I had the great fortune to play Bel-Air, LACC and Riviera last week. Following are my impressions of the 3 courses after some reflection. One man's opinion, for what it's worth:
Bel-Air CC
1. The best greens of the 3 courses...excellent internal green contours, fast and very firm conditioning, difficult to read with subtle breaks. Lots of great hole locations.
2. Great movement in the land...again, best of the 3 courses in my view. A wonderful piece of property with beautiful vistas of the Hollywood hills and downtown LA.
3. I know many of the bunkers have been changed, but I didn't find them so much out of character as others have suggested. Let me be clear...the bunkers are not nearly as impressive as Riviera, but they're not horrible either (or even the slightest bit offensive for that matter).
4. The water features that have been introduced throughout the course are totally contrived and detract from the course. The water features are not unattractive per se, it's just that they are totally out of character...it feels a little bit like Shadow Creek in parts. The water features just don't come across as natural.
5. Tree clearing would do the course a world of good. Several of the tee shots are quite narrow.
6. The history and ambiance of the club are world-class. Very friendly membership, great service, great clubhouse and setting.
7. Extraordinary displays with golf memorabilia adjacent to the locker room.
8. In total, I would rank it the 3rd best of the 3 courses, but frankly it is a wonderful course in it's own right.
LACC North
1. Another amazing piece of property with great movement in the land.
2. Great par 3's.
3. Course absolutely screams championship layout..what a shame that the club hasn't wanted to host a USGA championship. The USGA recently approached the club about hosting the Walker Cup and the request has been put put to a vote by the membership. Speculation at the club is that the members will decline to host the tournament.
4. A complete examination...long, strong, challenging greens, well-bunkered, strategically challenging.
5. Course is in the midst of a bunker restoration by Gil Hanse and they will close the North course for 9 months starting in June for a complete regrassing of all fairways, tees, and greens.
6. Very private ambiance.
7. An amazing display of golf memorabilia in the lobby.
8. In terms of course layout and architecture, my 2nd favorite of the 3 courses but behind Riviera by a slim margin. Once the bunker restoration and regrassing projects are completed, it might nudge ahead of Riviera in my book.
Riviera
1. The championship history makes it a very special place. The clubhouse setting overlooking the course is majestic.
2. Overall, the best conditioned of the 3 courses...reminded me of Oakmont in terms of being in championship conditioning routinely.
3. The bunkering was my favorite by far of the 3 courses...incredible.
4. The land has far less movement than Bel-Air or LACC since it sits in the floor of the canyon. With that said, Thomas' use of the barrancas is pure genius.
5. Great strategy in the layout that forces you to really think your way around the course.
6. The best set of par 3's among the 3 courses...great variety.
7. A world-class finishing stretch of holes in 15-18. Strong par 4 15th, great par 3 16th, strong par 5 17th, and classic par 4 finishing 18th hole.
8. My favorite of the 3 courses. I'm a sucker for history and in the end that puts it ahead for me.
There you have it....comments, questions, and challenges are welcome.
Jim