On the Saturday of Labor Day Weekend I had the privilege of
going back to the first golf course at which I was a season pass holder, Grand
View Golf Links. Although I moved on to bigger and better courses with age,
this nine-hole track located just outside of Duluth, Minnesota, will always hold a
special place in my heart.
Grand View can be characterized as a quirky layout and it
wastes no time in apprising a golfer of this fact as it opens with a par three,
a rare occurrence for a first hole. Although it plays uphill, it is only 132
yards and offers an opportunity to get off to a strong start. With a deep ditch
to the left, a row of pines to the right, and a green that slopes from back to
front, it still demands a certain measure of respect and can certainly
punish the nonchalant golfer.
The second is a short par four that plays well downhill.
With plenty of room to miss on the right, a golfer can take a slash with the
driver off the tee. However, hitting less that driver on this short par four is
certainly a reasonable play. The real defense on this hole is the green which
slopes downhill in the first half and then levels out. With this being the
case, it is often necessary to land even wedge shots short of the green if one
wants to hold the putting surface.
Following the second
is another par four that offers room to miss on the right and, if you plan on
missing the fairway, right is the way to go as the Dry Dock Bar and Restaurant
parking lot sits just to the left of the fairway. A final consideration off the
tee is the ditch that crosses the fairway 232 yards away. Even if one can’t
reach this ditch, hitting less than driver off of this tee is not a terrible
idea as the hole is only 326 yards. Just like with the tee shot, for the
approach, if you plan on missing the green, miss right, as there is a hill just
to the right that often repels a golfer’s ball onto the green.
The fourth is a par
four of only 267 yards that certainly offers some the opportunity to drive the
green. As is the theme at Grand View, the place to miss on this hole is right. However,
this does leave a tough uphill shot over a deep bunker. A well placed tee shot
though, for those that don’t have the firepower to reach the green, leaves an
easy shot to a green that is essentially in a bowl. With this being the case,
any shot that reaches the edge of the bowl will roll down onto the green.
Back in the day, the fifth played as a long, uphill par
three. The green has since been moved further up the hill and to the right and
now plays as a par four. The tee shot sets up nicely for a smooth baby fade (for a right-handed golfer) with the big stick, a shot that certainly fits my eye well. Playing uphill
to a two-tiered green, one cannot fall asleep on the approach though.
Another somewhat
recent change at Grand View is the new back tee on the sixth. Even with this
added length, the hole isn’t terribly difficult as it is a par four of 367
yards that plays downhill. Not only that, the hole allows a golfer to take a
solid rip with the driver as one can hit the ball almost anywhere and still be
in play. The terrain at the sixth is somewhat hilly though which can make for
an awkward stance on the approach.
At only 425 yards, the seventh is a very short par five. It
does play slightly uphill and has out of bounds down the whole left side, which
adds some challenge. As usual though, there is plenty of room to miss on the
right. Any integer greater than five on this hole will surely anger most
golfers that have any facility in the game.
Back in the day, a golfer could take out the anger induced
by a poorly played seventh on the eighth by pulling out the driver and having a
rip at the green as the eighth used to be a semi-drivable par four. In modern
times, the eighth is a short, downhill par three carved out of the woods on the
hillside to the left of the old eighth. Only a less than full wedge is needed.
Even so, it can be tough to get the ball close to the hole, especially with a
front pin, as the green slopes from front to back.
Throughout the round,
a golfer is probably wondering why the course is called Grand View. Well, that
question is answered on the ninth tee, which is well above the fairway, and
indeed offers a grand view of the countryside. The hole is a par four of 375
yards that plays towards the parking lot. With the hole playing so far downhill, driving the green is not out of the realm of possibility. The prudent
play, however, is to knock an iron down the fairway, which leaves only a short
wedge shot to a green that slopes slightly from front to back making it
difficult to hit the ball close to a front hole location.
If you have never played Grand View, I hope that I have you intrigued with the course and, if you have played Grand View before, I hope that you are yearning to go back. For me, it was definitely great to go back to the old
stomping grounds, to play the holes that I have played so many times before and
to see the changes to the course as well. Grand View is where the game of golf
first courted me in earnest, and I must have been truly smitten because I am
still an avid golfer to this day, and the game never even had to take me to a
malt shop. Even as I write, my mind hearkens back to various memories at Grand
View like all the times I took empty beer cans from the golf course trash cans
and put them into my friends’ golf bags hoping that they wouldn’t notice and
that their parents would find them. Those were good times indeed, good times
indeed.

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