Well I played Dubs yesterday afternoon...and I'm still recovering!!!
I thought it was telling that despite having 5 sets of tees on the scorecard, the furthest tee markers set out where the Blues at 6700 yards. Even still my buddy and I decided to play the "Gold" tees that are +/- 7200 yards, by playing one tee box behind whatever box had the blue tees.
I took pictures, that I haven't had the chance to upload yet, but here are a few general comments;
*Adam Clayman - I value your opinion, but I think you are 100% wrong about the pro's eating this course up. Jones was given an assignment to make this a US Open-difficult golf course and he delivered. The main differences in the redesign of each hole are that 1) they are all much longer, 2) there are more fairway bunkers that, while not always being visible, are far far far deeper, 3) the greenside bunkers are not just deep they encompass the most of the elevated greens, and 4) the greens have much more slope than they did before.
* So in essence I thought the course was very tough...but not quite fair in the least bit.
*When I played the greens were very firm, which has been explained to us as being the greens are somewhat new, but it had to of been because of this new sub-air system as well, because the greens were actually browning out in some spots where there was heavy slope in the greens. This made hitting anything more than a PW tough to hold on the elevated greens. On a couple occations (#8) I hit a 52* wedge (that is one week old with fresh grooves) into the green perfectly to a front pin thinking it would be 10 feet...it hit a front mound and bounced to the back of the green. On #3 I hit a perfect 6 Iron up the hill at the green just over the front bunker that bounced through to the rough on the back of the green. On #10 I hit a PW to a back pin that took two hops and bounced into the back bunker. (I could keep going but I wont sorry).
*I played with a steady 15-20mph wind that made things a little tougher than usual.
*The greens have much more slope than I remembered with the old design, and for some reason I feel the greens are smaller than they used to be? Can anyone who is more familiar with the course comment on that?
* It seems they designed the 5th and 15th holes as to be played as par-4's for the professionals, I made a couple hard earned 4's on those holes but the greens were somewhat softer than many of the others.
* The other R. Jones redesign that I have a decent amount of experience with is Bellerive, and I can say that Jones went a bit overboard in making Dubs play hard, while restraining himself a bit in the redesign of Bellerive (which is tough in its own right, but not overbearing IMO).
* The new #7 at Cog is a reverse new #2 at Bellerive. Jones essentially took down a bunch of trees, built a lake, and has the hole play around it with a couple "framing" fairway bunkers on the opposite side of the lake.
* We teed off pretty much right at 2pm, and finished at 5:20pm, but by playing through three groups. On #6 we caught up to a 4-some of guys that were really into their round (plum bobbing their putts, numerous practice strokes, probably a "cheater" line or two). I can't imagine that this course would be much enjoyable for the average golfer on a daily or once a week basis, and while the guys on a weekend morning could probably handle it fine as they know the course well, the afternoon rounds would have to be an average of 5 hours for a 4-some of guys keeping serious score.
* My back nine consisted of 2 birdies (#15 & #17) 1 par (#12) 5 bogeys, and 1 double bogey (#11) for a 41 on the back...whew!
* All that being said...I think its a darn good value for $150 in Chicago. There arn't many "weak" holes and I would rather pay an extra $50-$60 more than most "upscale" publics in Chicago on a weekend.
I'll try to post pictures later on.