Holey Terror: Hole No. 14 at Maumee Bay

Maumee Bay Holey Terror

Holey Terror: Hole No. 14 at Maumee Bay

Maumee Bay • Oregon, OH • maumeebaylodge.com • 419-836-9009

Hole No. 14 • Par 5 • 525 Yards

Good golf architects can manipulate and manufacture interesting layouts with bulldozers and Bobcats. It’s the great ones who can accomplish the same feat plus so much more by simply allowing a property’s natural attributes chart the course for them. It is this difference – along with utilizing textures and colors, shadowing and framing – that defines the more than 200 courses Arthur Hills built in his illustrious career.

Maumee Bay State Park Golf Course

One of Toledo, Ohio’s favorite sons passed away in May 2021 at the age of 91. But Hills’ legacy, and the impact he had on nearly every segment of the course design business for more than five decades, will certainly endure. His handiwork can be enjoyed at numerous courses throughout the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic, but especially in his hometown.

Hills grew up just across the railroad tracks from Ottawa Park in Toledo, a wonderful municipal course built at the turn-of-the-century. Early in his design career he fashioned Detwiler Park nearby, a friendly par-71 layout with terrific views that, if you’re not careful, can sneak up and take a bite out of your scorecard. However, if you crave more, it is another Hills’ creation just a few miles away that serves up even bigger proportions of his immense design talent.

Acclaimed by regional and national publications, alike, Hills’ Maumee Bay State Park course in Oregon, OH, covers over 1,850 acres of protected wetlands and follows the beautiful north coast of Ohio. Opened in 1991, Hills designed this unique Scottish-style links layout complete with low rolling mounds, tall fescues, few trees, and numerous sand bunkers and ponds. Maumee Bay has a distinct resort feel, and one can almost hear the faint sounds of bagpipes playing as they maneuver the par-72, 6,914-yard track.

Hole 1 at Maumee Bay

Hills’ design philosophy is captured to a tee at Maumee Bay. The flat terrain was left intact, providing sweeping vistas that are as scenic as they are deceptive. The fairways do look wide and, for the most part, are indeed. But miss one and your ball will likely be swallowed whole by the tall native grasses that define or outline most holes. And if the brush doesn’t get you, the course’s many water hazards certainly will.

This par-5, 525-yard No. 14 is far and away the toughest hole and this week’s Holey Terror nominee. Rated the No. 1 handicap, it turns left-to-right between two ponds, creating a funnel-like effect. Squeeze through the gauntlet and you’re left with a delicate approach shot to an oblong, diagonal green pitched to the left and fronted by water.

Maumee Bay

Hills took a traditional or historic approach when laying out Maumee Bay. Interesting shot angles, beautiful grasses and plants, sweeping views and vistas, gentle mounding, and other design subtleties combine to form a fair and balanced course that is both strategically sound and pleasing to the eye. Best of all, he allowed the property to speak for itself.

What is the most challenging hole at your favorite TeeTime Golf Pass participating course? Let us know! We would love to feature it in an upcoming issue of our weekly newsletter. Submit your Holey Terror to [email protected].

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