This is my first original post. I apologize for some of the pictures, I used my middle of the road cell phone camera and my father kept walking in front of me. I didn't realize they were in reverse order until they were all posted, sorry. I decided to post all of them because of the interest I have seen from the site for Erin Hills.
I had the chance to play Erin Hills yesterday for the first time. I knew they were doing some renovations and that they just opened, but I was not expecting so much of the work still on-going. The course was very playable. There were considerable areas of sod on greens, tee, and fairways but nearly all played well. The greens did not look good, but they putted smooth and with a nice pace, especially for the contours. The fairways were a little shaggy, but still ran pretty well. The only thing really missing was all the fescue.
I had been looking forward to playing to course for some time because I had heard such a wide variety of comments about it, everything from perfect to terrible. I really liked the course, but found some things that did not make much sense. Overall, both my father and I really enjoyed the course. We both found it challenging from our appropriate set of tees, and had a lot of fun with difficult spots we found ourselves. I also now see why there has been such a heated debate about the course. It can definitely be a love / hate type of place. I did play well, so that always makes the memories fonder. I plan to return, and want to see it firm and fast when it is grown in. I would not want to go back on a busy weekend, as it is just too difficult for the average golfer to make it around in a reasonable amount of time, and with the problem of playing the wrong tees in everyday play, I could not imagine what you would find here. We saw a group at the back tee on 18, not one reached the fairway. I imagine this was not an unusual sight.
I will start with my dislikes:
-tees. Why would you have a set at 8348, 7945, 7258, 6838, 5631, and 4810? Who would say, "I'll go to 7900 with you but just can't do 8300?" Where does the 12-15 handicap play from? Where is the 6000-6300 for seniors / high handicaps / skilled ladies? The course is already difficult enough, are you courting 6 hour rounds? (We did play in 4:15, and the day was very enjoyable, but if it were busy it could get ugly.)
-par 73. I just don't like them.
-#1. Really did not like this hole. What is with that tree? Maybe my reaction makes it a good hole? Didn't Mackenzie say something to that effect?
-linksy? It is not a links course. It doesn't play like a links. I only make this comment because much of what I have read has touted the course as an Irish links. I found that there was not a lot of strategy involved. You had to hit it to certain areas of fairways that would usually feed to a common area. Most of the fairways were narrow, even after widening, and the large slope effectively made them even smaller. Nearly all the greens needed to be hit from the air; very few spots to run it up and most of the slopes around greens would send the ball the wrong direction. Some of the larger greens will allow you to hit certain areas and feed to ball to other parts, but that is about all you would do on the ground.
-some of the bunkers. I am of the opinion that a bunker should be a hazard and some sort of penalty should be incurred for entering one, but some of the bunkers seemed to be almost overly penal. Many of them were too narrow to get a stance. Many of the sides are too steep to try and stand on, and there is probably a 50/50 chance that you won't really be able to make much of a swing at it. If you have 175+ in a fairway bunker, you should at least be able to get a stance and advance it 100+. If that chunky grass around the traps grows in thick, many balls will be lost right next to the bunker. You should not loose your ball within a few feet of a bunker.
What I liked:
-movement. The fairways were amazing. The way they rose and fell with all the humps and bumps. I found myself on many of them thinking about how most new courses would have just flatten them out a bit or smoothed them into gentler rises and falls.
-green complexes. I like most of them. I thought the short par 4's green were well done. The area around the second and the 15th were superb. 15 was my favorite hole, although I don't know how much I would have liked it with the original green. The new slope is still rather severe, but playable. Many of the longer holes had open areas in front. The ball would not usually bounce the right direction, but at least there was a chance to get to the back of the green or to a reasonable chipping area. The big greens were a lot of fun, 3,7,10,14,18. The new 10th is great. It looks like a modern biarritz green with the ability to put pins on the front, middle, and back. The drop is 4-5 feet.
-par 3s. I loved them. It was great to see a course that has been built with a ridiculous amount of length to build a variety of par 3's that require a range of clubs. I liked the 6th green that ran away from front to back. 9 was a fun short hole were a two or five is equally possible with a wedge to 8 in your hand. 16 was my favorite par 3. The green was simple but great, and the surrounds were perfect.
Back of 18 green
18 bunker construction
18 green approach
18
17 approach
17 tee
16 side of green
15
14 green
14
13
12 looking back from green
12 green
12 tee
11
10 green
10
9
8 green
construction
not sure, 8 I think
new bunker
6
4 green
4
3 green
2 green
2 tee
behind 1 green
1
clubhouse
1