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Hole 1 - Par 4
Hole #1 at Old Marsh Golf Club is a good opening par 4 with a wide-open fairway and water along the entire left side that is guarded by a long narrow bunker. There’s also a knobby mound at the front right of the green, which partially hides the putting surface, enhancing the character of the hole.
My intention was to provide putting surfaces at Old Marsh with a half-inch of fall
every 10 feet or so. The human eye can detect only a two-and-a-half inch fall every 10 feet, so I attempted to make a putt appear straight when it actually has some curvature.
At Old Marsh, the approaches to the greens are generally open in front and roll in and onto the putting surfaces, and the greens are relatively flat, with the mounds abutting. One contour on the green is also usually counteracted by another to prevent the ball from gaining speed at the hole.
Tour |
374 |
Championship |
363 |
Member |
338 |
Middle |
316 |
Forward |
283 |
Hole 2 - Par 5
After playing the right to left first hole, the second hole sets up left to right off the tees. This is a downwind par 5 that runs over water to a landing area that’s plenty wide. From the members’ tees, it’s 150 yards of carry to the fairway, but for your second shot, there’s a liberal landing area to the right. Because the green runs right to left creating a double dogleg, I suggest you hit your second shot toward the right side of the fairway so the green will open up to you. The second green is shaped like a little upside-down saucer, with one little pot bunker on the left in front. If you play this short par 5 from the correct tees, your third shot should be a wedge shot and a good opportunity to par or even birdie.
Tour |
545 |
Championship |
500 |
Member |
490 |
Middle |
449 |
Forward |
417 |
Hole 3 - Par 3
It’s an easy walk from the second green to the third tee. This is a hole to make every environmentalist’s heart leap. The entire right side of this bulkheaded par 3 is man-made, mitigated marsh. So what looks like Mother Nature, was actually put in there by hand, carefully recreating a natural-looking wetland. Keep your tee shot left, if anything, because there’s a safe little bailout area to the left of the good-sized green that is blinded from the tee.
Tour |
200 |
Championship |
194 |
Member |
170 |
Middle |
161 |
Forward |
110 |
Hole 4 - Par 4
This is a relatively short par 4, but you’ve got a pretty good carry off the tee to get over the marsh. Hit your tee shot across the marsh to the right side of the fairway, even though you can see the flag and the green toward the left. There’s plenty of landing area on the right, and the green is receptive from that side. The giant, menacing bunker left of the landing area will keep your ball in bounds in the event of a big-time hook or a pull off the tee; however, it’s still shallow enough to allow for a good recovery on your second shot. But be warned, the fourth green has some significant contours and is not the easiest green to putt..
Tour |
401 |
Championship |
371 |
Member |
343 |
Middle |
308 |
Forward |
287 |
Hole 5 - Par 4

After going east on the fourth hole, the fifth hole turns south into the prevailing wind. A golfer could play this hole 100 times and never really figure out how to play it. I built this love-hate hole with a short approach shot to a green hidden behind a huge, two-story mound. Most golfers who have traveled to Prestwick in Scotland find the design reminiscent of the par-4 Alps hole there.
Before I believed in the design of blind holes, I mentioned my dislike for them to Tommy Armour. The silver-haired Scotsman bluntly told me I knew nothing about golf, adding, “Laddie, a blind hole is blind only once to a man with a memory.” Tommy Armour believed blind shots were effective since they created anxiety in the golfers by delaying their knowing the result of their shots. I know Ben Hogan hated them, but I think they can play an important part in the mix of holes on a particular course.
Players of all levels love to walk up and look around the mound, check the placement of the pin, and then try to imagine the line of flight to the green. The whole experience is topped off when they finally hit the shot and then race to the side of the mound to see where the ball landed.
Blind Man’s Bluff at Old Marsh is a short par 4 that measures only 320 yards from the back tee, but there is water to the right that borders the entire hole. If the tee shot is properly positioned in the middle of the fairway, a small obelisk rock sitting on top of the mound signals the line to the green.
To play this hole, I suggest you hit the tee shot 120 yards short of the mound, so that you can then hit a full 9-iron to the green. The wind prevails from the southeast, so the left side of the green is safe no matter where the rock is (the rock on the top of the hill gives you a line to the flag very much like the Dell hole at Ballybunion). Get it on the green and go for two putts. But don’t use too much club, because there’s a pond beyond the fifth green.
Tour |
430 |
Championship |
362 |
Member |
318 |
Middle |
287 |
Forward |
230 |
Hole 6 - Par 4
Continuing south, we mentally shift gears from a short par 4 to a good long par 4. The No. 1 handicap hole on the course, the sixth hole, is one of the few “brute strength” holes at Old Marsh where placement and club selection usually prevail over power. Once again, aim away from the green to the widest part of the fairway, straight at the bunker on the left. You’ll then have a wide-open shot to the smallish sixth green. The long, narrow bunker on the right in front of the green is more to prevent the player’s errant shot from going into the water than it is to provide another hazard.
Tour |
485 |
Championship |
444 |
Member |
415 |
Middle |
399 |
Forward |
349 |
Hole 7 - Par 5
Changing direction, Hole #7 runs westward. Since you’re faced with marsh and a long bunker on the right side of this dogleg right par 5, I suggest that you should hit your tee shot to the left side of the fairway for best results. Then, your second shot should also favor the left side of the fairway, which will provide you with the best angle to approach the green. Again, the strategy at Old Marsh is to hit the ball where the percentages are best, and that’s by no means always at the green or the flag.
Tour |
556 |
Championship |
556 |
Member |
540 |
Middle |
500 |
Forward |
430 |
Hole 8 - Par 3
This is the best little downwind par 3 I’ve ever built. Although you’ve got to carry it over water all the way, once you get there, the bulkheaded green is the size of a football field. The natural marsh on the right and the deep pine woods on the left should be enough to force your attention to the pin. When it’s set on the right, I usually aim my tee shot to the left side and cut it in over the marsh, and then putt for a birdie.
Tour |
185 |
Championship |
160 |
Member |
146 |
Middle |
137 |
Forward |
116 |
Hole 9 - Par 4
Turning back north again onto the ninth hole, we have now gone in all four directions. Even though it’s rated the third hardest hole on the course with its bulkhead and water along the entire left side, this par 4 might be considered a relief hole from the members’ tee since it has the widest approach and fairway on the whole course. If you’re playing from the correct tee, you shouldn’t have any trouble carrying the lagoon to the generous landing area, and, you could very well get home in two. Now the ninth green has got some contour to it but it’s not that severe, so there’s no reason you couldn’t get a par on this relatively long par 4.
Tour |
463 |
Championship |
437 |
Member |
396 |
Middle |
385 |
Forward |
315 |
Hole 10 - Par 4

After the clockwise rotation of the front side holes, those on the back run counterclockwise, with wetlands bordering the left side of most of the holes. You get a great change of pace coming from the long, difficult par-4 ninth hole to the short, easy par-4 10th hole. Though it’s the shortest par 4 on the course, I personally like the 10th hole a lot; because it so often proves that finesse is more important than brawn in the game of golf.
At just 313 yards from the very back tee, the longest hitters may be able to challenge the green off the tee, making an eagle, two. But it’s still very challenging because there is marsh on the left and right, so an accurate shot off the tee is definitely required. I would suggest that players laying up would be best served positioning their ball just left of the small pine and palm tree grove that is about 200 yards off the tee, leaving them with a short wedge approach to the green.
A large bunker protects the front right side of the green and also hides the middle and right-hand side from the player’s view as they approach. This shot requires a precise wedge to get the ball close, but you can roll the ball onto the left side of the green, which is built to the existing grade. The green also has a lot of undulations and subtle breaks that require an accurate read in order to be able to hole your birdie or save par here at Hole #10.
Tour |
313 |
Championship |
313 |
Member |
300 |
Middle |
271 |
Forward |
227 |
Hole 11 - Par 4
Eleven is a little bit longer par 4 that doglegs right to left and has a liberal driving area, especially if you keep it to the right side. Once again, the straight line off the tee is risky as it means you have to hit over the marsh on the left. In my opinion, you are better off keeping your tee shot to the right, where you’ll wind up with an open shot to the green. The 11th green itself is also pretty receptive and open in front, so you can either roll it in or get the approach up in the air and carry it in.
Tour |
399 |
Championship |
391 |
Member |
345 |
Middle |
328 |
Forward |
278 |
Hole 12 - Par 5
Now for another change of pace, Hole #12 is a par 5 that goes dead west. It is the shortest par 5 on the course, and the hazards here are chiefly mental. The marshes and the feeding birds frequently will distract you from what should really be a not-that-difficult tee shot. The carry from the members’ tees is only 160 yards, and the landing area is very generous. Once there, hit your second shot to the right, short of the green. The big hitters who go for it will find a large bunker in front of the green, and disaster in the form of a marsh beyond the green.
Tour |
525 |
Championship |
501 |
Member |
465 |
Middle |
435 |
Forward |
381 |
Hole 13 - Par 4
To mix it up, Hole #12 was a hard hole, but not so much a difficult driving fairway, whereas Hole #13 is an easier hole, but a more difficult driving fairway. The most difficult tee shot at Old Marsh, Hole #13, is a dogleg left that runs south and features marsh on the left and out-of-bounds on the right. When you see that flag down to the left, you’ll subconsciously want to hit it to that side of the fairway, but resist the urge. I would aim for the right-center of the fairway because there is more room on the right than is visible from the tee.
Now, greenside, there’s a bunker built along the right and the green itself looks flat, but, we built the bunker up the way 19th century courses were built, with “blind” parts of the greens. Thirteen is a perfect example of the semi-blind green, due to the old-style mound on the right.
Tour |
406 |
Championship |
377 |
Member |
366 |
Middle |
336 |
Forward |
274 |
Hole 14 - Par 3
Hole #14 is the longest par 3 on the course. There is nothing in front of the green, and to the right there is a big collar of Bermuda grass. Most often, I would suggest hitting it toward the right rather than to the pin. That’s how I usually play this hole. The whole thing about Old Marsh, throughout the course, is to stay away from the marsh. If you miss it right here, for example, you can at least keep it in play. Miss it left, and your ball becomes part of the local ecology. This bunkerless par 3 is unique. I love this hole.
Tour |
223 |
Championship |
190 |
Member |
175 |
Middle |
152 |
Forward |
128 |
Hole 15 - Par 4
Rated the fourth hardest hole on the course, the 15th hole is a great dogleg left par 4, with enough landing area on the right side for two football fields. But because the green is to the left, over the marsh, players persist in cutting off too much of the dogleg. Instead, I would play it straight down the middle of the fairway, and wind up with an open shot to the green. From mid-fairway, you’ll have a medium iron to the contoured green. If the hole placement is to the rear, make sure you take an extra club.
Tour |
501 |
Championship |
393 |
Member |
387 |
Middle |
310 |
Forward |
300 |
Old Marsh Golf Club Hole 15 from LINKS Magazine on Vimeo.
Hole 16 - Par 3
I don’t know why, but the 16th hole is rated as the easiest hole on the course. This par 3, over water, is the tightest bunkered green on the course. There’s no bailout area, but the green is quite large. Although the bunkers don’t blind the green, some of the contours can fool you. I will tell you this, however, a good iron off the tee will be rewarded on this green.
Tour |
176 |
Championship |
176 |
Member |
162 |
Middle |
145 |
Forward |
124 |
Hole 17 - Par 5
Rated as the second hardest hole on the course, this long par 5 with water on both sides has plenty of room on the left side, so aim your tee shot at the left side of the aiming bunker through the fairway. On the canal side of the fairway, you notice a distinctive feature, a long bulkhead, in order to add stability to the bank. But also as a design feature, it makes the holes play a little easier by increasing the slope pitching back towards the fairway, preventing the players’ balls from going down in the hazard.
Your second shot on this hole should be a positioned iron shot aimed toward the right- center of the green. There’s really no reason to gamble here. Unless you hit it as far as a touring pro, you can’t get home. Whatever you do, don’t go left with your second shot or your ball will become the property of the resident pair of sandhill cranes who live there. By the way, their names are Pete and Alice.
Tour |
573 |
Championship |
530 |
Member |
510 |
Middle |
468 |
Forward |
401 |
Hole 18 - Par 4
The final hole plays downwind and is a mirror twin of Hole #9. This one plays from left to right, and the member player has the widest landing area. Keep it left, away from the lake. With the sight of the Old Marsh Clubhouse in the background, you can roll it on from the front left from where the contours make it most receptive. But be warned, it takes an accurate read to hole out on the huge 18th green.
Tour |
460 |
Championship |
440 |
Member |
395 |
Middle |
376 |
Forward |
316 |
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