We have so many uphill holes at Rolling Green that some people think all of them are.
I would say that Flynn was able to create quite a bit of variety in the playability without severe walks.
# 1 is a par four that is slightly uphill with a demanding green. It is open in front and some balls will run onto the green. Unfortunately, the running shots are on the right side of the green and move away from the flag . The left side of the green , where you want to be, usually requires an aerial approach.
#4 is mostlly visible from the fairway and has an opening from the right. It is a relatively short par four hole. The green is banked on the right.
#6 is one of our uphill par threes. As with the others, it appears more uphill than it is. If we recovered the fairway in front then an attempt at a runup shot would be allowed. The green is very visible. The green is saddled in front but slightly falls away at the back----those old guys were always thinking "drainage"
#8 is severely uphill but is wide open in front. An attempt at a runup shot is rarely successful. It usually results in rolling back some 50 yards. The green is quite visible until you get within 100 yards. There is a subtle ridge from front left to back right in the green.
#9 is a long par five, but you can see the flag from the tee setting up your strategy right away. There is a nice opening in front that allows a runup shot. The green again is visible. It is quite challenging after such a long trek to get there. It allows a significant roll from the back .
#10 is a long par three that gradually goes uphill and has no change in elevation between the fairway and the green. This invites the runup shot. The green is fully visible. Again there is that saddle off of the bunkers in the front and gentle breaks in the rear.
#11 is a mirror image of #4 with the opening on the left side and the possibility of bouncing off of the hill onto the green. The green is quite visible . The saddle is quite pronounced here.
#12 is a short par four that uses blindness effectively. The approach from the right (shorter) is blind but into a receptive green. The approach from the left (longer) is visible but less receptive. There is a severe falloff on the right and an impossible hill on the left. One can get a nice roll from the back of the green or a disappointing roll off of the back right side.
#14 is another long par three which requires, more often, an aerial shot. The green is quite visible. There is a severe falloff to the right, but I find that blind recovery easier than the visible one from the left because of the left to right slope of the green. The green has much movement and a putt from the back to the front is scary.
#15 is the first dogleg uphill hole. The hole is short; the approach is blind to a two tiered green. The ridge is somewhat wavy. An aerial shot is almost always required. The opening is in the front. Front flags can lead to a first putt, a second wedge, a third wedge, a second putt, and so on.
#17 is a short five dogleg to the left that is deceptively uphill all the way. The opening in front is rather narrow and the green is perched so an aerial shot is called for here.The green is generally visible from the fairway. The green is a wonderful short five green where it is difficult to get close to a front flag.
#18 is a short five that doglegs to the right and slopes against your shot. The opening in front is huge but there is limited visibility. I can't recall another uphill green where the ball runs on as much as this green. You are always surprised at how far in the back of the green you are. But, you can't easily get to the front because of the slope.
While there are many uphill holes here they have different heights, different angles of attack, different visibility issues, and very different greens at the top of the hill. They also move in all directions.
The most severe elevation changes are from tee to fairway on a couple of holes. This shows Flynn's knack for making a hilly course both playable and walkable.
None of these holes are weak; several are very good; and a few are great!
So, I agree with much that has been said--little blindness; good use of severe falloffs; variety in the approach; receptive but not dull greens.