Tom Doak has built some corkers. Pacific Dunes, Ballyneal, Barnbougle, Cape Kidnappers and Old Macdonald are all hailed by GOLF Magazine as world top 100, many with ease. Is it a stretch to suggest that a course on a rocky Montana ranch can be held in as high esteem as those five courses that are so ideally situated? Shockingly no, for reasons that I endeavor to detail in its course profile now posted under Courses by Country and Architecture Timeline.
Recent photo threads by George Freeman and Peter Ferlicca captured the allure of the Rock Creek so heading there, I knew that I was in for a treat - but how much of one? My two golf buddies outside of North Carolina - Ted 'The Braying Donkey' Sturges and Joe 'I've only played 4 new courses this week' Andriole - each played there and both nonchalantly
awarded it a Doak 8. To my mind that doesn't begin to scratch the surface of what's been accomplished and I sent them mean texts from Deer Lodge politely inquiring after their mental health.
Of course, I may be biased as I date a girl from Montana, Big Sky is my favorite ski mountain in North America and nothing is more enjoyable to read than Wallace Stegner's writings on the American west. I love this part of the world and as well as Rock Creek's big picture stuff - golf, hiking, being outdoors, peace, quiet, eagles soaring, big skies, yummy fattening bacon in the morning and beef at night, no asphalt, not many people, a Western sensibility for what you need (and don't need). As you meander along the 6+ mile dirt entrance drive (Yeamans - eat your heart out!) your worries fade. Bottom line: I side with Jim Franklin's passionate, no holds barred viewpoint.
From a design perspective, a massive amount of superior work occurred at Rock Creek - the routing, width, grassing scheme, the 'dainty' preservation of the natural ground contours despite working among mega ton boulders; literally everything (even the bridge on 13 is one of the neatest I have ever seen on a course). The need for width was CRUCIAL, if everyone were to enjoy golf in these rocky environs, but it needed to be 'intelligent width.' The number of ways that Doak & crew accomplished that is
a-m-a-z-i-n-g and is highlighted (hopeful!) within the course profile. For example, the 500 yard par 4 14th calls for positioning your bombed tee ball on a diagonal between landforms for a green set off at 2 o'clock. On the tee of the following hole (a par 4 some 200 yards shorter!), the challenge is to decipher the ramifications of the day's hole location as to which side of the 60 yard wide fairway you should seek.
So it goes all day, alternating between power hitting and precise shot-making. The shifting challenges occur seamlessly and constitute a design balance with few equals. The first hole begins with a Principal's Nose feature while the second fairway is wide open down the middle. On the first par 3, Rock Creek slashes front left to back right between the tee and green and the last par 3 has Rock Creek angled the opposite way along the left of the green. There are short par 4s on each nine: one is uphill to a domed green and the other downhill to a wide but shallow green. The huge par 4 on the front (the 7th) swings left while the big one on the back moves right. The back-to-back par 3s on the inward nine can differ in length by - wait - 10 clubs! Is it just me or is such variety/diversity/range nearly unmatched in world golf?
Rock Creek is a wonderful concoction where everything imaginable is asked of the golfer in a setting that (unexpectedly!) appeals as much as any other. Jim Taylor of Clear Creek Tahoe fame always pushed me to visit here and no surprise to find that he was so incredibly right.
Best,