Designated exclusively for Sports Club members, the par 71; 7,120-yard course bears the distinctive design of Robert Trent Jones, Jr. and Jay Morrish. On a whimsical note, the number one green is shaped like Texas, and the sand bunker resembles Oklahoma.
Distance control is key to this short par 3. Hit it short and the ball will find either a watery grave or a front bunker. Hit it long and your penalty is a sand shot from one of the two bunkers at the back of this sloping green.
A tee shot that strategically carries the left fairway bunkers on this moderate par 5 will be rewarded with a birdie opportunity. Any shot through the fairway into the right rough will be challenged by live oaks, so favor the left side of the sloping fairway. Shots missing the raised green, protected by bunkers, will demand a skilled recovery pitch.
Aiming toward the fairway bunker is worth the risk in order to land your drive on the right side for the best approach to this uphill green. The densely wooded left rough presents a difficult recovery challenge. This long green slopes right to left and will play a half club longer.
This demanding dogleg right requires a well-placed tee shot that threads the trees, water, and penalty areas of the left and right roughs. With a well-positioned shot in the center of this narrowing fairway, your second shot must avoid both the greenside bunker and water on the right to find the correct tier of this difficult green.
The first of three short holes begins from a series of elevated tees. Proper club selection from the tee is critical to avoid the fairway bunker on the left and the tree-lined rough on the right. Stay focused on your short iron approach as you negotiate the heavily bunkered green complex.
The drivable par 4 seventh presents a classic risk-reward opportunity. The conservative play stays short of the landing area bunkers on the left and avoids the creek on the right. The heavily bunkered and elevated green will demand a skilled sand game from wayward approaches.
You won’t see the green from the tee on this par 4. Tee shots centered on this plateau fairway yield a straight forward approach shot to the saddled green below. Offline shots will require creative recoveries from the fairway hillsides or the greenside collection areas. Take one less club on your downhill approach.
The front nine closes the way it began with a difficult golf challenge. A heroic water carry is required to hit this redan positioned green. Distance control is critical to successfully negotiate the water while avoiding the deep back bunker on the left.
Negotiate the fairway bunkers with a strong tee shot, and the reward is a shortened uphill approach to this two-tiered green. An errant shot to the left will present a challenge for your second shot as you navigate around the trees. The raised and difficult green requires one more club as you try to avoid the collection areas on the right and left.
From its elevated tee, this deceptively challenging par 5 provides a scoring opportunity if the lone fairway bunker on the right and the tree-lined rough on the left can be avoided. Hole location may call for a layup strategy, as only the bold will attack a right-side pin.
With water to carry and bunkers to avoid, a well-struck tee shot is required for this straight forward par 3. Favor the right side of the green to avoid a difficult short-sided recovery from the left bunker.
A strategic tee shot decision is key for this risk-reward dogleg left. Playing short of the target bunker is a safe choice, leaving a straight forward second shot. An aggressive challenge of the narrowing fairway is rewarded by a shorter approach shot but risks finding the water running down the left side of the fairway. All but the back-left hole locations will be receptive to shots that avoid the front bunker.
The most demanding hole on the back nine is an uphill dogleg left that requires strength and skill. Any tee shot that doesn’t find the fairway will require a difficult recovery from the trees on both sides to the two-tiered green that slopes steeply from back to front. Take heed when putting from above the hole or the return shot may be a chip shot from the fairway below the green.
The elevated tee on this tree-lined par 5 is the highest point of the golf course, giving you a full view of the hole as you consider how best to play it. Favor the right side of the fairway on the downhill tee shot to avoid the punishing trees on the left and keep the door open for a birdie opportunity. On this raised green, sloping back to front and guarded by front, left, and right bunkers, the best chance for a low score comes from below the hole.
The final par 3 presents a scoring opportunity, with accessible hole locations in all but the back-right tier. The prevailing wind makes the hole play a half club shorter, so swing away and avoid the strategically-placed bunkers that punish an errant shot.
The closing hole is a dogleg right that demands a strong tee shot past the tree-lined rough. This long par 4 favors a drive on the left side of the fairway for a clear view to the elevated green. All shot-making skills will be tested as even an approach from the fairway may be from a downhill lie. Every pin location requires careful attention to the break to ensure a strong finish.
Whatever you’re looking for, we’ve got you covered. All conveniently located among the rolling hills of Las Colinas, just 20 minutes from Dallas. So what’s stopping you?