Nice to see that Pinon Hills (Ken Dye), one of the bellwhethers of extremely affordable and good golf (ie value) continues to be so well recognized. It's certainly in lofty company at #4.
17. Aspen Golf Club Aspen, Colo. This is very surprising to me. I've never played it. Numerous drive-bys led me to believe this was a flat, boring, uninteresting etc. course. Am I wrong?
Doug,
I too was surprised by this inclusion, but in hindsight, there is a good deal of merit for some measure of recognition, if not such a lofty perch on the rating list. Of course, I am biased, having won the 1998 Aspen City championship (with an unconscious 69 final round, including a quad bogey,...but that's a whole n'other story). The terrain there is indeed mostly flat...until you arrive at the greens. They are(were) pure poa.... canted, slanted, pushed up, crowned, and putting everyone on full-tilt when shaved tight. Imagine a muted municipal doppelganger of Winged Foot East and throw 18 of them around a mini-mesa topography, add a dose of silly ponds, creeks, and crotches of fescue and voila!!!, you have Aspen Golf club, circa 1990's.
I'm told the place has enjoyed a bit of post 2001 RE gold-rush facelift, sprucing up the H20 features and chasing away the effects of decamped revelers from a night spent chasing the hoity-doity around town. But before I get side-tracked, let's get back to those greens. Not anywhere else west of Vail Pass and east of Sacramento is there a set of as much fun-but-difficult muni greens to play. There are few straight, non-breakers and anything left above the holes were terror. Just like a Stanwich, WFW or Merion, the wrong side misses left IOUs for par and the near-guarantee for much worse.
The course is short and the air thin, so the ball goes & goes, but layout works well enough to provide test for the adventurous. Save for those greens and the magnificent views of the surrounding mountain majesty, the rest of the course won't impress much, but the fun and beauty factor is a large component of municipal success and enjoyment.
I'm absolutely certain, with the appropriate respect (or lack of?) that our resident expert, Matt Ward won't agree with me about Aspen GC, but I'm further comforted by the inclusion of Neshanic Valley, back here in Central NJ. He's never been a huge fan of that 27 hole muni-complex either(and again I'm biased having won a county competition there), but many of those who have gotten out to site sing it's praises and mob it's phone lines for tee times.
Remember, the placement on the list aren't what anyone should focus on, but instead simply make note of the fact that enough "otherwise knowledgeable" golfers saw fit to include these venues in a list that points out the better of the bunch. Muni golf is root system of the American game and sometimes, it's just plain fun to break out the hawaiian shirt , cargo shorts and ugly footwear and scrape it around. Aspen is definitely one of the better equivalents of golf's "gin joints" to frequent for such pleasure!