Clubhouse

FEGC CLUBHOUSE

Stay up to date on all things happening in the FEGC community.

MEMBERS-ONLY ARTICLES
Weekend Chat: Pete Dye’s Influence
Weekend Chat: Pete Dye’s Influence

Weekend Chat: Pete Dye’s Influence

Weekend Chat: Pete Dye’s Influence
Enter the Club TFE Bracket Challenge
Enter the Club TFE Bracket Challenge

Enter the Club TFE Bracket Challenge

Enter the Club TFE Bracket Challenge
Chocolate Drops: How the Restored Tree on No. 6 at TPC Sawgrass Affected Play
Chocolate Drops: How the Restored Tree on No. 6 at TPC Sawgrass Affected Play

Chocolate Drops: How the Restored Tree on No. 6 at TPC Sawgrass Affected Play

Chocolate Drops: How the Restored Tree on No. 6 at TPC Sawgrass Affected Play
Weekend Chat: Routing Through Different Topographies
Weekend Chat: Routing Through Different Topographies

Weekend Chat: Routing Through Different Topographies

Weekend Chat: Routing Through Different Topographies
March Virtual Hangout: Call for Questions – On-Site at The Masters
March Virtual Hangout: Call for Questions – On-Site at The Masters

March Virtual Hangout: Call for Questions – On-Site at The Masters

March Virtual Hangout: Call for Questions – On-Site at The Masters
Weekend Chat: What Is Golf’s Opening Day?
Weekend Chat: What Is Golf’s Opening Day?

Weekend Chat: What Is Golf’s Opening Day?

Weekend Chat: What Is Golf’s Opening Day?
RECENT COMMENTS

Erik Barzeski

Design Notebook Portsea Golf Club Clayton Devries Pont
July 3, 2025
Allegheny is great. Private golf in Pittsburgh is phenomenal and somehow underrated.
Link to article

Erik Barzeski

Change Importance Golf Course Architecture Design
July 3, 2025
I’m glad others commented. I don’t have anything to add except to say that I greatly enjoyed this.
Link to article

Brian Borger

Golf Architecture Mailbag Podcast Call For Questions
July 2, 2025
Andy, I heard you reference on this podcast visiting Rodeo Dunes. I was just out there to see it yesterday and was amazed by the landscape. Interested to hear more of your thoughts about it. Are you going to be putting out some content on it soon?
Link to article

Adrian Mazzarolo

Change Importance Golf Course Architecture Design
July 2, 2025
I do think it is an interesting concept (is experiment a better word?) when we consider the absolute golf mania seen in South Korea, combined with their lower number of courses / smaller geographic footprint. Sort of a build it and they will come? We'll have to wait and see I guess! :)
Link to article

Brett Hochstein

Change Importance Golf Course Architecture Design
July 2, 2025
Thank you, Laurence. Very kind words.
Link to article

Brett Hochstein

Change Importance Golf Course Architecture Design
July 2, 2025
Yeah that course is eye-catching and intriguing, perhaps in both the wrong and right ways. The wrong is the fixed width of the corridors and overall sterility of the place. The right is the randomness of those pot bunkers and the reversibility of the holes. In that sense there's some Old Course-esque mystery/nebulousness of how exactly to play the holes, at least at first. Maybe there's something there, if executed properly and thoughtfully?
Link to article

Brett Hochstein

Change Importance Golf Course Architecture Design
July 2, 2025
Thanks for the comment and reading, Joseph. I'd say Jacob is right--there are too many to mention. I'm going to think a little more on that, though, as there are a few general examples of "monotony" and ways to create change within that. Trees are an obvious one. Too many trees--break it up with some open spaces. No trees at all--break it up with some carefully planted and well-timed copses. Land is another. If super flat, find some ways to better use an existing feature or create some anew. If way too severe, perhaps try to find some available areas of calm (I will note this is often not "available" on many severe sites.) And then there's just architecture in general. The most common examples of monotonous courses tend to be from 50s/60s era designs that have not changed over time. These also tend to be the best opportunities for improvement, as they are more of a clean slate and are often on "core golf" (I.E. no houses within) sites. They usually provide opportunities not just to create new features--bunkers, greens, mounds, berms, burns, dry-washes, etc.--but also reroute holes and vary up their corridor widths. There tends also to be ways to break up what is usually an even spread of isolated trees--remove a bunch, highlight the better and more mature ones, and sometimes create more density and naturalness with the remaining stands. And all this also ties into level of challenge, types of strategy, visual stimulation, etc. The opportunities can be seemingly endless...
Link to article

Luke Lavoie

Weekend Chat Athletes And The Media
July 2, 2025
Collin Morikawa during his Master's press conference: "If you guys -- you can't just ask me when I'm playing well. You guys should be asking the top 10 players every single week, every single day, and just document it. Then you get a sense of who we are and you get a flow of how that comes to be." You can't say this and be mad about a reporter coming up to you on the first tee and asking you a question. He's doing exactly what you asked him to do! Collin's weird aggression with the media is the latest example of a modern tour player being completely out-of-touch. The worst part of this whole experience is all the people who have come to his defense. As if the media is out to get him by simply reporting the words he is saying and asking him questions about his performance -- this is their entire job, as Collin has stated! Before you jump to defend an athlete, especially a golfer, who criticizes the media, ask yourself this: Do we want a world where the only interactions we get with players are on their terms and on their channels? Where they never have to answer an uncomfortable question? Do we really want the players to have more control over "the narrative"? I don't. I value an independent observer point out inconvenient facts and calling players on their BS.
Link to article

Mark Chatfield

Olde Salem Greens Golf Course
July 2, 2025
Thanks for the review of this interesting course and list of other good courses in the Boston area, they are all on my personal Google Maps of golf courses to be played.
Link to article

David Wellen

Chocolate Drops King Prince Golf Georgia
July 2, 2025
I've done a lot of work for PE folks and I think it's highly dependent on the ownership group. There's a path that could be great - a firm views it as at least a partial public good they can also make money on. However, I don't think there are as many firms taking that view as opposed to the cash cow they can flip.
Link to article
Members Proshop

Shop exclusive Fried Egg Golf Club member merchandise .

Explore
Members Concierge

Book the trip of a lifetime using Fried Egg Golf Club's trip planning concierge service.

Explore