Two courses which would not gain much love on this site, but a club which has as strong of a competitive membership as any. If you like playing golf and developing your game, i.e. if keeping score is important to you, Champions is a great club. Listening to Jackie's stories is worth the price of admission. Seeing him walking the range watching his members is really awesome. He expects his members to be serious about their game, always playing for enough money that they're not lackadaisical over a shot.
Lou:
I don't know anyone who doesn't think Jackie Burke is a great person, and Champions a great club, although your description of the club sounds like it would be torture for me.
I am curious though, if you think that the golf course in any way reflects the ethos of the club. No one on this thread has really said anything about the golf course so far, except for Ran. [And giant greens are generally not what good players ask for.]
The course was long and difficult back when that was still a thing, but there's no way it would be for scratch players now, is there?
I suspect that neither course at Champions would be to your liking. No doubt that your reputation as a fine putter would be rewarded, but CC requires solid drives for most people, preferably to the proper half of the fairway, in order to get to or close to the greens. I haven't been there for some seven years, but my recollection is that quirk and happenstance are mostly nonexistent.
The link below to the club's website contains a lot of good information. The "60 Years of Pure Golf" is of particular interest.
https://www.championsgolfclub.com/ I haven't seen Chet Williams's bunker and greens 2018 restoration, but my guess, being acquainted with his work, is that it has enhanced the playability of the course without diluting its challenge. I believe that some 100 yards were also added, so, along with typically softish conditions due to the rainy, humid climate of the area, my bet is that from the back tees it remains a long, challenging test even for the scratch golfer (I am guessing that it would receive a very high mark in Golf Digest's "Challenge"/resistance to scoring category, which is based not on the tour pro, but the club scratch golfer).
Please note that the large greens would not be that big of an issue to a scratch golfer who can control his distances to the hole with the shorter clubs. But from the back for the long hitters and the middle tees for us distance impaired, only drives on most 2 shot holes hit solidly on the sweet spot will avoid middle and long iron/woods on the approach. 60'+ putts to 11'-12' stimped, subtle greens are not easy tasks even for good putters. One would expect to hit a lot of greens there, but that hasn't been the case for me. I know I've had a much easier time on and around the greens at Harbour Town (mostly around) than at CC.