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Central Arizona Peoria

Westbrook Village Vistas Golf Course

Arizona Golf AZGA Buzz: The Vistas Course, the second layout at Westbrook Village, provides a nice contrast to the original Lakes Course at Westbrook Village Golf Club. Ken Kavanaugh, a Tucson-based course architect, delivered the enjoyable links-style Vistas Course in 1990, opening roughly10 years after the Lakes Course, designed by Ted Robinson.

The Vistas Course is longer but more open, giving players the opportunity to be a little more free-wheeling in their shot selection, and perhaps take a more aggressive approach to attacking this second Westbrook Village offering.

Vistas has four sets of tees at 6,432, 6,023, 5,704 and 5,333 yards and, depending on which you choose, plays to par 73 or 72. It is rated at 70.0 with a slope of 120, which indicates that it is slightly easier than the Lakes layout.

The signature hole is the fifth, a short 487-yard par 5, but with a long approach shot over a lake if you go for it in 2 shots.

The 17th, although ranked as the No. 2 handicap hole, may well be the toughest. The demons at this 529-yard par 5 are bunkers, artfully placed to grab slightly mishit shots and dash your birdie hopes.

The fully stocked pro shop, locker rooms, all-turf practice facilities and full-service restaurant make The Vistas Course a pleasant play. The onsite Links Neighborhood Grill serves up lunch and dinner, with a wide variety of menu items.

The Vistas Course, and nearby Lakes Course, are part of the Westbrook Village master-planned community for active adults that has nearly 4,000 homes and provides many facilities and amenities to residents. The courses are semi-private and offer various perks and discounts to members, but are always open to public play.

Westbrook Village residents enjoy 2 recreation centers with swimming pools, tennis, a fitness center, arts and crafts rooms, auditoriums, a library and media center, and several social clubs.

These courses also are close to baseball spring training facilities and are quite popular for fans and team personnel in the winter and spring seasons.

Categories
Central Arizona Peoria

Westbrook Village Lakes Golf Course

Arizona Golf AZGA Buzz: The Lakes Course is the original course at Westbrook Village, a semi-private club that welcomes public play and offers two distinct 18-hole championship courses.

The Lakes Course, designed by Ted Robinson, opened in 1980. The Vistas Course, a sister facility nearby, was designed by Ken Kavanaugh and opened 10 years later. They are part of the overall Westbrook Village master-planned community for active adults, which offers many facilities and amenities amidst nearly 4,000 homes.

The Lakes Course is a traditional design with mature landscape and trees accented by water hazards, bringing water into play on six holes, and strategic bunkering; it offers a nice contrast to the Vistas Course, which is more of a links-style layout.

Lakes plays to par-71 with four sets of tees at 6,366, 6,003, 5,708 and 5,333 yards, making it the shorter of the two, although it also plays a whole lot tighter. It is rated at 70.3 with a slope of 123 and has back-to-back signature holes, which make for an exciting finish to your first round here.

If, on the other hand, you’ve played here before these two golf holes torment you from the time you unload your clubs in the parking lot as one of the toughest finishing stretches in Arizona.

The 17th is a 183-yard par 3 that requires a full-carry tee shot over water and the vertical face of the retaining wall separating the green from the lake. The only run-on option here is a well played right-to-left runner; bunkers and mounding around the green complicate the execution of that shot.

The 18th demands a choice early: two shots or three to reach the green? The dogleg-right par-5 of 530 yards is certainly reachable but a two-shot plan requires flirting with the water running along the right side of the fairway and through the corner.

The green is elevated, severely tiered and fronted by the same water hazard that compromised the inside corner of the dogleg in the fairway. A front pin on this green is terrifying; short in the water’s no good, and anything above the cup is unlikely to be holed.

Play these two finishers well and life seems so good; spoil a good looking card at 17 and 18 and, well, you’ll join the tormented parking lot veterans mentioned above; it’s a big group.

The Lakes Course pro shop is well stocked, locker rooms and full practice facilities are pleasantly generous and a full-service bar and restaurant completes the package. The Sunset Bistro at the Lakes Course serves up lunch and dinner daily, with a wide variety of menu items, and Sunday breakfast.

Members here receive various playing privileges and discounts, and Westbrook Village residents have access to two recreation centers with swimming pools, tennis, a fitness center, arts and crafts rooms, auditoriums, a library and media center, and social clubs.

Categories
Central Arizona Fountain Hills Scottsdale

We-Ko-Pa Saguaro Course

We-Ko-Pa Saguaro Course – Arizona Golf Courses

If you were tasked with choosing the best piece of property in Arizona  for a pair of golf courses, the site at We-Ko-Pa Golf Club would be one of your finalists. Both courses, Cholla and Saguaro, provide native-natural terrain and boast spectacular views.

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The team of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw laid the Saguaro Course in place with their distinctively delicate hand about  five years after the Cholla Course opened for play. It made WeKoPa Golf Club “the” place to play in Arizona and with the addition of Saguaro, it still is!

One of golf’s red-hot design teams of the past decade, Coore-Crenshaw did not disappoint with their stellar effort at We-Ko-Pa Saguaro, even if a few holes did turn out rather unique, like the super-short uphill par-3 ninth and super-challenging par-4 finish at the eighteenth.

Course conditioning and incredible desert-mountain views don’t get much better than here at We-Ko-Pa and the Saguaro Course offers up an entertaining mix of of short par 4s and long par 4s right in the middle of the surrounding natural splendor.

The golf course plays firm and fast throughout so don’t be frightened by the 469-yard par-4 first hole; your tee ball is going to run forever. Just remember that’s just as true at the 336-yard par-4 second or your tee-ball will run-out and find a fairway bunker you thought you were playing short of.

The signature 14th, a 538-yard uphill par 5,  presents a different dilemma: a tempting split fairway and fantastic mountain views both vie for your attention. Here’s a tip: highly skilled players go right, the rest of us play to the left-side fairway – your choice.

The par-3 fifteenth is another favorite. The elevated tee tempers it’s 255-yard length, reducing your club selection by at least two clubs. The green complex below offers an open door for the baby-draw shot we all see ourselves playing from time to time. Go ahead and author one, the forgiving slope on the right-hand side of the green will collect those shots that stay straight.

One thing to definitely smile about is that We-Ko-Pa’s slightly shorter Saguaro Course (a little over 6,900 yards) allows walking and that’s a good thing. This is no level stroll through your local parkland muni though, you’ll be up and down through the natural arroyos that give this course it’s desert character.

wekopa-ben-crenshaw-bill-cooreTrue to form, Messrs. Coore-Crenshaw left the fairway and green sites completely natural. Or as Crenshaw spun it:

“We just kind of draped the grass over what was already there.’’

It’s the less is more, minimalist philosophy the dynamic-duo adheres to and it’s perfect for property this stunning. Another thing to like is the old-style bunkering, which undoubtedly is a Coore-Crenshaw strength. Not only are there several gaping pot bunkers on the Saguaro, there also are plenty of elongated fairway bunkers known as “furrowed brows’’ with a touch of wispy grass hanging over the edges strictly for effect.

Add it all up and Saguaro is pure, compelling golf in the desert.  Also featured are a cool, rustic half-way house that looks like it was built in the days of yesteryear, and We-Ko-Pa’s striking clubhouse – it’s first-rate and ultra-chic in a new-age Native American way.

Arizona Golf Authority AZGA “Local Hang” for We-Ko-Pa Golf Club is the club’s panoramic patio, especially if you indulge in the magnificent mahi-mahi sliders with zesty Pico de Gallo and a draught of Drop Top amber ale.  No wonder We-Ko-Pa markets the final moments of a day of golf as “good food with a view.’’

Click We-Ko-Pa Cholla Course to check out Saguaro’s sister course; these two pair for a world-class 36-hole day of Arizona golf.

Visit our Arizona Golf Course Reviews 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.

Categories
Central Arizona Fountain Hills Scottsdale

We-Ko-Pa Cholla Course

We-Ko-Pa Cholla – Arizona Golf Courses

Even though it’s often referred to as the “other course’’ at We-Ko-Pa these days, the Cholla Course is the main attraction for many players who visit this 36-hole facility, located about 20 minutes east of Scottsdale.

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Built in 2001 by Scottsdale’s own golf course architect, Scott Miller, the Cholla course tips out at 7,225 yards, but offers several, more entertaining tee boxes between there and the front tees at 5,289. Cholla is rip-roaring fun thanks to its constantly changing terrain and endless variety of risk-reward golf hole designs.

Cholla’s thrilling adventure across the native American reservation of the Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation begins at the first tee. Elevated far above the first fairway below, you can play nearly any mid to long club in your bag. Your task is to determine how much, if any, you want to cut off the nearly 90-degree, downhill, dogleg left par-4, which plays much shorter than its official 351 yards.

That’s followed up by a slight double-dog-leg par-5 that slithers its way gently uphill to a partially hidden green, and then it’s onward to the dramatic, par-3 third which glistens like an emerald green jewel dropped into this natural, arid terrain.

wekopa-cholla-scott-millerWow, whether you’re two-under or four-over after these first three fasten your seat belt because this Scott Miller thrill ride just keeps getting better all day.

Even though it’s a bit controversial,  the difficult par-5 eighth hole offers a signature “Kodak moment’’ shot into a green complex that is drop-dead gorgeous. The tee shot is launched from the highest point on the course and breaks sharply to the right and down the hill. Your second shot is the tricky one here.

The green complex in the distance is artfully tucked into a rocky box canyon, on the opposite side of a natural arroyo that bisects the fairway. A lay-up short of it leaves you a sticky, downhill, side-hill lie for your third that can be troublesome. There’s room to lay on the far side of the arroyo as well, but a solid shot is required to carry the arroyo and find it.

If that’s not enough distraction, just add the awe-inspiring backdrop beyond featuring the namesake Four Peaks mountain, pronounced “we-ko-pah’’ in the native Yavapai language. The eighth is great fun and no matter what you card here, your eye-candy appetite will be satisfied.

The back nine is just as exhilarating, with a non-stop barrage of special par-3s, risk-reward par-5s and elegant green complexes with putting surfaces that are sure to knock your golf socks off.

So how is it that the Cholla is often overlooked in favor of the Saguaro course if it’s really this much nonstop excitement?

Well, call it the Coore-Crenshaw factor, as the design team of Bill and Ben, and their “minimalist” design philosophy are pretty popular these days. But a lot of those who rate golf courses for a living recognize this first offering at We-Ko-Pa has a lot more pizazz.

We agree. If you find yourself in need of an elevator presentation for the two courses at We-Ko-Pa Golf Club use this:

“Cholla, the original course, is played through the air and Saguaro, the one Crenshaw did, is played on the ground. They may be the best onsite, sister course pairing in desert southwest, and that’s why next Saturday, I booked us for a 36-hole day!”

Arizona Golf Authority AZGA “Local Hang” for We-Ko-Pa Golf Club is the club’s panoramic patio, especially if you indulge in the magnificent mahi-mahi sliders with zesty Pico de Gallo and a draught of Drop Top amber ale.  No wonder We-Ko-Pa markets the final moments of a day of golf as “good food with a view.’’

Click We-Ko-Pa Saguaro Course to check out Cholla’s sister course; these two pair for a world-class 36-hole day of golf.

Visit our Arizona Golf Course Reviews 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.

Categories
Central Arizona Mesa

Viewpoint Golf Resort

Arizona Golf Course List – Arizona Golf Authority Golf Course Guide

Arizona Golf Course List - Viewpoint Golf Course - Arizona Golf Authority
Viewpoint Golf Course

Viewpoint golf course is part of an RV resort that happens to be the top rated in Arizona as well as in the US. It features two golf courses – a par-71 18-hole layout and a nine-hole executive, both of which were designed by Michael Rus and opened in 1996.

Both are player-friendly courses devoid of the extremes of desert-target golf and generally are well kept with tree-lined fairways and strategic bunkering. The complex is located in a golf-rich area near Usery Mountain Regional Park and offers nice views of the Superstition Mountains in the distance.

The 18-hole layout features three lakes and a winding stream that can bring water into play on 10 holes depending on the wetness of the season. It plays to par 71 and has four sets of tees that range from 4,774 to 6,324 yards with a rating of 69.2 and slope of 117 from the tips, which means there are plenty of birdie opportunities.

The course starts strong with water in play on four of the first five holes, which include par 4s of 421, 337 and 373 yards, a 174-yard par 3 and a 516-yard par 5. The ninth is a fun par 3 of 180 yards over water to a green surrounded by four bunkers, but the highlight of the round is the three-hole finish.

No. 16 is a slight dogleg left par 4 that plays at 382 yards, followed by the longest par 3 of 205 that has a stream running along the entire left side and wrapping behind the green. The finish is a 481-yard par 5 with a double dogleg that can be reached in two shots, but it’s a gamble because a large lake wraps around the left side of the green and two large bunkers guard the right side.

The executive course has two sets of men’s tees at 2,162 and 1,935 yards and plays at par 33 with an 18-hole rating of 60.7 and slope of 94. Women’s tees are set at 1,666 yards and play at par 34. It has nice variety with four par-3 and four par-4 holes and a par 5 of 484 yards.

The facility has a grass driving range and putting green and a comfortable bar-restaurant called Fat Willy’s Clubhouse Pub & Grill. Green fees are very reasonable, even during peak season.

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

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