Hole #17 (Par 3, 209 yds, 202 yds)
The drive – The golfer exits the back-right corner of the 16th green and walks up, over and down the hillside to the 17th tee – or, more accurately, to one of the 17th tees. As with the 14th hole, 17 features alternate boxes that vary the distance and angle of play.
The main box is elevated, and the hole plays fairly straight in a just-south-of-east direction, past two traps that line and pinch the right side of the fairway – yes, this par 3 has a proper fairway – to a green edged by two traps on the right and one on the left. The golfer will typically hit a long iron or rescue club, although a 3-wood or even driver may be needed if playing directly into an east wind.
The primary alternate box is located some 40 yards to the south of the main box. Also elevated, this tee lengthens the hole by some 20 yards and also brings the string of bunkers right of the fairway and green directly into the line of play. For somebody who favors a draw, the hole becomes considerably more difficult from this box.
A third tee was recently constructed below the primary alternate box at the base of the hill. The angle is the same – i.e., bunkers directly in the line of play – but the distance considerably shorter at around 180 yards, albeit slightly uphill. I have not yet used that box and thus cannot comment on how the hole plays.
The green – If the golfer is smart or lucky, he will find himself just off the front-left of the green in Cavvy’s Corner – the preferred location from which one can get up and down, and miles better than hitting the green but stopping above the hole.
The green itself is a built-up pad that tilts severely from back to front. The greenside bunkers bottom out well below the putting surface, and the back edge falls away severely back to grade-level rough.
The front of the green is a fairly uniform sheet of back-to-front terror, whereas the rear-left and rear-right sections, formed by a vertical spine, feature more subtle sliding breaks both off the spine and from back to front.
A back or middle pin offers the best chance to hit the green and leave an uphill putt, front pins should be feared, and experienced players won’t even bother with precise yardages and instead will just play short to Cavvy’s Corner.
A birdie will almost certainly win the hole, a par will have a good chance, and even bogie can be enough.
Other commentary – Of the Chicago-land courses I have played, the closing stretch of holes from 15 through 18 may represent one of the most engaging – and surely offer one of the most challenging – ends to a round of around. Two stout par 4’s, a long par 3 and a double-dogleg par 5 which, on the card, are the #6, 18, 14 and 4 handicap holes, respectively – an important feature to consider when playing a match. The presses, rolls and re-rolls in the scotch component of the Beverly Game and the auto-presses in the Nassau components mean that the final putt on the 18th green can really, really matter.
(Insider’s Tip – Again, please do not, under any circumstances, agree to play the Beverly Game.)