My son and I are from Canada and we played 9 holes last year during our baseball trip and we were so impressed we scheduled 18 holes last Friday morning before our Cleveland Guardians game. I am 76 years and my son is 43 and a single digit handicap.
We have played many great courses in Canada and US including Bethpage Black and Sleepy Hollow Golf Course is truly in the top echelon of golf courses. Beautiful natural setting, great terrain changes and so peaceful and enjoyable to play although it is very challenging, especially the greens which are sloped, fast and well protected. The greens and the turf were magnificent and the rough was long and tough due to wet weather.
Price is amazing value, $41 for myself as senior and $55 for my son with cart. Carts could use an upgrade in the near future, no GPS and yardage on course is minimal at best, glad I had my Garmin golf watch.
Same starter as we had a year ago, John who is 83, made our day again with his hockey knowledge including Don Cherry. We met John after our round in the parking lot with his clubs heading out for his round. Great customer service by Pro Shop and Bag Drop. The entire environment is so welcoming and first class in every respect. This is their 100 th Anniversary with flags, tee markers and scorecard.
I played the forward tees and even they were long given the hole lengths, wet turf and wind. Forget your score and enjoy the experience. Not really suitable for short hitters, my wife would not have enjoyed it off the tee. The greens are really tough, lots of slope and break. 3 or 4 putts will happen. We didn’t keep score and just enjoyed our outing on a fantastic but tough golf course, especially with the wind and wet rough we experienced.
The bunkers were groomed perfectly and were wet and firm which I prefer. You really need good wedge shots to get on the greens as many holes have severe slopes surrounding much of the green and the ball is lost and not retrievable. We lost a few balls apiece as the rough was so deep. A few blind holes on the back side are tough for anyone who is not familiar with the layout. Lots of divots on the beautiful fairways and no sand bottles provided on the carts which was very disappointing as I make it a practice to fill as many as I can throughout the round. Very few ball marks on the greens which was excellent.
We played as a twosome and never waited one second on all 18 holes. Played easily in 3.5 hours. One incredible golf course that we highly recommend, absolutely first-class in...
Read moreI’ve played Sleepy Hollow nearly every week for the past seven years. I love this course.
Stanley Thompson’s original design is one of the finest examples of Golden Age architecture — strategic, natural, and fair. I keep coming back because I believe in that vision. But sadly, the current course conditions no longer reflect the spirit Thompson intended.
Green speeds have steadily increased to levels (9.5–11.5 on the Stimpmeter) almost double what Thompson’s designs were built for (~5–6 Stimp in the 1920s–30s; USGA Green Section Record, 2015). Several greens — especially #2, #5, #7, and #9 — now punish good lag putts. Many times, I’ve watched putts that stop a foot short of the hole roll all the way back past the original putting spot. Thompson designed greens to reward thoughtful play, not to create putt-putt chaos.
The rough is now about 4 inches tall and extremely dense, making it easy to lose a ball even one foot off the fairway. Recovery options are limited to lateral chip-outs, not strategic recovery shots — contrary to Golden Age philosophy of graduated penalties (George Bahto, The Evangelist of Golf, 2002; USGA, 2014).
Tee boxes have badly deteriorated. Many have no flat lies anymore — balls are consistently above or below your feet even before the hole begins. Thompson’s design principles emphasized strategic difficulty from the shot, not basic instability from the ground itself (Cornish & Whitten, The Architects of Golf, 1993).
Green shrinkage over decades has also forced pin positions onto steeper areas never intended for hole locations (USGA Green Expansion Report, 2012), further compounding the problem of unplayable putts.
I say this not as a one-time visitor, but as someone who has cared enough to play this course almost every week for the better part of a decade. I want Sleepy Hollow to succeed.
I hope The Cleveland Metroparks considers simple steps toward a historically informed restoration: • Moderating green speeds to suit the original slopes or not placing holes on slopes greater than 4%. • Managing rough height to allow for strategic play (a simple first cut would do) • Rebuilding and leveling tees
Sleepy Hollow deserves to be the masterpiece it was built to be — a beautiful, challenging, and strategically fair experience for all players, as Stanley...
Read moreDate of Play: 05/24/2025 I’ll preface this review with the fact I have played this Metroparks course once in Fall 2024 and loved the foliage and quality. The only reason they get a 1 star is due to the beauty of the area.
It was our first time out in 2025. It’s Memorial Day Weekend and we had a group of four tee off from the front 9 for 9 holes. We were first rushed on the first tee box even though the group in front of us was still within 100 yards. We understood they wanted the pace to be kept and it’s standard on busy weekends to have this.
4 holes in and the ranger begins tailing our carts and driving/parking by us as we are approaching the green. Poor etiquette and he can clearly see there is a group in front of us just teeing off and a group in front of them still on the green. He proceeds to park his cart in the middle of the fairway on the fifth hole and stand in the middle of the fairway while we tee off. We ask him to move his cart and he gives us attitude that his cart is not in the way and we should not hit it if we are good enough. For the next 10 minutes we are verbally assaulted by the ranger as he explains to us that we shouldn’t play the course…. This is a public course and we are limited in our pace due to the backlog in front of us. We had called into the clubhouse about this situation and they informed us they would handle it.
Once we finished the round we stopped in the clubhouse to lodge a formal complaint and understand why this had occurred. The one lady reminded us that we needed to keep pace. We showed her pictures of the group in front of us and how we could not go any faster. The male in the clubhouse, Michael, assured us they would handle the ranger and his actions. This ruined our experience for half the round and was highly unprofessional. We have never experienced this at any course before, public or private. I am hoping the Metroparks take action as this goes against their mission for affordable and quality golf for all ages and levels.
I will not be playing this course again due to the way we were treated unless we are informed the ranger has been held accountable. Once again, beautiful course, but terrible experience. They should also take care of the sinkholes near greens 2 and 9 as they are...
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