Had the privilege of playing Diamond Creek last weekend, and with the leaves inching toward their peak, it was a memorable day in a gorgeous setting.
I'm not sure there is a more impressive entrance to a club (setting aside the ghosts and tradition of older clubs, which is impossible to replicate).
You drive through the town of Banner Elk, and off a side road for quite some time before coming to a modest turnout with a small sign and an iron gate.
As you drive in, you come around a bend and are met with a cabin (guest accommodations), a pond, and a 100 foot rock face and waterfall
Further up the road you hit the clubhouse, a lodge-y, stone/wood structure staffed by an incredibly friendly crew. The interior is impressive, with a golf shop that strikes you more as living room and less as "store".
But the real awe is when you walk out the back and enjoy lunch overlooking the entirety of the front nine.
As for the golf course, I thought it was excellent. Nice work by Fazio of making a mountain site not feel like mountaingoat golf. Most of the holes traverse the slope with a few exceptions. Conditions are immaculate as you might expect.
The first hole is a tough tee shot with an even tougher second (especially if you are out of position off the tee)
I am going to mess up some of the hole numbers I'm sure, and for that I apologize. The third calls for a tee shot skirting the fairway bunker protecting the right
The 4th is a nice par 5 with a stunning view of the mountains and the valley. Reachable with 2 big shots. As you can see in the second photo, the run-up shot is encouraged (and necessary for this day's pin)
The walk to the 5th tee takes you through the woods - this is a new back tee - and you hit a mid/short iron through the chute
Looking back to the 6th tee you can make out yours truly teeing off and the clubhouse in the distance. The green is well-protected, as you'd expect from a short-ish hole
The blind tee shot on the 9th is a challenging one - keep it right.
After you finish the 9th hole, stop in to the clubhouse for a drink and snack. Not a bad spot...
The 10th is the shortest par 4 on the course and is a demanding 2nd shot for a wedge. One of the few forced layups off the tee, though I'm told some of the members try to drive it downwind...
The 11th green is a simple and stunning spot...tough to gauge depth
The 12th is the first hole that starts to feel "wooded" - a par 3 of around 200 yards
13 is a reachable par 5 that has one of the better tee shots on the course - again, a wooded hole, which feels a bit claustrophobic after the openness of the front nine (even though it's got plenty of width). A draw over the bunkers can get you inside of 200 yards
14 is maybe the toughest par 4 on the course - hug the right and then a forced carry to a green that will accept a shot running in from the right
16 is a "wow" tee shot, but it also can be scary to have a ball be in the air for this long. It's 460 or so on the card, but it plays more like 350. Driver not necessary.
17 is the "signature" hole and for all the hemming and hawing about waterfalls, this one still takes the breath away. The giant waterfall that you see driving in plays as a backdrop (some 400 yards beyond the green, but still). Sorry but if you can't enjoy this, then you're taking yourself a little too seriously.
18 is a tough, short/medium uphill par 4. It's a bit anti-climactic to end this way, but it is what it is. It's not an awful hole...but definitely one of the weaker ones on an otherwise spectacular course. It's more of an Anycourse National finisher.
Seems like they'd get rid of this if they reversed the nines, but I also understand the desire to want 17 as the crescendo. I think 8 is a fine par 3 and could serve nicely in that capacity.
Either way, I thought Diamond Creek was an excellent golf course at a world-class facility. Knocks on it I would say are the relative similarity to the par 5s on the front (though both are EXCELLENT holes), the 18th hole, and the fact that it's hard to concentrate on golf with such beautiful scenery around. I think it compares VERY favorably with other top 100 courses.