I have played Sanctuary four times. Sanctuary is a unique golf course on a uniquely demanding site. It put Jim Engh on the map, and rightly so, as one who could build a golf course anywhere on any site (see Black Rock). That is an accomplishment. I appreciate Sanctuary for its uniqueness; I like some of the holes and dislike others. Likes: 1 (a good opener--only the long-hitting Matt Ward would be worried about hitting the ball off the course--hey Matt hit a 3 wood!); 3 (a solid uphill par 4 to a fun green); 8 (a strategic hole that requires placement for a clear view of the green and with a tiered green you have to see to believe-the best hole on the course IMO); 10 (the best of an otherwise boringly similar set of par 3s); 12 (a solid dogleg right par 4 that is well bunkered off the tee--the only relatively flat hole on the course--and a very well-chosen greensite); 18 (a fittingly tough uphill finisher). Dislikes: All the par 5s except 1 (I totally agree with Matt re the par 5 15th--just a strange hole that makes me think Jim ran out of real estate in that corner of the property); all the par 3s except 10 and the fun green on 14 (one hits about the same clubs to the back to back par 3s 5 and 6--the 6th hole especially could have been much different and better IMO--see eg the back to back 10th and 11th par threes at Pacific Dunes); 9 (just a short par 4 to get back to the clubhouse) and a collection of boringly similar downhill dogleg par 4s: 7, 13 and 17.
A few more general comments.
--Jim Engh was working for a single owner (Dave Liniger, owner of Remax) whom I believe had quite a bit of say in what the final product was. We'd need to ask Jim how much but my guess is it was a contributing factor.
--Sanctuary gets a 10 on the "Wow" meter--it's just a spectacular series of highly photogenic views, especially for flatlanders.
--I don't get Matt's concern about "distortion." There's distortion if it's windy, humid, uphill, downhill, sun in your eyes, nearly dark--whatever it's part of the game and the challenge. I get tired of the repetitiveness of the downhill shots, but I'm not bothered by the challenge of figuring out and adjusting to the downhill nature of the shots. Matt says they "can't be calculated." Well maybe that's a good thing--some indecision rather than "hey it's 165 so it must be an 8 iron."
--I agree with Matt and Jim that the course is too narrow in spots. If one gets a ball going offline downhill in this altitude, it's adios and reload.
--I'm not a big fan of Sanctuary's cartball, particularly cartball uphill from the previous green to the next tee vista for another downhill tee shot, which Sanctuary is to the max. I think the flat or uphill holes are the best on the course, and I wish Jim had done more of them.
--In case you don't know, Dave Liniger only makes the course available for play for charity benefit tournaments. Although I'm sure he gets paid a fee by the charity to do so, which defrays his costs, this is a terrific benefit to many charities in this area every year. It's a real draw for charities, and the club does a first class job.
--Top 100? It's top 10 in scenery, but not a top 100 golf course. How could it be on that site?
--An interesting discussion would be The Golf Club at Bear Dance/Castle Pines CC/Castle Pines GC vs Sanctuary. Each one of these nearby courses (the Castle Pines courses are right across the road FYI) has somewhat similar topographical challenges. In particular, I think Bear Dance is a better golf course than Sanctuary.
Best,