Golfweek’s Best: Where to play golf in Michigan, from Forest Dunes to Arcadia Bluffs, Boyne to Greywalls

Michigan offers miles of great golf at Arcadia Bluffs, Forest Dunes, Greywalls, Boyne, Belvedere, Island Resort & Casino and Eagle Eye.

Red barns and cows. Narrow two-line highways and trees – so many trees. Grand lake views stretched to the horizon. Blue jean jackets and gas stations attached to liquor stores. Tall cornfields and billboards advertising only the finest marijuana edibles.

And incredible golf.

Michigan is more rural than an outsider might expect, full of farms and small-town crossroads. Outside Detroit and a few midsize cities, the Great Lakes State is the embodiment of Midwestern agrarian living, this despite it being the 10th-most populous state among the 50.

And thanks to a boom of golf course developments over the past 25 years mixed with a handful of exceptional classic tracks, Michigan offers what could be considered a surprisingly inspiring spread of public-access layouts. Outsiders might expect states such as California, Arizona and Florida to be packed with solid golf, but a recent study of Golfweek’s Best ranked courses revealed that Michigan offers the seventh-best sampling of elite public-access layouts in the country, ahead of such golf-heavy destinations as Hawaii and Virginia. Not bad for a state where the golf season doesn’t stretch much past seven months before the snow falls in many locales.

The Links nine at Boyne’s Bay Harbor Golf Club in Michigan (Courtesy of Boyne Golf/Evan Schiller)

I was there to see as many courses as I could fit into 11 days. Landing in Detroit and cruising west toward Lake Michigan, I would tee it up at 15 layouts – including a new par-3 course – and put some 1,400 miles on my rental car’s odometer before dropping it off in Milwaukee, the easiest major airport for me to reach after sliding my carry bag back into its travel case at the end of the trip.

This trip started with an airport arrival in Detroit and meandered all the way north into the Upper Peninsula along the shores of Lake Superior with samples of everything from daily-fee options with one course to a winter-season ski destination with 10 tracks. The only rule was the courses had to offer spots on their tee sheets to non-members. I started my planning with the goal of playing the top five Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play in the state and added plenty more, including four days in the Upper Peninsula hosting a tournament for Golfweek’s Best raters. My golf route, in order:

  • Eagle Eye, No. 5 in Michigan on the 2021 Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access layouts
  • Arcadia Bluffs’ Bluffs Course in Arcadia, No. 1 in Michigan
  • Arcadia Bluffs’ South Course, No. 6 in Michigan
  • Forest Dunes’ Bootlegger par-3 course
  • Forest Dunes’ The Loop, No. 3 in Michigan
  • Forest Dunes, No. 4 in Michigan
  • Belvedere, No. 9 in Michigan
  • Boyne Golf’s Arthur Hills course, No. 19 in Michigan
  • Boyne Golf’s Donald Ross Memorial
  • Boyne Golf’s The Heather
  • Boyne Golf’s Bay Harbor (Links/Quarry nines), No. 8 in Michigan
  • Island Resort & Casino’s Sage Run
  • Timberstone
  • Marquette Greywalls, No. 2 in Michigan
  • Island Resort & Casino’s Sweetgrass, tied for No. 15 in Michigan

One of the best parts: The end of summer in Michigan offers some of the best-rolling greens found in the country. Bent grass thrives at this latitude, and the putting surfaces I sampled were, without exception, pure. Perfect greens frequently are an imperfect goal – there’s a lot more to great golf than smooth and fast greens – but seeing ball after ball roll across Michigan’s putting surfaces with hardly a bump or wiggle was a highlight of my trip.

It was an unforgettable and sometimes exhausting romp, with nine rounds played on foot and six in carts. There were cliffside holes overlooking one of the Great Lakes followed by secluded, forested layouts – even a fast and firm track that plays in one direction one day, the other direction the next. Hills, valleys, bluffs – a few birdies to keep things rolling, and so many bogeys. Too much golf and never enough, always waking before sunrise to squeeze in more holes, trying to finish before dark with enough time to find an open restaurant while avoiding the roadside deer that flashed through my high beams en route to that night’s bed.

Simply put, a wandering golfer’s dream.

NYC’s Ferry Point gets new management group; Trump team looking for $30M ‘cancellation fee’

Lawyers for the Trump team say NYC needs to pay a $30 million “termination fee” because the breach of contract assertion has no legal merit.

A new management company will assume responsibility for running New York City’s Ferry Point — a stunning track that overlooks the city’s dramatic skyline — but the departure from former President Donald Trump’s organization has some saying the process has been ramrodded through.

On Tuesday, a hearing was held in advance of a vote, and lawyers from the Trump team insisted course designer Jack Nicklaus had direct oversight on any decision regarding the course’s management. That wasn’t enough to sway a city panel, however, as members approved the switch on Wednesday. Two panel members voted against the measure, and one insisted that the process needed more time to be thoroughly vetted.

Formerly known as Trump Golf Links at Ferry Point, the links-style golf course opened in 2014 and debuted at No. 2 for New York on Golfweek’s Best: State-by-State Courses You Can Play list in 2015, trailing only Bethpage Black. When Ferry Point opened, the city signed a 20-year agreement with the Trump Organization.

While the course opened beneath the Bronx-Whitestone Bridge (on the site of a former New York City landfill) in 2014, a 20,000-square-foot clubhouse, designed by the architectural firm Hart Howerton, was completed in 2019.

Donald Trump
President Donald Trump plays golf at Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Virginia, on Nov. 28, 2020. The former president said Ferry Point, which his group previously managed, could be the best public golf facility in the country. Photo by Alex Brandon/Associated Press

Mayor Bill de Blasio announced earlier in the year that the city would terminate contracts with the Trump Organization in the wake of the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection, which sent lawmakers running for cover in fear for their lives and left five people dead and dozens injured.

Lawyers for the Trump team have said the city will need to fork over a $30 million “termination fee” because the breach of contract assertion has no legal merit, according to reporting by The City, a digital news platform in New York City.

Trump released a statement on Oct. 12 blasting the mayor.

“The course has received rave reviews, is considered one of the top ten open to the public facilities in the United States (could even be the best!), is designed for tournament play, and Mayor De Blasio wants to take it away after all of the work was so successfully done, and so much money was spent,” Trump said in the statement. “So unfair—this is what happens in Communist Countries, not in America!”

Back in June, the Trump Organization legal team said the termination was motivated solely by political pressure. The group invested significantly in the project after New York City failed to complete the course, which ranks 77th on the Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play in the United States list, as judged by Golfweek’s nationwide network of raters.

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“After the City wasted hundreds of millions of dollars of taxpayer money in its prior failed attempts to complete this project, we stepped in and, at the City’s request (much like Wollman Rink in the 1980s), invested over $30 million of our own money to deliver to the people of the City of New York what has been widely recognized as one of the most magnificent public golf experiences anywhere in the country,” said a statement from the Trump Organization.

Atlanta-based Bobby Jones Links was chosen to take over the property, which means assuming daily golf operations, handling instruction programs on-site and coordinating food and beverage concessions.

“We are honored the City has selected Bobby Jones Links to be the next steward of one of New York City’s most remarkable recreational assets,” said Whitney Crouse, founding partner of Bobby Jones Links. “Ferry Point Links is one of the premier golf courses and experiences in the nation and we are honored to bring our service-based culture and extensive industry knowledge to this highly acclaimed golf course. Bobby Jones Links has been an innovator in the golf course management industry for more than 22 years with collective experience at more than 200 courses worldwide.”

According to a release, the new management group will make some changes at the course after it closes in November.

“The golf course and high-quality dining experiences will not change,” said Crouse. “However, we do plan to make enhancements that we believe will benefit the residents and golfers of New York.”

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Check the yardage book: Torrey Pines South Course for the U.S. Open

Take a detailed look at each hole for this year’s U.S. Open at Torrey Pines South, courtesy of Puttview.

The South Course at Torrey Pines in La Jolla, California, is the site of this week’s U.S. Open, bringing back memories of Tiger Woods’ dramatic 2008 major victory over Rocco Mediate. The course is also the annual home of the PGA Tour’s Farmers Insurance Open.

The South originally was designed by the father/son duo of William P. Bell and William F. Bell, and the layout opened in 1957. Previously, the site near San Diego had been a World War II U.S. Army installation named Camp Callan, and it also served as an auto racetrack after that war before being converted into a golf course.

With one of the best cliffside settings imaginable for golf, the South has been renovated several times. The teams of Billy Casper-David Rainville and Stephen Halsey-Jack Daray Jr. worked on it, and in recent decades Rees Jones made many changes – most lately in 2019 to several holes. The layout can be stretched to 7,802 yards off the back tees.

The South ranks No. 7 in California on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access layouts. It also is tied for No. 40 on the Top 100 Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for the whole U.S., and it ranks No. 107 on Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list for layouts opened before 1960 in the U.S.

Thanks to yardage books provided by Puttview – the maker of detailed yardage books for more than 30,000 courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges that players will face this week. Check out each hole below.