Monument, Pinnacle Set Sonoran Target Standards |
|
The Monument Course: No. 6 named Gamble is a Weiskopf-Morrish trademark -- a short, but tricky par 4 at 306 yards. There are four bunkers down the fairway, the one on the right is huge, and there's a boulder in the middle of your line-of-sight.
No. 10 on the Monument Course was going to be No. 1 in the early design days. It's a rolling dogleg left in two distinct sections, an Allister MacKenzie-like false-front green and a pile of boulders stacked three times higher than an elephant's eye in back.
No. 13, a 176-yard par-3 is named Saguaro has a forest of saguaros surrounding the green. No. 16 is named Postcard is a 140-yard signature gem with water right, a centered pot bunker and two huge bunkers left and right. The view must have been incredible until someone built a house right behind it. If you look in the clubhouse you can see a photo of the hole before the house wrecked the view.
The Pinnacle Course:
No. 6, Canyon Pass, is your birdie chance, but the scenery will
take your thoughts. It's driveable at 299, but most will just
play a safe iron off the tee. The second shot can be tricky since
the green is somewhat elevated and hidden. A boulder pile in back
frames another photo op.
Lone Mountain, No. 7, will test your distance judging. It's 239 yards downhill, with a stack of rocks in front of a green heavily guarded by three big bunkers.
No. 10, named Bobcat Hill, presents you with a par 4, 405 yards. From the back you can't hit it further than 226 or you land in a rocky ridge that ends the fairway. The uphill second shot is all carry. Hit it short and the slope, bunkers or boulders will reject all balls.
Par-threes at 14, 206 yards, and 16, 187 yards, are rocky-terrain carries and set you up for the finale, No. 18, The Pinnacle, which aims right at Pinnacle Peak. It's a 407-yarder, with a 250-yard carry from the back to a monstrous fairway-wide bunker.
Scenery: A |
Pinnacle Peak is also your view from the new Four Seasons Resort Scottsdale, on the site a scene from the movie Raising Arizona was filmed. The world-class resort opened its door on December 22, 1999, and it completed the Troon North complex as a world-class resort. American Way magazine ranked the joining as the No. 8 golf resort in the USA. A block of tees times are reserved each day at Troon North for the resort guests.
Troon North
Monument, Pinnacle Courses
10320 E Dynamite Blvd
Scottsdale, AZ 85255
Green Fees: $225, includes cart, range, bag tag, yardage book. Cart-path only golf course. Fees reduced in hotter months and shoulder seasons.
Telephone: 480-585-5300.
Fax: 480-585-5161.
Internet: www.troonnorth.net.
Directions: From central Scottsdale go north on either Scottsdale Road or Pima Road. At Dynamite Blvd turn right (east). Troon North is on the left side of Dynamite about two miles east of Pima Road. It takes almost an hour to get to the course from the Phoenix Sky Harbour Airport (with no traffic delays). http://www.troonnorth.net/location/default.htm.
Awards: Troon North Monument is Golf Digest's No.
4 in Arizona. No. 1 in Arizona by Golf Magazine and Golfweek..
No. 20 on Golf Magazine's 2000 Top 100 You Can Play List.
Cross Country, No. 14, is a 604-yard, par 5, that was voted one
of "The Best 18 Holes You Can Play" by Golf Digest
in 1997. GolfWeek selected the course 22nd in the category
of "America's 100 Best Modern Courses" for 1997, 26th
for 1998 and 36th for 1999 and No. 1 resort in Arizona. Golf
Digest's 5-Star Award. Hosted 1990 Merrill Lynch Shootout.
Hosted LPGA Mitsubishi Championships 1991-1993.
Troon North Pinnacle Course is No. 42 on Golf Magazine's Top 100 You Can Play List for 200. No. 2 Best New Upscale Course in America 1996 by Golf Digest.
Four Seasons Resort Scottsdale
10600 E. Crescent Moon Drive
Scottsdale, AZ 85255
Telephone: 480-515-5700.
Internet:
www.fourseasons.com. Check the web site for golf, tennis and spa
packages.
The view is Pinnacle Peak, perfectly framed out of your luxury
casita's patio door just minutes from Troon North. There are 188
guest rooms with kiva fireplace and private latilla-covered patio.
If you book one of the 22 suites you will have your own private
plunge pool and a telescope to gaze on the starry Arizona sky.
The twinkling lights of Phoenix are also in view.
The land was used in the 1940s as a girls' finishing school, owned by Louise Kellogg. It had two guest houses, a bunkhouse and main building. In 1967, 80 acres of the 110 total were sold to Gordon Ingebritson for $900 an acre. His son, Jack, later purchased the remaining 30 acres to add to the family's investment, called the Crescent Moon Ranch.
Where to Dine at the Four Seasons:
Acacia is a contemporary American restaurant rated one of the "10 Best New Restaurants in the Valley" by Phoenix Magazine. Crescent Moon is a rustic Italian bistro created for a fun dining experience and serves a great breakfast buffet. Saguaro Blossom, located at the edge of the pool, offers outdoor dining and a bar. It offers salads, sandwiches and Mexican dishes.

SCOTTSDALE, AZ -- Many have said the blueprint for desert golf was
made when Tom Weiskopf and Jay Morrish designed the Troon North
Monument Course back in 1989.
Today, Troon North includes the Pinnacle Course, too, which was
designed solo by Weiskopf in 1995. Perhaps the Monument Course
did set a standard for daily-fee courses because those early target
layouts were private golf clubs. Both layouts are ranked high
by Golf Magazine. Monument is No. 20 and Pinnacle is No.
42 in its 2000 Top 100 You Can Play List.
"These are my favorite courses in the world," said Joe
Knight of St. Louis. "Both courses are in excellent shape,
the views are inspiring and the course has a true harmony with
the desert. The Monument hole is one of the most intriguing par
5s I've ever seen with lots of risk-reward options. The price
tag is high. The pace is slow. The amenities are among the best
and the service is great most of the time, but not always. Troon
North is a place I want to return year after year."