Sure bet at Turning Stone: The upstate New York casino resort offers miles of solid golf

The massive casino property is owned and operated by the Oneida Indian Nation of New York.

VERONA, N.Y. – Matt Falvo has a natural way of sauntering around a golf course – armed with an impressive driver, a confident stride and a coy smile. When he’s walking one of the three championship courses at Turning Stone, a casino property in Central New York just east of Syracuse, he’s even more at ease. Now the director of golf courses and grounds, Falvo has worked for nearly a quarter-century at the property and he knows every in and out of this pastoral piece of paradise.

Falvo points to his house while playing the picturesque but inviting Shenendoah course, the one staffers often recommend as the resort’s best starting point. Also, his son is a 6-foot-4 defensive end for the local high school football team, which plays its games at a campus visible from the Turning Stone grounds.

And Falvo can share funny stories about when the complex – part of a massive and expanding casino property owned and operated by the Oneida Indian Nation of New York – was host to the PGA Tour’s Turning Stone Resort Championship from 2007 to 2010. For example, he won’t go into detail about John Daly’s brief appearance in the 2008 event, but when asked if the two-time major winner spent too much time in the casino before his opening round, Falvo stops and smiles.

Turning Stone
Turning Stone

“All I’ll say is this,” Falvo quietly says with a smirk. “He only played seven holes. And it took a while to figure out that he was gone when he left.”

But for all his knowledge about the casino property, one that’s seemingly adding new pieces every summer, Falvo has no desire to trumpet how demanding the resort’s most difficult track is. In fact, he insists it’s not his place to do so. But he does know that when many players come off the Robert Trent Jones Jr.-designed Kaluhyat, they liken it to another famous New York State track nearly 400 miles away.

“It’s not my job to say so, but people love to tell me that this course is harder than Bethpage Black,” Falvo said in his relaxed style. “That’s them. Not me. But I hear it all the time.”

In fact, Kaluhyat’s slope is 145, which makes it one of the state’s toughest courses, although not the 155 of Bethpage Black. But there’s still room for debate about whether it’s as difficult as the municipal course hosting the 2025 Ryder Cup.

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There is no sign warning players how difficult the challenge at Kaluhyat is, but there probably should be. And starters, staffers and pro shop attendants are all quick to check if you’re prepared for the course’s wrath before starting a round. I had three different people ask me if I was prepared to be bludgeoned.

And while it’s certain to damage your handicap, Kaluhyat offers up some incredible views and truly breathtaking holes. The tee box on the second hole is perched high and its fairway is tree-lined and tight, like so many during the round. Precision is truly in demand on this course, but those who find the short stuff can score.

For example, the short par-4 fourth hole teases players into bombing down the left side of the fairway over a small bunker, leaving an easy wedge approach. But even the slightest pull will find not just deep grass, but an impossible line of trees from which to dig your ball. And those who catch a bad break and roll through the fairway can find an equally impossible shot. The safe play is a mid-iron to the right side of the fairway, leaving a good angle and another mid-iron in.

Easy to say, difficult to mentally put into action.

And after you get a little weary from the grind that Kaluhyat delivers, the par-5 No. 13 offers a Bay Hill-like risk-reward, with a lake that allows you to bite off huge chunks if you’ve got the guts and the game.

Turning Stone
Turning Stone

I played with my dad, who was clearly beaten and bruised by the experience, to the point where his normally reserved personality suffered a severe meltdown in a bunker on the incredible 16th hole, a par-4 with a blind tee shot that demands both distance and accuracy. To set up a second shot over a deep ravine, you need to place your tee shot deep and straight, as the fairway narrows approaching the dropoff. Miss even a little with your big stick and the potential to put up a huge number becomes likely.

This exact scenario played out with my father, who pulled his drive a little left and into the thick stuff, then had to lay up to the edge of the ravine. He missed left with his approach and found a massive bunker, and when he caught the top of the lip with his wedge and the ball rolled back to his feet, the nearby maintenance crew heard words I’d never before heard him utter.

Kaluhyat can do that to you.

But the real surprise for those who haven’t done their research is that Kaluhyat is not the course on which the Tour made its presence felt. That distinction lies with Atunyote, a Tom Fazio-designed parkland-style course with wide, gorgeous fairways and a sense that you’ve entered a private world, complete with an exclusive entryway that has almost no signage and a massive gate. To enter you approach a call box, like something from an ’80s CIA movie, and get buzzed through to the pro shop.

But once inside Atunyote, which means “eagle” in Oneida, you can see why this was a great venue for the Tour. Originally, Turning Stone filled in as the host site for the 2006 B.C. Open, after En-Joie near Binghamton – about 90 minutes away – was flooded just months before play was to begin. The site was so satisfactory that the resort was given a full-fledged event for the next few years and Atunyote, which was the site of Dustin Johnson’s first PGA Tour victory in 2008, forever became a piece of professional golf lore.

Turning Stone eventually lost the tournament, but to be fair, the rural setting makes it difficult to attract what the Tour now covets – massive crowds and loads of corporate involvement. The move away had nothing to do with the course, which ranks among the top 10 on Golfweek’s Best top casino tracks.

Turning Stone
Turning Stone Resort Casino in Oneida County, New York.

While the course is open and inviting, it’s anything but easy, as is best evidenced by the par-5 12th hole that forces those with “atunyote” dreams to flirt with a pond that surrounds the right portion of the green. Also, the 14th hole follows a crooked creek that was manipulated by Fazio’s design team after a breathtaking waterfall was installed behind the green.

There is plenty to love about Atunyote, as the experience feels befitting of its place in Tour history (Matt Kuchar also won here), and Fazio’s elaborate touches help make the experience truly world-class.

While Kaluhyat and Atunyote get most of the attention, the popular and playable Shenendoah also offers plenty of bite. The host site for the 2006 PGA National Club Professional Championship, Shenendoah is a fun ride, some parkland-style holes, some with a links feel. As previously mentioned, this a perfect indoctrination into the Turning Stone family, and the closing hole, a long par 5, is a perfect way to prepare for what Kaluhyat and Atunyote have in store.

Of course, Turning Stone is a full-service resort, with impressive accommodations, gaming and the exquisite TS Steakhouse, which sits atop a 21-story tower with sweeping views that stretch as far as Oneida Lake. And there are plans for more additions in the near future, including a $400-million expansion that will add to the resort’s skyline with a new hotel and seafood restaurant that’s expected to rival the steakhouse.

And if the three big courses aren’t enough, Sandstone Hollow is a Rick Smith-designed short course that offers plenty of fun. Oh, and here’s a pro tip: The nine-hole Pleasant Knolls was originally purchased as a nearby addition to be folded into one of the current courses, but instead was maintained and improved upon. The course is a great romp and offers the cheapest beer prices on the complex.

Speaking of prices, how does the entire experience match up with other great golf destinations? As of this story’s publication, you could play rounds at all three of the championship courses, and both of the shorter courses, for about the same price as one round at TPC Sawgrass.

Well, that is if you don’t spend too many hours – like John Daly may or may not have done – at the resort’s many blackjack tables.

Public New York golf course formerly on Air Force base slated to close at season’s end

The owner wasn’t prepared to close the course, but the county made him an offer.

A golf course in the Central New York region that was originally built for officers and civilian employees is slated to close at season’s end, according to a recent report.

Mohawk Glen Golf Course in Rome, New York, was built as a nine-hole course for those assigned to Griffiss Air Force Base, but once the base closed in 1995, a local owner maintained the property.

Now, according to a story in the Rome Daily Sentinel, the course will be permanently closed at the end of the season. Owner Michael DeSalvio said Oneida County will purchase the land.

The county and Mohawk Valley EDGE have been working in the area after receiving a $23 million grant in March to transform the nearby Triangle Site to be more industry-friendly.

“We’ll be open for the rest of the season,” DeSalvio said, usually closing when snow starts falling. He noted that he will not be selling Delta Knolls Golf Center on Elmer Hill Road.

When the base was still open, play was heavy on the par-36 track. During its operational years, Griffiss was its own community.

The base had barracks, its own church and numerous amenities that made it completely self-contained.

“It was a city within a city,” said state Senate Deputy Minority Leader Joseph Griffo, who served as Rome’s mayor from 1992 to 2003. “It had every amenity. Every amenity you would have in a city, it was there.”

So when Griffiss Air Base closed in 1995, it took approximately 8,000 jobs and 10,000 people with it, Griffo said. Suddenly, the “city within a city” now had a big question mark hanging over its future.

But because of the spark in commerce, the region has become attractive again, meaning the land had added value.

DeSalvio told the Sentinel he hadn’t planned on closing the golf course for another few years, but the county approached him with the offer.

“I was thinking I would go a little longer,” DeSalvio told the paper. “It’s been really good here.”

This New York State public golf course is going through a renovation (and ready for an amateur event)

Locals can play the course for just $36 and it was named the best local course seven times this century.

Luke Whalen still sometimes thinks of himself as “one of the kids” and can’t believe how quickly the time has flown. Granted, it hasn’t been that long since the 21-year-old was actually a child. But the Poughkeepsie native put himself at the head of the local golf grownups table last summer, winning the Dutchess County Amateur.

That victory, tournament chairman Mark Webber said, was “good for competition.”

“There’d been talk over the years that, ‘Only 3-5 guys every year have a real opportunity to win it,’” Webber said. “For Luke to emerge and play the way he did, coming from behind and beating some of the best players, it’s great, especially as a young guy.”

The competition is steeped in history that dates back almost 90 years, and it’s a delight that some of the familiar names involved are septuagenarians who’ve still got game and a passion for the event. But organizers understand that its growth and future will depend on an influx of youth.

So, it is encouraging to them that a college student is the defending champion, and that a few prominent high school stars will be competing.

The Dutchess Amateur Championship will tee off July 12, running three consecutive days at the newly renovated McCann Memorial Golf Course in Poughkeepsie.

Players will play on a McCann course that recently had an overhaul of its traps and drainage system on the front nine. With the installation of Capillary Concrete, a polymer-based concrete in the bunkers, moisture can more easily be regulated, and debris doesn’t rise to the surface, Webber explained.

“One of the issues golfers have had was the traps, that they didn’t drain well and had rocks in the sand, so it was a blemish we needed to fix,” McCann course superintendent Chris Kemble said of the project that began three years ago with the hiring of an architect. “We repositioned some of the traps that come into play and made them smaller for maintenance purposes.”

The renovation began in 2022 and the last seven holes of the front nine were completed earlier this month. The expectation is that, with the more consistent sand, the golfers will have more traditional bunker shots. The work this spring was done relatively quickly, Webber said, and the finished product is “impeccable.” A similar project is planned for the back nine.

The course was built in 1972 with William Mitchell the chief architect, but was redesigned in 2001 by Stephen Kay. Locals can play the course for just $36 and it was named the best course by Hudson Valley Magazine seven times this century.

“The new bunkers will definitely play differently, and the upgrades are a positive,” said Whalen, who typically plays at McGann twice a week after his spring semester ends at Coastal Carolina University.

“We look forward to it every year,” Kemble said of the Amateur. “We love the buzz about it, the compliments we get from the golfers. With all the hard work the crew has put in, they’re looking forward to everyone seeing the course.”

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The tournament field is currently 55 golfers, down 20 from last year, and that prompted the extension of the sign-up period. Their hope, Webber said, is to draw at least 10 more golfers. There has been an overall decline in participation in recent years and, Webber said, some of the challenges include summer scheduling conflicts and the interest level of young golfers locally.

Organizers are making a concerted effort to promote the event more, including a social media push and word of mouth. It’s also why the entry of those teenagers and 20-somethings is so significant.

Whalen totaled a 2-under 214 in the three-round tournament last year, surging in the second and third rounds to finish five strokes ahead of Brian Viola, the 2022 champion and his former golf instructor. Colin Offenbacher shot a 220 for third place, and Mike Fisher and Nick DiMarco Jr. tied for fourth.

“My game is pretty sharp right now; better than it was a year ago,” said Whalen, who has improved his putting. “I’m hoping to go back-to-back, but the mindset isn’t any different for me as a defending champion. It’s like, ‘Just go play a few rounds of golf.’ I think if I do what I can, I should be able to throw up some good numbers.”

Stephen Haynes: shaynes@poughkeepsiejournal.com; 845-437-4826; Twitter: @StephenHaynes4

Legal saga ends as Donald Trump’s name to be removed at Trump Golf Links at Ferry Point

Two and a half years later, a protracted legal battle has come to an end.

Former New York mayor Bill de Blasio tried to terminate Donald Trump’s lease at Trump Golf Links at Ferry Point in the Bronx, New York, in the wake of the Jan. 6 riots at the U.S. Capitol.

Two and a half years later, a protracted legal battle has come to an end, with Trump’s name soon to be removed from the golf course. According to reports by ABC7 in New York and the New York Post, Bally’s has taken over the lease from Trump.

“We are supportive of the transfer of the Ferry Point Golf Course to Bally’s, and we are confident they will deliver a high-quality golfing experience to New Yorkers,” the New York City Parks Department said in a statement.

The ABC7 report says Bally’s is expected to continue to run the golf course at Ferry Point. Trump was in the ninth year of a 20-year lease with the city, signed when the course opened in 2014.

The Bally’s deal, according to the report, is “similar to the one Trump reached with Hilton to buy him out of his lease with the federal government to operate the old post office in Washington DC.”

The New York Post reports that Bally’s is adding the golf course in hopes of landing a valuable gaming license in New York City.