I agree with Doug's assessment. The Broadmoor East is gorgeous, but it sort of a hodgepodge. See if you can get on Colorado Golf Club, the Crenshaw/Coore course. CommonGround is fantastic. [
Bill Vogeney (new to the forum, don't throw me out!)
quote author=Doug Wright link=topic=55914.msg1297805#msg1297805 date=1370874461]
Tim,
Broadmoor East is one of my favorite courses here in Colorado, really a classic layout that works despite the Ross/RTJ combination. As others have said, the greens are some of the toughest around and can be absolutely maddening, especially on a first play. The course plays longer than it seems it should (holes 10-14 especially) so if you play it be sure to play appropriate tees to have an enjoyable round.
Having said that, if I were you I'd think about doing something else--staying in the Denver area and playing 36 in the time it would take you to go to the Springs for 18 at Broadmoor East. Depending on where you are staying, it's a 60-90 minute drive to the Broadmoor from Denver (and more if you get caught in Colo Spgs traffic going down or traffic in Denver on the return). There are a multitude of varied quality options in the Denver metro area that, taken together, would trump a trip to Broadmoor East in my view. These include CommonGround (Doak/Urbina/Iverson), Riverdale Dunes (Pete/Perry Dye and Young Tom Doak), Fossil Trace (if you haven't played a Jim Engh course and appreciate quirk), Bear Dance (a "mountain golf" experience much closer to Denver than the Broadmoor), Murphy Creek (Ken Kavanaugh), and others. The Broadmoor is a wonderful place that should get more than a drive by, and I'd suggest taking your wife/family there on a proper trip where you can play golf and they will have a great time on the property.
PM me if you'd like to know more.
PS, Avoid the Broadmoor Mountain course IMO. It's one of those courses that was thrown onto a terrible piece of property for a golf course and has some very poor golf holes as a result.
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