Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Giants Ridge - Quarry (Biwabik, MN)

#35 Top 100 Public USA (Golf Digest)

#68 Top 100 Public USA (Golf Magazine)

#36 Top 100 USA Resort (GolfWeek)

#44 Top 100 USA Public (GolfWeek)

#1 Best Public Courses Minnesota (GolfWeek)

Taking a page out of Mike Strantz’ book, Jeff Brauer created a wild, raucous ride full of heart pounding holes and cool shots. Like Tobacco Road, it plays easier than it looks. Wide fairways and multiple options allow players to choose how daring or conservative they want to be. The rich Northland terrain fits beautifully with the scale of the course, a mix of hardwoods, fauna, rock piles, and old quarry remnants.

(The 575/558/525 yard par five second can be played many different ways but the temptation to play it as a straightaway hole is there for the tiger golfer. Most of us will tack our way around the hazard, trying to obtain a good angle for our third…

…the central bunker is the last line of defense against the long hitter while squeezing the angle for short hitter coming from the side. It’s a terrific par five with many options to make it exciting for every level of player.)

(The 369/346/313 yard sixth is a great drive and pitch par four featuring a thrilling tee shot over a quarry…

…as this pic shows, the pitch portion of the hole is to a massive green full of great pin locations. Today’s flag is tucked onto a tiny tier in the back right corner. While this Sunday pin is hard to negotiate, most others are very accessible. My only thought is do they ever stick the pin in the sunken “bath tub” seen on the left side of the picture?)

(The 189/175/142 yard par three seventh plays over another quarry to an unusual green where the front half is three times wider than the back. Imagine a pin squeezed into the far left or far right. How juicy would it be hitting to those flags?!)

I saw a lot similarities with Tobacco Road, many times on the par fives where the low index player can take on risk and be rewarded with a shorter shot. It even has a dell type green where the flag can be hidden behind a hill, reminiscent of Tobacco’s famous par five thirteenth. The par fours are terrific, and the three short ones in particular are excellent. The past several years, the drive and pitch has been forlorn for the dramatic driveable hole, but the Quarry reminds us how exciting these types are, and for good measure, has one of the best driveable par fours in the country. It’s no surprise they’re my favorite holes on the course.

(The 377/353/325 yard par four ninth has a wide fairway that bottlenecks between two large hills. A shot down the left leaves the best angle while an indifferent strike to the right can be blocked out…

…the passage through the neck is quite narrow. Notice how unfavorable drives from the tee can leave very tricky approach shots.)

(The 323/296/275 yard par four thirteenth is the hole everyone associates with Giants Ridge. A centerline bunker forces a decision between laying back, hitting to the lower right, or playing to the upper left. The large green is angled so it’s thirty yards less to carry to the right side of the green…

…it is a wall of rough fronting the green so aggressive players best not be short. This is the view from the upper left where every pin is in view…

…being short or on the lower right leaves a blind to semi blind shot. It’s a classic 2 or 7 hole. Architecture rarely gets better than this!)

The Quarry has been getting accolades since it opened in 2003. It won Best New Course that year, and climbed the rankings to the 18th best public course in America before settling in the mid 30s. The unfortunate truth is that the last two holes play on the land by the clubhouse, away from the first sixteen. It makes for a long transition between 16-17, and creates an awkward last hole. Brauer acknowledged this much in an interview and commented they thought about making eighteen a par three over the corner of the lake. Regardless, the course is such high quality, I’m willing to let a few blemishes slide. I give Giants Ridge Quarry an 8 (excellent)(worth spending a weekend to play).

(The 513/499/454 yard par five fourteenth plays uphill to a saddled green that hides behind two ridges. Today’s pin is on the right, just out of view from the left fairway. Imagine how it looks from the center or right half. Strantz would love it!)

(One of my better rounds this year unfortunately. If I didn’t have 170 yards or less, I’d lay up and take my chances with my short game. Not a bad score playing with that mentality. I played the white tees at 6,101 yards. The course is in excellent shape and the $140 price tag is a great value considering it’s ranked inside the top 50. Minnesota is the 32 state I’ve played in.)

(454/431/398 par four fifteenth has an interrupted fairway. The approach is 180-200 from this view.)

(The 558/502/473 par five sixteenth is an excellent driving hole. Bailing out right makes second shot an intimidating one over a cross hazard. Excellent green!)

(The 220/181/156 yard seventeenth is a straightforward hole and relatively easy if you refrain from being too aggressive. Plenty of green to hit from the tee.)

(The 468/448/408 yard eighteenth hole doglegs left. A draw is optimal but it’s a longer carry than you think. The fairway does run out before tumbling over the ravine into the water…

…the approach is typically 200+ so layup like I did in the pic, or try to work it off the backside of the slope. Right is dead. It’s a tough ending hole.) Blog 487