Ken:
I am not saying Sycamore Hills is a bad course. What I am saying is that the design elements you see there have been met and exceeded by the current grouping of siuperior Nicklaus courses that have recently opened in say the last 5-10 years.
Let me ask you this -- would you place Syacamore Hills among the top ten in all of Indiana as of 2009 soon to be 2010?
The bar for quality golf is quite high in the Hooser State and possibly those who see it frequently like Chris Clouser can weigh in with his thoughts too.
Ken, Jack designed a number of courses in that time frame that fit the kind of bill Sycamore Hills presents -- it's the others of that time such as Shoal Creek (1976), Castle Pines (1982) which I see as better overall designs for that relative era of his efforts. In his own comments in CG, Doak did specify that he had not played the course as of the original printing of the book -- but that from the pics he had seen the course looked to be "fairly dull parkland terrain" -- "with mid-1980's vintage Nicklaus-style terraced greens."
For me Sycamore Hills was quite special when it hit the scene during its opening and immediately thereafter. I have played a good grouping of Nicklaus courses since then and it's apparent to me that Jack has clearly evolved beyond what you saw from his efforts back then.
Ken, there's no doub the course received a boost from the top tier condition that were present when it opened and likely have continued through to this day. I'd be curiious to know what other Nicklaus courses you have played and how Sycamore Hills fares when held against that listing.
Thanks ...
Matt,
I would certainly place Sycamore among the top ten courses in Indiana. My top ten in the state in no particular order looks like this:
Warren at Notre Dame
Wolf Run
Crooked Stick
Victoria National
The Fort
Harrison Hills
Sycamore Hills
Rock Hollow
South Bend CC
Prairie View
My sampling of courses doesn't include Purdue, any course from French Lick (you REALLY have to want to go there. You don't just "swing by"), any casino course, Purgatory and Sultan's Run to name a few other well known or "ranked" courses. I have played places like Sagamore Club, Brickyard, Broadmoor, CC of Indianapolis, Otter Creek and Heartland Crossing to name a group people might recognize.
I played Nicklaus' Sagamore Club outside Indy and was not impressed. Yes it's very hard. I didn't care for the routing (felt claustrophobic) and honestly expected more. I think it falls very short of Sycamore Hills.
As I can't speak of Shoal Creek nor Castle Pines, I'm aware of his "period courses" and what was accomplished on each. Another horrible example is the Bear course at Grand Traverse Resort. Jack did what the owner wanted. Build the hardest golf course you can. Jack obliged and the place has been hated since.
I know Doak doesn't think highly of most of his early work and I read his assessment of Sycamore Hills. I believe with the club and ball technology available today, the course is very playable and fun (it use to play much longer with the older equipment). The property is certainly more than "dull, parkland terrain."
The Nicklaus courses I've played? Sycamore, Bear's Best in Vegas, Sagamore Club, Bear at Grand Traverse and Harbor Shores in Benton Harbor, Michigan (10 holes are open now with grand opening next summer).
Harbor Shores is an interesting project I commented on a month or so ago. I was very impressed with the work being done there but must admit the greens will be more than most players can handle. Nicklaus' greens have certainly moved away from the terraced look with fall offs and collection areas to more wild internal contouring, but I was not prepared for what's been put down at Harbor Shores.
Thanks for your note back.
Ken