Given that Golf Digest just ranked Streamsong Red 100 on its 2015-16 list of the top 100 courses in America (Blue comes in at 120), I figured now was as good a time as any to post my comments and pictures based on my recent visit (December 27, 2014-January 1, 2015). I know others have posted reviews already--I benefited from them greatly both before and during my time at Streamsong--so I hope you'll accept one more.
But before I get to my hole-by-hole analysis of Coore & Crenshaw's Red course (I'll post a similar analysis of Tom's Blue course soon), a few comments about Streamsong generally. I can't say enough good things about the golf and the overall experience. The resort will no doubt continue to improve and grow (Gil Hanse sat next to us at dinner on our last night and is apparently in line to build the third course on the property by the end of 2016), but everything is pretty amazing as is. And, yes, I actually enjoyed the shuttle service, as it was prompt and quick and allowed us to leave golf behind as we returned to the lodge. Sure, the food quality has a ways to go (Sotto Terra is clearly the class of the three restaurants, and P205 is clearly the worst (both in food quality and in ambience--the lodge needs a place to eat breakfast where you can see the outdoors), but my legitimate complaints are few.
Each of the current courses (we played and walked five rounds total, two on Red, three on Blue) is picturesque, peaceful, and legitimately world-class (playable, yet challenging, to all). The resort is in the middle of nowhere (for those not aware, you take a one-hour car ride east from the Tampa airport to get there), so, apart from the hotel (which I love, architecturally and practically), you see no evidence of civilization anywhere. I love it so much--and the golf is so good--that I might consider going every year. Both courses are already in the top three public courses in Florida (Sawgrass is the other) and in the top five courses overall in the state (Seminole and Calusa Pines, both private, are the others). And what they say is true: Neither course looks or plays like a Florida course (although there was more water than I was expecting). The landscape is vast and dramatic, and golf-course-architecture connoisseurs--i.e., all of you--will be pleased to find, among other classic design elements, a spectacular Biarritz green (on the Red's par-3 16th), two Principal's Nose bunkers (by the green on the Red's short par-4 4th and in the fairway on the Blue's par-4 15th), and at least five Cape or, for purists, Cape-style holes (the Red's par-5 2nd, par-4 5th, and par-4 17th, and the Blue's par-4 3rd and par-5 14th). Red has the better collection of individual holes, but Blue has the better overall feel.
Streamsong Red (Coore & Crenshaw)Front NineMany argue that the start on Red (specifically, the loop comprising holes 1-6) is the heart of the course, but I found the stretch from 14-18 to be superior. As for the start, I think the first hole--though beautiful and arresting and blessed with a great tee shot (visually intimidating, yet quite playable given the shortness of the water carry and the width of the fairway)--is too hard of an opener, on account of being too long and too uphill. I shared the experience of other GCAers who, in playing the hole, saw no one come close to reaching the green in two.
Streamsong Red, Hole 1 (tee at sunset)
Streamsong Red, Hole 1 (right fairway bunker)
The second hole (a reachable par 5 with a Cape-style tee shot) and third hole (a medium-length, blind par 4), though unique and good holes, didn't do much for me, either.
Streamsong Red, Hole 2 (fairway, left fairway bunker)
Four is legitimately a great short par-4 rife with ingenious design elements, both in the fairway and around and on the green. I loved both the long dead-center fairway bunker and the front-center greenside Principal's Nose bunker, but I appreciated most the small sliver of a bunker on the back-left side of the green (where the pin was the first time I played it). It will gather lots of balls because the landing area on that side of the green is tiny, due a sharp false front. I found it and actually putted the ball from the bunker (for the first time ever, if memory serves) because my ball was only six inches into the bunker, which was on the exact same elevation as the adjacent fringe; alas, I hit it too hard, and it ran off the front of the green. As I said, a great bunker.
Streamsong Red, Hole 4 (fairway)
Five, though not a great hole, is underrated; it's also one of the few places on the Red course (ironically deemed to have more dramatic property than the Blue course) where you get a sense of Streamsong's scale, which is much more--and frequently--apparent on the Blue course:
Streamsong Red, Hole 5 (fairway)
Streamsong Red, Hole 5 (green)
That leaves holes 6-9, which I actually found to be the better stretch on the front side. Six is a stout, and beautifully framed, par 3, and seven is a challenging par 5 (although one where the hazards by the green make going for it in two unwise on most occasions and for most players).
Streamsong Red, Hole 6 (front tee)
Eight and nine are, along with four, my two favorite holes on the Red's front side. Like the Blue's fifth hole, the Red's eighth hole is a brilliant short par 3 where play is dictated by the angle of approach from the tee (diagonal to the green from the right tee, straight up the green from the left tee):
Streamsong Red, Hole 8 (right tee, diagonal angle to green)
Streamsong Red, Hole 8 (left tee, straight-on angle to green)
Nine is a great short par 4 where, like the Blue's first hole, the closer you get to the green on your tee shot, the harder (and more chili-dip-inducing) the approach shot:
Streamsong Red, Hole 9 (tee)
Back NineTen and eleven are solid long par 4s, with ten being a decent, but not great, Alps hole. (It's a poor man's version of the twelfth at Yale, minus the moat bunker that guards the green at Yale. In that way, the green at Streamsong Red's tenth reminds me more of the seventeenth green at Kingston Heath, which is similarly blind and accessible with a running approach shot.) I loved 12, which reminded me a great deal of the seventh at Montauk Downs (although the water at Streamsong Red's twelfth is outside (i.e., to the right of) the dogleg left, while the water at Montauk Downs's seventh is inside the dogleg). Different holes, to be sure, but similar feels with their downhill, right-to-left sweeps. Thirteen is a decent par 5, where play gets more interesting the closer one gets to the green (the tee shot is to another wide fairway--like the fourth and the eleventh--split in two by a dead-center bunker).
Then starts one of the best closing stretches I've ever played. The view from the fourteenth tee, with the fifteenth hole climbing toward the horizon in the distance, is the best on the property and surely one of the best in all of golf (even if it mimics Coore & Crenshaw's 17-18 at Sand Hills, which I've never played).
Streamsong Red, Holes 14 and 15 (from left of the back tee on 14)
Streamsong Red, Holes 14 and 15 (from the front tee on 14)
As for the holes themselves, they aren't easy. Fourteen is a medium-length par 3 to a plateaued green, best reached with a fade. Large and deep bunkers punish misses right or left. Short is probably the best miss. If you miss long, you face a steep roll off, as pictured below:
Streamsong Red, Hole 14 (behind the green, looking backward)
Fifteen, though probably, like one, too hard of a par 4 (again on account of being too long and too uphill), is a more interesting hole than one due both to its beauty and the blindness of the approach shot. I actually think it might play better as a par 5, and there is certainly room between the fourteenth green and the current fifteenth tee to add the required length.
Streamsong Red, Hole 15 (tee)
Streamsong Red, Hole 15 (fairway)
Then comes 16, which is my favorite hole on the course, and not just because I hit two of my best tee shots there and have such a fondness for Yale, which almost certainly inspired this Biarritz par 3 over water.
Streamsong Red, Hole 16 (Left) and Streamsong Blue, Hole 7 (Right)
Streamsong Red, Hole 16 (tee)
Streamsong Red, Hole 16 (green, a beautiful Biarritz, with the lodge in the distance)
After my first go around the Red course, I came off saying 14-16 was the best three-hole stretch I've ever played. But on reflection, and after playing the course a second time, I've concluded that 17 and 18 deserve to be grouped with that stretch for one great five-hole finishing stretch. Seventeen is one of the best tee shots on the property, with a bunker running up the right side of the fairway taking the place of water to form a great Cape-style hole (or at least a Cape-style tee shot). The green site is the most tranquil on the property.
Streamsong Red, Hole 17 (looking up the fairway from the beginning of the long bunker framing the right side of the hole)
Streamsong Red, Hole 17 (fairway, right fairway bunker)
Streamsong Red, Hole 17 (green site)
Eighteen is a fun way to end the round, especially after a grueling stretch. The only flaw, as I believe someone here already noted, is that 18 is almost always played into the setting sun, which makes appreciating its beauty (and it is beautiful, especially with the moonscape dunes surrounding the green) difficult.
Streamsong Red, Hole 18 (looking up the left side of the fairway to the green--and into the setting sun)
Streamsong Red, Hole 18 (green site, looking back down the fairway)
In short, the Red course at Streamsong is a great course owing mostly to its collection of individually great holes--and, like all of Streamsong, its beautiful land. Stretches of holes hold together well, but, like many courses where each hole is unique (even if design elements repeat on many of the holes), the course as a whole does not (or certainly not as well as the Blue course). I also found the Red harder to score on than the Blue, no doubt because of the several too-long, too-uphill par 4s.