Imagine building 26 golf courses at the height of the golf development bubble, with nine figures in public pension money — in an effort that now loses money year after year. Welcome to the Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail.
In theory, 12-hole designs should be cheaper to play, build, and maintain. But in the staid industry of golf course development, there’s been no rush to test the theory. The minds behind Sweetens Cove are ready to change that.
Webb Memorial is nearly 100 years old, but this Baton Rouge municipal golf course still delivers something that isn’t going out of style: affordable, quirky golf in an urban setting.
I take lessons. I read hornbooks. I think I’m better than I was 10 years ago — a better lawyer, a better golfer, a better man. But I’m not certain. And the numbers don’t look good.
The 6,300 yards that Tillinghast baked into Swope undoubtedly play shorter today than they did when the course opened nearly 90 years ago. But its bizarre yardages create awkward yardages that still challenge, even in the Twenty-First Century.
Few institutions deliver disappointment as consistently as baseball and golf. And yet season after season, and round after round, we keep coming back. The reason, I think, is hope.
The course is not perfect. It’s not even a perfect representation of what its masterminds were trying to achieve. But Bobby Jones is miles closer to what urban public golf must look like 20 years from now to stay relevant.
Whether Pebble Beach is America’s “best” public-access golf course is debatable. But it’s unquestionably one of the worst examples of public-access golf in America.
In my southwest Mississippi hometown, a once-heralded Arthur Hills design is far from the vision it promised a generation ago — but is still worth saving.
No-touch flagsticks and single-rider carts mitigate the risk of coronavirus transmission on a golf course. But hotels, restaurants, shops, and other gathering spots make golf resorts a much more complicated setting.
Aiken GC in South Carolina is a model for small, aging courses: it can’t compete with pedigreed, championship-length designs, so it doesn’t try. It’s unique, and that’s enough.
Like “The Force Awakens,” Eagle Ridge masks some boring moments in the middle by sandwiching them between a fun beginning and a memorable finish. It’s central Mississippi’s golf equivalent of a solid, go-to movie on cable.
Whippoorwill is largely treeless, frequently presenting no discernible playing corridor — just a teebox (if you can find it) and a flag in the distance (if you can read it). If it sounds disorienting, it is. But the result isn’t chaos — it’s adventure.
The new year’s first few months will be historic. Eventually, one candidate will emerge, and it might not be who you’d hoped. But in life, as in golf, disappointment and progress are not mutually exclusive.
Audubon Park is perhaps the closest thing that American golf offers to the Scottish tradition: a course that truly belongs to its community, not only because it is a public course, but because it is literally accessible to everyone — golfers and otherwise.
Like any residential golf course, Carter Plantation In Louisiana has its share of dud holes. But it frequently escapes those shackles and delivers an enjoyable time.