Recent News

 

Archives

News

Previous Post: California Golf Club Reopens in Style »So, who should design your golf course? »R & A - Kingsbarns Deal to Benefit St Andrews Golfers »Back on Top at Tahoe »Kingsbarns Hole 12 Ranks 6th »Scotland's Dundonald: An exceptional new links layout »The Grove to Host World Golf Championship »Opens to Loch Lomond Golf Club Members »The Best of the Best 2004 »The New Kingbarns? Another Kyle Phillips Masterpie... »

Saturday, March 14, 2009

2009 Golfweek's Best: Seal of Approval

...The runaway winner of "Comeback of the Year" is California Golf Club in South San Francisco, Calif., which appears as No. 60 on the Classic after a yearlong shutdown and massive restoration/renovation project. Bay Area golf aficionados always had
respected the 1926 Vernon Macan design, especially after it was treated to highly-stylized bunkering by Alister MacKenzie. But the course suffered a clumsy partial rerouting in the mid-1960s.

California GC enjoyed the national rating limelight for one brief stint at No. 92 in 2003, and then fell off the Classic list as tree problems, a nematode infestation and poor drainage took their toll.

Starting in August 2007, architect Kyle Phillips, working closely with
course superintendent Thomas Bastis, undertook a gutsy project: five retro
holes created, the practice range moved, two clumsy ponds filled in, 450 yards added and the old fairway widths and bunkering restored. Along the way they also dealt with eucalyptus and pine trees that had overgrown the grounds.

The boldest move was utilizing a virtually abandoned l7-acre dump site on a hill overlooking the bulk of the course and using it for California GC's seventh hole, a
stunning, wrap-around 402-yard par 4 where the fairway clings to the edge.

Golfweek
Bradley S. Klein
www.golfweek.com

Labels: