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The
state of Ohio has contributed a great
deal to the game of golf. It has bred
tremendous players like Renee Powell,
Jack Nicklaus and Tom Weiskopf, is
home to architects such as Michael
Hurdzan and Arthur Hills, and has
hosted memorable US Open and PGA Championships
and Ryder Cup matches. The state's
golfing legacy extends to its public-fee
courses, a diverse and accessible
lot.
The
warm air arrives a bit earlier and
departs a bit later in Ohio. Golfers
in the southern part of the state
are known to play year round, never
dodging snow flakes. A trip to the
Buckeye state doesn't replace a late-November
jaunt to Myrtle Beach or an early-March
sojourn to Florida, but it is a viable
option at any point in between.
There
is a lot of golf to be played in the
state that sits below Lake Erie, bordered
by Michigan, Indiana, Kentucky, West
Virginia and Pennsylvania. Closest
to Ontario, a mere three hours south
of the Niagara region, is the northeast
corridor that links the upper counties
to Cleveland and Columbus.
There
is affordable and challenging golf
during the 45 minute trip from the
Pennsylvania border to metro Cleveland.
It is the type of golf that provides
a nice warm-up for the main courses
found later. Our suggestion is to
stop by one of these courses on your
way down for a round to shake the
cobwebs and loosen the muscles.
Before
you get to Cleveland, there are five
courses that you should consider playing
for the championship experience. An
eastward detour takes you toward Youngstown,
with a stop at Fowler's Mill.
Beyond Fowler's Mill, just north of
Warren, is Avalon Lakes. Both
courses are early Pete Dye layouts,
with 27 holes at Fowler's Mill and
18 at Avalon Lakes. Although Lake
County, Ohio lies farther north, this
district might more deservedly bear
the name. Both courses are distinguished
by their nearly-constant access to
creeks, ponds and lakes.
Heading
back toward I-90, three courses in
the town of Painesville certainly
merit inspection. Two are accessible
for guests of the Quail Hollow
resort, meriting consideration as
a day one-and-two base of operations.
The resort brags of 36 holes designed
by Bruce Devlin/Butch von Hagge and
Tom Weiskopf/Jay Morrish. Both courses
feature the ups and downs of this
surprisingly hilly region, although
ample fairway space cushions the challenges
of the topography. Five minutes up
the road is Little Mountain Country
Club, eight years old and designed
by the Columbus Ohio firm of Hurdzan/Fry.
For Toronto area golfers, Michael
Hurdzan was responsible for the Devil's
Pulpit/Devil's Paintbrush duo north
of the city, along with the heralded
Wisconsin course Erin Hills, on the
short list of potential US Open venues.
Little Mountain offers the greatest
challenge posed to date on this journey.
Arriving
in Cleveland, the vast array of golfing
options makes it clear that the city
has shed all claims to the nickname
"mistake by the lake." In
Brian Huntley, one of its own, Cleveland
has a golf architect whose body of
work is developing into one impossible
to ignore. Although he might soon
become recognized on a national and
international level, it is in his
home region that his fame is most
easily recognized. The Quarry
(Canton), Deer Ridge (Bellville)
and Shale Creek (Medina) are
the three Huntley layouts ranked in
GolfClevelandOhio's top ten, although
Eagle Creek (Norwalk) and Links
at Firestone Farms (Columbiana)
follow close behind. First-time course
designer Joe Salemi notched a double-eagle
in his Boulder Creek layout,
located in Streetsboro. Boulder Creek
was recognized by national publications
Golf Digest and Golfweek
for its excellence.
The
trip from Cleveland to Columbus, along
I-71, takes about an hour and a half.
You'll pass Firestone in Akron,
home of the World Golf Council's Bridgestone
Invitational, won recently by Vijay
Singh. The premier course to play
between the two cities lays in Nashport,
near the Longaberger basket factory.
Highly thought-of as producers of
the nation's finest baskets, Arthur
Hills arrived in the mid-1990s to
build the acclaimed Longaberger
Golf Club. Close on its heels
is Eagle Sticks in Zanesville,
a Michael Hurdzan layout completed
to national recognition in 1990.
The
capital of Ohio might as well be known
as the capital of golf. Home to private
layouts like Muirfield Village
(the Memorial Tournament on the PGA
Tour), Scioto (Jack Nicklaus'
course as a youth) and The Golf
Club (seminal work of Pete Dye),
as well as championship public-access
tracks like Cook's Creek, Golf
Club of Dublin, Tartan East
and Phoenix Golf Links, greater
Columbus might just take a while to
explore. Cook's Creek was the maiden
design voyage of PGA Tour golfer John
Cook and his family and lies to the
south of the city. It utilizes the
rolling farmland of central Ohio to
create a course laden with undulations
and mounding. The Golf Club of Dublin
is Michael Hurdzan's Ohio tribute
to Irish courses, situated in a most-unIrish
landscape. In spite of its housing-development
locale, it truly is possible to play
GCD with a putter from tee to green.
Considering
that the driving distance between
the Pennsylvania-Ohio border and Columbus
is a mere three hours, there is an
extensive capacity for golfing memories
in the Cleveland-Columbus corridor.
High-end, mid-range and low-budget
courses are available for golfers
of all levels. Our suggestion is to
establish two bases for your trip.
Begin in the northeast area near Painseville
and play three or four of the good
ones on the trip down. Settle on a
second headquarters between Mansfield
and metro Columbus to avail yourself
of the capital district layouts. Do
not miss the Longaberger-Eagle Sticks
double east of the city. Finally,
on your trip back north, catch one
or two of the tracks that you missed
on the way down. You'll be singing
the praises of the diversity of Ohio
golf long after you return.
Best
Ohio Golf Links
www.golfclevelandohio.com
www.ohiosgolf.com
(use the "Maps" feature.)
Ronald
S. Montesano directs buffalogolfer.com,
the online guide to golf in western
New York.
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