Just like hole 5 at Papagayo's Four Season in Costa Rica, Puerto Rico's Royal Isabela hole 17 is a 215 yard par 3. Without question our most difficult golf hole. 17 has 11 tee boxes...most perched at cliff's edge 180 feet above the Atlantic. Your tee shot must account for wind in to safely carry the chasm before reaching the green. The 3 level green juts out to a penninsula across that soars 150 feet above the Atlnatic. As our dear friend, golf architect David W. Pfaff, use to say "a monkey could have designed this hole". David along with my brother, Charlie, and I design Royal Isabela. On a sad note, David passed away about a year ago...we miss him...

Most people think the handicap ratings on holes are a ranking that shows which holes require a stroke to stay even with a scratch golfer. That is not the case. It should be, but isn't. The hole handicap ratings start with the holes on which a golfer would score the highest numerical score. It has nothing to do with par. A 600 yard par 5 is more difficult than a 215 par 3. The two double bogeys the author shot would be pars on a par 5. His gross score is likely to be higher than on any par 3 hole, therefore it should be handicapped as more difficult than any par 3.
If the handicapping works the way it is designed to work, and a golfer shoots exactly according to averages, he would score a net 4 on every hole regardless of par (assuming a total par of 72 and a course rating of 72).
I don't agree with this method of hole handicapping, but that is how it is supposed to work.

Default User Avatar

NOTHING VENTURED NOTHING GAINED

Default User Avatar

Portage Country Club in Portage Wisconsin has a par 3 hole (#3) rated as the number one hanidcap hole. It's 213 yards from the white tee, into the prevailing wind, with water on the entire left side and behind the green. To the right is a wooded hillside, a popular landing place but a difficult bogey if you go there.

Default User Avatar

Oakmont #8 is a beast!

A note regarding Calvin's comment about Cacapon State Park #18 green with a chimney in the middle of it. It is actually in the middle of the practice putting green. By the way this course is one of the best kept secrets around. Just a beautiful, quiet, challenging golf experience in a wonderful country setting. One of my favorites.
RC

The Old Course at Omni Bedford Springs Resort in Bedford, Pennsylvania has a par-3 ranked as the #1 handicap hole. Our fourth hole, adequately named "Volcano," is 223 yards uphill to a green that appears to sit at the top of a volcano. Our course is also ranked the #1 Public and #1 Resort Golf Course in Pennsylvania by GolfWeek Magazine as well as #53 on their "Top 100 Resort Courses in the United States" list. Come see us!

This one is easy - the 5th hole at Anstruther Golf Club in Scotland. Of course most have never heard of this little 9 hole course 9 miles south of St Andrews and along the coast between Anstruther and Pittenweem. It is another one of those unique Scottish courses like Shiskine and Stonehaven that offer just spectacular scenery, great hospitality and pure fun.

The par 3 called Rockies was voted the toughest par 3 in the UK. "From the elevated tee you must hit the ball onto the small fairway which is guarded on the right by a steep gorse and rough bank and on the left by the Firth of Forth which is out of bounds.
The more adventurous golfer can go for the green but a knowe that obscures half of the green makes this an extremely difficult and high risk shot. Best results are achieved by playing it as a par 4."

And the unfortunate thing is, being a nine-hole course, you have to play it twice
.anstruthergolf.co.uk/anstruthergolfclub.pdf

There are quite a number of courses in Australia that have different stroke and match play ratings for each hole in the round marked on the card.

I would like to question the reasoning behind the toughest par 3 on our course that is rated as the #18 handicap hole! The handicap committee & the club pro all agree with the rating that was set many years ago & never changed. Unless there is greater than a 17-stroke handicap differential between two match play players, the low handicapper has an advantage over a higher handicapper.

It is 187 yards into the prevailing wind (if the wind ever stopped blowing, everyone would fall over!) to a long, narrow from side to side, domed green.
It has a bunker guarding the right front with a strategic tree to the front left and right of the green to prevent shot shaping. If your tee shot misses the green pin high, you have a difficult chip, which if short, it rolls off & you do it again, if long it rolls off & you chip again. The reason the hole is rated #18 is because it is the hole a low handicapper would least wish to give a stroke to a higher handicapper in match play!!!!! That seems one-sided favouring low handicappers.