One of North America's most prolific, yet underrated golf
course architects has now brought his design magic to a Canadian course we can
all play. Rees Jones, known to many as the "Open Doctor" for his modernizations
of classic major championship courses, also redesigned the courses being used
for BOTH the Bell Canadian Open and last summer's Canadian Women's Open this
summer, and this year's President's Cup. But those are all private courses. The
recently opened Rees Jones Course at Grand Niagara Resort in Niagara Falls is
open to all of us looking for unique golf adventure.
The centerpiece of a
resort that will include a 350-room hotel, vacation ownership properties, fine
dining, a winery, a full-service spa and fitness center, and in 2009 a course
designed by Greg Norman, the Jones Course is only Rees' second Canadian
original. He also designed Royal Oaks Golf Club in Moncton, New Brunswick with
colleague Keith Evans in 2000. But his renovations of the Hamilton Golf and
Country Club for the Bell Canadian Open, the London Hunt and Country Club for
last year's Women's Canadian Open, and extensive re-design of the famed Blue
Course at Royal Montreal for the upcoming President's Cup will have his work,
and name, very familiar to Canadians very soon.
Jones believes
his Grand Niagara layout "could host a major championship." And he ought to
know better than anyone in the business.
In his work as the "Open Doctor", he's modernized classic championship
courses originally designed by Donald Ross (Pinehurst #2), A.W. Tillinghast
(Bethpage Black and Baltusrol) and his father Robert Trent Jones (Congressional
and Hazeltine). He headed up the renovation of famed Medinah for last year's
PGA Championship, and another of his originals, the Tournament Course at the
Redstone Golf Club, is the new home to the Houston Open.
Yet despite
having his name connected to many of the most tantalizing tracks around the
world and his family's design heritage, Rees Jones might be one of the most
under-appreciated designers of our time. Ask anyone to name a Rees Jones
original (even though four of Golf Digest's Top 100 are his) and it might take
them a moment. But tell anyone you just played a Rees Jones course and they'll
likely match your smile and add a tinge of envy.
That will
likely change with the Rees Jones Course at Grand Niagara. In
typically-understated Jones fashion, Grand Niagara is a unique challenge. The fairway angles, positioning of hazards
and exquisitely contoured greens demand intelligent course management, tempting
players with a variety of risk-reward options. Water is evident on most holes,
but generally avoidable, with few forced carries. As a young golfer playing the traditional
Scottish-style courses (he says he was "awestruck" the first time he played St.
Andrews), Jones' usually take what the landscape gives him and shapes more
classic lines.
There's no
trickery, no railroad ties, no bells-and-whistles, just a playability that is
the signature of Jones' projects. The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts,
Pinehurst and Bethpage Black are examples of Jones' ability to "dial-up" a
course for a major tournament, but subsequently dial it back for regular play.
Jones strives to have his courses be just as challenging for the pros as they
are for us rank amateurs. His personal test of any of his course's success is
simple. Do you want to play it again tomorrow? Consider yourself "dialed-in"
when you visit the stunning Rees Jones Course at Grand Niagara Resort.
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