Milwaukee Country Club hosted this year’s U.S. Mid-Amateur, and the course earned universal praise from players, caddies, tournament officials and spectators. A classic, tree-lined parkland course, the design is attributed by the club to Colt and Alison, circa 1927, although others have attributed it solely to Alison. The club itself dates to 1894, and although viewed as the most prestigious club in the Milwaukee area, it maintains a very low profile. It has hosted only two previous tournaments of note, the 1969 Walker Cup and the 1988 U.S. Senior Amateur.
Because it keeps such a low profile, the course is perhaps one of the least-known of the highly rated, classic-era courses in the country (48th in the ‘07-‘08 Golf Digest rankings, ahead of such notable courses as Camargo, Garden City, Riviera and Colonial). GCA contributor and USGA rules official John Vander Borght said Milwaukee CC was the best Mid-Am course he’d seen since he began officiating at the tournament 12 years ago.
What follows is a pictorial review of Milwaukee CC, with some comments on individual holes:
No. 1 (427, par 4)
The inviting opening tee shot, from an elevated tee to a fairway below that gently doglegs right. Similar to Merion East, the first tee at MCC is just a few steps from the clubhouse.
A view of the 1st green, and a trademark of the course – a green perched up slightly from the fairway, pinched by deep, flashed-up, high-lipped bunkers left and right. Although the greens at MCC don’t have many significant internal contours, they often have a pronounced tilt, either from back to front or away from a greenside bunker.
A view of the 1st fairway, looking back up to the clubhouse.
No. 2 (451 par 4)
The disconcerting tee shot of the 2nd; where exactly does the fairway go? It moves slightly right, with both the landing area (completely) and a large bunker at the corner of the dogleg (partially) blind from the tee.
The approach to the 2nd; the pinching right-side bunker is quite deep. This played as the toughest hole on the course during qualifying play, averaging 4.6 strokes.
The right greenside bunker, from behind the green. From the player’s perspective in the fairway, the green does not appear to be as elevated as it appears here.
No. 3 (529 par 5)
One of two par 5s for the Mid-Am, it ranked as the easiest hole for the players, and helps establish the rhythm of MCC – stern tests like the 2nd are followed by relatively easier holes like the 3rd. The pattern continues throughout the round, giving the golfer the sense that the course is not one relentless slog, but one that provides a variety of challenges. The 3rd hole was one of two on the course that was completely redone by the club several years ago, including a new green. The hole, although of modest length for a par 5, does offer both a tight driving area and a fairway that narrows at the ideal landing spot for a layup. Those going for the green in two risk a tough up-and-down from deep greenside bunkers if the approach shot is errant.
No. 4 (194 par 3)
Although not a classic Redan, the 4th has some Redan-like attributes: a deep fronting bunker left, a green that runs away from the player, a back bunker right, and small knob right of the green that could be used to propel a ball toward the hole. But the green lacks the requisite tilt of a classic Redan. Still, the play here is a long, high draw – it plays uphill, perhaps a full club-length.
The green on the 4th sits near one of the busiest areas of the course – to the left of the green is the driving range and practice area, while behind the green sits the road that leads to the club.
The fronting bunker on the Redan-esque 4th.
No. 5 (431 par 4)
An elevated tee to a “saddle” fairway pinched on both sides by fairway bunkers. It’s downhill all the way to the green.
The bunker complex that lies between holes 5 and 6.
No. 6 (407 par 4)
A par 4 of modest length that played surprisingly tough during qualifying play, averaging 4.5 strokes. It’s uphill all the way (holes 5 and 6 parallel each other), with fairway bunkers left and right. The bunkers flanking the green are quite deep. Note the size of the far greenside bunker in the distance, 400+ yards away.
Although the course has undergone an aggressive tree-cutting program, there are still some places where overhanging branches can impact shots. This is from the intermediary rough (two yards wide for the Mid-Am), about 130 yards from the center of the green (275 yard tee shot).
No. 7 (492 par 4)
A par 5 for the members, but used as a par 4 for the Mid-Am. A long, tough hole – players have to be willing to take on the large fairway bunker right to shorten their approach shot.
Those opting for safety left off the tee will have a long approach shot to a green with two bunkers left and one right, shown here. Par at the 7th often won the hole during match play at the tournament.
No. 8 (166 par 3)
A nifty little par 3; it played as the easiest of the par 3s during the Mid-Am, and the site of three aces during qualifying play. But it still presents some challenges; the tee shot is to a slightly perched-up green surrounded in front and both sides by deep bunkering.
To get a sense of the bunker depth at 8, click on picture #10 from this USGA link from the Mid-Am:
http://www.usmidam.org/photos/tue/index.htmlHere’s the fun portion of the 8th hole – an aggressive shot to a pin in the back of the green risks running off the closely mown backside, and into a deep ravine.
Random non-golf architecture tangent
On-course restrooms are often drab affairs, with little thought put into them. This charming little building sits between the 8th green and the 9th tee.
No. 9 (322 par 4)
A personal favorite, and a very good, short par 4. The hole plays straightway toward the beckoning clubhouse, with a tee shot over the deep ravine that sits at the back of the 8th hole. A series of fairway bunkers right catch errant tee shots; the safe play is an iron/fairway wood out to the left.
The green of the 9th, with a dramatic false front and bunkers left and right. The right-front bunker, dubbed Big Bertha by the members, is the deepest on the course.
Back nine to follow soon.