Go to GOLFZING.com for the best deals on tee times at Mountain Meadows Golf Course. Mountain Meadows Golf Course is an 18-hole championship-length golf course set amid the rolling hills, flourishing trees, and native wildlife of north Pomona.
The opening hole is a straightaway par 5 measuring 523 yards from the back tees. It’s possible for longer players to reach the green in two, but your second shot has been made tougher by the recently installed dry creek bed that runs across the fairway about 100 yards in front of the green. This is a good risk/reward hole.
Your tee shot here is important. The green is large, but relatively flat and guarded by bunkers on the left and right sides. This is the #1 handicap hole on the golf course. It is a very important blind tee shot up and over a hill, which slopes down and to the left.
This hole is a straightaway hole with a dry creek bed in front of the tee and bordering the left side of the fairway. The green is two-tiered with bunkers right and left to catch any wayward approach shots.
The tee shot needs to stay to the center or left side of the fairway or it will roll into the rough and in the trees on the right side . The second shot is uphill to a green that can’t be seen from the fairway and is guarded by a large bunker on the left, a pot bunker on the front right, and a bunker to the right of the green.
This hole doglegs left and plays longer than it really is. The tee shot must be played to the left side of the fairway, which slopes from left to right. There is a small stand of trees that guards the left side of the fairway, making it tough to go for the green in two.
There is also one tall pine tree directly in the middle of the fairway, approximately 100 yards from the green, making the placement of the tee shot very important. The green is flat with a bunker guarding the front right of the green. This hole is all about the tee shot.
Fox Run is definitely a course to add to your must play list for years to come. Fox Run Driving Range is conveniently located just minutes from Woodfield Mall. The range features 55 hitting stations, a 300-yard venue, both grass tees and mats, and a sand bunker for your practice needs.
Redesigned by architect Greg Martin in 2012 the course was updated to be more challenging for the better players, while at the same time more forgiving and enjoyable for recreational golfers and families. Fox Run is definitely a course to add to your must play list for years to come.
Wedge play abounds. A third of Mountain Shadows’ holes will require one wedge ...
With its elevated tees above the famous Mountain Shadows Resort Scottsdale pond, this most delicate of short-shot holes plays to a peninsula green that is rather simple in terms of breaks and rolls. Defined by a stone ledge on all sides and front, the green appears much smaller than it actually is.
The Biarritz at Mountain Shadows is a twist on the original sporting a low valley to the left of the green. This valley will be a welcome reprieve to those who do not want to tangle with the bunker set short and to the right side of the green.
When Arthur Jack Snyder originally designed Mountain Shadows in the early 1960s ...
In the style of the famous 6th green at Riviera Country Club in Los Angeles, a design of George C. Thomas and William P. “Billy” Bell, Mountain Shadows has its own version of the bunker-within-a-green concept. Here, the small bunker serves to divide the large double green.
Learn more about our Pristine Clean program and current operations. The original 1961 course was designed by Arthur Jack Snyder, and redesigned by his mentee, Forrest Richardson. The updated layout pays homage to the original with challenging greens, rugged slopes, and distinct holes.