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Erin Hills

Designer: Fry, Hurdzan, Whitten
Established: 2006
Location: Erin Hills
7169 Hwy O
Hartford, WI 53027
Washington County

Distance: Located 1/2 mile west of the intersection of Hwy. 83 and
Hwy 167 West (Holy HIll Rd). Club entrance is on the south side of Hwy 167
Championship Length 7,824 yards
PAR 72
Golf Season: April - Nov
Phone: 262-646-3331
www.erinhills.com

Sponsored by Marriott Hotels



 

 

Erin Hills great course, but very long and tough
By JERRY SLASKE
KEY Milwaukee Golf Editor

BEFORE ERIN Hills Golf Course was opened, we did a story based strictly on the owner/developer’s vision. Now, in the first full year of operation, I played it and found it quite a challenge. Keep in mind, this is from an 8 handicapper who likes to play a lot (75-85 18-hole rounds a year).

If you’re going to walk the course as I did, choose a day that isn’t too hot and humid because it’s an awfully long haul, much longer than your typical course. In fact, the starter said it’s 8.5 miles to walk. And there are some considerable elevation changes. The typical course is just over 6 miles.

Wisconsin residents pay $132 to play the course located 35 miles northwest of Milwaukee. That includes a thick yardage book, scorecard, and pin sheet. And you get a complimentary fruit at the first tee and bottles of water all along the course, a very nice touch. If you’re not from Wisconsin or you take a cart, add $20-$50.

Your round will take at least five hours because there are 19 holes and because of all the stuff you’re given to read while playing. Also, anyone who has ever picked up a golf club will think they can play this course from a set of tees well beyond their capability. It’s the macho thing about golf and courses touted as US Open caliber.

Erin Hills was built to emulate the links courses of Scotland. Why everyone is so bent (pun intended, but in this case, it’s fescue) on trying to copy Scotland in Wisconsin is beyond me. I realize Scotland is the birthplace of golf, but it seems as hopeless as trying to make a new building look old. I’ve never played in Scotland so I couldn’t tell you how successful it is. My playing partner, who plays in Scotland quite a bit, calls it the best knockoff he’s seen.

True to links tradition

After we finished, my partner added that the course is much more true to links tradition than others in the U.S. It also was obviously built to host PGA and USGA events – about 8,400 yards from the tips with roller coaster-like greens. It definitely wasn’t built for the person who wants to enjoy a round a golf every weekend.

I counted nine of the 19 holes as having blind shots. One of the most satisfying things in golf is watching a well-struck ball fly – almost float – to its target and then softly land. In many cases at Erin Hills, you can only watch a well-struck ball disappear, not knowing whether it got to its target until you walk up to it. My playing partner called it “the randomness of the outcome.” The only blind shot I found to be blatantly unfair was the second shot on the 2nd hole. Not only was it blind, but it was to a small crowned green that sits on a pedestal. It’s more luck than skill to hit and hold that green.

And then there’s the entire 7th hole! There are 19 holes because the 7th hole – a par 3, 184 yards (blue) – is so difficult that a legitimate par 3, 157 yards (blue) was built between the nines as a substitute. Take your best score of the two. The 7th is goofy because you can’t see a thing – green or pin – from the tee. You’re supposed to aim at a small white rock about 110 yards from the tee. When you finish the hole, you ring a bell to let following players know you’re out of harm’s way.

On the other hand, the extra hole – or “bye” hole as it’s called – is a terrific par 3, one of the best I’ve ever played. You hit from an elevated tee to a kidney-shaped green that’s surrounded by traps. I give management credit for acknowledging the mistake and correcting it in an interesting and fun way

‘Punch bowl’ greens

The toughest part of the course is the greens. They are fast, but true, and I love fast greens. All you have to do at Erin Hills is look at the ball the wrong way and it starts rolling. They also are extremely undulating. As my playing partner said, they have “lots of dips and doodles.” The course brochure calls the greens “punch bowls” because of their shapes. Parts of the pin cannot be seen even when you’re standing just a few yards off several of the greens because of the severe slopes and contours.

Apparently this is how the USGA and PGA like greens for the majors. And that’s what course employees will tell you. On the 14th green, I felt as if I was at the carnival waiting in line for the next ride as I stood over a putt.

For the most part, the fairways are fair and generous. In spots the grass was still thin, but overall, they were nice to hit from. There were two holes, however, where the uneven lies in the fairways seemed unfair. On the 10th hole – a par 5, 597 yards (green) – a solid drive smack dab in the center of the fairway left me with such a steep downhill lie that I had little chance of getting the second shot into the air. I’m sure the pros could do it, but I couldn’t. All I could do was punch it about 175 yards.

I feel that someone who hits a good drive (250 yards) should have the opportunity to hit a decent second shot, particularly on a long hole. The same thing happened on the 12th hole – a par 4, 432 yards (blue). I played the tee shot exactly as the yardage book suggested – over the ridge – and still the ball ended up on such a steep downhill lie (155 yards from the green) that I had very little chance of keeping the second shot in the air long enough to reach the green.

The rough was fair throughout the course. I wasn’t in any of the many bunkers so I can’t tell you anything about them other than to say they looked awfully penal, which is what they should be. Attesting to the somewhat “hit and hope” nature of the course, my playing partner said, “I loved the bunkers and the challenge to both get out of them and allow something positive to happen on the greens afterward.”

I played various tees – green, blue, and black – and shot a 92, with four doubles and one triple. I’d like to play Erin Hills again because this is definitely a course that needs to be played a couple times to be able to know where in the heck you’re going. But based on how much I play annually, I think I’ll probably forgo another round and leave it to the PGA pros if and when the course gets a US Open.

While I think Erin Hills is a fine mental and physical test of golf, I’d rather play nearby Washington County (an Arthur Hills design) three times for the same amount of money.

(Erin Hills is on a 652-acre site in the small town of Erin 35 miles northwest of Milwaukee. In January Golf Magazine rated it the “best new course of the year.” Call 1-866-724-8822 or visit www.golfwisconsin.com.)


The Bull At Pinehurst

Designer: Jack Nicklaus
Established: 2003
Location: The Bull At Pinehurst Farms
One Long Drive
Sheboygan Falls, WI 53085
Sheboygan County

Distance: Located on the southeast corner of Highways 28 and 32, just
three miles west of Interstate 43 in the city limits of Sheboygan Falls,
Wisconsin.
Championship Length 7,332 yards
PAR 72
Golf Season: April - Nov
Phone: 920-467-1500
www.golfthebull.com

Sponsored by Marriott Hotels



 

 

No bull…This course is the real thing!
By JERRY SLASKE
KeyMilwaukee.com Golf Editor

THE BULL at Pinehurst Farms, just outside of Sheboygan, may look tame, at least from the clubhouse, but don’t let it fool you. This course will beat you up and leave you staggering back to your car if you let your guard down.

Even if you don’t let your guard down, you’ll feel like you’ve just been involved in a donnybrook. Amazingly, however, you’ll also find yourself thinking, “That was fun. I’ve got to come back.”

Location, location, location is what it’s all about, on just about every shot and every hole. That’s why you have to play it more than once. Oh sure, there are a couple holes that will give you a breather like #1, par 4, 424 yards, and #10, par 4, 469 yards, but I suspect that’s part of the diabolical strategy to make you think, “Hey, what’s the big deal,” before the Bear’s paw starts pummeling you. Jack Nicklaus and company designed the course, which Golfweek magazine called the best new daily fee course in 2005.

The outstanding feature of The Bull is how well protected all the greens are by traps, sloping terrain, trees, or, water, as on holes #3, par 3, 213 yards, and #18, par 4, 485 yards. You must hit them or you’ll find yourself struggling to get up and down. The greens themselves are receptive, run true, fast - but not unfairly, and undulating – sometimes subtly, sometimes not. Also, other than three or four holes, trees – lots of dense pockets of trees – come into play. Landing areas for the most part are fair and the rough is manageable for most golfers.

Perhaps the most intimidating and challenging hole on the course is #5, a par 4 dogleg left, 432 yards – although #18, a par 4, 485 yards, also could vie for honors. Your tee shot must be long and straight down a fairway lined on both sides by dense trees. Favor the left side as much as you dare so you have a good look at the green. Your second shot – probably from a slightly downhill or side hill lie – will hopefully be about 160 yards over a ravine, which ends where the green begins. So it’s all carry. You could bailout right, but there’s a large bunker guarding that route. If you carry it, however, the fairway slopes toward the green. Go over the green and you’re chipping back toward the ravine.

Number 18 is also an interesting challenge. It looks pretty straightforward, but, as I said before, looks are deceiving on this course. Your tee shot must carry a lake, which shouldn’t be a problem if you’re playing from the tees to match your skill level, but it’s determining how much of the lake to cut off that is problematical. You want to get as close to this green as possible. But cut off too little lake and you could run through the fairway into bunkers. If your second shot doesn’t carry onto the green, you’re looking at bogey and probably worse because it’s all marsh and a creek in front. If you have any doubts, aim well to the left and then chip up.

The par 3s were particularly fun to play. Numbers 3 and 6 were the best of the lot. Water runs along the entire right side of #3, while a ravine divides tee from green on #6, par 3, 193 yards. Each of the par 3s has a bailout option, except #6. Hit that green or face possible disaster.

As I said earlier, you can’t let your guard down anywhere on this course, but perhaps the toughest hole is #9, a par 4, 453 yards. It’s straight, but it’s straight uphill and usually into the wind. Plus, you hit to a green – the surface of which you can’t see from the fairway because it sits high – guarded on the left and front by a large, deep bunker.

The most demanding tee shot on the course – notwithstanding the par 3s – is probably #16, a par 4, 422 yards, dogleg left. It’s uphill to a narrow landing area. Perhaps driver isn’t the wise choice, but if you do use it, cut the corner. Otherwise you’ll go through the fairway and won’t have a shot to the green. Heck, you might not have a shot period. The fairway is lined on both sides by trees and drops off left to wetlands. There is little room for error here, including on your approach shot, so you want your tee shot to be as well-positioned as possible.

The only weak hole in the whole bunch is … well, I can’t think of one. The one thing I wish could be changed was the pace of play. It was well over five hours when I played. Everyone thinks they’re Tiger Woods when they get to a course like this and consequently they play from tees where they have no business. That only leads to more time spent looking for lost balls.

No matter which tees you play from, The Bull at Pinehurst Farms certainly has enough bull – as in a wild, kicking, snorting kind of bull. The trick is staying on and riding it through to the end.


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