A few thoughts on CommonGround after 1 1/2 rounds there. Sorry no photos yet but here's a link to the course website photos:
http://www.commongroundgc.com/tour.aspxThe course is all about width and angles. The better player will appreciate the angles; the lesser player will appreciate the width.
This is not a course with "Wow Factor," so Ben Sims don't go there after Ballyneal expecting a municipal Ballyneal. It has a number of very solid, interesting golf holes. The only real "wow" I experienced was taking in the views created by the routing. Holes that play directly towards a snow capped Mt. Evans, Long's Peak, and my office building in downtown Denver. I don't think these were accidental; Tom Doak can confirm or deny.
The thing that sets CommonGround apart from courses like Buffalo Run is the finish work such as the detailing of the bunkering and the greens and greensites. The greens are varied and interesting, for the most part more subtle than striking. Though I may retract that last comment once they become a bit faster and some like the 6th are not subtle at all...
As has been mentioned on the thread detailing Bethpage Black, a number of the tees steer the unwitting golfer towards the edges of wide fairways where bunkers often lurk. I experienced this in particular on the par 5 2d, the par 5 11th and the long par 4 15th. This creates a kind of uneasiness as you adjust to play away from those corners.
Par 3s: The 144 yard 2d to a large pushed up green and the 188 yard 6th, which is a replica of ANGC's 16th, are my favorite par 3s. My comment on the other par 3s (11, 14 and 17) is that each is increasingly more difficult than the one before. One of my few negative comments about the course is that I hit the same club (5 wood) on each of those long par 3s.
My favorite holes are #4, a medium length dogleg left par 4 that has a "bite off what you dare" tee shot, #11, a risk-reward par 5 with a cool "foozle bunker" 100 yards or so off the tee, #13, an excellent, beautifully bunkered par 4 with a great push-up green with a false front (there are several false fronts throughout), #16, a long par 4 that gently doglegs left around a beautiful stand of trees and is just a classic looking hole.
Least favorites: Unlike Wyatt, I'm not sold on #8 as "brilliant." It's just OK IMO. And that pine tree short right of 18 green is still just a "stupid tree" IMO. It will probably only bother the average golfer and might leave a bad taste in his/her mouth at the end of the round. Just my opinion I could be wrong...
The back nine is much harder than the front. The stretch from 14-17 is particularly challenging.
CommonGround is a thoughtful, well-designed and executed golf course. Unlike many modern courses (including one like Murphy Creek), the average golfer won't walk off feeling abused (unless caught up in the tree on 18) and there's plenty of challenge and interest for the better player. As Wyatt said, it's a course one will readily want to play again.