This article presents a subjective ranking of seven golf courses in and around Augusta, Georgia, by a golf writer, prioritizing accessibility. The list includes renowned courses like Augusta National and lesser-known gems.
The article compares the Augusta area's golfing scene to other renowned golfing locations like Philadelphia, New York, and Chicago. It notes that Augusta is a strong contender but might not have the same depth of top-tier courses as these cities. The writer quotes a golf course architectâs view who highlights the strong top 3-4 courses in Augusta but lacks a deeper bench of high-quality courses.
The article emphasizes the accessibility of Aiken Golf Club, highlighting its public nature and affordable green fees. It contrasts this with the exclusive nature of other courses like Augusta National, drawing attention to the contrast in playability for the public.
AUGUSTA, Ga. â Earlier this year, partly for my own amusement and more so for those who still read books, I cooked up a list of some of my favorite courses in and around Augusta. I listed them in terms of their accessibility, from most difficult to least difficult. I didnât quite know what to do with Augustaâs six-hole First Tee course, chiefly because itâs a six-hole course. A solid one at that. Anyway, hereâs how the list shook out:
1. Augusta National. Have played it a handful of times. Good course. What they donât tell you in any on Golf Channel or elsewhere is that there is no grass under your ball. So unless you have some Seve in you, good night and good luck.
2. Augusta Country Club. Old Old-South course. Hugely fun and playable (one ball should do) and now, post Helene, you can see the roof of the Augusta National clubhouse from the Country Clubâs halfway house. Same piece of land, really, both courses running down to Raeâs Creek.
3. Palmetto Golf Club. In Aiken, S.C., across the Savannah River from Augusta and an easy half-hour drive away. Private, cozy club with a patrician past and a hot-dog steamer for your midround calorie needs. After a heavy rain, ancient golf balls rise from its turf. The course heaves and hos and celebrates scruffiness as an enduring value in traditional course maintenance.
4. West Lake Country Club. A housing development course off Furys Ferry Road on the outskirts of town and almost in the country. Not a memorable course but one a lot of us (golf bums posing as writers) have played often over the years, courtesy of Masters-week house rentals.
5. Forest Hills Golf Club. In Augusta, owned and operated by Augusta University, some of it very Donald Rossy (with a few holes that would leave D. Ross scratching his head right through his woolen cap). The trademark of Georgia golf is an elevated tee, a swale, an elevated green; pine needles; tall pines. As Ross, in his save-some-ink way, used to say, FH gotz.
6. Aiken Golf Club. I should point out that the counter people wonât let me pay a green fee here, which is kind but robs me of the chance to fork over $30, cash money, and get change. The green fee is $28, after 1 p.m., hoofing. As the song goes, afternoon golf on a public course, bag on back, is where itâs at. One of my post-Masters Monday plays. Not even 5,800 yards with unreachable par-3s and double greens. Straight outta Scotland.
7. Augusta Municipal Golf Course, aka The Patch. If you have never played it, youâll be playing a new course when you do. Hurricane Helene last year felled well more than 1,000 trees and the course has been closed since Jan. 1, not because of the storm damage but because of an overhaul the course is getting, courtesy of some well-intentioned golf-minded philanthropists with ties to Augusta National. The old Patch was baked and tilted and odd, but also huge fun. The new Patch will be different. Whether it is better is another question. When it comes to golf courses, as is the case in other aspects of life, better is in the eye of the beholder.
But most any beholder would consider Palmetto, Augusta Country Club and Augusta National to be memorable, outstanding courses. If youâre way into golf-course architecture, or just playing golf, your life will be richer for having played these courses. (Especially â fill in the blank.) Three in one place (pretty much) is something. Iâm not saying greater Augusta is, as golfing mecca, Philadelphia (my longtime home) or New York (born and raised) or Chicago (engaged there), but it has a heavy-duty golf magnet. Ben Crenshaw will tell you that. So will Rees Jones, the architect son of the architect Robert Trent Jones. Herbert Warren Wind wrote about how Bobby Jones was drawn to Augusta for golf long before there was an Augusta National.
In 1989, I asked Crenshaw (who had one Masters victory then), Trent Jones (who deserves more credit for Augusta Nationalâs strategic use of water through the back nine) and Wind (who came up with the phrase Amen Corner) to name the three great golf capitals of the United States. Crenshawâs list went New York, Philadelphia, Chicago. Trent Jonesâs order was Philadelphia, New York, Chicago. And Windâs ranking was Chicago, Philadelphia, New York. I donât recall Augusta coming up in these conversations, which took place a few weeks after the â89 Masters.
Recently, I posed a similar question to Gil Hanse: What would he consider the great American golf capitals?
âPhiladelphia, New York, Chicago, San Francisco,â he said. Gil, who lives in the semi-rural Philadelphia suburbs, said of our adopted home, âPhiladelphia has two of the all-time greats and a very deep bench. Pound for pound, in the tightest area, the best!â Pine Valley and Merion, of course.
If Augusta National looks like itâs missing something this year, it is By: Michael BambergerFrom there, Hanse went to New York: âArguably the best lineup but penalty points for being spread out over a large geographical area.â Yes. National Golf Links, on Long Island, to Quaker Ridge, in Westchester County, can take three hours, given the moods of the Long Island Expressway.
And then, Chicago: âLike Philadelphia, two all-timers at the top but the bench is not as strong.â Iâm quite sure Chicago G.C. is at the top of his list. When I find out his No. 2, I will update ya! Could be Medinah. More likely Shoreacres.
Finally, batting fourth, San Francisco:
âTalk about a compact center of gravity â the stretch from Cal Club to Harding Park and the other courses in between, more if you grab Meadow Club to the north and Pasatiempo to the south.â The San Francisco Golf Club and the two courses at Olympic are in this fertile stretch, of course.
I asked Gil about greater Augusta and whether it deserved consideration and this is what he said:
âI thought about it, but it is really only three or four deep. Augusta National, Palmetto, Old Barnwell and Tree Farm. Not much else that would sniff the other citiesâ Top 10s, in my humble opinion.â
I havenât played Old Barnwell or Tree Farm. It would be impossible for me to leave Augusta Country Club off this list. As for the Aiken Golf Club course, Iâm not saying itâs world-class in the conventional sense. But it is public, inexpensive and fun.
Some years ago, late in his life and on assignment for Golf Digest, George Plimpton poked around the Masters. He stumbled into a green-coated Augusta National member sitting in a green golf cart and asked, âHow do you get into this nice club?â
Hereâs how Plimpton described the exchange: âFor an instant, he looked into what I believe is called the middle distance. And then he said, âThere are some application blanks up there at the clubhouse,â and he drove off.â
So, thereâs that. Thereâs a lot of that, all through American golf. Every last course in Scotland has tee times for the public.
Aiken G.C. follows suit. If you want to play there, you just call the shop and see when the first tee is open. Most late afternoons are good.
Oh, this in from Gil Hanse, regarding his top two Chicago courses: It is Chicago G.C. over Shoreacres, by a nose.
âReally more like 1 and 1A and very close, in my book,â he said.
Michael Bamberger welcomes your comments at Michael.Bamberger@Golf.com
Golf.com Contributor
Michael Bamberger writes for GOLF Magazine and GOLF.com. Before that, he spent nearly 23 years as senior writer for Sports Illustrated. After college, he worked as a newspaper reporter, first for the (Marthaâs) Vineyard Gazette, later for The Philadelphia Inquirer. He has written a variety of books about golf and other subjects, the most recent of which is The Second Life of Tiger Woods. His magazine work has been featured in multiple editions of The Best American Sports Writing. He holds a U.S. patent on The E-Club, a utility golf club. In 2016, he was given the Donald Ross Award by the American Society of Golf Course Architects, the organizationâs highest honor.
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