I still can't believe Wild Horse is not in that list... Definitely belong in the list of top 50 in the world IMHO, not public, just top 50 overall... If you have chance to go play there, don't ever miss it.
People might say it's because it's a public version of Sand Hills, I don't think the courses are all that similar... Different type of ground... great golf...
Here's what I wrote on my website about Wild Horse:
Wild Horse Golf Club: what golf architecture is all about
In a recent trip in the Nebraska Sand Hills, I visited Wild Horse Golf Club. Outside of golf architecture fanatics and the lucky residents of Gothenburg, Nebraska, few people knows how great this golf course is. It is not designed by a big name architect, not set in a luxurious resort, doesn’t include a bag drop staff…
No, Wild Horse Golf Club is just a golf course, a small clubhouse and a steady stream of happy players.
Bunker Hill design (Dave Axland and Dan Proctor) built something unique, something that is rarely accomplished in golf architecture these days: unassuming elegance.
Long sweeping vistas among a sandy site reminiscent of Shinnecock Hills, beautiful yet simple rugged bunkering and a set of greens that challenge the mind of every player as well as any course on earth, Wild Horse Golf Club is as inspiring a golf course as it can be. Axland and Proctor could have fell into spectacularism and over-the top dramatics to attract people to this remote location, but instead they use a forgotten word in golf architecture: restraint.
Great courses are, sadly most golf courses are trying too hard to be.
In my last few on-site design construction projects, it seems that all I’ve heard is longer, deeper, steeper and more… more bunkers, more contours, more everything. All that at the expense of golfers. Golf architects should learn from Wild Horse, with its 45,00 $ green fees and its maintenance crew of 6 people who, I must say, do a phenomenal job. As the commercial says: there are some things money can’t buy… among them, elegance is one.