As one who has played Dallas National (6 weeks ago) let me offer my observations.
1. I think that Ron Whitten's review was a fair one, even if a bit contrarian. The course has probably received a bit too much hype, for various reasons, and Ron tried to prick that bubble, and rightly so. In his pricking, I think he went a bit over the top (by dissing it as not a "Top 100" course)--there are a lot of tracks (many of them high up) on the various rankings that would not be particularly flattered by any comparison to DN. DN is a very good golf cousrse.
2. That being saId, this course (AS ANY NEW COURSE!!!) will find its place in the Pantheon (if it does) only over time. I have said and will continue to say such about new courses of similar quality which I have played (e.g. Pacific Dunes, Kingsbarns, Applebrook).
3. Getting back to the course, here are its main strengths
--A reasonably compact (good flow from green to tee) routing over a very broad canvas. In many ways, fitting 18 good and flowing holes on a 300(?) acre track is HARDER to do that fitting them into a 120 yard "gemlike" property. No?
--Walkable. My 57-year old body survived over it without noticeable myocaridal infarction and this after a wild wedding weekend in Oklahoma (oxymoron aleryt!(s)?).
--Excellent variety. Uphill/downhill/flat, bend right/bend left, wide/narrow. Perhaps a bit short in the "short" department--no really driveable "4's" that I can remember, not enough medium "4s", nor any really "Short" "3".
--But....this course was built to (hopefully) hold BIG tournaments. Maybe for the big boys, 175 from the tips is a "drop shot." Speaking of "Misison Statements" this is a course that could easily hold a US Open or PGA, and not embarrass the guys form Far Hills or Palm Beach Gardens.
-VERY interesting greens. Hard to comment on them after only one play, and one in the middle of winter, for that. However, their contour and intregration with the likely angles of approach from the fairways/tees seems admirable.
--Excellent "maintenance Meld." The course played surprisingly fast and firm, particularly on the greens, which reminds me...
--the 17th is a GREAT hole. Sure it looks a bit goofy with the channell of cut limestone between the tee and the green, but the corridor gives it character, and the green is something else. It looks simple (as most things do from 220+ yards), but to get the ball close you absolutely have to hit a perfect long and high iron to the front of the green, even with a back pin. I know this for a fact.
Finally, I probably should disqualify myself from this thread since Dallas National is the first and only Fazio I have played (not counting uncle George). But, Naaahh, I wont.........
Anybody who gets a chance to play DN, DO!