I had the opportunity recently to play Butler National out in Oak Brook, west of Chicago. I had heard horror story after horror story of how difficult the course Butler was, so maybe I built it up too much in my head. The course is difficult, no questions asked, but the day I played it, I felt it definitely could have been had. Don't get me wrong, it was early season, I'm sure the greens weren't up to their peak-season speeds (they were still quick and incredibly true), the trees had yet to get their leaves, and the rough was for the most part manageable. Maybe I just caught it on a day when it wasn't showing it's teeth.
I played it from 6,700 yards. So I would imagine at 7,500, breaking 90 or 100 in August would be reason to be happy.
I was pleasantly surprised to see that the property had a decent amount of cant, and I thought the course used it quite nicely. It definitely wasn't as wide off the tee as other Fazio's that I've played, but then again, I think it was wider than I had expected (no leaves might have impacted this). I also liked the bunker style in places, which I hadn't really seen before either from Fazio. There are some really good holes on this course.
Here are some pictures:
#1 360 yds / 375 yds (6,700 yds / 7,500 yds)
No picture of the first, however it is a slightly elevated tee shot right out in front of the clubhouse, over a small river to a wide fairway. After a slight bend to the left, the green sits beyond yet another small river. All in all, a pretty benign opener.
#2 534 yds / 563 yds
The second is a serpentine par five up a gentle hill. You need to be able to get your second shot far enough to get out around the second bend and the trees on the corner.
Tee shot (the green is up and to the right of the left fairway bunker)
Bunker 50-60 yards short right of the green, with the green in the background
#3 406 / 433
Dogleg right that needs a good poke to get out around the corner. You need to be pretty accurate on this tee shot to get a good look on your second.
From about 80 yards out
#4 384 / 411
Cool uphill dogleg right. Challenge the corner to cutoff the distance of you second shot. The bunkers on the outside of the dogleg are reachable for some from the tee.
Turning the corner, just short of the first fairway bunker
Lots of green back behind the right greenside bunker
#5 156 / 227
First par 3 of the day is over a large pond that plays a role in multiple holes. A large ridge runs perpendicular to the tee, cutting the green into two large sections.
#6 428 / 474
Slight double dogleg, left then right. OB right is much closer than it appears from the tee (trust me, I put my first and almost my second OB).
No pics.
#7 580 / 623
Long sweeping dogleg right par 5 with a creek down the entire length of the hole (except up near the green). Very difficult driving hole.
About 80 yards from the green (you can see construction of a new bunker on the left)
#8 167 / 214
Per our caddies, this is Butler National's "signature hole." All I can say is that it is very difficult from 200+. Right is DEAD.
#9 409 / 461
Long and tight uphill par 4 with an interest green site.
#10 376 / 450
Difficult driving hole with bunkers right and water in play on the left. Tough uphill second to a green perched beyond a deceptively wide creek.
Don't be short!
#11 150 / 193
Probably my favorite hole on the course. Mid-length par three. If you don't know the course, you don't realize that the river snakes behind the green and is in play for anything too long. Interesting green setting with a few peaks and troughs.
#12 444 / 492
Caddy told me that they wanted the course to be par 71, so they took this hole which used to be a par 5,
lengthened it, and turned it into a par 4. Welcome to Butler National.
#13 160 / 199
Interest downhill par 3 played to a peninsula green.
#14 369 / 430
Difficult driving hole with water left and bunkers complicate this drive. There is more room than it looks and hole plays much shorter than it looks from the tee.
Get it to the big tree and you'll have about 150 in
The green looks very far away from the tee!
From where a conservative tee shot might land
#15 560 / 638
A beast. 90 degree dogleg right par 5 which plays over a mini-rollercoaster part of the property.
Landing zone 1
Landing zone 2
#16 365 / 390
Tough driving hole. The best angle (and only one which will get you a look at the green) is from the left side of the fairway. However, think brush runs down the length of the hole on the left. If you bail out right your view will be blocked by a bunker on the right side cutting into the fairway.
From in the bunker
Better view
#17 420 / 466
Another contender for my favorite hole. Can't see the green from the tee, and if you don't hit you drive far enough and right enough, your view will still be blocked by the bunkers. Interested green benched into the hill.
Green is back by the evergreen on the far left of this picture
Standing on the top lip of the bunker on the inside of the fairway
#18 444 / 484
This felt like a par 5 the entire time we were playing the hole. If you don't hit it far enough, you won't have a look at the green. Slight double dogleg (right and then left). Water on the right on the drive and short left at the green (and long if you're not careful!).
You can't tell, but if you fly this green by a few yards, you're in the drink