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Erin Hills Golf Club Golf Course Map /Erin Hills Golf Club Golf Holes Map
Erin Hills Golf Club Golf Course Review in Hartford, WI in 53027

HARTFORD WEATHER
Hole
Par
Yards
5
553
4
358
4
476
4
439
4
505
3
237
5
607
4
492
3
165
4
504
4
403
4
464
3
215
5
613
4
366
3
190
4
481
5
663
Hole MAP
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Hole 1
Hole Name
From The Tee
From The Fairway The opening hole skirts the wetland, with the fairway tilted from right to left towards it.
On The Green This hole features the one green that is best approached along the ground. The cluster of bunkers dug into the right hillside some 50 yards from the green function, in effect, as greenside bunkers for those trying to reach the green in two.
Hole 2
Hole Name
From The Tee The 2nd is a classic strategic hole where the player who is confident enough to venture towards the unseen
From The Fairway (the left side of the fairway) is rewarded with a view of the green for his or her pitch. However,
On The Green the smallest green on the course ensures that the challenge is far from over after a good tee shot.
Hole 3
Hole Name
From The Tee The first long par 4 on the course, the 3rd completes a varied opening trio of holes. The wetland on the left and bunkers challenge the tee shot, and the central bunker can deceive golfers into under-clubbing with the approach.
From The Fairway
On The Green
Hole 4
Hole Name
From The Tee The 4th could be the most demanding hole on the course.
From The Fairway The fairway is flanked by a hillside of healthy rough on the left and a menacing bunker that juts into the fairway from the right.
On The Green The large central bunkers will force many players who miss the fairway to leave themselves a long third shot. With the shallow green, the front bunker and the wetlands just beyond the green, the approach is the most demanding iron a player will be asked to play all day.
Hole 5
Hole Name
From The Tee
From The Fairway With its fairway flowing over the natural contours and the surrounding openness,
On The Green the 5th hole appears to be a more manageable scoring opportunity. This may be true, as long as a player can cover the precarious front-left greenside bunker with a well-placed approach into the center of this large, pear-shaped green.
Hole 6
Hole Name
From The Tee With its large green and apparent lack of defenses surrounding it, the 6th at first seems to be a breather. While it is true that a score of worse than 4 is unlikely, a 3 is well earned.
From The Fairway
On The Green With the westerly prevailing wind from behind and a false front followed by a green sloping away from the player, getting close to a hole location on the front half of the green is especially challenging.
Hole 7
Hole Name
From The Tee This rolling three-shotter plays past the bell that was used to give the all clear for the former Dell Hole (RIP).
From The Fairway
On The Green Three bunkers in front and on the left visually dominate the approach, but the false front on the right is perhaps the bigger challenge. As with several greens at Erin Hills (e.g., the 10th and 14th), the 7th green steps down from side-to-side, a refreshing change from two-level greens that have all-too-predictable front and back levels.
Hole 8
Hole Name
From The Tee
From The Fairway With its right-to-left dogleg and left-to-right slope of the fairway,
On The Green the 8th is the tee shot where the player who has the ability to shape his shots at will (in this case from right-to-left) holds the biggest advantage at Erin Hills. With the front bunkers and shallow green, the approach favors the player who can bring the ball in with a high trajectory, although the rise at the back of the left half of the green provides a helpful backstop.
Hole 9
Hole Name
From The Tee After a series of big holes, the short and precise 9th comes as a jolt to the player. With the elevated tee and exposure to the wind, club selection is a challenge.
From The Fairway
On The Green The green is a bit of a mirror image Redan, with its angle and slope from left-to-right. The treacherous back-left bunker is key as it is not visible from the tee and many players whose tee shots looked good in the air walk away with 5 or worse after finding this bunker.
Hole 10
Hole Name
From The Tee Despite the blind tee shot,
From The Fairway the expansive fairway encourages the player to open their shoulders off the tee. Should you opt to drive it at the “speed-slope” located on the righthand side, you may be rewarded with a (less difficult) approach into a heavily bunkered, hourglass green surface.
On The Green The closely mown area right and behind the green can be used to work the ball with a longer club towards the hole, though.
Hole 11
Hole Name
From The Tee After a number of demanding holes, the 11th provides a bit of a
From The Fairway breather as the fairway can gather tee shots and the approach is usually just a pitch.
On The Green However, care still needs to be taken with the small green that slopes from left to right. The back nine presents a variety of challenges and not just the stereotypical long par 4s seen on most championship courses.
Hole 12
Hole Name
From The Tee With its wild topography and partially hidden green, the 12th hole showcases the minimalist approach the architects took, and best captures the character of Erin Hills.
From The Fairway
On The Green The tee shot must reach the plateau to afford the player a reasonable approach to the green set in a hollow. With a rare wind from the east or for the long players, the tee shot that flirts with the right side can go down the hill and leave just a pitch.
Hole 13
Hole Name
From The Tee The 13th is a rendition of the classic hill-to-hill par 3. In this case, the player’s eyes are drawn to the expansive bunker left of the green, to which a swale in the left side of the green directs balls.
From The Fairway
On The Green However, the fall-away short, right and behind the green cannot be ignored or looked at as safe places to miss the green. In the final round of the 2017 U.S. Open, Brooks Koepka’s par save from right of the green proved to be crucial as it inspired him to birdie the next three holes.
Hole 14
Hole Name
From The Tee The 14th is a gambling par 5 where fortune does in fact favor the bold. Here the player who lays up faces an awkward third, where the pitch is nearly blind to a green that runs away from that angle.
From The Fairway
On The Green The player who goes for the green with his second shot certainly faces his share of trouble, though, such as the thick rough short of the green, the severe false front of the green, a cavernous front-right bunker and a river right of the green.
Hole 15
Hole Name
From The Tee The 15th presents the player several options – to lay up short of all the bunkers, to place the tee shot in the middle of the bunkers or to have a go at the green itself.
From The Fairway
On The Green The sharp drop-off right of the green encourages the player to favor the center or left of the green with his pitch, but the spine that extends from the hillside into the green provides a challenging two-putt for a player on the wrong side of the green.
Hole 16
Hole Name
From The Tee This narrow, slightly angled green is nestled against the hillside on its left.
From The Fairway
On The Green At first glance one might think that left is a good place to miss the green in that the hill should kick balls down towards the green. However, there are bunkers at the base of that hill that the golfer cannot see from the tee that will catch a ball trying to find the green off the hillside.
Hole 17
Hole Name
From The Tee With the green tucked behind a hill on the left, a tee shot down the right provides the golfer with a clear view of
From The Fairway
On The Green the green while one down the left leaves a partially blind approach. Like the 1st, the 17th hole does not need greenside bunkering as the natural terrain provides plenty of challenge.
Hole 18
Hole Name
From The Tee Erin Hills closes with a long par 5 that lines up with Holy Hill in the distance.
From The Fairway Look for a “shamrock” plaque near the righthand fairway bunkers, which commemorates Justin Thomas’ famous 3-wood in the third round of 2017 U.S. Open.
On The Green The player must fight his natural tendency to play directly towards the green and must force himself to play his second shot well to the right. The cluster of bunkers short of the green visually dominates the approach, but the player needs to take care not to miss the green to the left, where the closely mown area will propel the ball well away from the green.

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