Ron / John / Matt,
The NY list had me scratching my head a little also. I tried to get to Saratoga a few time over the last few years but every time I thought about the $125+ green fee it made the decision very easy. Someday i'll get ther, but not until the price gets adjusted.
Ravenwood is a very very solid course that could be better with some more movement on the greens, but the routing & shot's it asks / temps you to pull off make up for it a bit. Still, it's probably not 3rd. Greystone has what Ravewood needs, superb greens, but suffers from a stupid 18th hole. The rest of the course though is very very solid and IMHO the best public course in NY west of Cooperstown.
What more can I say about Leatherstocking. Jim Kennedy commented to me once about it really opened his eyes as to what quality design was and Paul Cowley said similar words. Finally got there last year (what I was waiting for, I have no idea) and it's more than everything you've heard. It's not perfect though (needs a few less tree's and ) but it is just a wonderful course with challange, scenery, ambiance and all the rest. Anyone who posts here shpuld get there play some golf, see the Hall of Fame and spend some time relaxing.
Ron as for west of Victor, I agree on Ivy Ridge - I like it a lot along w/ Arrowhead (how is that for a great 2-fer!) and Harvest Hill on my one tour was very good - need to get back. Have not seen Diamond Hawk. I'd have to think about how I would place them. I like Mark Twain, but it's defienetly a step behind almost everything else that has been listed here that I have played.
All in all, Upstate / Central / Wester NY is a great place for very affordable high quality golf. Great place to be.
John,
I totally agree about Leatherstocking. With a few trees gone (like any Upstate NY classic course) it would be tremendous. As it is, every single hole on the course has strategy, interest, and charm. I love the mountain holes across NY-80 (especially the two par threes, with 9 being a brute and 12 being a great short three), and you could not have a more dramatic and heroic finishing hole. I haven't seen Bethpage Red, but I think Mike Cirba might be right about its proper ranking.
I also agree that Ravenwood could use a little more interest in the greens, but there are plenty of wild greens out there. How about the crater green at the second? The rolls on the third? The neat two-tiered plateau green at nine? The elevated green at sixteen? These are all top notch.
Ravenwood certainly does not match the green contours of Greystone for overall wildness. However, I tend to think Ravenwood is the superior layout, for a couple of reasons. The fives at Greystone are much weaker, particularly on the front. Several of the holes (1, 8, 9, 17, 18) are just lacking in strategy. Furthermore, the routing at Ravenwood is solid and much more walking-friendly, whereas Greystone's routing is a bit disjointed at times. Greystone does not have any standout short fours (10 is good but not great, and it is more of a mid-length four at 350), while Ravenwood's three short fours are fantastic (especially 2 and 7).
Overall, I enjoy Greystone a great deal, but I believe Ravenwood is stronger for the reasons listed above.
Also, Mark Twain is a FANTASTIC layout. Great layout, fun terrain on the side of a mountain. Wild set of a greens, and a joy to walk, especially in the fall.
Matt Ward:
My theory about the public/private quality gap in NY is that it exists due to a common perception about the inferiority of public golf in NY communities. Many golfers in the Rochester area seem to think all of the private courses in the area (several of which are mediocre to poor) are perferrable to the public courses simply because they are private courses. In Elmira, I get the impression that golfers think the mangled Elmira Country Club is better than the muni at Mark Twain!
Because of this view, people will not only be less likely to rate public courses highly, but they will also be less likely to build great public courses. Why build an unrespected public course when you can build a highly respected private course? I happen to think Leatherstocking is better than nearly every private course in Upstate NY, but it will never be ranked as highly as many of them. In short, if someone is going to build a great course in New York (especially downstate) it will be private and not public.
One other note: my "ignorance" about Saratoga National will probably always exist due to the course's pricetag. The same thing goes for the Turning Stone courses, which are only 30 minutes from where I go to school at Colgate but are courses that I will probably never play. The low walkability at both sites is also a big turnoff for me.
Could you compare the set of threes at SN to the great par threes at Leatherstocking or the short fours (are there short fours at SN?) to the three great short fours at Ravenwood?