A.G.,
I am always a little hesitant to chime in on a course near me since it could be interpreted the wrong way. But, what the heck! I have had considerable experience with zoysia grass and even its use as a turf quality green. About a decade ago we had bent greens and we experimented with two zoysia greens: a chipping/practice green and a separate putting green that we used diamond zoysia on. Each green was about 2,000 sq. ft. At the time, we had space limitations and chose zoysia foremost for its wear tolerance. My superintendent, Mark Hoban, and I traveled to several courses in South Carolina speaking with the few supers who were using diamond zoysia at the time as greens.
Diamond zoysia has fallen out of favor but it took off when AAC and Peachtree both used it extensively at their courses. We used it as well on our tee boxes after our big renovation in 2006. Anyway, diamond zoysia is not the cultivar being used at Crooked Creek, but it is an exceptionally fine bladed zoysia and what many were using on greens in Texas, and South Carolina.
First, the positives: it is a warm season grass like Bermuda and actually greens up earlier and stays green longer than Bermuda. It is dense and ball marking is almost non existent. It handles shade far better than Bermuda and for those courses that can't cut enough trees or move houses to get enough sunlight, it is a great warm season grass alternative to Bermuda.
The negatives: like Bermuda, zoysia will require Crooked Creek to use covers during the winter. A one time expense for the covers and then an ongoing expense when you need to cover/remove in the winter. I will say that is pretty overrated though as even this year the number of times to cover/uncover wasn't that bad. It does mean you have to keep a decent size crew throughout the year and I know Crooked Creek has had severe financial/staffing issues.
Additionally, we found zoysia very susceptible to disease--we spent a ton of time and money fighting wilt and disease on our tees. I am pretty sure Peachtree has moved to a different cultivar of zoysia and AAC has moved away from diamond too. We no longer use diamond on our tees. With that said, I understand Crooked Creek is using a new cultivar of zoysia. That may be great but I would hate to ever be the one who is the "first in the pool" so to speak with a new cultivar. With any grass I like having one that others in my area are using. One thing about superintendents that I love is how cooperative and collegial they are as a group. They genuinely help one another out and want each other to succeed. With a common grass cultivar you can share protocols and information. If you are the only one on the block with a unique grass, you are out there all alone--I know I wouldn't want that.
When we had our zoysia greens (2) they took a tremendous amount of work--intensive cultural practices. We walk mowed every day even getting below .100 of an inch. We verticut and top-dressed almost weekly during the growing season and despite this, the biggest challenge will be grain and green speed. Zoysia is so dense, finding fine particle sand is a must and of course, it was more expensive.
We could never achieve speed much past 10 and that is after intense effort to see how fast we could get them. Grain was absolutely an issue and there was certainly a fast direction and slow direction that varied by more than a foot on a stimp which is a lot! So down grain we may get 10.5 but into the grain we were lucky to get 9.5. I will be shocked to see if they can get green speeds anywhere near where the Atlanta private club market deems acceptable. Please know, I am NOT saying 9.5 is a bad speed and Crooked Creek has some terrific greens with nice roll in them, BUT people are hooked on "fast". I also think in the summer when the greens are really growing, it is going to be very hard and labor intensive to get the texture, roll and speed they want.
The courses that we visited were a combination of public, resort and one private course. Again, that was in 2008-9. My take is that zoysia is fine for public and maybe even resort play but unless someone can crack the code and get speeds, tecture and ball roll considerably improved, I'm skeptical as to how private club golfers will receive them as a quality putting surface.