the day looked somewhat better...62-70 most of the day and no rain until 3pm.
The land here is very flat...all 18 holes. It was obvious to me that lots of large trees were cut down (as many of the stumps were still being removed) and the guys with me confirmed that it had been overgrown with trees and the changes in terms of openness are awesome. Doak countered the flatness of the land with terrific use of creeks running thought the property, contours around greens, wide fairways with lots of interesting options created by hazard placement and angles, and by shaping contours into the fairways. From an architectural standpoint, this place is a lesson in creating superb bones from a "boneless body". The greens are for the most part large, varied, and filled with devilish slopes, and false fronts, sides, and backs. For now they are very slow to give the grass a chance to build strength and grow, but I sensed they will be excellent in a year. The course really gets going on the dogleg left 6th hole, a 443 yard par 4 that makes perfect use of a creek/ditch by placing the green just to its right and sloping the green from left to right. Hitting into the ditch will frequently leave the player with a sharply downhill pitch to a green running away from them. Aside from 6 (which is my favorite hole) I really liked 7, 9, 11-13, and 15. The only hole I did thought was pedestrian was #8. The course plays 7292 yards from the tips and probably can be extended for the Tour players.
I started off with 7 straight pars and had a one over 37 on the front...but gave it back with a lackluster 43 of the back for an 80. We had to play "cart paths only" (fully understandable with a brand new course) which usually slows play but our foursome finished 18 in 3:30...well done guys!
OK...now the bad news. In order to host the Houston Open in November 2020, the course had to open at least a year earlier. The sodded rough had not "kneaded" and for sure will be severely damaged by play over the next few months. But Houston's hot climate should allow replacement grass to take hold quickly starting in April or so. This will cost $$ but I expect the course will be in fine shape next November.
Oh...and this was course #1200 for me.
Club at Carlton Woods--Nicklaus Course, November 11, 2019: David W. and I left Memorial Park in his car as soon as our round there concluded and we had a chance to say thanks and goodbye. The drive north to Carlton Woods was about 40 miles and we arrived around 11:55am. In 1998 developers of The Woodlands announced plans for The Club at Carlton Woods with two courses. Jack Nicklaus designed the club's first course which opened for play in June 2001 and its clubhouse was completed in March 2003.
As a group was teeing off #1, we went to the third tee and played #3-9 before running into another group at 10...and responded by heading to #11 and playing #11-18 followed by holes #10, 2 and 1. Net net, we played the whole course (David had played here numerous times) and the really good news was no rain yet. The Nicklaus is a good course, in excellent condition and very well laid out. However, the contrast after playing Doak's Memorial Park was stark. Frankly, the Nicklaus felt "manufactured" compared to Doak's which felt much more natural. To be fair we played it fairly quickly but I doubt my reaction would have been materially different if we had taken 3+ hours playing it. It plays to 7407 yards (par 72) and a strong course rating of 76.8.
The Nicklaus Course has never made a USA Top 100; its highest rating was #175 on the Golf Digest USA list in 2013.
No score on this 18...we were in too much of a hurry. During the round we decided that if the rain held off, we would try to get in at least 9 on the Fazio after the 18 on Nicklaus. It started raining as we were playing the last two holes on Nicklaus, but not very hard....so we dashed off to Fazio (about 3 miles away).
Club at Carlton Woods--Fazio Course, November 11, 2019: The Fazio Course opened in April 2006 and its separate clubhouse opened in 2007. On this day it was hosting a charity event with a shotgun start that commenced at 10am. We arrived at the pro shop at 3:20. The morning event had just concluded and participants were flowing into the clubhouse. The event in the morning featured Champions Tour player Jeff Maggart (who is a member at Carlton Woods). This was the morning after he had holed a wedge on the 72nd hole to win the Charles Schwab Cup Championship on Sunday afternoon in Phoenix. Word is he was about the first person to arrive for this morning's event...good for him!
The assistant pro was unaware that the head pro had said we could go out, but David knows everyone in Houston golf and we were all set to play. Then I glanced out a pro shop window and saw three members of the staff struggling to hold down a mini-tent that almost was blown away by a squall...it was also pouring rain! David and I displayed a rare modicum of wisdom; we waited out the squall for a while and our brilliant decision paid off. After 10 minutes the rain stopped and the wind backed down to about 10-15mph. We dashed off to #10 (figuring that Wednesday afternoon the front nine was more likely to be empty than the back nine). Played the back nine in about 1:15. It rained a little but not too bad...and we had no problem finishing the back nine. I liked the Fazio more than the Nicklaus. Fazio's course is more open, on slightly better land, had better hole variety and is in better condition. The greens on Fazio were close to perfect.
The Fazio course also has never made a USA Top 100 and its highest rating was also in Golf Digest on 2013 at #152.
We returned to the clubhouse to say thanks. My car was back at Memorial so first David and I went for a delicious seafood dinner, then he dropped me off at my car and I drove back north to my hotel. But first I had to deal with one issue. I was scheduled to play 36 on Tuesday, first at Lochinvar Golf Club at 8:15 and then to meet my hosts at Houston CC for lunch around 12:15. However, the forecast was for temps of about 37-39℉ at 8am with winds of 17-20mph. The afternoon would be more manageable. My Lochinvar host had texted me to say he could not play in those conditions...certainly more than understandable. After trading some texts he arranged for me to play unaccompanied in the morning...I would call the pro shop first thing to see how long the inevitable frost delay would last. But that would be tomorrow's problem. By getting in 45 holes today we had relieved time pressures for Wednesday so all of a sudden the chances of getting in 5 or even all 6 rounds were no longer remote...it might be possible.
When I arrived at my hotel it was about 9:30 and I was exhausted. The winds were howling...no other word for it...higher than last month at NGLA and I would guess 30mph steady. Golf could be tough tomorrow but I had plenty of clothes to deal with it.
Lochinvar Golf Club, November 12, 2019: I talked to Head Pro Rodney Houston (can't make up that name) around 8am and he said I should be able to go out by 9am or so...if I wanted to. I laughed and told him I would be there. The club was less than 10 minutes from my hotel, and the "good news" was that the winds had subsided to about 15-20mph.
Lochinvar opened in 1980 and was the 4th course designed by Jack Nicklaus. The club lies just west of Bush Intercontinental airport..and with today's wind out of the northwest, the take offs were continuous. It is an all male club with a fabulous clubhouse and an immaculate course. However, the land on which it was built is very very flat. It was cold but semi-bearable when I arrived and Rodney said the frost delay would end at 9am...which was good timing for me.
The best holes on the course IMO are the par 5 4th and the par 4 12th...and my latter choice has nothing to do with my holing out for a birdie with a gap wedge on a 72 yard shot into the wind. Knowing you would want to see a photo...here we go:
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Lochinvar #12...note the creek and stone wall guarding the green and the difficult left pin position!! |
By the way, based on another blog description of Lochinvar, if you have played it before you may know this hole as #3. At some point in the past the nines were reversed from their initial rotation.
Aside from this hole out, my game was just OK...had a 43 - 42 = 85. The club has never been included on a USA Top 100 (probably in part because it is very difficult to obtain access to it). It hosted the 1989 US Senior Amateur won by R. S. Williams.
By my 14th hole it had warmed up enough for me to remove one of my five layers of clothing. When I finished I was happy to get in to the clubhouse and in front of the roaring fire. Apparently I was there only person to play at least that morning. Talked with Rodney for a few minutes...first class guy. He knows a former head pro at Brookline (Don Callahan) fairly well from Don's work with Butch Harmon (but Don was "before my time").
Then it was time to run as I had a 35 minute drive to Houston Country Club and wanted to get there by noon. Maybe I will get in all 6 courses...now it was looking more likely than not.
Houston Country Club, November 12, 2019: Founded in 1908, Houston CC was located southeast of Houston's downtown until 1956 when it moved to its present location (about 7 miles west of downtown) to a new course designed by Robert Trent Jones, Sr. In 1988 Coore-Crenshaw completed a restoration which maintained most of RTJ Sr.'s architectural features. Right now, HCC is in the midst of a massive renovation of its clubhouse (with some additional work scheduled for the golf course). The budget for this renovation is a cool $85 million (no typo there) based on various news reports.
I have friend at Brookline who is originally from Houston and is a member of HCC and he set me up to play it on this trip. I wanted to play it for two main reasons. First it was included on GD's 1966 and 1967 lists of USA's 200 Toughest. Second, it was the site of a Shell's Wonderful World of Golf match featuring Sam Snead against Ben Hogan, with commentary by Gene Sarazen and Herb Warren Wind. The match was conducted in May 1964 and broadcast the following year; it would be the last time Hogan and Snead competed against each other. Hogan won with a 69 over Snead 's 72 but the real story was the brilliance of Hogan's play from tee to green. He hit every fairway and every green in regulation (and never had a birdie putt longer than 25') but on the greens he was affected by the "yips" that affected his putting late in his glorious career. Many Hogan devotees consider this to have been the greatest display from tee to green in the history of the game. The full broadcast (2 hours) is available on Amazon for $130!!
I was playing with two long term members, Loren S. and Bob P. (friends of the Brookline member mentioned above). I had met Loren a few years ago at Brookline and Bob is also a golf course affection-ado...with focus primarily in GB&I. After a good lunch and a few minutes hitting some balls on the range, we went off the 10th tee. Some other guest by the name of Phil Mickelson was at HCC that day and he was assigned the first tee!! Imagine!
The weather in the afternoon was far more reasonable...very light wind and temps in the high 40's. Much more comfortable than this morning!
The first thing that struck me at HCC was how similar it is to Denver CC (Post #135). Specifically:
1. both clubs are the primary "old money waspy" clubs in major cities
2. both clubs are located close to downtown
3. the layout of the practice range at both is very similar
4. the architecture of the clubhouse at both is very similar.
The influence of R. Trent Jones is very obvious...and I think this is one of Jones' better designs. From a golf architecture standpoint, it reminded me of Wilmington Country Club-South (DE) with large, deep fairway and greenside bunkers with high fronts, large greens with sweeping slopes, and runway tees. But the most "different thing" about HCC is the wonderful ground movement related mainly to the adjacent bayou...especially when compared with other courses in Houston (as a side note, I should also point out that both courses at Carlton Woods have reasonable land movement but not as much as HCC). The bayou is another example of a "double edged sword". While it contributes to this site's very good land contours, erosion caused by the bayou is responsible for some very costly renovations at HCC through the years and ongoing. My favorite holes were #6 (nothing to do with my birdie there) and #8 (absolutely nothing to do with my double bogey there)...and the green on the 7th hole is nothing short of perfect for a short, drivable par 4. The course is tighter than I generally like but overall I liked it a lot....and no question this is a wonderful club. I had a 41 - 41 = 82.
After the round we had a brief drink and I headed back north...amazed that I had thus far played 4.5 rounds and the outlook for Wednesday was cold but pretty good. I had talked with David regarding Wednesday and he suggested I get rid of my rental car this evening and he would pick me up first thing and drop me off at Houston's Hobby airport in the evening. We had to drive about 125 miles to Lufkin early Wednesday to play Crown Colony CC...and then return to Carlton Woods to play the front nine of its Fazio Course. My flight out of Hobby departed at 8:20pm so it looked like plenty of time available tomorrow.
Crown Colony Country Club, November 13, 2019: Located in Lufkin, TX (about 125 miles north of Houston), Crown Colony CC opened in 1979. Arthur Temple, who founded a predecessor company to Temple-Inland, Inc. wanted a first rate golf course near its headquarters in Lufkin to entertain customers. The course was designed by Robert von Hagge and Bruce Devlin and was usually named the #1 course in Texas by the
Dallas Morning News in the late 1990's. My Texas golfing friends generally confirm this assessment.
In 2012 Temple-Inland, Inc. was acquired by International Paper and before then people started to notice a deterioration in the course's condition. It was included on GW's Top 100 Modern Course list from 2003-08 and then totally disappeared...see the following table showing its ratings during that period on the Modern list and my GW "Merged" list:
Modern Merged
2003 85 170
2004 67 134
2005 72 155
2006 87 171
2007 75 153
2008 93 181
It would not be any great surprise to find that Temple was underwriting a portion of the club's expenses and decided to reduce or terminate that support with an anticipated sale in the works.
David picked me up around 6:45am and we arrived at the course around 8:50. There was a frost delay until 10am (it had been as low as 27℉ overnight but was about 40℉ when we teed off...but no wind made a huge difference).
The course no question has excellent bones. The land is superb, and it is a challenging design. Greens are mostly small (for example the par 3 7th green is only 12 yards deep) and have plenty of slope. It seemed clear that at one time this was a vibrant club, but today signs of deferred maintenance are obvious.
We played in about 2:20 and I had a lackluster 44 - 43 = 87. Then we drove back to Carlton Woods Fazio...where there was a light rainfall...and played the front nine...thereby completing the six course/six round/three day tour!!! Best thing was a good hot shower at the club, then David dropped me at Hobby airport with lots of time before my flight. The flight to RDU was in a little early and I arrived home at 1:00am.
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Texas Golf: Texas is the largest state among the USA's contiguous 48 states and has the highest population of all the states except California. It also has had more than its share of brilliant golfers.
So please explain to me how there have been 373 course to ever be on a USA Top 100 list...and only 11 in Texas...and only two Classic Courses (opened prior to 1960) namely Colonial and Champions-Cypress Creek...and only one Classic on any list in the 21st Century (Colonial).
And while you are at it...explain why there have not been any Texas Classic courses on any World 100 listing since 2005...and the only two Modern courses (1960 or later) this century have been Austin Golf Club and Wolf Point which only appeared on golfclubatlas.com in the 147 Custodians list last year.
Amazing!!
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This past week I had a couple of free days and the weather looked decent. As I sorted through my golf to-do list, two easy day trips became obvious...both pretty doable even with November's limited daylight hours.
Alamance Country Club, November 20, 2019: One of Donald Ross' last designs, Alamance CC opened in 1946 (Ross passed away in 1948). Located in Burlington, NC, about 20 miles east of Greensboro and a 1:35 drive from our house in Pinehurst, I was able to arrange a tee time at 9am and left our house at 6:30 to play it safe. Upon entering the club ground, it was very evident that this is a very well maintained club (with a wide variety of amenities for families) and golf course.
Alamance was on the 1966 and 1967 GD 200 Toughest lists. I played poorly on the front and well on the back (44 - 40 = 84)
I found it to be a very fun course...that had some good challenging holes. It is a club that one could play every day...and in many ways a great example of what most clubs should be...a place to its members to enjoy golf and other sports. Remember...the top 200 courses in the USA comprise some 1.25% of USA tracks...but that does not mean that thousands of other courses cannot be wonderful places for people to enjoy the ages.
Bryan Park Golf & Conference Center-Champions, November 20, 2019: Bryan Park is about 15 miles north of Greensboro and is a public facility with 36 holes (Champions and Players). In 2010 the Champions course hosted the US Amateur Public Links Championship. The course sits alongside Lake Townsend and the Lake is in play on holes 3, 4, and 10-15...and water also is in play on holes 1, 6, and 7. The course opened in 1990 and was designed by Rees Jones. In summary a big contrast with Alamance and not one I would want to play every day.
The wind started whipping off the lake making it seem much colder than the actual temperature. I had a similar round... 44 - 39 = 83 and was glad to have this one under my belt. Tough but certainly not fun.
Good news was the round went quickly as the course was fairly empty and I was able to get back home before 4pm.
Orangeburg Country Club, November 21, 2019: Orangeburg CC is located about 40 miles south of Columbia, SC. The club was founded in 1921 and soon after purchased 142 acres and constructed a golf course ands swimming/dock facilities along the Edisto River which bordered the property. About 40 years later the club accepted an offer to swap its land for a 200 acre parcel of land owned by Mr. A. D. Griffith. Architect Ellis Maples of Pinehurst was chosen to design the new course. On the parcel Griffiths acquired in the swap, he built a large number of private homes. In 2009, architect Richard Mandell, also of Pinehurst, redesigned the course to enhance its original Maples design characteristics.
Today it stretches to 7032 yards and if out was anything like that length in the 1960's that probably explains how it was included on GD's 1966 and '67 100 Toughest lists. The front nine is very very flat and there is very little definition to this nine. For the back nine the golf comes back across a road to the other side of the clubhouse and this nine has much better routing, topography, definition and angles. Overall the course will never be included in a USA top 100 list again but its new clubhouse (constructed about 10 years ago) is a fine facility. Playing Orangeburg brought my Golf Week 100+100 EVER unplayed list down to 81 (249 different courseS appeared on one or both of these lists...of which 10 NLE, and I have played 158). Not sure this Bucket list will ever be completed as for the most part these are not great courses....but as I travel I will continue to try to whittle it down.
Florence Country Club, November 21, 2019: . The drive from Orangeburg to Florence was about 90 miles and 1:40. I arriveD at Florence at 12:10pm and was able to get out right away. I was playing Florence for two reasons. First, it had host both a US Junior Amateur Championship (1963) and a US Girls' Junior Championship (1955). Second, a friend and member of CCNC (Gordon "Buddy" Baker) grew up in Florence and won the US Junior Amateur in 1958. Buddy still has plenty of game and I thought it would be interesting to see where he learned to play.
Florence CC was founded in 1925 and today plays to a mere 6430 yards from its tips...but don't let that fool you. Merion played to 6498 yards in 1979. In many ways Florence is similar to Merion. Aside from the length (ignoring for the moment that Merion was lengthened to about 7000 yards over past 40 years), both courses are built are very small acreage (Merion on 125 acres, Florence on about 105 acres based on my measurements...warning, I am not a professional surveyor), both have relatively small greens with devilish breaks and slopes. Before you go nuts...I am not saying Florence is equal to or even close to equal to Merion..but I will say it is an outstanding test and has some interesting similarities. Like Merion, it really makes you think about what shot to play. And one must analyze each hole backwards, deciding tee shot length and direction based on where one want to come into the green from. Best hole IMO is the par 5 #14 (511 yards from the tips and the longest hole on the course). Other superb holes are #2, 3, 6, 7, and 11-13. But it is the bunkering and greens that really make this course. The greens are very small...I would guess about 3400-3500 sq. ft. on average..with lots of tiers and slopes...but plenty of pin positions on each hole.
Interestingly, the club is not sure who the original designer was. It looked to me like a Donald Ross design, but apparently their board minutes etc. etc. do not give a hint.
I had to play pretty quickly to get home at a reasonable hour...but hope to play it again before we head north in May...hopefully with Buddy, and look at it more and ask more questions. I would also want to play it when it was firm and fast...with recent rains it was hardly either of those when I played it.
Two basic conclusions from this round:
1. I now know where Buddy got his game!, and
2. This one is a hidden gem for sure!!
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Bucket List Status
My lifetime course count is now 1209 courses and 21,295 holes.
I need to get this Post out...and am working to get my Bucket List status together in a more understandable format...so you will have to wait for that (no tears, please).
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New Golf Magazine Top 100 List Published
As many of you probably already know, Golf Magazine published its latest World 100 listing late last week (go to: https://www.golf.com/top-100/courses/). This is GM’s 21st biannual World list going back to 1979. The first three lists (1979, 1981, and 1983) covered World Top 50’s and the 1985 list through the 2017 list covered World Top 100’s.
Some may consider this expansion to 150 to be an example of “list inflation”. I do not. The wave of:
(1) outstanding new courses constructed over the last 25 years, and
(2) the renovation/restoration movement which has rejuvenated dozens upon dozens (if not hundreds) of outstanding courses built before World War II
has, in my always humble opinion, resulted in the a highly significant growth in the number of outstanding courses throughout the world. Put simply…THE BAR HAS BEEN RAISED.
I would expect top100golfcourses.com to publish its 2019 (2020?) World and USA lists some time in the next two months and plan to update my spreadsheet when these lists are released. If you are not on the distribution list for updates to my spreadsheet and wish to be placed on that distribution list, please advise.
Finally…best wishes for a Happy Thanksgiving.