Recently I had the pleasure of visiting Wisconsin for some golf. It was my first time there and I couldn't help but think of John Winger's line from
Stripes:
"C'mon, it's Czechoslovakia. We zip in, we pick 'em up, we zip right out again. We're not going to Moscow. It's Czechoslovakia. It's like going into Wisconsin."I zipped in for 6 rounds over five days last week, and enjoyed the sights, sounds, and smells of the area.
My first round was at Erin Hills. I flew into the Milwaukee airport in the morning and made the 1.5 h or so drive to the course. My tee time was at 2 PM, so I had time for lunch (very solid food offerings) in the beautifully decorated, early American style, clubhouse. Afterwards a young employee gave me a full tour of the facilities, which included seeing the lovely accommodations on the 2nd floor of the clubhouse, and some of the nearby cottages on a hill.
The clubhouse:
The new cottages:
A view from the cottages of the putting green and the beginning of the first hole:
There are solid practice facilities as well. While warming up there was something I've never seen in person before in the sky, a circumhorizontal arc:
Many changes have occurred at EH in preparation for the upcoming US Am this year (and I assume also for the 2017 US Open). I don't have in my collection any "before" photos.
Here is the routing of EH. The yellow dots represent where the tips are located, which stretches out to 7820 yards. I played from the green tees at 6712 yards, and the diagram below tries to show where those tees are located.
#1. A dogleg-left par 5. Here is the description of the hole from the EH web page:
Begin the Erin Hills experience by playing down left center for a beneficial kick off one of the natural fairway moguls. When going for green in two, aim for the bunkers short and right of green. Otherwise, your second shot is uphill played over the right-hand fairway bunker using an extra club into a generous upper fairway. From there, you can play a true links approach, letting the ball bounce towards the small green.View from the middle tee box:
From the right part of the fairway landing area:
From the middle of the fairway 100 yards out:
From just over the green:
#2. A short par 4 with a blind tee shot. Apparently this green was enlarged by 40% recently, and it is still small compared to the rest of the greens. From the EH web site on the hole:
In order to view the flag, your tee shot must be hit at least 200 yards down the left side of fairway. From there, it's just a pitch shot over a ridge to a tiny green, just 2,600 square feet, formed from a natural knob. For the bold, carry your tee shot over the fairway bunkers for a chance at an eagle putt.View from the tee, where a draw off the left edge of the bunkers, or even farther left, works:
Plenty of room left in the fairway:
If you bail out with a shorter club and miss it a bit right, you'll have a blind second shot:
View of the green from just over the previous bunkers:
From the hill left of the green looking back to the fairway:
This green is very much an upside-down saucer:
#3. A long par 4. Here is the web page description:
From left-hand tees, it's carry-what-you-dare over the corner of the tamarack wetlands by aiming at the bunker on the far right hillside. From right-hand tees, favor right center of fairway, as terrain will kick shots down to fairway bunkers left. The green has distinct levels, low on the right, high on the front left, higher still on the back left. The safe approach is short or right.We chose to play it from the tips, which looked most interesting.
The hole plays pretty straight from the middle tees:
A very interesting shaped bunker left of the fairway:
View back down the fairway from the beginning of the green:
A large, very interesting green, as this view from the hill over the green shows:
I'll present the course 3 holes at a time and hope some solid discussion ensues in between updates!