Archives for the ‘zCOURSES’ Category
Turtle Island — Hole #2: Par 4
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Turtle Island • • Leave a Comment (0)There are a couple ways to get close to this green sometimes. The natural instinct is to high tee a driver and blast away, but there’s also a ramp that you can catch to propel a straight low-teed driver 400+ yards towards the green. Give it a try sometime!
Otherwise, lay up short of the sand with your drive — use backspin to be sure to stop at the top of the hill. Here’s an example hole-out.
Turtle Island — Hole #4: Par 4
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Turtle Island • • Leave a Comment (0)Here is a 3-wood floated over the top into a back pin.
With a tough left-pin placement, here’s a great 3-wood curved into the hole.
A driver still gets over the top too — this one backspun into the hole.
Turtle Island — Hole #6: Par 5
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Turtle Island • • Leave a Comment (0)No reason not to just lay up at the end of the first fairway and bring it in from there — here’s an example driver hole-out.
However, here’s a 9-wood hole-out from the second fairway. If you lose one off the left edge, though, you may get to check out a sweet sand castle!
Turtle Island — Hole #8: Par 4
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Turtle Island • • Leave a Comment (0)Here’s a 3-wood over the top, spun back to a front pin.
This 5-wood caught a soft hop off the rocky ground in front to the hole.
Turtle Island — Hole #9: Par 5
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Turtle Island • • Leave a Comment (1)Put your drive down in the fairway close to the lava to give yourself a driver straight in over the trees on your approach — here’s an example hole-out.
If your drive comes up short and/or you need more distance because you’re around 350 out, then play a big C3 driver shot as your approach into this green. A full cut wasn’t needed here for this one to find the cup.
You may also be able to lay up out to the left in the rough to avoid the issue with the fairway neck, as seen in this example hole-out.
Even if you go long here, the rough in the back of the green is quite friendly and accommodates putts in many instances, as seen here.
Turtle Island — Hole #10: Par 4
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Turtle Island • • Leave a Comment (0)Many times you can just lay back in the first fairway and loft your approach over the tree to the green. Consider laying back to the left for a 5-wood approach if you don’t have a 7-wood or higher in the bag. Or, you can carry towards the end of the first fairway and curve an iron around to the green. This shot was way too far left, but it just kept bouncing back down and into the hole!
Or, you can drive out to the second fairway to get past the blocking trees and have a shorter approach shot instead — here’s an example hole-out from there.
And there’s an alien if you miss the green pretty badly — check out what he says if you hit him with a golf ball!
Turtle Island — Hole #11: Par 5
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Turtle Island • • Leave a Comment (0)Unless the wind will be strong in your face on the approach (and maybe even then), you can lay up straight ahead in the fairway in line with the lava pit on the left. This should leave an open driver approach into the green — here’s an example hole-out.
Or, you can take the traditional approach if you are able to put a huge drive out past the lava guarding the fairway. Here’s a 3-wood hole-out from the rough in front of there. And here’s a 5-wood from the fairway.
This drive found the sand by the water, but plenty of distance was had to hole-out from there!
Finally, you can curve anywhere from a 5-wood or a high-teed 3-wood around the trees and to the landing area straight ahead. In front of the lave lakes, there’s a ditch where the ball can settle, giving you an open approach shot to the green most times. There are a couple trees down there, and if you end up too far left in that ditch, your approach could be impeded.
Turtle Island — Hole #13: Par 4
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Turtle Island • • Leave a Comment (0)This green can rarely be drivable given a great setup — this big A1 shot would have gotten there if not for a bush at the end! This A1 did graze by the hole, leaving a short chip. This A1 settled nicely on the green.
And this big C3 drive did carry to the green! Here’s another C3 that got there.
Here you can just carry down to the bottom of the last fairway, obviously being careful not to flirt too much with the water since the fairway slopes down. Here’s a hole-out from there.
Turtle Island — Hole #14: Par 4
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Turtle Island • • Leave a Comment (0)The shot here depends on the wind. With a head-wind, you’ll often high-tee a 3-wood over the top of the trees.
This high-teed 5-wood carried into the back rock but caught a great deflection into the cup!
With a right-blowing wind, you can aim left and pretty much take the trees out of the picture completely — here’s a nice 4-wood ace.
Turtle Island — Hole #15: Par 5
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Turtle Island • • Leave a Comment (0)Most of the time you can high tee a driver straight ahead to the far-left fairway. Another option is to rotate right and play a C3 shot with roll out there instead. Check out this nice hole-out to a front pin. And here’s a 4-wood hole-out using the back-right of the hill as a backstop.
If the wind favors playing out to the right fairway instead, that’s certainly an option too. You may or may not have to work the approach around some guarding trees. Here’s a driver hole-out from that side. This one carried into the rough but still had an opening to the green for a hole-out.
Turtle Island — Hole #16: Par 3
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Turtle Island • • Leave a Comment (0)From the back box, check out the bounces this 5-wood gets off the rock before it finds the cup. Here’s another terrible shot that kicks all the way over and somehow into the hole! And this 9-wood rattled around off the rock too and settled back in the cup! There can be quite a bit of wind in play with lofted clubs, but this one floated in nicely!
This shot was way long, but after spending time bouncing along the rock, it made its way back in!
Turtle Island — Hole #17: Par 4
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Turtle Island • • Leave a Comment (0)Clearing the hill is not that difficult from anywhere in this fairway, but if you can get closer by aiming for the back left fairway, go for it. This approach shot caught a nice hop off the front rock and settled into a back pin.
This shot was way too far left, but the rock shot it all the way across the green to the cup! Here’s another one that missed left but hopped and spun back in the hole.
Turtle Island — Hole #18: Par 4
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Turtle Island • • Leave a Comment (0)This 3-wood caught tree and hill but still settled down and backspun into a left pin! This 5-wood also used a nice bounce off the hill to find a front-left pin. This 5-wood with no roll settled nicely into a back pin.
And this driver curved around quite accurately, catching a back pin before tumbling over. Here’s another driver with just a small cut, using bite to settle into the cup.
Highland Links — Golden Tee 2014
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Highland Links • • Leave a Comment (0)
Here is the official preview of the new 2014 Scotland course, and this article breaks down the course even further.
This post contains tips, tricks, and information related to the 2014 Golden Tee course Highland Links! Check out the hole-by-hole breakdowns and example hole-outs as I partner up with the Golden Tee community to give you the edge you need to beat your friends!
At first this course looks like Bonnie Moor, suggesting low-score potential, but the rough is absolutely brutal here. Do all you can to stay away from it, as it severely limits your distance on approach shots and ruins your touch on short chip shots. If you can do that, you can certainly score low here.
Most pros use the Hawks on this course to allow control with the lower-lofted hybrids on longer approach shots. There isn’t much need for any high-lofted woods, but they can help you out on a couple shots, so some pros play the Flares here insteaed. I’d still recommend the Hawks. Many pros like the Streak balls for their distance, but I like the Razors this year to give you backspin and roll as well as distance and a soft landing on the green.
Highland Links — Hole #1: Par 4
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Highland Links • • Leave a Comment (0)From the middle box, here’s a huge C3 driver that carried onto the green!
Here’s a giant A1 that hopped the last bunker and also made it on!
Highland Links — Hole #2: Par 4
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Highland Links • • Leave a Comment (0)From the middle box, this hole can be drivable — this high-teed driver came up just a few feet short of the cup! But this high-teed driver did find a right pin with distance to spare! Here’s another with the Hawks.
Otherwise, just lay up in the fairway and avoid the sand and rough — here’s an example hole-out.
Highland Links — Hole #3: Par 3
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Highland Links • • Leave a Comment (0)Highland Links — Hole #4: Par 5
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Highland Links • • Leave a Comment (0)On this short par 5, you don’t even have to worry about driving past the sand trap in the fairway. If you lay up short, you’ll have plenty of distance and elevation to carry over on the approach — here’s a 3-wood with bite that sucked right into the hole.
Highland Links — Hole #5: Par 4
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Highland Links • • Leave a Comment (0)If you’re feeling aggressive, this hole can be drivable, but you could also end up in a nasty spot in the pot bunker by the green. From the back-right box, here’s one that hopped the one in front and rammed into the cup! Here’s another one that rammed in — amazing! It’s typically an A1 high-teed driver with roll, but not all the way out to 1…you’ll have the distance in the right setup, it’s just getting the right angle coming in! This one was overcut a bit, but check out the deflection off the bunker wall!!
With an out wind, this straight high-teed driver carried the bunker right at it!
Highland Links — Hole #6: Par 4
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Highland Links • • Leave a Comment (0)Highland Links — Hole #7: Par 3
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Highland Links • • Leave a Comment (0)Here’s an ace from the front-right box.
Here’s a nice bounce off the hill with a 6-iron from the middle box.
Highland Links — Hole #8: Par 5
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Highland Links • • Leave a Comment (0)This short par 5 only asks that you stay out of the sand for a chance at eagle. In some cases you can blast a drive past all the sand for a short approach — here’s a short DE hole-out.
There’s some open fairway in the second-left fairway in the middle of all the sand. From there, here’s a 5-wood with some friendly roll that found the hole.
There’s a little less fairway to stick out to the right, but that’s an option too — here’s a hole-out from there.
Highland Links — Hole #9: Par 4
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Highland Links • • Leave a Comment (0)You’ll usually want to fly over the rock mountain in the middle of the fairway, but you’ll have to make sure you have enough loft. From the back box, this medium-teed 3-wood played a small cut left-to-right to ensure it cleared, and then it found the cup. This medium-teed 3-wood cut over the left peak and backspun into the cup. Here’s a great high-teed 3-wood cut to a back-right pin!
This driver did NOT have enough loft, but it deflected off the rock mountain and somehow into the hole!
Here’s a ridiculous driver around the left side with no tee — just a sick ace.
And here’s another one around the RIGHT side with no tee…another sick ace!
From the middle box, this high-teed 5-wood found a front-left pin.
Highland Links — Hole #10: Par 4
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Highland Links • • Leave a Comment (0)With a great wind here, you can get close to the green if not on it — check out how this tee shot from the BACK box carried 426 yards into the hole! But this one was even longer — 430 yards straight at it, to top the longest hole-out record books! From the front box, this big C3 driver lipped out of the cup! But here’s one from the front that found the hole!
An A1 also works if it favors the wind — check out this 424-yard ace! But here’s the king of them all — a 448-yard ace from back box to back of the green…just amazing!
If you end up a bit short, you may be able to putt still — this putt hopped the rough and found the cup! And here’s another.
Otherwise, there’s not much reason to risk sand and rough by the second fairway, so just lay up at the end of the first fairway here for your approach — here’s an example hole-out.
Highland Links — Hole #11: Par 3
By Golden Tee Fan • Category: Highland Links • • Leave a Comment (0)From the far right box, here’s an ace to a back pin.
Here’s a nice ace from the middle box.