Las Vegas is a regular destination for me. My work has taken me there at least fifteen times. With the exception of one trip that I took to get a lesson from Butch Harmon, golf has not been a part of my Las Vegas experience. That changed this week when I decided to see what the area had to offer.
After consulting Jon Cavalier (thank you sir), I settled on Sand Hollow, the Wolf Course at Paiute Resort and Wolf Creek. What an adventure I had.
A few main thoughts emerged for me as I made my way through the week, with plenty of photo taking and driving time for reflection:
* All three courses had beautiful and dramatic settings. When the setting is so stimulating, I question the necessity for an architect to also make the holes and features dramatic. Doing so strikes me as unnecessary overkill that lacks in a certain amount humility. Whether it is seaside cliffs, or mountain ridges, it seems better that at certain times the architecture takes a back seat to nature.
* These courses highlighted the distinction between adventure golf and everyday golf. Sand Hollow came the closest for me to everyday golf, but all three fall into the adventure golf category. I enjoy adventure golf, and Sand Hollow, Paiute Wolf and Wolf Creek are all courses that I am grateful to have experienced. They were visually stunning, fun to play, and full of thrill and challenge. But they are not the kinds of courses that I could happily play every day for the rest of my life.
* Before I die, I would love to play a bunkerless course. This thought came to me as I made my way around Pete Dye’s Paiute Wolf (which is why I bumped the bunkerless holes thread). As I examined the tee-to-green terrain and green surrounds, the grass bumps, slopes, and hollows that Pete builds are much more interesting to me than his bunkers. The Wolf Course also had large waste areas that were really cool looking. Between the ground features and the waste areas I would have been plenty stimulated, and I make the argument that the bunkering was a visual detractor. So, to bring the thought full circle, my dream is for Pete Dye to build a bunkerless course. His creativity would produce a wild result that would be a blast to play.
As I headed home from Las Vegas, I was struck by the variety I encountered on my desert golf adventure. I’m not sure that the same variety exists within the city and suburbs. My willingness to drive a bit was rewarded with an amazing array of color, terrain, architecture and the tired satisfaction of having broadened my golf geek horizons.
Photos to follow, with a little course specific commentary…