Where to play golf around Orlando and Central Florida: Golfweek’s Best 2023 public-access courses

Thanks to Golfweek’s Best rankings, we break out the top courses around Orlando and Central Florida.

Looking for a break from the theme parks around Orlando? Whether you want to stay close or you’re willing to drive a bit, there are several courses available that appear on the Golfweek’s Best rankings of top public-access layouts in Florida.

But it’s not as easy as pulling up our state-by-state rankings, which lists Florida courses that might be a full day’s drive away from Central Florida. We wanted to focus on the eight top-ranked courses that, while they might require golfers spend up to 90 minutes in the car, are within reasonable driving distance.

For the purpose of this exercise, we limited driving time to within 90 minutes of Disney World. Why 90 minutes? Because it can take a while to get anywhere around Orlando, especially if you’re stuck on Interstate 4, so 90 minutes seemed like a reasonable amount of time in a car to reach great golf.

And why Walt Disney World Resort? Because chances are if you’re visiting Orlando, you will be bunking up not far from that entertainment giant’s theme parks or Universal Orlando nearby.

We used Google Maps for its drive times, keying in Walt Disney World Resort at a time with no significant traffic slowdowns. Take all drive times around Orlando and Central Florida with a grain of salt, of course, as backups frequently happen.

None of this is to say there aren’t plenty of other worthy places to play around Orlando. As a nearby resident, this author will attest to the simple pleasures to be found at Winter Park Golf Course – frequently called WP9 – just north of downtown Orlando. The short nine-holer is one of the most fun two hours you’re likely to spend on a golf course.

Included with this list is a general map of where to find all these courses. Each one on the list below is represented with a number on the map – keep scrolling to see the numbers.

Included with each course is its position in Florida on the Golfweek’s Best public-access list. For any course that appears on our other popular rankings lists, those positions are included as well.

A little background: The hundreds of members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them on 10 criteria on a points basis of 1 through 10. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings are averaged to produce all our Golfweek’s Best course rankings.

The courses on this list allow public access in some fashion, be it standard daily green fees, through a resort or by staying at an affiliated hotel. If there’s a will, there’s a tee time – no membership required.

Orlando map where to play 2023
(Google Earth/Golfweek)

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This Florida city thrived through golf — and now another course is being plowed over for housing

“Flying, golf and citrus were all wrapped up in one big ball of wax,” he said. “Golf was huge.”

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LAKELAND, Florida — A longtime Lakeland resident would like to see the city recognize golf’s critical role in its development, as yet another course is plowed over for a housing development.

Gene Owen has looked out from the shore of Lake Parker at the roughly 56-acre field toward East Memorial Boulevard. Passing drivers see a cow pasture that’s been dug up as construction starts on a 199 single-family home development, dubbed Cypress Point at Lake Parker.

To Owen, it’s part of the former home of one of Lakeland’s first public golf courses — Lakeland Country Club. One whose story he says has been lost to time.

“Flying, golf and citrus were all wrapped up in one big ball of wax,” he said. “Golf was huge, especially for Lakeland.”

Owen said his goal is to have a historic monument or marker put up at Cleveland Heights Golf Course to commemorate its 100th anniversary in 2025. He wants to see public acknowledgment that the Heights and other early golf courses put the city on the map.

This image, found in Lakeland Public Library’s collection, was used on a postcard discovered by Lakeland resident Gene Owen dated to 1918 of Lakeland Country Club off Lake Parker. (Image provided by Lakeland Public Library)

It started when Owen found a 1920 pamphlet that described Lakeland as having two golf courses. It didn’t specify which ones. It was dated prior to Cleveland Heights Golf Course and, even later built, Carpenter’s Home golf course.

“I wanted to know: What two golf courses was it talking about?”

In 1910, Willard Fordyce Hallam, a Washington, D.C-based publisher, bought roughly 3,000 acres in Lakeland Highlands and Highland City for $25,000 ($5.25 an acre). Within two years he built a three-story hotel off what is now Clubhouse Road where he invited investors and wealthy families to stay. Hallam’s goal was to sell 10-acre lots of a citrus grove for $960 ($96 an acre) with an additional fee for a home to be built on the property. In exchange, landowners were promised part of the proceeds of the citrus co-op. As part of his effort to attract people to the area, Owen said Hallam began building a golf course on the shores of Scott Lake, in an area now a nature preserve. It opened in January 1917. Not everyone in Lakeland was thrilled about the travel distance from downtown Lakeland to the golf course at Scott Lake, according to Owen.

Lakeland businessman Clinton Todd wrote a 1919 letter to The Lakeland Evening Telegram expressing his frustration with having to travel so far to Hallam’s golf course, according to Owen. By the following year, Todd and a group of investors had acquired land off Lake Parker building a boathouse and pier.

Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play 2023: State-by-state rankings for public-access layouts

A public golf course opened off the south shore of Lake Parker in 1921. Owen has a postcard of the course titled “18-hole golf course overlooking Lake Parker, Lakeland Country Club.”

It made its mark on early golf history when the Professional Golf Association held a tournament at the Lake Parker course.

“The early legends of golf were here in Lakeland,” Owen said

Among those who played were Bobby Jones, a World Golf Hall of Fame inductee who founded and helped design Augusta National Golf Club and co-founded the Masters Tournament. Others included Sandy Alves, a golf course construction manager for the world-famous Donald Ross; American amateur golfer Eddie Loos; Cyril Walker, a U.S. Open champion; and more.

The course, early maps show the railroad running through it, faced some stiff competition. Cleveland Heights Golf Course opened for private membership in 1925.

The Lakeland Country Club off Lakeshore Drive can be found listed in Lakeland’s 1928 directory, Owen said. However, its name no longer appears in the directory by 1931.

By that time, Carpenter’s Home was now listed in the directory. The home was opened in 1929, with the greens to become known as Wedgewood Golf Course opened in 1931. The land has been purchased and is slated to be developed into 954 homes by Mulberry-Based SJD Development to create Gibson Trails.

Cleveland Heights Golf Course is the only one of Lakeland’s four early golf courses remaining, Owen said.

Bob Donahay, Lakeland’s director of parks, recreation and cultural arts, told The Ledger he would be very supportive of efforts to put a historic plaque or monument at Cleveland Heights Golf Course.

“It’s amazing what he’s found,” Donahay said. “I think it’s a rich part of Lakeland’s history.”

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Sara-Megan Walsh can be reached at swalsh@theledger.com or 863-802-7545. Follow on Twitter @SaraWalshFl.

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Lakeland (Fla.) football coach Bill Castle retires after 8th state title

Lakeland (Fla.) is losing a great one.

Players win championships, not organizations. That said, it certainly doesn’t hurt to have a good head coach – especially at this level, with players rotating out every four years.

Lakeland (Fla.) is losing a great one. Bill Castle has been their head football coach for the last 47 years and has been part of the program for 52. However, he recently announced his retirement after Lakeland won the state championship over Venice.

Castle admitted to Fox13 that he’s going to miss coaching.

“I am going to miss coaching, no doubt about it. You do it as long as I have been doing it, it’s in your DNA… I am going to miss the kids and all the things that go with it.”

The victory over Venice (Fla.) was Castle’s eighth career state championship and 473rd win all-time, a new record for Florida.

Lakeland finished the season at No. 12 in our Super 25 rankings. Their athletic director says they have not decided on a replacement as of yet.

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Watch this highlight reel and see for yourself why he’s ranked the No. 1 defensive back in the nation.

The best high school football player in the country who has yet to decide where he’ll play in college is five-star Lakeland (Fla.) cornerback Cormani McClain.

McClain (6-foot-1, 165 pounds) has video game-type attributes, and he’s put them to good use paired with exceptional technical prowess for his age. Over the last two seasons, he’s totaled 19 interceptions and has established himself as one of the top young defenders in the sport.

Watch this highlight reel, and you’ll see why he’s ranked the No. 1 defensive back in the nation.

https://www.instagram.com/reel/CjS-pjhpCjG/?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y%3D

McClain recently narrowed his college choices down to three schools: Florida, Alabama and Miami. The Gators are favored to get his commitment.

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High school football schedule: Top games of Week 13

Some teams are in the playoffs. Others are in the championship game. Take a look at the top 15 high school football games of the week.

Some states are in the playoffs. Others are deciding champions.

This rendition of Top Games of the Week features 15 teams in win-or-go-home situations. One team has four straight championships on the line; another is set to play for its 11th in a row.

Take a look at the schedule of best games of the week.

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Southlake Carroll wide receiver Wills Meyer (Photo: Cameron Been/Friday Night Glory)

MATCHUP

No. 18 Southlake Carroll (Texas) (11-0)

vs.

DeSoto (Texas) (9-2)

When: 11/22, 6:30 p.m. ET

Tale of the Tape: DeSoto may have been beaten twice this year, but both of those losses were one-point games. This team is just a couple breaks away from being undefeated. Southlake Carroll, though, is undefeated; the closest game was a 12-point win, and last week, the Dragons won by 78 points. They have been unstoppable behind sophomore quarterback Quinn Ewers and freshman running back Owen Allen. It will take a big performance from some DeSoto player to keep up: maybe cornerback Jabbar Muhammad or Devyn Bobby, or perhaps an offensive weapon like leading wide receiver Lawrence Arnold. More likely, it’ll take a big performance from several Eagles.

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