My recent visit ignored The Pines, a course I had played three times more than a decade ago. Despite the "buzz" around it in the early 90s, not many Minnesotans talk about the course any more. They've added a 3rd nine, cleared out a lot of the underbrush, and introduced some condos since inception. Still, anyone in the area for 4 or 5 days would be remiss if they didn't play at least one round there.
The Preserve at Grand View isn't at Grand View at all. It is 8 miles N. I didn't have time for it on this visit and am told it is very similar to Golden Eagle. Both were designed by native North Dakotan and former PGA Tour pro Mike Morley.
So where did I play?
FRIDAY: The Classic at Madden's.
This is a wonderful way to spend a day. Ranked #33 in the Golf Digest listing of the Top 100 Public courses, I think I find more Minnesotans that favor this to Deacon's Lodge than vice versa. These people must be masochists! Architect Scott Hoffmann joined me for lunch after the round and it was a real treat to hear about the project. He has been the Supe at Madden's - considered to be pretty low-end stuff by serious golfers - for 25 years. The owner wanted to have a top-tier course without spending a ton of money. Various projects were considered before sticking to going it alone. Tom Doak's name was even bandied about.
John Harris (1993 US Am champ and Minnesota golf legend) and Geoff Cornish were brought in as "consultants" but time has lessened the attention their contributions have received. Credit, rightfully, goes to Hoffmann for seeing the project through and his bosses for entrusting him with the responsibility.
Hoffmann's routing is tight with one exception, the trip from 3 green to 4 tee. Many folks were walking the day we played, a rarity at upscale daily-fees these days. The reason the walk is a bit of a trek is that the #3 green was sacred to Hoffmann as he had a suitable replica of Minnesota's most famous hole - the 16th at future Ryder Cup venue Hazeltine - just waiting to be created with a peninsula green. This version plays 330 for most, stretching to 383 with a whopping carry of about 240 to carry the lake from the back. (A playable course is really changed with the back tees on 3 (+53), 11 (+105), and 13 (+31 to make it 634)).
Other notable holes are #4 (the owner asked that two trees stay up - the entire course was a cut-through - on the interior of the dogleg), #5 (a punishing hole for those unable to carry the lake fronting all the way to the green), #10 (a short par 5 at 470 max with an extremely narrow fairway the whole way... water up the right), #11 (where a drive-wedge hole of 339 becomes 444 through a forest for anyone on the back tee - 7102 total), and #14... one of the coolest par 3s I've seen anywhere with bunkers built into mounds that almost completely hide the green. You know it is there, but you can't quite bring yourself to believe it.
Honestly, I drove it so poorly all day that I can't fairly comment on the difficulty. Two U of M players have shot 65, one of them doing so with a 29 on the back. So it can be done. Having IMMACULATE greens to put on doesn't hurt for guys who really can play. Course conditions were unreal. The only blemishes I could see are on fairways that are very narrow which leads to everyone playing from the same spot.
I'll be coming back with comments on my Saturday (Deacon's Lodge) and Sunday (Golden Eagle) rounds over the weekend.