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Central Arizona Litchfield Park

Wigwam Golf Resort – Heritage Course

Heritage Course – Wigwam Golf Resort: The Patriot and Gold courses at the Wigwam Golf Resort have more name recognition, as they were designed by the legendary Robert Trent Jones Sr., but the Heritage (formerly called the Red Course) remains the favorite of members and local golfers, annually receiving the most play of the three.

It was designed, appropriately, by Robert “Red” Lawrence, who set the standard for desert golf design as we know it today when he created famed Desert Forest in Carefree. “The Desert Fox” as Red would become known, worked his magic with the Heritage Course, a more traditional design with a neat blend of mature trees, wide fairways, large greens, streams, canals and ponds that bring water into play on 10 holes.

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The Heritage Course at The Wigwam Resort

Built in 1972, it plays to par 72 at 6,865 yards from the back tees. Some have always called it the  “The Heritage Course” and like the Jones designs, features several memorable holes, including one very tough finishing stretch. Many of its large undulating greens are sloped toward the front, creating challenges on approach shots.

The back nine builds to a tough, dramatic finish after starting with a pair of relatively tame par-4 holes at 373 and 378 yards and a 148-yard par-3. Birdies become far more difficult in the closing stretch, starting with a 414-yard par-4 at No. 15. Next up is a par-4 at 454 yards with a left dogleg and an approach shot to an elevated, well-bunkered green with water on the right and back.

Don’t relax yet because 17 is a treacherous par-3 at 254 yards with trees, a bunker on the right side and a canal running the length of the left side. Take it home with a 591-yard monster, where the ideal tee shot is to the right on a left dogleg, the second shot must avoid two lakes connected by a narrow stream, and the green is guarded by trees on both sides with a canal running along the left side.

Afterward you can relax and dine at Wigwam’s patio, which overlooks the Gold and Patriot courses and other facilities. The Wigwam is the only golf resort in the West Valley and the only one in the state to offer three championship courses.

The resort, which opened in 1929, was purchased late in 2009 by a group that includes Valley sports mogul Jerry Colangelo, a former owner of the Phoenix Suns and Arizona Diamondbacks. Along with the courses, the resort features 331 guest casitas (each with a secluded patio or balcony), and 72 suites, set among 450 acres of landscaped gardens, towering palm walkways and citrus tree-lined enclaves.

Other facilities include three restaurants, three lounges, two swimming pools, nine tennis courts, a health club, full-service spa, two Jacuzzis, bicycles, business center, beauty salon, massage and special children’s programs. It also has a “Village Green” area, which was built in 2005 near the driving range with a two-acre putting green, garden, fire pits and wine bar where guests gather to relax under the stars and try their hand at a little “night putting.”

To read “The Buzz” on Wigwam’s Patriot Course, please click here.

To read “The Buzz” on Wigwam’s Gold Course, please click here.

Read the Arizona Golf Course Review for every golf course in Arizona at www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory/.

It’s “All Things Arizona Golf” from the Arizona Golf Authority.

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Central Arizona Litchfield Park

Wigwam Golf Resort – Gold Course

Gold Course – Wigwam Golf Resort: Three championship golf courses on-site make the Wigwam Golf Resort the most unique golf resort in Arizona, and the Gold Course is the signature layout here; locals call it “The Monster.”

Designed by the legendary Robert Trent Jones Sr., the course sits on the site of the original Goodyear Farms, built in 1918 as a retreat for visiting executives from the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company.

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Wigwam Gold Course – Hole No. 17

The resort opened to the public in 1929 and its first nine holes are believed to have been built around 1930 by an unknown maintenance worker, using only a tractor. Another nine holes were added later and Jones was hired in ’64 to create a 36-hole complex, which became the Gold and Patriot courses.

Jones designed more than 500 courses in his storied career and had a hand in creating gems like Augusta National, Oakland Hills, Southern Hills, Oak Hill and Congressional. He was hired by the Wigwam after Goodyear took notice that Jones had designed Firestone Country Club, owned by its chief competitor, and that the course was drawing rave reviews.

Part of the Gold Course was redesigned during a $5 million renovation project headed by architect and design historian Forrest Richardson in 2005, and now plays to par 72 at 7,315 yards from the “monster” tees with a rating of 74.5 and slope of 135. Even though it’s a parkland-style layout, “The Monster” is definitely not a walk in the park.

“Mr. Jones’ philosophy was that every hole should be a hard par but an easy bogey,” Richardson said when he started the renovation. “That’s what he created here, and that’s what we’re going to retain because everything we’re doing is in the spirit of his designs.”

This particular design hits you between the eyes by the time you reach the fourth hole, a 645-yard beast that requires both strength and patience. If that doesn’t wear you out, wait until you make the turn and get a taste of the 630-yard tenth that features a bunker roughly the size of Mission Beach running down the right side, three towering palm trees in your way (including one in that bunker) and a pond partially blocking the path to a tucked-away green. Do yourself a favor, play for bogey and be thrilled if you pull it off.

Then prepare for the tough finishing stretch, enhanced by Richardson’s re-design of the 18th hole, where he fixed the one weak link in the chain of this otherwise brilliant layout. The 16th is a 174-yard par-3 to a split-level green, and No. 17 is a testy 422-yard par-4 to a narrow green, approached across a pond.

The new 18th, a 440-yard par-4, is now one of the toughest finishing holes in Arizona. To start, you face a diagonal tee shot across water. The left side provides a better angle to the green but there is a narrow canal, which was created decades ago as an irrigation source for crops, running along the edge of the fairway. There’s plenty of room on the right, but if you take that route, your approach shot must clear a deep, massive bunker and stop on a shallow green with that same canal wrapping up to the left edge. You want a make-or-break for a finishing hole? It doesn’t get much better than this.

The Wigwam is the only Arizona resort with three championship courses to choose from, and if you like golf, you’re going to love The Wigwam.

To read “The Buzz” on Wigwam’s Patriot Course, please click here.

To read “The Buzz” on Wigwam’s Heritage Course, please click here.

Read the Arizona Golf Course Review for every golf course in Arizona at www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory/.

It’s “All Things Arizona Golf” from the Arizona Golf Authority.

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Central Arizona Litchfield Park

Wigwam Golf Resort – Patriot Course

Patriot Course – Wigwam Golf Resort: History abounds at the Patriot (formerly Blue) Course, which was designed by the legendary Robert Trent Jones Sr. on the site of the original course created as a retreat for Goodyear Tire executives in the 1930s. It is one of three championship courses at Wigwam Resort, making it the only resort in the state with that distinction, and definitely is the most quirky of the trio. Jones’ trademarks include elongated tee boxes, elevated greens with subtle putting surfaces and strategic bunkers and water hazards, and all are in play here.

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Wigwam Patriot Course Island Green

Forrest Richardson, a Phoenix course architect and design historian, who oversaw a renovation of the Gold and Patriot courses in 2005, did his best to keep that intact, even though he had to re-create the last five holes to add practice facilities and accommodate other changes to the overall golf complex.

“We have so few of these great old parkland style courses in the Phoenix area, which are so refreshing to play,” Richardson said. “Our goal was not to redefine that experience, but to re-create it.” Preserving history also was part of the overall plan at a resort whose golf guests over the years have included Paul Newman, Robert Mitchum, Mickey Mantle, Joe DiMaggio, Joe Namath and former President Gerald R. Ford.

If they enjoyed exciting golf, this was the right place because the Patriot Course is a combination of character and contradiction, sporty and subtle, aggravating and invigorating. It is a shotmaker’s course that plays to par 70 at just 6,000 yards from the tips, although Jones’ hallmark array of deep, perilous bunkers, water hazards and doglegs might make it seem exceedingly longer. Water hazards on seven holes add to the challenge and the aesthetics of the Patriot Course.

The back nine, in particular, is loaded with fun. Starting at No. 11 (after a 492-yard par-5), you will face five holes at 330 yards or shorter from the back tees. Think drivable, but be careful in the attempt.

Next up is the par-3 15th with its island green, a design feature used by Jones as early as the 1930s, faced by a stone wall.  No. 16, a short par-4, demands a carry over a canal off the tee and an approach to a well-bunkered green. The 17th, another par-3 at 144 yards, was created by Richardson to mirror the famous 16th hole designed by Jones at Augusta National Golf Club, home of the Masters tournament. No. 18 is the longest par-4 on the course at 464 yards, made even more difficult by mounds and bunkers.

Beyond the golf experience, Wigwam offers an array of first-class amenities (click the Wigwam Heritage Course description for details) and much of its luster has been restored in recent years. The history has been preserved, yet it offers modern-day comfort, dining and amenities that add up to an uncommon overall experience in a location where you might not expect to find it.

To read “The Buzz” on Wigwam’s Gold Course, please click here.

To read “The Buzz” on Wigwam’s Heritage Course, please click here.

Read the Arizona Golf Course Review for every golf course in Arizona at www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory/.

It’s “All Things Arizona Golf” from the Arizona Golf Authority.

Categories
Central Arizona Litchfield Park

Falcon Golf Club

AZGA Arizona Golf Buzz: If you don’t mind a free air show with your golf, then Falcon Golf Club is one course to consider, located just west of downtown Phoenix. The course, not to be confused with the nearby US military course, Falcon Dunes Golf Course, is nestled near the Estrella and White Tank mountains and just south of Luke Air Force Base.That’s where the F-16 Fighting Falcons perform daily maneuvers high above the Arizona desert with formations that might leave you singing “Highway to the Danger Zone” while you grip and rip it.

Falcon Golf Club

Falcon Golf Club  is an enjoyable layout that plays to par 71 at 6,733 yards from the back tees. It opened in 1997 and struggled in early years with logjams because of the opening hole configuration, but that was corrected in 2007 when the course swapped the front and back nines and rearranged the order of some individual holes.

“I’ve been here for eight years and I can tell you that those changes made a big difference in how the course flows,” course manager Chuck Dixon said. “I think our golfers enjoy the fact that it’s a very fair test, it’s walkable, it’s not tricked up, but it’s still a pretty good test for mid- to high-handicappers.”

The course was one of the early designs by Brian Curley when he was with Landmark Designs. He later joined with Lee Schmidt in a design firm that is considered one of the most innovative in the world and has partnered with the likes of Pete Dye, Jack Nicklaus and Fred Couples in creating courses in the U.S. and Asia.

With its new configuration, Falcon presents a more traditional, parkland style on the front nine and a target-desert feel on the back, with mountain backdrops adding visual appeal to several holes. It offers a nice variety with some “reachable” par-5 holes and others that require three shots to reach the greens, and par-4s that range from 362-464 yards.

There are just three par-3 holes, but two of them might be the most memorable holes on the course and they happen to be Nos. 9 and 18. The ninth, which formerly played as the sixth, is 218 yards with water running along the right side, requiring a partial carry, and bunkers guarding the green.

The 18th, formerly the 15th, is considered to be the signature hole and plays at 225 yards from the tips with a water hazard running down the right side and two bunkers each on the front right and left of the green. The same water hazard also is on play on the 17th, a 537-yard par-5 with a demanding approach shot to the green.

The clubhouse is small with a basic snack bar, but Falcon offers a full practice facility with an expansive range, putting and chipping areas. It’s not a country club or resort golf experience, but open fairways, medium-sized greens, good conditioning and pricing make this a popular course and one of the better values in the Phoenix area.

AZGA Arizona Golf Authority “Local Hang” for Falcon Golf Club includes Max’s Sports Bar, just south of Glendale Avenue on 47th Ave.