Note: Gold Tee plays 468 yards with the addition of new teeing groundsThe 8th tee shot is not a difficult when the wind is calm, bit with the wind blowing hard from the left, finding the fairway is no easy task.
The 8th fairway is among the most undulating I have ever seen. Longer hitters, depending on wind direction, can play over this wild terrain, but many (like me) will be forced to play their second shot from an uneven lie.
A few looks at the undulating 8th fairway:
Shots on the left side of the fairway leave a very difficult and blind approach. Shots down the right side of the fairway leave a very difficult and semi-blind approach. The flag is in view, but the terrain surrounding the green and the putting surface are completely blind. There is plenty of room to miss left (though this is no easy recovery) but this fact is not obvious from the fairway.
Longer tee shots may crest this hill 300 yards from the tee. If successful, the approach is far more appealing:
A look at the green site from the 4th green:
Once again, Maxwell intimidates the golfer into missing in the wrong place. A false-front short and a nest of bunkers (complete with Yuccas) guard the right side of the green. But, the green which slopes severely from back-left to front-right, must not be missed left or long -- from there finding the putting surface is near impossible. While intimidating, recoveries from the right are certainly the simpler task.
Short of green:
Right of green:
Green site from 9th fairway:
From Ran's Review of Prairie Dunes:
"Not content with just the difficult tee to green aspect of the eighth, Perry Maxwell built what is possibly the course’s most severe green with four feet (!) of elevation change from back to front and a ridge through its back middle....Of all his work, no single green is any more impressive than the one here.Several looks at the green:
Front-right:
Back-right:
Back-left:
Behind: