Ranking For The Wee Ones: Golf Magazine Lists Best Par-3 Courses, Nine-Holers And Under-6000 Yarders

Welshpool

Welshpool

Rankings have become redundant, or worse, the last profit centers for some publications. The sheen is all but gone from most listings, though Golf is sticking to a small panel of experts and now, three lists that will only hopefully inspire more non-18-hole, non-elitist recognition of what matters: fun places to play.

Ran Morrissett sets up this new “top 100” this way:

The earliest tracks were 5-, 6-, 7-, 9- and 12-hole affairs. The locals looked for land that drained well, with interesting natural obstacles. If the property only supported six holes, so be it. The sport wasn’t meant to soak up half the day. Work beckoned. The Industrial Age eventually created the chance for more of the population to pursue leisure activities, and golf expanded. Move the clock forward 150-odd years and courses of all shapes and sizes now exist.

The top 50 nine-hole courses features so many nifty places you’d love to play, leading off with Tom Dunn’s Royal Worlington and Newmarket, dating to 1895. While I love everything about the Winter Park 9, seeing it next to Musselburgh was a bit strange. The Cradle of Golf it is not. But we’ll let that slide for the overall grandeur of this stellar list.

Golf also put together 25 “exemplary” sub-6000 yard courses listed from shortest to longest. This highlights a class of course totally underappreciated by rankings and hopefully bolsters travel itineraries with some of the most enjoyable rounds you’ll ever play. Places like Shiskin, Kilspindie and Welshpool (above) get much-needed attention, as do so many other “gems”. The only bummer: just six reside in the United States, but that’s more of a statement about us than architects or developers.

The final and most exciting list of all highlights the world’s 25 best par-3’s in alphabetical order. It’s easy to imagine this growing to 50 or 100 in a few years given not making this iteration, including Turnberry’s revamped pitch and putt, the Spieth Lower 40 in Texas and some of Tiger Woods’s efforts.

I loved this summation of the renewed interest in par-3’s:

“The growing popularity of par-3 courses is a wonderful anomaly in a game often obsessed with distance,” says Adam Messix, a head PGA professional in Cashiers, N.C. “From one perspective, par-3 courses are a test of precision. More important, I think, they’re a joy to play for golfers of every caliber. Par-3 courses lack the formality you see at quote-unquote real courses, where you have to follow golf’s various conventions, like four players maximum to a group. They’re all about fun, families, friends and inclusiveness. Their ability to include all players make them the ideal place to enjoy the game no matter one’s age or ability.”

Naturally it was a treat to see our Horse Course effort at the Prairie Club make the cut alongside some of the planet’s neatest one-shotter classics.