At GOLF.com, travel — and playing golf — is a part of the gig. Here, as we count down the final days of 2024, is a look at some of the favorite courses our staffers played over the past 12 months.
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Phoenix, Ariz., is known as one of the country’s golf meccas — and for good reason. With nearly 200 courses in the region — and mild winter temperatures in the 60s and 70s — there’s no shortage of places to play all year round. The fact that the area is a coveted destination for vacationers escaping the winter cold, however, creates a bit of a problem for locals like me. As soon as the weather gets nice, the price of golf increases dramatically — sometimes to several hundred dollars per round. (Check out the eye-popping green fees I found around town during last year’s Super Bowl weekend — yikes!)
If you aren’t a member of a private club, you need to be prepared to shell out in a big way to play a round during the prime season. But unless it’s a special occasion with friends and family in town, I’m generally not inclined to spend top dollar on golf. This year, though, I learned why it pays to play the bulk of my rounds in the off-peak summer months when I discovered a smokin’ late-summer deal at a local course.
Stonecreek GC is a public course located just minutes from my home in Phoenix. The par-71, 6,871-yard course was originally designed by Gary Grandstaff and Roy Dye, and later re-designed by Arthur Hills & Associates. The vibe is friendly and low-key, and the links-style layout offers beautiful views of the Squaw Peak mountains.
Prior to the start of summer, my mom, who also lives locally, expressed an interest in re-establishing her long-dormant handicap index. We decided to play a series of rounds together, and as I was investigating a good venue for us, I happened upon a summer deal from Stonecreek that seemed too good to be true. The Stonecreek “6-pack” offered six rounds of golf for $159 — that came out to only $26.50 per round, and included the cart. The only catch? All rounds needed to be completed by the end of September, and the earliest you could book a tee times was 72 hours in advance. Even though we’d have to brave 110-degree temperatures, we were immediately sold.
Signing up for the 6-pack was the first time I had multiple days of golf on my schedule — one round per week — since my college days. It’s remarkable how much better each round feels when you get in the groove of regular play. I hadn’t experienced that in a long time! And aside from spending the quality time with my mom, which I loved, it was also fun to get to know a nearby course as our “local.” Stonecreek is tricky, with some lay-ups required off tees, numerous inconveniently-placed penalty areas and lots of bunkers. Water comes into play numerous times. In our first round, I lost two sleeves of balls. (!) But each week, over the course of our six rounds, my mom and I discovered how to play each hole strategically. By the end of September, I suffered no such losses. We knew were to miss and how to mitigate potential blow-ups.
It felt good to call a new course my home. I felt like a regular, so much so that when a friend came to town last week, Stonecreek was where I wanted to bring him to play. Our high-season green fee? $105. While the price stung a bit, considering what I had paid to play less than three months before, the cost was still a relative bargain, considering the cost of other area courses.
More than anything, the Stonecreek 6-Pack reminded me of golf’s core joys: Playing with people you love and enjoying the outdoors — even when it’s sweltering. The fact that it was also ultra-affordable was the icing on the cake.
While the Phoenix temperatures are positively ideal at the moment, suffice to to say that my mom and I are already looking forward to the summer — and another Stonecreek 6-pack.
Golf.com Editor
As a four-year member of Columbia’s inaugural class of female varsity golfers, Jessica can out-birdie everyone on the masthead. She can out-hustle them in the office, too, where she’s primarily responsible for producing both print and online features, and overseeing major special projects, such as GOLF’s inaugural Style Issue, which debuted in February 2018. Her original interview series, “A Round With,” debuted in November of 2015, and appeared in both in the magazine and in video form on GOLF.com.
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