I spent last week in Austin, Texas, staying at Barton Creek with friends. Austin is a great town, with excellent Tex-Mex food, live music everywhere, and some good golf courses.
This trip I had the good fortune to play a round at Austin Golf Club, the Crenshaw & Coore design built in 2000. The club is located about 15 miles west of downtown Austin in rolling Texas hill country, with a lot of oak trees and scrub. The course uses the terrain very well and has two steeply elevated greens at #6 and #18. All of the bunkering is strong in the C&C style, deep and tight to the greens. The course is big and built on a lot of acres. There were no two holes in the same direction and always 60 to 100 yards between adjoining fairways.
Like Cuscowilla, another C&C favorite, the challenge is primarily in the greens as long as one plays the appropriate tees. Most of the greens are elevated with deep bunkers cut into the surfaces. This is one of those courses where you can score better if you are consistently around the front of the greens and reasonably straight. Everyone in our group had several occasions where shots that finished hole high but off to one side or the other resulted in chips, pitches or putts that went over the green into a bunker on the other side. The pressures on the players’ short games are relentless and never ending!
There’s plenty of width, the course is fast and firm, beautifully maintained, the primary challenge is in the greens!
I also played my favorite Barton Creek course, the Crenshaw Cliffside course designed by C&C in the early 1990’s, and once again loved the layout there. Where most of the greens at Austin Golf Club sloped from back to front and were built up with some frightening false fronts, at Barton Creek the greens are draped over the terrain, with fully 13 of 18 greens sloping from front to back! Again the primary challenge is in the greens and how you handle the short game challenges.
I am a big fan of C&C courses, and Austin Golf Club did nothing to change my mind. Many thanks to our host for an excellent day.