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Marana Southern Arizona Tucson

Heritage Highlands at Dove Mountain Country Club

The Buzz: Playing Heritage Highlands, a semi-private course in the foothills north of Tucson, is like teeing it up on two different layouts because the front and back nines provide contrasting experiences, and both have plenty of appeal. Heritage Highlands, designed by regarded architect Arthur Hills, meanders through natural vegetation and up and down landscape at the base of the picturesque Tortolita Mountains in Marana – the same town that plays host annually to the World Golf Championships – Accenture Match Play Championship, featuring the top 64 players in the world rankings, at the neighboring course Ritz-Carlton course.

While the front nine flows along flatter terrain, its arroyos and desert washes provide plenty of challenges and risk-reward opportunities. The back nine takes full advantage of elevation changes and confounding breaks on the green that leave golfers asking “how?” Mountain vistas, provided by five ranges, on the inward nine are stunning and the variety Hills designed into this layout makes you stop and think about which of many is your favorite hole. There are plenty of natural desert flora, wildlife and rock outcroppings, and yet this course has a more traditional feel, and generally excellent conditions.

As a semi-private course, Heritage Highlands offers residents preferred rates and tee times and several membership options, but there is plenty of public golf available here. The course has six sets of tees, which range from 4,716 to 6,904 yards, with a rating of 72.3 and slope of 139 from the back tees. What that suggests, accurately, is that there is plenty of challenge without being overwhelming.

There are several memorable holes, highlighted by these four: No. 7, a 184-yard par 3, where the green slopes severely on the right side and a bunker guards the left, with a tee shot straight at the Catalina Mountains that must carry a wash nudging the front of the green.

The 10th, a 546-yard par 5 and the No. 1 handicap hole, features a three-tiered green. It is called “Second Thoughts” because, on the approach shot, you must decide whether to lay up or try to clear the bunkers that bisect the fairway in order to reach the green.

The 13th, named for the architect, is called “Arthur’s Hill,” and the par 4 plays at 359 yards. The tee shot is stimulating and intimidating, requiring accuracy on a hole with a divided fairway, and leaving an approach shot to a partially hidden green with a deep bunker guarding the right side.

No. 17, a par 3 at 223 yards, is called “Picture Perfect,” and it is exactly that with its views of the surrounding mountains and Tucson skyline. The tee shot needs to carry two washes to a shallow green protected by desert on the left and severe bunkering on the right.

Heritage Highlands also features an expansive clubhouse with an excellent restaurant, a warm patio with spectacular views and members have access to a swimming pool, fitness facilities and recreation area. This is considered one of the premier active adult communities in the state and more intimate than most others because it has just 1,297 homes in a master-planned community of 6,200 acres. It sets at an elevation of about 3,000 feet, about one third of its nine square miles is designated to remain open space and much of its perimeter is protected as preserved land.

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Marana Southern Arizona

Gallery Golf Club – South Course

The Buzz: The South Course was the second of two wonderful tracks built at the Gallery Golf Club at Dove Mountain, which has received numerous honors from national magazines for course design and for golf community living. Former U.S. Amateur champion John Fought and former British Open champion Tom Lehman teamed up to design the first course, called the North, and Fought went solo on the South. His hope was to create a layout that would complement and contrast with the original, and he clearly accomplished his goal with a course that hosted the World Golf Championships-Accenture Match Play Championship in 2007-08 and the Pacific Coast Amateur in 2009.

“In both cases, we tried to create wide playing areas so golfers don’t feel handcuffed off the tee,” Fought said. “We wanted them to be different but arguably equal so players don’t all gravitate to one or the other.”

Set in the Tortolita Mountains, in an area once inhabited by Hohokam Indians, with elevations reaching 3,000 feet, both courses offer spectacular views of the Tortolita and Catalina ranges, and the influence of the mountains creates a difficult challenge in reading greens on the South layout. A 2,400-acre preserve along the south side heightens the feeling of seclusion offered by pure golf experiences, and unlike many desert layouts, it is walkable.

Five sets of tees allow the course to play from 5,215 to 7,468 yards, with a rating of 74.5 and slope of 145 from the back tees, and Fought added another distinct touch with those. Instead of simply placing them behind the other tees, he also moved them off to the side, where tee shots require longer forced carries.

Fought has always admired the work of Donald Ross and spent several days with the Gallery owner at Pinehurst No. 2 studying the classic design of that U.S. Open course. It shows, as the South Course features shallow bunkers with subtle edges and slightly elevated “turtle back” greens with false fronts. The green complexes present the greatest challenge on a course that offers plenty of room in the primary landing areas off the tee. The tightly-cropped areas around the bent-grass greens allow golfers the option of hitting putts instead of chip shots from well off the putting surface.

Strategy comes into play on many holes, which is why it worked so well for the Match Play events. A couple examples are the short par 4s – the 349-yard seventh and 362-yard 12th — where tees were moved up during the competition to tempt players to try and drive the greens. No. 7 is a dogleg left and No. 12 is a dogleg right, both slightly downhill with slopes and bunkers that can lead to frustrating results for those who gamble.

The Gallery is part of the 6,200-acre master-planned Dove Mountain golf community and is a non-equity club set in an area that has a rich history of cattle ranching. Amenities include a 28,000-square foot award-winning clubhouse, five-star restaurant and state-of-the-art sports club. In addition to its basic golf membership, The Gallery also offers a one-year trial membership and property ownership is not required for club membership.

Click on the link for the Gallery Golf Club – North Course to read the Buzz on the other must play course at The Gallery.

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Marana Southern Arizona

Gallery Golf Club – North Course

The Buzz: Draped across a tip of the Tortolito Mountains with sweeping views of the High Sonoran Desert, the scenery doesn’t get much better in southern Arizona than it does right here, and neither does the quality of golf. John Fought, who won the 1977 U.S. Amateur, and Tom Lehman, who won the 1996 British Open, teamed up to create this gem, which is one of two terrific courses at The Gallery at Dove Mountain.

Fought went solo on the second course, with a contrasting design that has hosted two World Golf Championship events. Together, the two men created a course that can be diabolical at times and yet a fun challenge with a rollercoaster ride across terrain that features wide fairways, large, elevated greens, deep bunkers and some holes that never seem to end. The latter is represented by the ninth hole, a par 5 at 725 yards, and no, that’s not a typo, seven hundred and twenty-five yards from the tips.

Easing the sting ever so slightly is that it plays downhill all the way, but still requires three well-struck shots to reach the green. Adding to the challenge are 13 bunkers, including five that protect the green, along with a desert ravine and a water hazard that comes into play on the approach.

It is among several memorable holes on this layout, with another being the par-4 fifth, which plays slightly uphill at 454 yards and is tucked into a saddle on the mountain. That is apropos because it once was the setting of the T-Bench Bar Ranch, a 5,000-square-foot cattle operation, where the family’s stone well, dating to the early 1900s, remains.

Highlights of the back nine include the 15th and 16th holes. No. 15 is a par 3 at 198 yards with a wonderful shot down a rock-encrusted hill to double greens, which offer distinctly different challenges created by strategic bunkering. The 16th is a par 5 downhill dogleg at 550 yards that wraps around the side of a lake to a triple-tiered green. The variety of holes and challenges are excellent on this course, which has four sets of tees that can be played in eight combinations, ranging from 5,261 to 7,384 yards. From the tips, it is rated at 74.0 with a slope of 142.

The clubhouse here, which covers 28,000 square feet and has touches of Frank Lloyd Wright built in, is nearly as dazzling as the course. It doubles as an art gallery with more than 100 gallery-quality works from around the world, and has an award-winning restaurant with wonderful views, décor and cuisine. Gallery members also enjoy a state-of-the-art sports club and other amenities. This is a private, non-equity club that offers several memberships, including a one-year trial membership for prospective members. Property ownership is not required for membership.

Click on the link and read the Arizona Golf Authority review of the Gallery Golf Club – South Course, host of 2 World World Match Play events.

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Marana Southern Arizona Tucson

Ritz-Carlton Golf Club at Dove Mountain

Arizona Golf Courses – Ritz-Carlton Golf Club at Dove Mountain
“Jack is Back.” Only 10 years separated Jack’s last two Masters’ victories, but over 25 have passed since Mr. Nicklaus built a golf course in the Tucson locale. Savor a round at the Dove Mountain Ritz-Carlton Golf Club and we expect you’ll agree, it was certainly worth the wait.

Arizona Golf Course List - Dove Mountain Ritz-Carlton Golf Course - Arizona Golf Authority
Dove Mountain Ritz-Carlton – Tortolita Golf Course

You will recognize the Saguaro-9 and the Tortolita-9 as the 7,849-yard 18-hole host venue for the Accenture Match Play Championship televised each February. The Wild Burro-9 completes Dove Mountain’s 27-hole offering and it may be the best of the 3, so don’t skip it.

This harsh Sonoran Desert setting, artfully adorned with the elegant ribbons of manicured golf course turf which televise so well, is genuinely stunning in person. The Tortolita Mountains provide a gentle enclosure from the east, while the vistas to the west from the course’s 3000 foot elevation seem to go on forever. The 3-nines are Nicklaus Signature Design golf at its best. Generous fairways beckon your tee ball among vast expanses of native desert washes and stands of sentinel saguaro cacti.

These are second shot golf courses and the greens are the most formidable line of defense here. Elevated and contoured is the norm, with penalizing run-off areas for the imprecise approach shot. Unless you are a truly skilled player, choose a comfortable tee marker and play your second shots to these inviting targets with enough loft to enjoy holding them; you will be rewarded.

Our take on the raging debate regarding the dramatic undulation Jack built into the greens? They are great fun and they will teach avid amateur players an important lesson.

Mr Nicklaus, perhaps the finest clutch-putter of all time, came back, took a look around and revised them once. The lesson is this; if you’re putting from over there where your ball shouldn’t be instead of over here where the pin is, be quiet, accept your 3-putt, and next time, play a better approach shot.

Visit our Arizona Golf Course Directory List and read the AZGA Player’s Review for every golf course in Arizona at http://www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory/.

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