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Central Arizona Rio Verde

Tonto Verde Golf Club

Tonto Verde Golf Club – Peaks Course / Ranch Course
Tonto Verde Golf Club is the centerpiece of the private golf community of the same name, located just 15 miles east of Scottsdale in Rio Verde, Arizona. Instead of concrete freeways and skyscrapers, this upscale property is perched high above the Verde River Valley and is surrounded by the native desert splendor of the adjacent Tonto National Forest.

Arizona Golf Course Reviews - Tonto Verde Golf Club - Arizona Golf Authority
View of Four Peaks from the Tonto Verde Golf Club

Tonto Verde may translate from Spanish as “green fool,” but “green with envy” is a better description of golfers who have seen the property’s spectacular 360-degree mountain vistas and enjoyed the first-class clubhouse, elegant country club amenities and two semi-private championship golf courses.

That’s right, each day Tonto Verde Golf Club reserves one course for membership play and welcomes public play on the other. It’s an open invitation worth accepting too.

The Peaks Course, which opened for play in 1993, is the original layout at Tonto Verde and is one of the last layouts built by the highly respected Gary Panks and David Graham design team. Its namesake, Four Peaks, is the distinctive mountain formation to the east, across the Verde River Valley, distracting your attention all day.

The Peaks is the shorter of the two courses, and a bit tighter, placing a greater premium on accuracy. You’ll be treated to gently rolling fairways laid across the arid desert canvas and well-manicured bentgrass putting surfaces that are subtly contoured; a perfect match for their smallish size.

Arizona Golf Course Reviews - Tonto Verde Golf Club - Arizona Golf Authority
Peaks Course 351-Yard Par-4 Fifth Hole

The Peaks plays to par 72 at 6,737 yards from the back tees and man-made lakes come into play on three holes, particularly the fifth, which is the signature hole. This par-4 plays at just 351 yards and water threatens both sides of the fairway. The approach shot to a two-tiered green is complicated by water as well. The fifth is also the shortest par-4, the only one under 400 yards from the tips, on the front nine.

The back nine features a delightful par-4 at the 13th which is drivable for big hitters, at just 305 yards from the back tees. As is customary, the desert terrain presents a formidable hazard here and we see a lot more lay-up tee shot one-putt birdies than big-drive eagles or two-putt birdies, combined.

The Ranch Course was added in 1999 with Gary Panks going solo on the design here. Mr. Panks knows his way around the difficult issue of artfully pairing two contrasting golf courses. He made the 6,988-yard Ranch Course a tad longer, but a bit more forgiving, particularly in the fairway landing areas. The Ranch Course’s larger greens will help your G.I.R. statistics as well.

Named after the Box Bar Ranch, which began operation on these lands in 1919, the Ranch Course features one of the best finishing stretches in the Scottsdale / Phoenix locale.

It begins at the devilish 14th, the shortest par-4 on the course at 317 yards from the back tees (just 276 from the middle tees). The classic risk-reward hole tempts you to go for it, but a ball-grabbing brook haunts the entire right side of the fairway and multi-fingered bunkers threaten both the lay-up tee shot and the contoured green.

Arizona Golf Course Reviews - Tonto Verde Golf Club - Arizona Golf Authority
Ranch Course 202-Yard Par-3 15th Hole

The 15th is a tough, but fair 202-yard par-3. Water and bunkers hug the entire right side of the green, while the left side is wide open. Just relax and play it smart here.

Set up on the left side of the green and play the fade. If the shot drifts right as intended, you’ll have a fair birdie putt; if it stays straight, you’ll have a low-stress chance to get it up and in for par.

The straightaway par-4 16th demands two proper golf shots to reach the green. Playing 430 yards from the tips, they must be solid and well-executed. But out of respect for the hole’s length, you won’t find a single fairway or greenside bunker here, just a desert arroyo crossing the fairway about 40 yards short of the green.

Arizona Golf Course Reviews - Tonto Verde Golf Club - Arizona Golf Authority
Ranch Course 531-Yard Par-5 17th Hole

Then comes the entertaining par-5 17th, another risk-reward hole that plays to 531 yards from the back tees, but just 484 from the middle tees. The landing area is plentiful, and hugging the left side will allow you to go for the green in two shots, but the approach must carry over desert landscape. The safe play, away from cacti and desert creatures, is to lay-up in the second island of fairway Panks provided. It’s just a short iron to the island green-complex from there.

The 437-yard par-4 18th is a strong finishing hole that’s all about making sure you carry your tee ball over the desert transition area between your tee box and the wide, generous fairway. Bunkers guard both sides at the front of the green so club yourself to the middle yardage, no matter where the pin is cut.

Both Tonto Verde courses offer five sets of tees, as well as two additional “combo-tee” setups. So no matter what yardage you’re comfortable playing from, you’ll find one of these seven course yardage setups is just right for you.

The AZGA “Local Hang” for Tonto Verde is the luxurious 26,000-square foot clubhouse with exceptional dining and banquet facilities, a fitness center, swimming pool, spa, activity rooms and library.

And if you have bets to settle, head over to the 18-hole all-turf putting course Panks also designed. It’s a great way to play 36 and soak up a bit more of the scenic splendor served up by Tonto Verde Golf Club.

Click on our Arizona Golf Course Reviews and read the AZGA player review for every golf course in Arizona. It’s “All Things Arizona Golf” from the Arizona Golf Authority.

Categories
Cave Creek Central Arizona

Tatum Ranch Golf Club

Arizona Golf Courses – Arizona Golf Authority Golf Course Reviews

Designed by highly-regarded architect Bob Cupp, Tatum Ranch Golf Club opened in 1986 as a public facility but was converted to a private club in 2002 after the multi-million dollar clubhouse, complete with a swimming pool, and other enticing amenities were added.

Tatum Ranch Golf Club - #7 348-Yard Par-4

The championship layout features rolling fairways, strategic bunkering, greens that are large and undulating and plenty of native cacti, mesquite and palo verde trees. While making your loop, you’re treated to some nice views of the surrounding mountain landscape prevalent in this part of the Cave Creek/North Scottsdale area.

Despite the visually-intimidating desert transitions, Tatum Ranch is a player-friendly layout that is very accommodating to golfers of all abilities due to the generous landing areas off the tees. And with seven sets of tees, golfers are able to bite off just as much as they wish to chew that day. From the tips, the par-72 plays at 6,856 yards with a rating of 72.7 and slope of 135 and will test any skilled player’s game. The front tees are set at 5,081 yards.

The signature hole is the seventh, which happens to be the only hole where water is in play. The short, 348-yard par-4 features a lake running along the entire right side of the fairway to threaten the tee shot. The short second-shot approach is over the lake to a contoured, elevated green complex that hugs the water’s edge. It’s all about accuracy and ball control for birdie here.

Highlights on the back nine include two par-4s, the short 12th and the 18th finisher. No. 12 is drivable for big hitters at just 305 yards from the back tee, but it’s a risk-reward proposition. Mounding hides the green from the tee, and the green pitches away from you as well. A lot more birdies result from a lay-up in the left side of the fairway and a well struck wedge approach shot.

No. 18 can be a brute of a finish at 467 yards, with a slight dogleg left. Fairway bunkers pinch the fairway in the landing area and the enormous green runs away from the player; three front bunkers gobble up any second shot that comes up short, one behind grabs everything long. Par here deserves a well-earned reward in the elegant clubhouse libation area.

Tatum Ranch Golf Club offers complete practice facilities and professional instruction. The Club’s members enjoy all the amenities including casual and fine dining, fitness center, swimming pool and private locker rooms, all of which are available via a well designed variety of affordable membership programs.

Read the Arizona Golf Course List AZGA Player’s 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 Scottsdale

Talking Stick Golf Club – North & South Courses

Arizona Golf Course Buzz – Arizona Golf Authority Golf Course Guide:

Ben Crenshaw and Bill Coore built two terrific layouts for the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community at Talking Stick Golf Club. Due to their location on the reservation, water is plentiful and course conditions are lush and manicured.

The South Course is the pure application of a traditional golf course upon desert land; wide and tree-lined all-turf fairways with rough extend from tee to green. The fairways are routed around bunkers, in the traditional locations, and deliver you to raised and bunkered green complexes. No forced carries over desert or pond here, but to achieve par 71 on the 6,833-yard South Course you might consider a few.

Arizona Golf Course Guide List Directory - Talking Stick Golf Course - Arizona Golf Authority Arizona Golf Course Reviews
Talking Stick Golf Course

Messrs Crenshaw and Coore created an entirely different experience at the North Course. It’s the same piece of property, same designers, but a completely different type of golf.

The 7,133-yard par 70 North course approximates links golf in the desert. The course is mown tight and the ball runs all over the subtle contours built into the fairways. Don’t be surprised when you find your ball in a bunker you thought you couldn’t reach, or appeared to be nowhere near the spot you landed your ball. The greens take subtle to an even higher level. As your putt loses speed approaching the hole and drifts left or right, just enough to miss, you’ll realize that you need to look a little closer at that next “straight” putt.

Play them both, more that once if you have time, and revel in the rich contrast we so often find in the game called golf.

Categories
Central Arizona Fountain Hills

SunRidge Canyon Golf Club

SunRidge Canyon Golf Club – Arizona Golf Courses: “Stunning” is a word perhaps used too often when describing golf courses, but according to one of its designers, Keith Foster, it fits SunRidge Canyon Golf Club to a tee.

Its rugged setting, deep within rock-faced canyons and weather-worn ravines, provides an elegant contrast to the manicured playing surfaces contained therein.

sunridge-canyon-golf-1

Together with the famous Arizona “go-on-forever” sweeping mountain vistas which reveal themselves throughout the round, SunRidge Canyon is a day well spent, no matter what your scorecard totals.

Constructed in 1995, SunRidge Canyon was purchased in December 2010 by part-time Fountain Hills residents Don and Cindy Misheff. Their local, hands-on stewardship keeps SunRidge Canyon on the leading edge of the premier daily-fee “member for a day” golf club offerings available in the metro area – its Fountain Hills location makes it convenient too.

Designed by Keith Foster, a devout minimalist before it was popular, SunRidge Canyon displays all the best features the philosophy “less is more” offers.

Instead of a grabbing a bulldozer, Foster laid his work on the canvas Mother Nature provided, relying on the magical effects her wind, water and relentless tectonic pressure worked on the picturesque McDowell Mountains. What she and her disciple created is a par-71 layout that tips out at 6,823 yards from the back tees; 5,193 from the front.

Before you let that yardage start you salivating, be advised: level lies in fairways will be few and straight, flat putts won’t be found.

Your SunRidge journey begins at the high end of one of its rugged canyons and gradually descends through the front nine, offering excellent views of Four Peaks and the Mazatzal Mountains to the east. As you make the turn, you begin a gradual climb to a thrilling string of finishing holes, dubbed the “Wicked Six”, that are among the best golf experiences in Arizona – for players and photographers alike.

We say the highlights of the front nine are the first and the seventh – both reward elegance over brawn. The first, a 318-yard par-4, let’s you pair two comfortable clubs for your first two shots of the day: fairway metal and wedge, five iron and seven iron, driver and putter. Any two solid, accurate shots will do.

At the picturesque, par-4 seventh, 373 yards requires the same artful pairing of tee ball and second shot clubs, although driver and putter won’t be an option.

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SunRidge Canyon Golf Club par-3 14th

The entire backside is an uphill thrill-ride that doesn’t end until you reach the clubhouse. Each shot authored during your trip through the “Wicked Six” demands your careful consideration of risk exposure and potential reward.

These six holes at SunRidge Canyon are not tyrants, but rather the perfect opportunity for a player to test their ability to pick a shot and execute it.

Fairways are generous, with clearly defined landing areas, and modest forced-carries over natural desert arroyos are quite manageable – when planned for. Not so much when one chooses to believe this will be the one time out of fifty they will successfully execute their “career” shot.

Particularly entertaining are the 14th hole and the finisher. At the par-3 14th, visual intimidation is the enemy. Your challenge is to fly, bounce or run your tee ball 181 yards to the center of the green from an elevated tee. Ignore the front, left bunker and the glistening lake that wraps the entire right side of the green and you’ll be fine.

sunridge-canyon-golf-18
SunRidge Canyon Golf Club par-4 18th

The finishing hole is pure golf and includes one last test of your ability to judge a golf shot – playing 432 yards, uphill, it’s a handful for most.

Following a solid tee shot, pay strict attention to what’s staring you in the face: an uphill second to a front-bunkered green complex perched above a natural desert arroyo, that most days plays directly into the prevailing breeze.

Here’s the bottom line regarding club selection for the shot: add two clubs, minimum.  It’s a whole lot more fun to finish your round saving par from behind this green than making six from short of it. For those that missed their tee shot a bit: lay-up short of the arroyo – it’s a manageable up and in from there.

SunRidge Canyon’s practice facilities are first rate and feature the Jim McClean Golf School onsite. Expert club fitters from Hot Stix are here as well so any student of the game will find everything they’re looking for in one spot.

AZGA “Local Hang” SunRidge Canyon Golf Club –
sunridge-canyon-golf-patio-four-peaksGreat news – When the last putt drops, you’ll find your golf cart is literally parked next to the Wicked Six Bar & Grill. Rest assured, regardless of what scores you’ve posted so far, everyone cards a few birdies here.

You’ll find a full compliment of food and libation options that play right through the bag – from breakfast and lunch, through post-round drinks and apps, to an entertaining, full evening dining experience. An engaging staff delivers “expressive” dishes, in both taste and presentation, that amps up the great golf experience you’ve just enjoyed.

SunRidge Canyon’s indoor-outdoor patio facilities remain unrivaled as the place to savor the day’s fun amid striking views of the golf course and the locale’s namesake mountain, Four Peaks, in the distance.

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 Scottsdale

Starfire Golf Club

starfire-golf-club-king-8-photoThe Buzz: With its name, location and the legendary Arnold Palmer as designer, Starfire Golf Club might appear to be one of those ultra-exclusive and dazzling golf experiences that Scottsdale is famous for, at a rate you didn’t expect to find. But in a way, it’s even better than that.

Starfire is a lovely neighborhood golf club,  which day in and day out, can be much more appealing than the high-end North Scottsdale knock-your-socks-off golf courses. Starfire, which is managed by In Celebration of Golf, began simply as Scottsdale Country Club, an 18-hole layout in 1953, making it Scottsdale’s first course. Palmer was hired to design a new nine-hole layout, dubbed the “King” in 1988 and also re-designed the previous nines, which are named “Hawk” and “Squire.” Since then, some holes have been rearranged, giving them a better flow and allowing them to work within the available space and with a new clubhouse constructed in 2001 that was placed about 500 yards from the original clubhouse site.

The three nines are played in various combinations, and the “King” is the longest and most popular. The Starfire property is relatively flat and winds through mature eucalyptus, pine and cottonwood trees with generous fairways, medium-sized greens and, depending on the 2-nines you play, water can come into play on 13 holes. There are some nice views of the McDowell Mountains and Camelback Mountain, but this is an urban golf experience and can feel a little cramped with holes surrounded by homes and the course bordered by some of Scottsdale’s busiest roads. Those factors also limit its length, so this isn’t the place where you’re going to wear out your driver. Each course has four sets of tees and yardages from the front and back tees with each combination are: Squire/King, 6,040 and 4,362; King/Hawk, 6,098 and 4,467; Hawk/Squire 5,622 and 3,933.

Par-3 holes are the strength of the layouts, especially the eighth on King and the fifth on Squire, which are considered their signature holes. The former plays at 205 yards from the tips to a well-bunkered green surrounded by water. The latter is shorter, at 175 yards, but trickier and plays over water with bunkers on the left and a series of mounds on the right.

starfire-golf-club-squire-9-photo The Squire’s fifth starts a very nice four-hole stretch created by strategic use of water hazards. The highlight of that stretch is No. 7, which was the first hole of the original country club. The par 4 is just 324 yards and has a sunken lake in the middle of the fairway with very little grass around either side, and a fountain that shoots water high into the air. Because you can’t see the lake from the tee, it looks like a geyser coming right out of the ground.

The signature hole on Hawk may be the ninth, a narrow par 4 at 339 yards that puts a premium on accuracy off the tee and into the green. The par-4 sixth also has a neat feature with a pair of palm trees, which you must split on the approach, like a field-goal from 150-yards out. The approach shots to both the par-4 seventh and the par-3 eighth are over water.

The clubhouse is reminiscent of those popular in Palm Springs. The 19,000-square-foot facility is tastefully adorned amidst a grove of palm trees with a full-service restaurant, an outdoor terrace and a pro shop with a nice array of equipment, apparel and accessories.

Starfire offers a practice chipping area and putting green but no driving range. It is a popular course with female golfers, hosts many scramble tournaments and offers lower green fees than most of its neighboring courses. With its location near central Scottsdale, there are plenty of quality hotels and dining options in close proximity.