CJ,
Sleepy Hole is in very good condition ... at least the greens are. The fairways are very very firm and fast right now (and sometimes threadbare), coupled with a number of doglegs that create a lot of forced fades and draws to keep out the trees. That is the major challenge of the course and then there is holding the several elevated greens. The course is interesting how it weaves in and out of tree lined to open areas which at times makes play in the wind interesting. The 18th hole at Sleepy Hole is monster by anyone's definition.
Mr. Pazin,
The reason why I asked the moderators to join this site is a thread a while back titled something like (I think), 'Tom Doak's lesser known courses'. Riverfront gave something to talk about that I knew something about. In my golfing life, I have had only a sporadic and limited opportunity to travel to play. It was Riverfront the got me interested in GCA, because of its subtletly, themes and variations (by trade I am an architect as in buildings, as a golfer I am a mid single digit handicapper). By the third time I had played it, I realized this was a very different course than any I had ever come across.
At multiple times in the past on various threads discussing relevant themes, i have chimed in on how Riverfront relates to this or that topic. I can send you a bunch of pics on a cd if you want. Each hole has a whole lot to talk about.
The reputation of Riverfront will probably always suffer because of the ever present housing development on many holes, but given the goat pastures disguised as golf courses I grew up on, Riverfront is like going to heaven without having to die first.