Golfweek’s Best 2021: From Bandon Dunes to Shadow Creek, the top 200 golf courses that were built after 1960

Golfweek’s experts have ranked the Top 200 courses built since 1960, such as Bandon Dunes, Whistling Straights, Kiawah, Shadow Creek and more.

Welcome to the Golfweek’s Best 2021 list of the top 200 Modern Courses, built in or after 1960 in the United States.

Each year we publish many lists, with this Top 200 Modern Courses and the accompanying Top 200 Classic Courses lists being the premium offerings. Also extremely popular and significant are the Best Courses You Can Play State by State and Best Private Courses State by State.

The members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on our 10 criteria. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings on each course are averaged together to produce a final rating for each course. Each course is then ranked against other courses to produce the final rankings.

To ensure these lists are up-to-date, Golfweek’s Best in recent years has altered how the individual ratings are compiled into the rankings. Only ratings from rounds played in the past 10 years are included in the compilations. This helps ensure that any course in the rankings still measures up.

Courses also must have a minimum of 25 votes to qualify for the top 200 Modern or the top 200 Classic. Other Golfweek’s Best lists, such as Best Courses You Can Play or Best Private, do not require as many votes. This makes it possible that a course can show up on other lists but not on the premium top-200 lists.

Each course is listed with its average rating next to the name, the location, the year it opened and the designers. The top 100 courses also note in parenthesis next to the name of each course where that course ranked in 2020. After the designers are several designations that note what type of facility it is:

  • p: private
  • d: daily fee
  • r: resort course
  • t: tour course
  • u: university
  • m: municipal
  • re: real estate
  • c: casino

* Indicates new to or returning to this list.

(Pictured atop this story is the Sheep Ranch at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort.)


SEE ALSO

Golfweek’s Best 2021: Top 100 public golf courses across the U.S.

Golfweek’s Best 2021: Best public golf courses you can play, state by state

Golfweek’s Best 2021: Best private golf courses in every state

Golfweek’s Best 2021: From Augusta National to Pebble Beach, these are the top 200 classic golf courses

Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play: Florida

TPC Sawgrass Players Stadium Course is No. 1 on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play in Florida, with Streamsong claiming Nos. 2, 3 and 4.

Sure, we all know about the 17th hole of the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass. That island green soaks up much of the attention every year in the PGA Tour’s Players Championship.

As the No. 1 course in Florida on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access layouts, the Players Stadium is the epitome of golf in the Sunshine State. Built by Pete Dye – with plenty of inspiration from his wife, Alice Dye – on flat, swampy ground and opened in 1980, it is a perfect example of the challenges that often face course designers in golf-rich Florida and the creative ways in which architects attempt to address them.

Golfweek ranks courses by compiling the average ratings – on a points basis of 1 to 10 – of its more than 750 raters to create several industry-leading lists of courses. That includes the popular Best Courses You Can Play list for courses that allow non-member tee times. These generally are defined as layouts accessible to resort guests or regular daily-fee players.

The Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass is No. 1 on that list, and it can be a beast for amateurs in the 51 weeks a year the course does not host the Tour’s best. Water, long rough, plenty of length – there’s no shortage of challenges. But it’s the creativity of the shaping and the demands on shotmaking that set the layout apart from most courses in Florida.

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That famed 17th green is a perfect example of the Dyes’ creative thinking to handle the challenges architects often face when building in Florida. Designers frequently dig ponds all around a course, both to handle drainage from frequent heavy rains and to supply building material to lift fairways and greens above the water table. Dye’s island green certainly wasn’t the first in Florida – it wasn’t even the first on that stretch of A1A, as that honor goes to No. 9 at the nearby Ponte Vedra Inn and Club’s Ocean Course – but the 137-yarder he created faces players at a critical time in one of the Tour’s largest events.

For Pete and Alice Dye, No. 17 was a perfect opportunity to make something special instead of having just another pond – if you must have all that water, why not stick an island green in it? The results have had players shaking over their 9-irons ever since.

It’s all part of an experience that lifts the Players Stadium Course to No. 22 in the United States on Golfweek’s Best Modern Courses list for layouts built in or after 1960. It’s also No. 11 on Golfweek’s Best Resort Courses list for the whole U.S.

Streamsong Red in Florida (Courtesy of Streamsong/Laurence Lambrecht)

Water wasn’t nearly as big a part of the equation at the next four courses on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list in Florida. Streamsong Resort in Bowling Green and World Woods in Brooksville had something even better: sand. Lots and lots of it.

Within the past decade, Streamsong has opened three courses built on sand. The Red, designed by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw, ranks No. 2 on Golfweek’s Best list for public-access tracks in Florida. The Black by Gil Hanse is next at No. 3, followed by Tom Doak’s Blue at No. 4. Built largely on old phosphate-mining spoil, the layouts at Streamsong stand out because of their other-worldly topographies created by all that sand, which once was an ancient seabed – the place is littered with shark teeth – and that provides an ideal playing surface.

Streamsong Black (Courtesy of Streamsong Resort/Laurence Lambrecht)

On top of some of that sand sits new green surfaces for the nearly decade-old Red and Blue courses. Streamsong installed new Mach 1 putting surfaces on those two courses in 2020, ensuring its oldest layouts – dating to 2012 an hour southeast of Tampa or 90 minutes southwest of Orlando – remain fresh and provide world-class conditioning.

Streamsong’s threesome also has broken into Golfweek’s Best Modern Courses list. The Red is No. 39 on that listed, followed by the Black at No. 46 and the Blue at No. 57. The trio also made it into Golfweek’s Best Resort Courses list for the U.S., with the Red at No. 15, the Black at No. 18 and the Blue at No. 21, making Streamsong one of the premium three-course destinations in the world.

Streansong Resort
Streamsong Blue (Courtesy of Streamsong Resort/Laurence Lambrecht)

Tom Fazio’s Pine Barrens course at World Woods north of Tampa also utilized sand instead of water. Opened in 1993, Pine Barrens’ native, rolling terrain and large sandy waste areas offer a non-traditional Florida experience. Rolling Oaks, the second 18 at World Woods, ranks No. 20 in Florida on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can play.

So while the Players Stadium Course has made the most of its water, the next four public-access layouts in Florida on Golfweek’s Best rankings took advantage of their sandy environments. For a state that prides itself on beach life, these five layouts are a perfect meeting of water and sand.

Each year, we publish the three lists that are the foundation of our course-ratings program: Golfweek’s Best 2020: Top 200 Classic Courses, Golfweek’s Best 2020: Top 200 Modern Courses and Golfweek’s Best 2020: Best Courses You Can Play.

These are the best courses you can play in Florida.

  1. TPC Sawgrass (Players Stadium), Ponte Vedra Beach (No. 22 m)
  2. Streamsong (Red), Bowling Green (No. 39 m)
  3. Streamsong (Black), Bowling Green (No. 46 m)
  4. Streamsong (Blue), Bowling Green (No. 57 m)
  5. World Woods (Pine Barrens), Brooksville (No. 171 m)
  6. Trump National Doral Miami (Blue Monster), Doral (m)
  7. Black Diamond Ranch (Quarry), Lecanto (m)
  8. Bay Hill Club, Orlando (m)
  9. Innisbrook (Cooperhead), Tarpon Springs (m)
  10. Hammock Beach Resort (Ocean), Palm Coast (m)
  11. PGA National Resort & Spa (Champion), Palm Beach Gardens (m)
  12. Camp Creek, Panama City Beach (m)
  13. Turnberry Isle Resort (Soffer), Aventura (m)
  14. Hammock Beach Resort (Conservatory), Palm Coast (m)
  15. Sandestin Resort (Burnt Pine), Destin (m)
  16. Juliette Falls, Dunnellon (m)*
  1. PGA Golf Club (Wanamaker), Port St. Lucie (m)
  2. Crandon Park, Key Biscayne (m)
  3. Trump National Doral Miami (Gold), Doral (m)
  4. World Woods (Rolling Oaks), Brooksville (m)
  5. Hammock Bay, Naples (m)*
  1. Orange County National (Panther Lake), Winter Garden (m)
  2. Victoria Hills, Deland (m)
  3. Mission Inn Resort (El Campeon), Howey-in-the-Hills (c)
  4. PGA Golf Club (Dye), Port St. Lucie (m)
  5. Black Diamond Ranch (Ranch), Lecanto (m)
  6. Turnberry Isle Resort (Miller), Aventura (m)
  7. Gasparilla Inn & Club, Boca Grande (c)
  8. TPC Sawgrass (Dye’s Valley), Ponte Vedra Beach (m)*
  1. Reunion Resort (Watson), Kissimmee (m)

*New to the list in 2020

(m): modern
(c): classic

Golfweek’s Best 2020: Top 30 Campus Courses

The rankings below reflect where these courses fall among the top 30 Campus Courses in the United States.

24. Mark Bostick GC (Florida), 5.82

Gainesville, Fla.; Donald Ross, Bobby Weed, 1921

Golfweek’s Best 2020

How we rate them

The members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on our 10 criteria. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings on each course are averaged together to produce a final rating for each course. Then each course is ranked against other courses in its state, or nationally, to produce the final rankings.

The golden age of golf course renovation and restoration

Golf designers Gil Hanse and Bill Coore feel the pressure and pride of tackling restorations of classic courses that host U.S. Opens.

There’s a segment of art fans who regularly demand the Mona Lisa be cleaned and restored. It’s a touchy debate. If the painting were to be restored, it might better represent what Leonardo da Vinci intended as he created it. But if so much as a line of her smile was damaged during such attempts, a real possibility when dealing with a 500-year-old painting … well, art fans don’t like to consider the loss of even a single stroke of paint on that famous face. 

There are similar debates throughout the art world as experts consider what was, what is and what will be for masterpieces of all kinds. Paintings. Classic architecture. Sculpture. The list goes on and on. 

Even golf courses. 

The early 20th century has been dubbed by many to be the golden age of course design in the United States, as 94 of the top 100 layouts on Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list were built in the four decades through the 1930s as cars proliferated and airplanes took off. The 1990s and early 2000s also were boom times, but nothing compared to that previous stretch in which famed designers – artists, really – produced so many masterpieces. 

And just like famous paintings, these courses sometimes show their age. Throw in the effects of benign neglect or, even worse, well-intended alterations that abandon key characteristics, and many of the best golf courses have slowly lost much of their original designers’ intentions, even without considering the greater distances that modern golf balls travel.

Greens shrink and their internal contours are often subdued. Bunkers migrate, changing shapes, depths and sizes. Fairway widths are altered. Trees grow to block ideal lines of play. Golf courses are living, breathing creations that are subject to ever-changing budgets, growth patterns and whims of membership committees – nothing remains static. 

As with any work that might be done to the Mona Lisa, there are many considerations when tackling the problems of aging golf courses. But Mona Lisa doesn’t live outside in a field, subject to weather and all kinds of dynamic forces. Golf courses do, and they need work to retain their artistry.

Enter the modern golf architect, many of whom have become restoration artists. For most of today’s designers, much of their business since the financial crash of the late 2000s and subsequent drop in new golf course development is less about creating their own namesake layouts as it is restoring, renovating and otherwise touching up existing layouts. 

In fact, it’s safe to say that in the past decade we have entered a golden era of restoration and renovation. The top courses on Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list is full of prime examples, many of which are on full, televised display during major championships. Even the list of top resort courses in the U.S. – which tends to favor more modern layouts – is dotted with significant renovations and restorations. 

“There’s been an appreciation building over time going back several decades, and I think what’s been happening is, because of this golden age of restoration, not only is there an appreciation for the name architects – A.W. Tillinghast, Donald Ross, Alister MacKenzie, C.B. Macdonald and several others – there’s a greater appreciation for their talents and their golf courses,” said Gil Hanse, whose portfolio of restorations with design partner Jim Wagner continues to grow. “There’s maybe more of an appreciation for those architects now. You can see that across the board for other modern architects and the courses they have touched, too.”

Winged Foot Golf Club West Course
The ninth hole at Winged Foot Golf Club’s West Course in New York, which was restored by Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner before the 2020 U.S. Open (Copyright USGA/Russell Kirk)

Hanse’s restorations and renovations include but certainly are not limited to Merion’s East, most recently host of the 2013 U.S. Open; Winged Foot’s West, most recently host of the 2020 U.S. Open; The Country Club, next hosting the 2022 U.S. Open, and Los Angeles Country Club’s North Course (in collaboration with author and blogger Geoff Shackelford), next hosting the 2023 U.S. Open. 

 “It’s a long-winded kind of answer,” Hanse continued, “and there’s been this kind of appreciation for a long time, but now because of all this good restoration work that is happening – of which we are happy to do our part – there’s an even bigger appreciation of the older golf courses and those architects. ‘Wow, we knew these guys were good, but we didn’t know they were this good.’ ”

Bill Coore – who with design partner Ben Crenshaw has worked on classics such as Pinehurst No. 2, Maidstone, Seminole, Riviera and many others – agrees.

“We do seem to be in an era where there are significant efforts going on to try to restore or, in some cases I guess you could say, address the current playing conditions of some of the classic old courses,” Coore said. “They are all living, breathing things like we are, and they change and evolve.

“In the case of the best courses in the country, they have for the most part evolved in a very positive fashion. But they do change. Sometimes the changes are so incremental that they’re almost unnoticeable until years and years later. Then, you realize they were slightly better the way they were intended. You see a lot of that going on, I think. We’re trying to recapture the original intent and playing characteristics of some of these old courses.”

Seminole Golf Club in South Florida was restored by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw. (David Cannon/Getty Images)

 

It can be a daunting task. How exactly does one go about touching up a masterpiece without damaging it? The first step typically involves some definition of intent. 

“Part of the process you go through is, what are the goals?” Coore said. “What are you trying to obtain if you’re working at one of those great old courses? Is it purely trying to recapture the character and the aesthetics? Is it trying to recapture the playing characteristics? Is it trying to address issues pertaining to more modern golf? Is it all of the above?”

The terms thrown about can muddle things. What exactly is a restoration? And what is a renovation? Do those terms ever cross, and how many shades of gray are present between them? 

“The easiest way for us to describe it, for Jim Wagner and myself, is that a restoration is when the original architect’s thoughts, style and design are the driving force behind every decision on the site,” Hanse said. “A renovation is when we’re interjecting our original design thoughts into an existing golf course, allowing our prejudices, thoughts, skills, etcetera, to influence what we think would make for a better golf course.”

Hanse pointed to his and Wagner’s work at Winged Foot’s West course in New York as a restoration, with the duo trying to reclaim the characteristics instilled by the original designer, Tillinghast. Greens edges had crept in since the course opened in 1923, leaving fewer hole locations. Some bunkers had become irrelevant. Among all the work involved, perhaps key was Hanse and Wagner’s expansion of putting surfaces back to their original sizes and shifting of bunkers to better fit Tillinghast’s intent of challenging players. 

The second hole at Pinehurst No. 4, which was renovated by Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner (Courtesy of Pinehurst Resort)

At the opposite end of Hanse’s redesign-renovation spectrum is Pinehurst No. 4, a Ross layout at the famed North Carolina resort that had been the subject of numerous subsequent redesigns since its opening as a full 18 in 1919. Defining it as a renovation and not a restoration from the start, Hanse and Wagner built what Hanse called “close to being a whole new golf course” through mostly existing corridors in the pines, and that renovation opened to play in 2018. 

Pinehurst is a great example of the different ways to approach a renovation or restoration, as it has been 10 years since Coore and Crenshaw wrapped up what most certainly was a restoration of Pinehurst No. 2, the resort’s flagship course that rests directly next to Hanse’s since-renovated No. 4. 

Often cited as among the best of Ross’s designs, No. 2 had changed considerably over the decades following its 1903 opening. The course’s most famous features are its crowned greens, but much of the rest of the course might have been almost unrecognizable to Ross, who lived for years to the side of the third green. Most dramatically, the native sandy areas alongside fairways had been replaced with grass at rough heights, presenting totally different appearances and playing challenges. 

No. 2 hosted U.S. Opens in 1999 and 2005, and even between those Opens the course changed, with fairways growing more narrow between ever-expanding fields of rough. After that 2005 Open, the resort’s operators wanted to make drastic changes. Employing Coore and Crenshaw in 2010, they opted to take the course back in time, restoring what once was to replace what it had become. 

“Sometimes we look back at some of the architecture that has happened at Pinehurst, whether it’s golf course architecture or building architecture, and you scratch your head a little bit,” Tom Pashley, now the president of Pinehurst Resort, said at Golfweek’s Architecture Summit in November of 2020. “How did this happen, how did that happen? …

“The decision was made, and it was a risk but it was obviously the right decision, to take No. 2 back. It had become a very manicured golf course, and the standing wire grass areas were only ornamental. It didn’t look like a Sandhills course. … Things had happened over the years, and the courses had evolved and all that, and we just said, look, this land is where Ross laid out the original four courses in Pinehurst, and we need to be true to some sort of aesthetic, the Ross aesthetic.”

So Coore and Crenshaw were tasked with taking the course back, but to what, exactly? And for whom, Tour pros in the U.S. Open or resort guests? And how to do that? 

“At least for us, the single biggest priority is to take ourselves out of it,” Coore said. “If we leave signatures that we’ve been there, we failed, quite frankly. The goal is to recapture – at least at places like Pinehurst or Maidstone or wherever – the goal is to try to recapture what made that place so special in the beginning. And all those cases, they were built long before Ben and I were ever on this earth. So we take ourselves out of it, yet we’re so involved in it, trying to study the original intent. What did Donald Ross intend at Pinehurst No. 2? What was the focus? How did the course play and look?”

Coore and Crenshaw got a major boost when local resident Craig Disher presented them with aerial photos of Pinehurst No. 2 taken on Christmas Day in 1943. The design duo received another break when Pinehurst agronomist Bob Farren told them the current irrigation system had been laid in the same trenches as the water pipes installed during Ross’s time, allowing them to figure out the previous center lines of the fairways while projecting their width based on how far water would have been sprinkled. 

“I said, ‘Bob, if that’s the case, we have not only a road map, we have the center of the road,’ ” Coore said of the old irrigation system. 

Such sleuthing can be crucial to a true restoration. At Pinehurst, those kinds of efforts allowed Coore and Crenshaw, with a fairly high degree of certainty, to present the course as it looked in 1943, with wider fairways surrounded by native grasses and no traditional rough. 

The ninth green at Pinehurst No. 2, as seen before Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw’s restoration (inset photo) and after, with new wire grass (Photos courtesy of Pinehurst and by David Cannon/Getty Images)

The U.S. Open returned to No. 2 in 2014, with Martin Kaymer winning on a firmer, faster and browner layout that looked almost nothing as it had in 1999 and 2005. It was a departure from the typical U.S. Open setup of tall rough, but the work was roundly praised. And with the U.S. Golf Association now slated to establish a second headquarters at Pinehurst, the U.S. Open will return with No. 2 as an anchor site in 2024, 2029, 2035, 2041 and 2047.

“We’re very proud of Pinehurst, because the people there are very proud of it,” Coore said. “I know there were people who said, what on earth are they doing, they’re going to destroy the place. But I think given the time since the work – and it’s probably been enough time to begin to assess – that this was a positive move. 

“I grew up in North Carolina and I played golf at Pinehurst as a kid, and I remembered it from what it was in the 1960s, and I just knew from my own memory that it had changed dramatically through the years. Ben and I certainly never would have gone there and said you need to change this, you need to restore this. All that influence came from the Pinehurst people, who said we’ve been listening and studying that this course is not the way it used to be. It was a huge leap of faith.”

While Pinehurst serves as a great model for restorations and renovations, it’s hardly alone in efforts to refine a golf course, even among U.S. Open venues. Oakmont Country Club in Pennsylvania, host to nine Opens, for example famously removed thousands of trees in the 1990s and 2000s to restore playing corridors as intended by original designer Henry Fownes. That certainly would be one of the most visually impactful restorations for any television viewer. 

None of this is exactly new. Robert Trent Jones Sr. was known for his work on championship courses, and his son Rees followed in his footsteps. Courses have been the targets of redesign efforts ever since the game developed. Old Tom Morris certainly was known to tinker.

But as courses continue to age, efforts have been stepped up at many private clubs and resorts alike, often with grander goals of revisiting previous work that was more limited in scope. Whereas announcements of course openings filled the news wires in the early 2000s, today’s design news is more typically filled with restorations and renovations – not a week goes by without announcements of such work across the U.S. 

It’s all a great opportunity for current architects, but it can be very different than creating a new course. In a sense, great restorations are more of a research endeavor than a design process. 

“When you’re in the field, there’s a ton of archaeology,” Hanse said. “You’ll find old bunkers and things. We’re working at Oakland Hills right now, and we’ll be sifting through, and ‘That looks like old bunker sand. Yep, there’s a layer, chase it and find where it goes.’ So there are markers on the ground. Working at Baltusrol, we’ve been sort of peeling away layers of bunker sand buildup along the edges of greens. You have thatch and sort of top dressing, then all the sudden you hit this sort of blackish soil layer. You can chase that soil layer, and that sort of reestablishes where the edge of the bunker was. If you’re paying attention, you can find these things.”

Hanse said the greatest example may have come at Los Angeles Country Club’s North Course, a George C. Thomas Jr. original design from 1921 that had been reshaped and diminished through the decades. A skilled contractor on an excavator kept finding all kinds of clues to the original course beneath the sod, especially as to the placement of the second and sixth greens. 

“He found the old green surfaces that literally had been covered by dirt – they hadn’t even stripped the grass off it,” Hanse said. “Pulling this away, we even found old cup holes. It was remarkable. We were just able to pull away the dirt and have the old green edges and contours intact. That was one of the coolest things I have ever seen.”

But the fact there are clues in the dirt doesn’t necessarily make it any easier for the architects. 

“Without question, I think Ben and I would both say that there’s more stress in (restoring a classic course than in building a new one),” said Coore, who along with Crenshaw delivered one of the most-anticipated new courses of 2020, the Sheep Ranch at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort in Oregon. “It’s because you’re not dealing with your product. You’re trying to return the greatest potential of somebody else’s product, a product that has proved to be successful and sometimes even revered around the world for years. 

“So it’s way more stressful and intense than creating a new product where, even though the site might have great potential and expectations, the course doesn’t exist yet. On a new course you’re living up to what the potential of the site is, but you’re not living up to what was. You’re not chasing a ghost.”

– This story originally ran in Golfweek’s 2021 Ultimate Guide.

Golfweek’s Best Courses 2020: Hawaii

Kapalua in Maui is No. 1 on the list in Hawaii for Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play 2020.

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Ocean views, lava-lined fairways, palm trees – golf in Hawaii naturally has plenty going for it. But the best of the best public-access golf in the island paradise is even better these days after renovations and restorations to several top courses in recent years.

That starts at Kapalua’s Plantation Course, annual host site of the PGA Tour’s Sentry Tournament of Champions. The design team of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw oversaw extensive restoration work on the Plantation that wrapped up late in 2019, helping what already was No. 1 on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list in the Aloha State strengthen its grasp on the top spot.

Golfweek ranks courses by compiling the average ratings – on a points basis of 1 to 10 – of its more than 750 raters to create several industry-leading lists of courses. That includes the popular Best Courses You Can Play list for courses that allow non-member tee times. These generally are defined as courses accessible to resort guests or regular daily-fee players.

Kapalua’s Plantation Course is famous for providing sweeping views of the Pacific Ocean on television as the Tour kicks off its annual calendar each year. The course, which plays some 400 feet up and down the side of a mountain in Maui, opened in 1991, and regular wear and tear over the years led to the renovation that wrapped up 13 months ago. Now the course has been restored to its fast and firm conditions, perfect for golf in the island breezes with balls frequently rolling prodigious distances along sweeping fairways and into greens.

Aside from being the top public-access layout in Hawaii, Plantation ranks No. 44 among all tracks on Golfweek’s Best Modern Courses list for layouts built in or after 1960.

Hualalai Golf Club
Four Seasons Resort Hualālai in Hawaii (Courtesy of Four Seasons)

Four Seasons Resort Hualālai in Kailua-Kona, ranked No. 5 in Hawaii on that Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list, is another example of a recent renovation, having wrapped up work in 2020 on its Jack Nicklaus-designed layout. Set among black lava rock alongside the Pacific, the layout received a new coat of paspalum grass, bunkers were reshaped and greens were recontoured. The resort said it worked closely with Nicklaus to retain the integrity of the course that hosts the PGA Tour Champions’ Mitsubishi Electric Championship.

Four Season Resorts Manele course in Hawaii (Courtesy of Four Seasons)

Four Season Resort’s Manele Course in Lanai is No. 2 on Hawaii’s public-access list and is No. 51 on Golfweek’s Best Modern list for the entire U.S. Built by Nicklaus in 1991 on lava outcroppings, the course features three holes atop cliffs above the Pacific.

Mauna Kea Beach Hotel’s eponymous course at Kohala Coast is No. 3 on Hawaii’s public-access list. Built by Robert Trent Jones Sr. in 1964, the layout sits atop a black lava field and received a modernization by Rees Jones in 2008.

Princeville Makai Golf Club in Hawaii (Courtesy of Princeville Makai)

Princeville Makai in Kauai, Robert Trent Jones Jr.’s first-ever solo course, is No. 4 on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list. Opened in 1971 and renovated in 2009-’10, the layout features six ocean holes.

As might be expected, Hawaii also features stunning private golf courses. Nanea in Kona is No. 1 in Hawaii on Golfweek’s Best Private Courses list, and it is No. 17 on Golfweek’s Best Modern list for the whole U.S.

Kukio Golf and Beach Club in Kailua-Kona is No. 2 on Hawaii’s Private list, followed by No. 3 Kohanaiki in Kailua-Kona, No. 4 Hokulia in Kailua-Kona and No. 5 Kukuiula in Koloa.

Mauna Kea Beach Hotel’s course in Hawaii (Courtesy of Mauna Kea)

 

 

Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play in Hawaii

1. Kapalua (Plantation)

Maui (No. 44 m) 

2. Four Seasons Resort (Manele)

Lanai (No. 51 m)

3. Mauna Kea Beach Hotel

Kohala Coast (No. 194 m)

4. Princeville Makai

Kauai (m)

5. Four Seasons Resort Hualalai

Kailua-Kona (m)

6. Grand Hyatt Kauai Resort & Spa (Poipu Bay)

Kauai (m)

7. Wailea (Gold)

Maui (m)

8. Mauna Lani (North)

Kona (m)

9. Turtle Bay Resort (Arnold Palmer)

Oahu (m)

10. Wailea (Emerald)

Maui (m)

11. Kapolei GC

Kapolei (m)

12. Ocean Course at Hokuala

Kauai (m)

13. Wailua Municipal

Kauai (m)

14. Royal Ka’anapali

Lahaina (m)

15. *Mauna Lani (South)

Kona (m)

Golfweek’s Best Private Courses 2020 in Hawaii

1. Nanea

Kona (No. 17 m)

2. Kukio Golf & Beach Club

Kailua-Kona (m)

3. *Kohanaiki

Kailua-Kona (m)

4. Hokulia

Kailua-Kona (m)

5. Kukuiula

Koloa (m)

*New to the lists in 2020

(m): modern; (c): classic

Golfweek’s Best 2020

How we rate them

The members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on our 10 criteria. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings on each course are averaged together to produce a final rating for each course. Then each course is ranked against other courses in its state, or nationally, to produce the final rankings.

Streamsong reopens Red, Blue courses with ridiculously smooth Mach 1 putting greens

The resort’s new Mach 1 putting surfaces produce some of the truest Bermuda grass putting greens found anywhere.

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BOWLING GREEN, Fla. – Rolling, rolling, rolling, keep those golf balls rolling. And if the ball never bounces on a green during a putt attempt, even better.

That’s the approach for Streamsong Resort in Central Florida, which on Thursday will reopen its Red and Blue courses after re-grassing the greens over the summer. The new turf, without any doubt, provides some of the smoothest Bermuda grass surfaces found anywhere.

Named Mach 1, the new grass is an ultra-fine Ultradwarf Bermuda developed by Rod Lingel. Streamsong is the first to install it on 18-hole courses.

“The leaf texture is a little bit better than anything else we’ve seen,” said Streamsong director of agronomy Rusty Mercer after a preview round Tuesday on the Blue. “The inner node length is much shorter and tighter, and when handled properly, the bar gets really high with this. There is virtually no grain associated with the grass, and the ball rolls just phenomenal.”

He wasn’t kidding about the lack of grain, and that’s practically unheard of for Bermuda grass greens, especially in Florida during the summer. Normally the grain of the grass – the direction in which the blades of grass grow, often pointing downhill but sometimes following the setting sun – is as much a factor in reading a putt as is the slope. The grain can force a ball to break more or less on a given slope, and it also effects speed and can cause a ball to bounce.

A view of 18th green on Blue with the Red course lacing throughout the background at Streamsong Resort (Golfweek/Tracy Wilcox)

At the Blue on Tuesday, the grain was zero, zip, nada. Mercer said the greens were rolling at about a 9 on the Stimpmeter for our preview round, and he expects the green speeds to increase to a PGA Tour-like 11 soon as his staff mows them lower. They can surpass even that if the weather dries out during the fall and winter.

This writer has played all his life on Bermuda greens, having grown up in Louisiana and Florida and the past 35 years or so playing golf all around the Sunshine State. It’s not hyperbole to say I have never seen a ball roll more consistently true for 18 holes on Bermuda grass than I did during Tuesday’s round. Think bentgrass smooth – the ball never skips or hops, hugging the ground the entire way.

It’s so smooth, there’s an odd sidenote for my kindred golf geeks: Frequently, if you listen carefully, you can hear a ball skittering across Bermuda grass greens, much like a faint sound of Velcro being pulled. The new Mach 1 greens at Streamsong produce a silent putting surface because the ball never grabs or bounces. It’s akin to a pool ball rolling across a perfect pool table – no sound at all.

It’s so smooth and true, Mercer had to take the resort’s caddie staff onto the course for a lesson on how to read the new surfaces. Otherwise, they might read putts from memory of the older Mini Verde Bermuda surfaces – reads that frequently included the grain. Now, when the caddie says “straight putt,” you’d be wise to believe it.

“It’s strange. We associate grain with Bermuda,” Mercer said. “Maybe that will come with time, I don’t know. But right now, I would just like for people to enjoy it.”

The project started with intentions for the Blue to be resurfaced in 2020 and the Red to come next in 2021.  But then, coronavirus. The resort operators weighed options and decided to re-grass the greens on both courses at once so the resort would be fully operational in 2021 when things hopefully return to normal for travel and golf.

Mercer and his staff also tweaked a few tees on the Red and Blue, adding new boxes to create better yardages, especially for players who tee it up forward on the silver or mixed tee boxes that play between 6,100 and 6,500 yards. The intent is to provide better options for players who struggle to carry the ball past 200 yards on tee shots.

It’s not as if the old Mini Verde green surfaces were especially terrible – they were among the best surfaces in Central Florida, especially for a public-access facility. But it wasn’t good enough for Mercer and his staff.

“We were struggling to provide a good playing surface,” said Mercer, who has been in charge of the turf since before the resort opened the Red and Blue in 2012. “And one of our edicts here at Streamsong from the very beginning, it wasn’t good enough to just be a top Florida golf course, we needed to be a top international golf course.

“The greens had gotten to the point where it became necessary to look at what was next. So, resurfacing them became the answer. We went to great lengths to determine what we wanted to plant. We did a lot of testing, a lot of different plots with different options. At the end of the day, we couldn’t find anything that we felt like was going to be quite as good as this stuff.”

Streamsong Red in Florida (Courtesy of Streamsong/Laurence Lambrecht)

Mercer and his staff had a tough summer of installing the grass. Central Florida had an especially hot and wet summer, and the Mach 1 sprigs were washed out on the Red after several intense storms. With the main season for the resort approaching in the fall and winter, he was under the gun.

There are big expectations for the new greens on the Red and Blue to wow customers. The Red is ranked No. 39 on Golfweek’s Best list for all modern courses built in or after 1960 in the United States, and the Blue is No. 57 on that elite list. The third course at the resort, the Black, came online in 2017 and is ranked No. 46 among all modern courses. The greens were not redone on the newer Black course.

The Red – designed by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw – is also ranked No. 2 in Florida on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access tracks, trailing only the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass. The design team of Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner laid out the Black, which is No. 3 in Florida, and Tom Doak’s Blue is No. 4 on that list.

How did it feel to tear up the old greens on some of the best tracks in the state?

“There certainly was a little bit of nerves,” Mercer said. “But we knew it was necessary.”

Feel good to be done?

“We’ll never be done out here,” he said. “If we’re ever done, it will be time to just go home, because there’s always more work to do.”

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#SheepRanchDay: New Bandon course showcases a double green at the edge of the earth

Two par-3 holes at the Sheep Ranch share a massive green on 100-foot cliffs above the Pacific Ocean, one of the most dramatic sites in golf

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(Editor’s note: June 1 is the opening of Sheep Ranch, one of the most highly anticipated course openings of the last decade. Golfweek will have additional coverage all day long, including hourly photos on Instagram, and an Instagram Live with Golfweek Travel Editor Jason Lusk.
Follow us on Instagram here.)

BANDON, Ore. – There are plenty of cliffside holes to love at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort’s new Sheep Ranch, which opens June 1 and features nine greens on the 100-foot cliffs above the beach and Pacific Ocean below.

But the focal point clearly is the giant, undulating, made-for-selfies double green perched atop Fivemile Point.

One piece of advice: If you’re afraid of heights, don’t look down. Plenty of photos and drone videos show the steepness of that edge of North America, but it feels even more dramatic when you take a break from reading putts to sneak a peek westward.

Jutting toward giant rocks breaking free beyond the water’s edge, the double green built by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw is the target for Nos. 3 and 16. Both are par 3s, with No. 3 playing a mere 120 yards off the back and the 16th playing 151.

Simple, right? Short little par 3s, flip in a wedge or short iron, maybe make a putt and walk off with a smile? Not so fast. The wind that sometimes howls across Fivemile Point has to be felt to believed – it’s not an exaggeration that some players might discuss a four-club wind with their caddies. Balls that climb high into that breeze could land anywhere. Great fun.

No. 16 plays northward along the cliff to the massive double green atop Fivemile Point at Bandon Dunes’ Sheep Ranch. (Courtesy of Bandon Dunes Golf Resort)

The green is massive, with separate tall dunes blocking the right-side entrances to both holes. No. 3 plays almost directly west from the interior of the course, while No. 16 stretches along the cliff from a tee box set south of the green. The highest portion of the green serves as the front for No. 3 and is not really in play for No. 16. From that high point it’s down, around, over lumps and swales to the lowest portion of the green just a step from the cliff’s edge.

If the surface of the double green has any likeness at the entire resort that features four other highly ranked courses, it might be the Punch Bowl putting green, which isn’t even part of an 18-hole course. The Punch Bowl invites players to sip cocktails and compete against each other on a ridiculously large practice green that falls away from the first tee of the Pacific Dunes course. Likewise, players happily could spend hours tumbling balls across the double green atop Fivemile Point, if only there weren’t another tee box waiting.

Speaking of that next tee: The rear corner of the double green even serves as the par-4 17th’s back tee box, from which strong players can send a ball over the cliffs edge, across the yellow gorse and toward the ancient stumps of trees and fairway beyond.

For years the site was the focal point of the site’s previous 13-hole course, also called Sheep Ranch, that was built by Tom Doak and Jim Urbina. But that routing didn’t host much play, and Fivemile point was mostly a distant dream for players looking north from the No. 7 snack shack on the resort’s Old Macdonald course.

The double green for Nos. 3 and 16 at Bandon Dunes’ Sheep Ranch sits atop 100-foot cliffs above the Pacific Ocean. (courtesy of Bandon Dunes Golf Resort)

Now it’s the new reality, and it will be among the most-talked-about acreage at the resort. Think No. 7 at Pebble Beach or No. 16 at Cabot Cliffs for North American cliffside comparisons – the site is that dramatic, with perhaps only No. 16 at Cypress Point surpassing it for heroics.

“Five Mile Point is a focal point for the whole property, no question about that,” Coore said. “It was that way with the original Sheep Ranch, and it’s the thing people talk about the most. It was the face of the Sheep Ranch property, I guess. It wouldn’t be an overstatement to say it’s the cornerstone. You certainly won’t forget it.”

Bandon Dunes’ Sheep Ranch: Contours shape strategy on intriguing inland holes

Bandon Dunes’ new Sheep Ranch golf course by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw features amazing terrain that dictates strategy

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(Editor’s note: June 1 is the opening of Sheep Ranch, one of the most highly anticipated course openings of the last decade. Golfweek will have additional coverage all day long, including hourly photos on Instagram, and an Instagram Live with Golfweek Travel Editor Jason Lusk.
Follow us on Instagram here.)

BANDON, Ore. – The cliffside holes at the new Sheep Ranch – at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort as a whole, really – tend to steal the spotlight. They are stunning, perched 100 feet above the Pacific Ocean on nearly vertical rock walls.

But don’t think the new inland holes fashioned by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw are any less intriguing. With rolling terrain and wind-sculpted contours that constantly ebb and flow like the waves of the adjacent Pacific Ocean, the inland holes at the Sheep Ranch are stars on their own.

Take Nos. 8 and 11 as examples.

The eighth hole on the new course, which opens June 1, is a dogleg-right par 4 that plays 429 yards off the back tees. There are no trees or sand traps – the entire Sheep Ranch has no traditional bunkers – to protect the dogleg. Instead, it’s native grasses, rolling contours and wind that dictate how best to play the hole.

A large ridge runs down the wide fairway as it curves rightward toward the green. Place your tee shot atop the ridge, and you will be rewarded with a view of the green and a clear approach shot. But if you try to take the shorter route to the right side, you likely will find your ball in a fairway swale with no view of the green and a much tougher approach.

Much of that depends on the wind. On a south wind the hole will play shorter, allowing long hitters to bang their tee shots close enough to the green that an open sightline won’t much matter. But into a north wind, the placement of the tee shot is crucial.

“The goal is to get up on that ridge,” Coore said. “It’s an interesting hole. We hope that people will look at it and try to figure out what they need to do. … The terrain makes all the difference.”

No. 11 is no less interesting. The 529-yard par 5 climbs the tallest hill on the property towards the green, with a scattering of pine trees down the left. An indifferent second shot – either a layup or an attempt to get home in two on a south wind – can sail into a hazard or bluff on the right side, or down a steep embankment to the left from where a player faces a blind wedge shot straight up to the green.

And the approach to that green is the most secluded spot on an otherwise exposed course. If any of the Sheep Ranch’s holes remind a player of the other four highly ranked courses at the resort, No. 11 is it.

The second green at Bandon Dunes’ new Sheep Ranch is perched above the fairway, forcing players to choose from where to best approach the putting surface. (Courtesy of Bandon Dunes Golf Resort)

Nos. 8 and 11 are just two examples of using the contours to shape challenges without bunkers or trees impeding the line of play. The par-4 14th has a dramatic swale along the left side of the fairway, forcing a blind approach shot over a hilltop. The short par-4 second dares players to swing for the fences to get nearer the green with the help of a north wind, but a long tee shot into the left side of the fairway leaves a player with a delicate uphill, downwind pitch that is difficult to control.

It’s all about placement and strategy. And it’s all dictated by the terrain.

“When you get out there walking, you realize, man these contours are just beautiful,” Coore said. “We tried to let those contours and the coastline dictate the type of course. It’s hard to describe in words, but if you’ve seen it, you know.”

Clever routing, contours and natural splendor distinguish Bandon Dunes’ Sheep Ranch

Sheep Ranch opens at Bandon Dunes with clever routing, extreme contours and nine greens perched on cliffs above the Pacific Ocean

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BANDON, Ore. – We could see forever on the downhill stroll to the first green at the new Sheep Ranch at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort. The view from that northernmost point of the resort was all Pacific Ocean to the west, while the panorama to the south appeared as exposed land that somehow has taken on the shape of ocean waves, rising and falling at the whims of the wind. Flagsticks dotted the exuberant landscape, dancing in the seaside breezes.

Built upon a mile of jagged coastline, the tract initially looks huge. The ninth green sits at the far southern end, nearly reaching the bluffs at Old Macdonald and the rest of the famed golf resort. On an early preview round before the course’s official June 1 opening, it was a thrill to know we would play from here to there, then back again – we could see almost all the challenges waiting ahead. With few trees to block the sightlines, it looks like one giant playground.

But looks certainly can be deceiving.

The design team led by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw had to dig deep into its bag of tricks to make this highly anticipated course work on a deceptively small piece of land that is roughly 600 yards across at its widest. With only about 140 acres for the course before the land climbs into trees to the east, Coore and Crenshaw fashioned a genius routing that plays as wide open as the views.

The grand opening of the Sheep Ranch will reveal several differences to the resort’s other courses – all of which rank highly in the Golfweek’s Best ratings of greatest modern golf courses in the United States. Pacific Dunes is ranked No. 2, Old Macdonald is No. 5, Bandon Dunes is No. 8 and Bandon Trails is No. 14.

Greens stretch along the cliffs at the Sheep Ranch at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort (David Davis/Statesman Journal)

The most immediately noticed difference is that the Sheep Ranch’s cliffs are not as linear, with promontories jutting 100 feet above the beach that afforded somewhat surreal opportunities to build several greens and tees almost entirely surrounded by open sky. And second is the ground itself, with little natural foliage to hide the sweeping internal contours.

“For the most part we did what we always try to do,” Coore said. “If you find a site that has a lot of inherent qualities, natural qualities for golf, you just let that guide the process. Certainly at the Sheep Ranch, the site was inherently different than any of the courses there. It definitely had different contours than most of the other courses. It wasn’t sand, wasn’t dunes. It just had such interesting natural contours for golf, amazingly interesting contours. We tried to let those contours and the coastline dictate the type of course.”

A few things to know going in: The Sheep Ranch is a compact course that is much more exposed to sometimes extreme wind than the other tracks at Bandon Dunes. The views are ridiculous. It has nine greens on those incredible, 100-foot Pacific cliffs. The fairways are wide, but that fact alone doesn’t necessarily make it easy to hit them when the wind is howling. For the first time at the resort, players can intentionally hit balls over the cliffs to targets perched on those dramatic promontories instead of just alongside the cliffs.

And there are no traditional sand bunkers. Not one. More on that later.

There are nine greens on the coast at the Sheep Ranch at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort. (Gabe Gudgel/Golfweek)

As for the question I get most after my preview round: No, I won’t call it my favorite of the now five 18-hole courses at the resort, simply because it’s impossible for me to choose. Golfers will gather in McKee’s Pub and around the fire pit to figure out that argument, and they’re all right no matter which course they choose. My favorite at Bandon is always the next one on my schedule.

“I think it was Willie Nelson who said, you just do the best you can – in his case music – and then you throw it out there for everyone to judge,” Coore said. “Somebody will tell you if it’s any good or not. The Sheep Ranch is a little like that in the sense it’s quite different than the other courses at Bandon. We think it’s good, and we’re very pleased with what happened there. How it will be perceived is up to others to determine.”

The fact that the Sheep Ranch is even part of the discussion as the best course at Bandon Dunes involves some sleight of hand that has holes zigging and zagging across the landscape with so many greens perched above the ocean. It’s that intimacy with the cliffs that turn this course into one continuous photo op. That was the goal from the outset for Sheep Ranch co-owners Mike Keiser and Phil Friedmann.

“Mike and Phil are very good natured, but they had a very pointed directive: Try to use every single foot of that coastline. Every foot. And I can’t say it enough, I mean every foot,” Coore said with a laugh. “We all like to have fun with that kind of stuff in conversations, but it’s hard to do. We could have said we’re just going to run some holes along the ocean and along the cliffs, but if you do that, you get very few holes on the ocean.”

The highlight of the cliffside holes – and the focal point for the entire course – is the giant double green for Nos. 3 and 16. Jutting into the ocean atop Fivemile Point, suspended above dark rocks that rise from the water, it was obvious from the outset that this spot was special. It surely will take its place among the best spots for a golf selfie on the planet – the caddies will be busy here, handing off putters in exchange for smartphones for the obligatory shot.

No. 16 green at the Sheep Ranch at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort (Gabe Gudgel/Golfweek)

But much of what makes the Sheep Ranch work was not so obvious. Routing is a common term in golf, frequently used to casually describe a course as a whole. But to a course designer, it’s the nuanced art of fashioning 18 holes into a cohesive experience. And at the Sheep Ranch, the routing is everything.

The new course replaces a 13-hole track on the site that was built by Tom Doak and Jim Urbina and which also was named Sheep Ranch. It was owned independently by Friedmann, who along with Keiser was a co-founder of Recycled Paper Greetings, Inc., in 1971. That version of the Sheep Ranch wasn’t open to standard resort play and didn’t always follow a traditional routing, as the handful of players who experienced it could choose their tees and greens in a golf version of the basketball game Horse.

So how did Coore and Crenshaw approach the task of making 18 holes fit onto the piece of land that previously held just 13?

“The big thing, because of the small size of the property and the effects of the wind out there, we did have some concerns that if we built a bunch of holes that paralleled each other, balls could go anywhere,” Coore said. “Once balls get airborne on that kind of wind, they could go laterally a long way ­– they can go anywhere. We tried to figure out, the most interesting ground is here along the cliffs and, say, 400 yards inland – how do we best utilize that? But we can’t just line the holes up in a paralleling fashion because we were worried about where some of these tee shots would go on that wind.”

Turns out, the secret is in the clever and shared arrangement of the tee boxes.

No. 7 at the Sheep Ranch at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort (Courtesy of Bandon Dunes)

If a course is built with parallel holes, each tee box consumes a sizeable chunk of land. Then there is all that ground stretching from tee to fairway. Factor in the space to keep the holes far enough apart so that each has its own identity – and so that players are less likely to send tee shots screaming on a crazy wind into other groups – and a designer will have used a lot of land that isn’t even really in play.

Instead, Coore and Crenshaw created several tee boxes that serve as hubs from which multiple fairways radiate outward and away from each other. Consider the spokes on a bicycle wheel: The spokes grow farther apart as they stretch outward from the hub.

Same thing with several of the Sheep Ranch tee boxes and fairways, with key examples being Nos. 2 and 18, Nos. 5 and 15 and Nos. 8 and 10. Placing the tees close together allows the fairways to extend farther apart while consuming less land.

(Routing graphic courtesy of Bandon Dunes Golf Resort; Map by Google Earth)

“Ben and I both agree, if we did anything that was maybe a bit unusual but was actually key to unlocking the routing there, it was combining those tee complexes,” Coore said. “By pulling tee complexes very close together where they almost become common teeing grounds for two different holes, it allowed us to really make it compact in the teeing areas. Then as the holes go away from the tees to the landing areas, they can get wider and wider. That was one of the absolute keys to the routing of the golf course.”

It also creates what can be a fun, communal vibe on the tee shots. Whereas most top courses revel in a sense of isolation, with one group rarely coming in contact with another, players will frequently come face-to-face with others at the Sheep Ranch.

“You’ll see a lot of other folks hitting golf shots, and they’ll be seeing you hitting golf shots too,” Coore said with a laugh. “If it were at a municipal golf course some place, it would be harder to pull this off because you would have to be so aware of which tees you are going to and which way you’re playing. It would be easy to get up there and play down the wrong hole. While we tried to delineate the lines of play very distinctly, it helps that Bandon Dunes has caddies and the vast majority of players choose to use them.”

One thing those caddies won’t need is a rake.

Instead of traditional sand traps, the Sheep Ranch features a wide range of shallow areas dug out like bunkers, but with variations of grass instead of sand. Some are partially mowed, while others have taller and wispier grass. Coore described them as looking like old, abandoned bunkers that have grown over with grass.

One of the main reasons for skipping the sand was the strong winds so prevalent at the Sheep Ranch. Wind over 30 mph – common at all the cliffside holes at the resort and even more so at the Sheep Ranch – can blow sand out of a bunker, making the traps a maintenance headache. And because the Sheep Ranch isn’t built on sandy terrain like the resort’s other courses, instead being laid out over what Coore called “red shot clay,” having sand blow out of the traps would leave hard-pan clay bottoms exposed.

No. 17 at the Sheep Ranch at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort (Courtesy of Bandon Dunes)

For inspiration on how to handle that problem, Coore and Crenshaw looked to a classic golf architecture book, The Links by Robert Hunter that was first published in 1926.

“There’s an old black and white photograph of contours that are just so incredible, and there’s a caption that says one day there will be a site with contours so interesting for golf that bunkers will be unnecessary,” Coore said. “And we thought if we were ever going to build a golf course with no formal bunkers, this is probably the place. Given the weather conditions, given the soil type and given the amazing contours, this is the site. So that was the beginning of the idea.”

Coore said that Keiser, the original developer of Bandon Dunes who has built a network of top courses around North America, got on board quickly. Friedmann, however, needed a little convincing to leave out what is typically one of the most recognizable features of a great course.

“Phil, I guess, was a bit more hesitant, and for good reason,” Coore said. “His comment was that we could build some of the most spectacular bunkers on earth here, and he was absolutely right. We could, and I could see how there would be bunkers looking like waves crashing against green sites. But again, we get back to long-term maintenance, and did we want to do that? Or do we want to try something a bit different?”

Coore expects that the lack of sand bunkers will make the course play easier for mid- and higher-handicapped players.

“But for the best players who can spin a bunker shot and control those shots consistently, I have an idea they will find those grassy bunker-type areas to be more unpredictable and more difficult,” he said. “All those things have been involved in the thought process collectively.”

No. 9 green at the Sheep Ranch, backed by a gorse-covered gorge and hillside (Gabe Gudgel/Golfweek)

The lack of bunkers is just one more example of different being interesting. Coore and Crenshaw didn’t set out to copy Pacific Dunes or Old Macdonald. With the eyes of the golf world on the much-heralded site, they understood that they needed to embrace the differences.

“We knew the expectations would be extreme because of the spectacular nature of the site and the coastline being so different, exposing it differently and play-wise to the ocean than the other courses,” Coore said. “And we knew people would focus on the spectacular potential and not so much on the restrictions of the site. That can be daunting, because people will think that if you can’t build the best course at Bandon on that site, you’ve done something wrong.

“The potential is extreme, but the restrictive nature of it is extreme as well. How do we work these things together? We knew the expectations would be very high, but the downside could be very high too. It’s a site where you can succeed spectacularly, or you can fail miserably. … I will say, we’re thrilled with how it turned out.”

Stuck in a tropical paradise: Course shaper Keith Rhebb sits tight in Saint Lucia

In normal times, most travelers would be chomping at the bit to visit Saint Lucia, the island nation that is part of the Windward Islands marking the border between the Caribbean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. Mountains, beaches, not too crowded. … who …

In normal times, most travelers would be chomping at the bit to visit Saint Lucia, the island nation that is part of the Windward Islands marking the border between the Caribbean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. Mountains, beaches, not too crowded. … who wouldn’t want to go? It’s a tropical paradise 1,500 miles southeast of Miami.

That would be in normal times, not since the coronavirus pandemic teed off on the world’s travel industry.

Keith Rhebb, a golf course shaper who frequently works for the design team of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw, is currently stuck in paradise. He’s helping build a course at the new Cabot Saint Lucia, and with work shut down on the island to only essential tasks as the nation’s government tries to prevent any new cases of coronavirus, he’s biding his time until he can climb back onto his bulldozer and return to shaping the course.

“One guy on a dozer out in a field, I’m not sure what the risk would be, but we’re following the guidelines,” Rhebb said in a call via Facetime audio, one of his best ways of staying in touch with family and coworkers in the U.S.  “There’s no traffic coming in, there’s no traffic going out. The government has been really proactive on that, making sure everyone is trying to be safe here.

“I think they’re doing the right thing. We’re just kind of abiding by all the social distancing, washing hands, being mindful of not just going out and being out and about. We’re basically staying put, not going out and lining up in the street for KFC. Life is just continuing on here. There’s still food on the shelves. They are limiting the amount of people that can be in the store at one time. There wasn’t a run on toilet paper or anything like going on in the States, you know.”

Rhebb said local news reports have indicated three cases of coronavirus on the island: Two people from the United Kingdom were infected and later flown off the island, and one local resident was sick but has recovered. All travel to and from the island is effectively shut down until April 5.

The last flight out was this past Saturday, and he chose to stay on the island so he could return to work as soon as possible. After arriving in Saint Lucia on Feb. 24, he had planned to return to his home in Winter Park, Florida – his design credits include the Winter Park 9, a short course that ranks as the 27th best in Florida on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play – on Thursday for a break.

“Basically, if I took that option to leave on Saturday, I knew I wouldn’t be able to know when I could come back and nothing would happen on the site,” he said. “Talking with my wife, she’s working from home and has everything she needs there. This is kind of what we’ve always known, a long-distance-type thing. She said, you’re probably safer there than traveling back to Florida and having to go through the airports in Florida. So we just made the decision for me to stay put.

“We’re working a plan to get things started. There’s plenty of work to do. That’s the reason I stayed here, because I wanted to be productive to keep things going.”

Rhebb is the only Coore-Crenshaw shaper left on the island, staying in an apartment in Rodney Bay in what he described as a popular shopping area. A handful of other contractors working on the course are there, too. He said there aren’t many Americans left on the island, where about 65 percent of the gross domestic product is reliant on tourism, according to the CIA World Factbook. With no cruises arriving and the airports closed, things are certainly quiet.

“I’m a creative person, and my outlet is kind of being creative and building stuff and wanting to be productive,” Rhebb said. “I know that’s kind of a first-world problem, so I don’t want to complain too much.”

Rhebb – whose work in the past year has included stints at Kapaulua’s Plantation Course in Hawaii and the new Sheep Ranch at Bandon Dunes in coastal Oregon – described the course, Cabot Point, as “spectacular.” The site has eight holes that directly contact the coastline, and the ocean is in view from all 18.

“The coastal holes are off the charts,” he said. “And personally, I’m really excited about these inland holes that aren’t right on the coastline. They have their own character and beauty. They might not be right on the ocean, but they’re just as spectacular.”

But for now, he’s staying away. He said that judging by what he sees outside his apartment, life appears to be continuing just fine on the island. He sees people lined up for fast-food takeout or visiting a nearby bank, but he and the other contractors are “just staying put for the most part.” He goes for jogs and has been taking photos, and despite many travelers’ fantasy of life in a beach bar, he’s staying away from beer.

“You find appreciation for the things you kind of took for granted earlier,” he said. “You take it day by day. Trying to make a plan for even four days out, you know it’s all going to change. You can just take time to put things in perspective and not waste energy on things that aren’t positive.”

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Kapalua’s Plantation Course ready for PGA Tour pros with restored and speedy surfaces

Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw finished a project at Kapalua, where thatch buildup had slowed the roll in the fairways.

The PGA Tour players in this week’s Sentry Tournament of Champions are in for a firm, fast and bouncy experience, the result of a nine-month renovation project to Kapalua’s Plantation Course that restored much of the original intent of designers Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw.

The debut course of that now-famous design duo opened in 1991, playing some 400 feet up the side of a mountain in Maui, Hawaii. The coastal course features wide fairways and dramatic slopes, with long views over Honolua and Mokuleia bays. The course has become a staple of the PGA Tour, blasting snow-bound golfers back on the mainland with views of sunshine, tropical breezes and the occasional breaching whale.

The Plantation Course played firm and fast for years, but the venerable track – rated No. 1 on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access layouts – had started to show its age. Thatch buildup had slowed the roll in the fairways, and regular maintenance and top-dressing of the greens had softened some contours and steepened others, leaving fewer reasonable locations for pin positions.

Coore and Crenshaw returned to start a project shortly after the 2019 Tournament of Champions to restore the firm conditions and recreate more hole locations on the greens. Working with management company Troon Golf, which operates the Kapalua courses, and with former golf professional and current Golf Channel personality Mark Rolfing, Coore and Crenshaw rebuilt the greens and bunkers, restored tees and re-grassed the entire property. The course reopened in November.

The second hole at Kapalua’s Plantation Course during restoration (Courtesy of Keith Rhebb)

The course routing is the same, but the fairways are now Celebration Bermuda grass and the greens are TifEagle Bermuda. The 93 bunkers also were rebuilt with a capillary concrete liner system to help handle heavy rains, with several bunkers being reduced in size while others were expanded, all with more natural shapes and edges.

Keith Rhebb, owner of Rhebb Golf Design and a frequent contractor who does course-shaping work for Coore and Crenshaw, spent about three months at Kapalua. Having worked on top-rated courses such as Cabot Cliffs in Nova Scotia, Streamsong Red in Florida and the soon-to-be-opened Sheep Ranch at Bandon Dunes in Oregon, Rhebb said the work at Kapalua was all intended to restore the original playing conditions, where wide fairways offered strategic options but also could play tighter because a golf ball might keep trundling along until it reached trouble.

“The biggest thing was, the ball wasn’t rolling in the fairways as much,” Rhebb said. “The length of the course, for (resort guests) coming to play, it was just getting way too difficult. It had more to do with the conditioning of the fairways – the thatch was slowing the ball down. With the new Bermuda grass, Celebration, it can get a better surface to it to get the firmness back in the fairways. They really de-thatched the fairways, got almost back to basically the dirt and sprigged right back into the fairways.”

Coore and Crenshaw’s assembled teams included Dave Axland, Jimbo Wright, Jeff Bradley and Riley Johns, as well as 15 to 20 contractors. The group faced tight deadlines to finish everything in time for this week’s Tournament of Champions, with frequent logistical and operational challenges tied to renovating a course on an island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.

“You could really feel that pressure because there’s a hard date,” Rhebb said. “All kinds of things could have happened, created big issues. They were shipping in the grass sprigs from another island that were, I think, in refrigerated shipping trailers. There could have been one delay in a shipment, and everything would have been off. It took a lot of logistics and planning to make sure everything came together. …

“Andrew Rebman (Kapalua’s director of agronomy) and his crew pulled it all off, got everything grown in and ready, and kudos to them. I can’t even imagine the amount of pressure for them, having construction going on and having to wait on us before they could get to work, knowing they’re going to host a tournament that’s going to be on TV in January. Andrew, with his skill set, he’s going to have that place dialed in.”

A Sand Pro used to finish greens during the restoration of Kapalua’s Plantation Course (Courtesy of Keith Rhebb)

Rhebb said several of the greens had developed slopes of as much as 4 or 5 degrees in areas, rendering them unpinnable as the surfaces approached Tour speeds because balls wouldn’t stop rolling. Those slopes were the result of nearly 30 years of top-dressing with sand and other common maintenance procedures that buried some contours and steepened others. The green contours also no longer properly flowed into the contours outside the greens.

The crew utilized laser scanning and 3D computer modeling before starting work, then recreated slopes of around 3 degrees that extended playable green surfaces and opened up new hole locations.

“When we cored out those greens, it was almost like the rings of a tree. You could see the years of buildup,” Rhebb said. “What should be about 18 inches at most of the green surface mix, there was in spots two feet or more of mix in the greens. With almost 30 years of top-dressing, it was just time to come back and renovate these greens.”