I used to play at Eagle Lodge in Philadelphia, which was bought by ACE Group Insurance and plowed under for the Gary Player designed ACE Club. The course was used for many years for the Philly PGA. I liked the way it changed from the whites to the blues. Not just added yardage but tees with very different angles, forcing you to play draws and fades to keep it in the fairway. If a fairway sloped from right to left you could assume that the back tee was further right, landing your ball on the downside of the slopes. The greens had multiple levels to ensure that hitting the center of every green was not a good idea. I now play at a course of his at Woodside Plantation in Aiken, S.C. There are some similarities in that the greens have enough areas to hide a pin that you often need to shoot at pins or face the probability of some 3 putts. A lot of doglegs so you need to be able to move your ball both ways. Both courses have severe elevation changes and he handles them pretty well. Fairway bunkers are to be avoided. Greenside ones are standard. The courses do not scream out greatness but are solid. A good golfer can shoot a good score if he is playing well, but an off day will lead to some real struggles, but fair ones. Overall I like his teeing strategies, penalizing the one dimensional player, and I like the way his greens look large, but are really 2 or 3 small greens that are connected, and you need to be on the right one.