Ak-Chin Southern Dunes Golf Club, located about 45 minutes south of Phoenix, is the latest facility in Arizona to offer night golf with its newly lit #miniDunes course.
With a celebrity lineup of former NBA standout Eddie Johnson, former NFL linebacker Seth Joyner, former NFL kicker Jay Feely, former Major League Baseball pitcher Archie Bradley and trick shot artist Tania Tare, Southern Dunes flipped the switch on its six-hole loop, which also serves as the driving range during the daylight hours.
The short course, featuring holes measuring from 60 to 115 yards, opened in 2014 but there’s now 13 poles with Musco stadium lights illuminating the night. Tee times can be booked as late as 10 p.m. with unlimited play options available.
The 18-hole course at Ak-Chin, designed by Brian Curley and Fred Couples, opened in 2002 and became part of the Ak-Chin Indian Community in 2010. It is ranked No. 14 on on Golfweek’s Best top casino golf courses in the U.S. and sixth best public-access layout in Arizona.
The livestream will be from 6-9 p.m. Arizona time (9 p.m. to midnight ET) on the Bleacher Report YouTube channel.
Grass Clippings Rolling Hills has had a smashing debut as the go-to destination for night golf in Arizona.
This week, the golf course debuted the Grass Clippings Open, a two-day, high-stakes par 3 tournament that concludes under the lights Saturday night with a live stream on Youtube and a $1 million prize for a hole-in-one on the 18th hole.
There are 75 two-person teams competing for a $100,000 purse in a no-stroke, scramble, low-gross format at the City of Tempe golf course, Arizona’s first fully lit 18-hole golf course, which officially debuted night golf on Dec. 1, 2023.
The festivities also feature concerts, with Easton Corbin headlining the Friday show and LANCO headlining Saturday night.
The teams competing consist of 20 “franchise” teams, 18 teams who had to first survive qualifying and 13 sponsor exemptions. Future events will have spots reserved for past champions.
The live stream can also be found on the Bleacher Report website and app.
Golfers can play under the lights as late as 11 p.m. during the week and midnight on Fridays and Saturdays.
TEMPE, Ariz. — First opened nearly 65 years ago, the Rolling Hills Golf Course in Tempe, Arizona, just underwent a massive overhaul to become the first fully lit, 18-hole golf course in the state.
Located just two miles from Arizona State University and right next door to the Phoenix Zoo, the venue is now called Grass Clippings at Rolling Hills, with tee times available from morning till way past sunset. In fact, golfers can play the course under the lights as late as 11 p.m. during the week and midnight on Friday and Saturday nights.
A par-63 layout during the day, the golf course becomes an all-par-3, par-54 venue at night, with clearly marked artificial turf tee boxes for use during the late hours.
“The lights are a game changer for golf in the Phoenix area,” said Grass Clippings CEO Jake Hoselton. “Our location is conducive to slipping in 18-holes of golf on the way home from work, enjoying a golf date night, or meeting up with friends for golf and a beverage.”
The course held a preview night on Thursday, Nov. 30, and had a “turn on the lights” celebration, before opening up the tee sheet for night golf starting on Friday, Dec. 1. The night-time slots were all sold out over the first weekend.
Scott Hebert, formerly the assistant golf course superintendent at the TPC of Scottsdale, home of the WM Phoenix Open, is now the greenskeeper at Grass Clippings. Golf fans may recognize him, as he always has his dog Rye nearby. Those two patrolled the grounds at the Stadium Course ahead of the PGA Tour event to make sure the course there was tip-top for the pros. His title now is the director of agronomy at Grass Clippings.
There are close to 80 LED lights on the Grass Clippings course, which has night-time yardages from about 100 to close to 200 yards. The topography provides multiple elevation changes and the design has several elevated tee boxes. And even at night, there are great views of the downtown Tempe area, downtown Phoenix and airplanes overhead making their descent into Phoenix Sky Harbor Airport.
Just off the first tee box is a lawn area with a food truck and a beer garden. There’s also a 15,000-square-foot practice putting green with several severe undulations.
The work at the course is far from complete, however. The original clubhouse is still in use but a full-blown renovation is on the schedule for that. When it’s complete, there will be a new Mexican food restaurant, a patio bar and refurbished golf shop. Also coming: a hilltop bar near the eighth hole, an activity lawn for live music, markets and events, all coming in 2024.
Grass Clippings was founded in 2018 in Phoenix. In March of 2023, the company signed a 30-year deal with the City of Tempe to renovate and revitalize the 93-acre, city-owned course.
Rates during the week are $45 during the day but go to $78 after 6 p.m. On the weekends, it’s $65 during the day and $89 at night.