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Fourth hole, 586/572 yards; It used to be unreachable in two shots, but today's technology brings it within range. It's the last hole to play downhill before the front nine starts tacking its way uphill to the clubhouse. The small green slopes back to front with a level spot in the rear. Not many fours get written on scorecard.
Fifth hole, 401/388 yards; We are now playing back uphill tho we may not sense it because of the gradual slope. The tee shot doglegs right and there's an opportunity to cut it with an aggressive drive. The fifth possesses one of the cruelest greens on the course. It slopes high left to low right. You must be short of the pin with your second shot. Even short of the green is better than being above the flagstick. It's an underrated hole.
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Seventh hole, 386/372 yards; The only mediocre hole on the course. The player must not be fooled into his inclination to cut the corner. It plays straightaway. The large green has a bowl in the front right corner. It's the main line of defense. When the pin is placed away from it, then three can be scored.
Eighth hole, 180/157 yards; Oh what a hole this was! Unfair in every way. The green was so severely pitched that balls would roll to the cup and tumble back to ones feet. Brian Huntley came in and flattened the green to its present look. However, he mounded the green and took away the imposing view from the tee when you knew a ball not hit straight would jump into one of the ravines guarding the left and the right. A needed improvement but missed opportunity.
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Tenth hole, 440/423 yards; Not many know this, but the tee box used to be back where the parking lot is now and played as a par five. This explains the small green and explains the use of the swale that crosses the fairway where all the long hitters drive into. As a long par four, many players instantly reach for a driver and hit the ball into the valley. It's a shorter second shot from the valley, but it's completely blind. From 200 marker, the player has clear view of green, and can use the terrain to run the ball on. It's a difficult start to the back nine.
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Twelfth hole, 143/137 yards; The old architects designed courses as the land dictated thus there were some unusual routings. Here at Sleepy Hollow, the back nine has only one par three and one par five. Twelve on the scorecard looks like a birdie hole, but this is one of the toughest short holes you ll play. The green is set at a 45* angle, and is 42 yards long. The left pin position requires a longer more accurate shot since the green narrows on that side. Once on the putting surface, two putts is not guaranteed as the green slopes hard to the right. There may not be a more diverse, more challenging set of par threes in northeast Ohio!
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Fourteenth hole, 497/465 yards; This risk reward par five has lost more tournaments than any hole on the course. It doglegs right like letter "L" around the property boundary. The aggressive play is a drive down the left side so one can hoist it over the trees and OB stakes to reach the green in two shots. Failure to do so is... A big umber! Those playing it as a three shot hole must still focus on hitting it the
correct yardage to the fairway across the valley. Anything that goes thru the fairway will be blocked out. This is an exciting par five.
Fifteenth hole, 327/319 yards; Fifteen starts the stretch into the clubhouse, all relatively short par fours. The green here is probably the most dramatic. With a valley left, right, and short, this effectively plays as an island green. Players must set themselves up with a good layup that leaves a favorite yardage so they can attack appropriately with the ball beneath the cup. This ferocious green is not one to be above the hole. As I've said a few times before, a hole you won't see elsewhere.
Sixteenth hole, 378/360 yards; Sixteen is routed thru a shallow valley and the golfer who challenges the treeline down the left side will be rewarded with a flat lie and clear view of the green. Those who hit straightaway take their chances. The valley is a very subtle hazard. The green is beautifully sited as the valley then protects the left and sand guards the right. Its a perfect example of Stanley Thompson's routing ability.
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Eighteenth hole, 386/364 yards; Sleepy Hollow finishes with a good par four. Not overly long, the challenge comes at the green. Sloping rear left to front right with a false front makes the approach a very demanding shot. Often players try to place the ball underneath the cup, and watch it catch the slope and spin down the hill short of the green. It's a classic ending to classic par four.
I'm biased towards Sleepy Hollow, it being my home course for many years, and I've always shied away from giving it the praise it deserves. Golfweek magazine just rated it #2 public golf course in Ohio which supports the view i had all along that Sleepy Hollow is a top 5 course. I give it a 7 rating. (great)
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