Connecticut National Golf Club
About
| Tee | Par | Length | Rating | Slope |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Black | 71 | 6935 yards | 72.9 | 133 |
| Blue | 71 | 6321 yards | 70.5 | 128 |
| White | 71 | 5913 yards | 68.4 | 123 |
| Gold | 71 | 5002 yards | 69.2 | 119 |
| Hole | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | Out | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | In | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Black M: 73.3/131 | 507 | 452 | 430 | 223 | 377 | 604 | 220 | 352 | 162 | 3327 | 402 | 162 | 537 | 386 | 447 | 193 | 462 | 432 | 588 | 3609 | 6936 |
| Blue M: 70.5/123 | 461 | 387 | 389 | 207 | 327 | 560 | 171 | 333 | 151 | 2986 | 375 | 152 | 505 | 333 | 399 | 177 | 427 | 369 | 552 | 3289 | 6275 |
| White M: 68.7/121 W: 74.2/128 | 436 | 359 | 369 | 187 | 304 | 512 | 145 | 312 | 137 | 2761 | 365 | 148 | 485 | 319 | 385 | 165 | 398 | 360 | 552 | 3177 | 5938 |
| Gold M: 63.7/112 W: 69.2/117 | 363 | 277 | 318 | 169 | 260 | 425 | 130 | 277 | 109 | 2328 | 317 | 120 | 436 | 273 | 307 | 124 | 350 | 302 | 445 | 2674 | 5002 |
| Red M: 63.0/111 W: 68.2/115 | 353 | 267 | 309 | 145 | 250 | 417 | 117 | 255 | 105 | 2218 | 308 | 116 | 425 | 259 | 304 | 119 | 339 | 297 | 430 | 2597 | 4815 |
| Handicap | 9 | 5 | 1 | 7 | 11 | 3 | 15 | 13 | 17 | 6 | 18 | 10 | 14 | 4 | 16 | 8 | 2 | 12 | |||
| Par | 5 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 3 | 4 | 3 | 35 | 4 | 3 | 5 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 36 | 71 |
| Handicap (W) | 7 | 5 | 3 | 9 | 11 | 1 | 15 | 13 | 17 | 4 | 18 | 6 | 14 | 2 | 16 | 8 | 12 | 10 |
Course Details
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Bar, RestaurantAvailable Facilities
Clubhouse, Banquet FacilitiesReviews
Reviewer Photos
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Photo submitted by berg8624 on 06/04/2025
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Photo submitted by u936873964 on 10/11/2022
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3rd: par-4, 430. This Cape design tempts you to take the shortest route down the fairway toward the green (on left). Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 08/07/2021
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7th, par-3, 220. A well-guarded and contoured green; a pleasant backdrop. Seen here from its left flank. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 08/07/2021
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8th: par-4, 352. Green complex at this short and steeply downhill hole--made perilous by a pond. Eagle potential, however. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 08/07/2021
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The par-4 14th, 447. Long, beautiful, and possibly deadly. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 08/07/2021
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Sixteen is another excellent, long par-4 concluding on this green. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 08/07/2021
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18th, par-5 of 588. The signature hole? I’ll go for that. Great bunkering from Mungeam. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 08/07/2021
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Photo submitted by Kpoutier on 05/23/2020
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Photo submitted by tscannell77 on 04/25/2020
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Photo submitted by tscannell77 on 04/25/2020
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Photo submitted by tscannell77 on 04/25/2020
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Photo submitted by bon1koo on 11/15/2019
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Photo submitted by bon1koo on 11/15/2019
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A picture speaks louder than words Photo submitted by u6790462 on 05/16/2019
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Connecticut National Golf Club, hole 3 Photo submitted by TimGavrichGP on 07/13/2018
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Connecticut National Golf Club, hole 18 Photo submitted by TimGavrichGP on 07/13/2018
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Parking lot Photo submitted by u209973761 on 04/21/2018
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Club house Photo submitted by u209973761 on 04/21/2018
Wet course, fast greens
This course is wet, lots of rain, cart path only was slow.
Greens are in great shape, very fast and challenging.
Fun course to play.
Beautiful course
The course is beautiful and it is maintained very well.
Great course, fine condition.
This course is in very good shape, a couple of the greens are a bit thin and need some attention. We played a fast 9 and then it slowed down, a lot. It is a great place for fall golf, good views and fun to play.
Always worth the ride
It takes me over an hour to get there, but to play a course of this caliber for the money I paid makes it more than worth it. The more you play the course the more you learn like how hard the green on #2 slopes from right to left and the 2 tier green on number 6. It is a great course and I could not recommend it enough
Connecticut National
I really like the course however the pace of play was ridiculously slow. The greens were very beat up because it seems like nobody fixes there ball marks. Is it worth the money, I’d have to say no due to what I experienced.
fun course, slow pace
course in pretty good shape, some wet spots here and there but not bad. greens rolled good and a fun layout. pace of play was bad though. never saw a ranger and had two groups holding up the entire course. still a good time though and would go back again.
A real gem
Not the longest course but greens are a great defense
Generous fairways and good mix of elevation changes with strategically placed bunkers
A must play
CT National
Course is great condition. My only suggestion would be to either have monuments at the tee boxes to depict hole layout, or have course layout on the scorecard.
A real Connecticut Gem
This course is always in fantastic shape, but this past Sunday, it was absolutely in perfect condition. We teed off shortly after the senior club championship, the greens were as fast as many private courses & the pin locations were brutal. It was a real physical and mental test of your game.
This is a course that you must give serious consideration of playing, it is a real gem
Mungeam’s Balancing Act
No golf course architect has designed better upscale tracks in Connecticut, including re-designs, than Mark Mungeam. Clearly evident to me, after playing Connecticut National today, was how this course rivals Mungeam’s Oxford Greens, the best modern course I had previously played in the state.
Quietly methodical and detailed in his approach to hole design, Mungeam doesn’t try to wow you with pointless flash: water hazards are not scattered about to make the course appear impressive but instead are used sparingly; bunkers, though used frequently, always seem to be placed for strategic purposes only. (By the way, isn’t this what great links courses do?) Still, Connecticut National manages to look like a terrific golf course, as its fairways roll smoothly up and down over an ideal, countryside landscape for golf. It could pass, virtually, for a PGA tour venue, although it’s not conditioned quite so fanatically. Play it from the back tees and it will measure up, likely, to TPC-Hartford in difficulty (or you can compare, simply, the slope and stroke ratings).
Fully applying his own style, Mungeam borrows from his mentor and former design partner, the late Geoffrey Cornish, who believed in applying typical Scottish landforms in course design by taking advantage of the most important feature of construction: smart use of the given topography. The constant ground movement in the fairways exemplifies this philosophy. But Mr. Mungeam also likes to up the adrenalin level, here and there, in the manner of Robert Trent Jones, Sr., by providing some genuine risk-reward action. At three, for example, a par-4 Cape hole, you may risk a tee shot that takes a longer route over some dangerous and recessed bunkers, in hopes of leaving yourself a shorter approach to the hole--and with a much better angle that opens up the green. Then there’s the amazing eighth, a short but potentially deadly par-4 playing steeply downhill off the tee. And the tee shot just happens to be blind, so you’re forced to flirt with a greenside pond if you want to make it a one-shotter. Deep perils, high risks; strong emphasis on strategy.
Every hole is a good one here, so here are three representative ones for those who’ve yet to play the course:
Par-3 fourth, 223: Playing downhill to a green set at an oblique angle to the tee, the hole favors a fade. Hit it too straight and you may end up in the left-side bunker or gnarly, sloping rough. Short right: another bunker. The green is pitched back to front, making distance control tougher. A hole that cuts you little slack.
Par-5 eighteenth, 588: The home hole may be the best five-par, featuring a gently curving dogleg-right that begs for a power fade off the tee. From there, you’ll have to deal with the Spectacle-like bunkers (somewhat reminiscent of the pair at Carnoustie’s 14th, if smaller) on your second shot. The entire conclusion to this hole, in fact, feels like an homage to Carnoustie’s 14th. The bottom line is that additional fairway and greenside bunkers mean you’ll have to make more decisions about how to avoid them.
Par-4 fourteenth, 447: The left-side water hazard may come into play if you’re playing the correct tee, though from the tips it’s over 280 yards out. 14 plays slightly uphill and will challenge you to hit a precise approach into the skull-shaped green with bunkers short-right and left.
A few other qualities that make the course outstanding:
A) Mungeam’s balancing act: Short and long par-3’s, 4’s and 5’s encouraged me to use, today, every one of my irons and hybrids, driver and three-wood, and all three wedges. I chipped and pitched, as well, with a variety of clubs (there are level and slightly sloped areas around the greens, and dropoffs, too).
B) The green complexes: The greens here may sometimes punish weak putting. Just as at Oxford greens, Mungeam sculpts putting surfaces with slopes that may move in different directions on a given green, varying degrees of slope, and different features and contours over each surface’s areas for pin placement. Bounces into these greens may be predicted with good reliability, and all of them have an entrance by which to run the ball on. No two greens are alike, and each has its own set of problems or hazards nearby.
C) Enough fairway width, on many holes, to allow some freedom to use the driver without great fear. And proportionately narrower widths on some of the 330-380 yard four-pars. Moreover, every par-4 and 5 profits from at least one fairway bunker.
D) Creative, unusual, odd, and varied bunker placement (along with varied configurations in a few places) to keep you on your toes.
Playing Conditions: There is little to criticize here because conditioning, as well, was excellent overall. Well-groomed fairways, tees, roughs and green surrounds; and the greens themselves were true. I’m not partial, however, to the speed these greens played--quite fast--combined with some of the bold slopes on four or five of their surfaces. Our foursome clearly was slowed through the eighteen because three and four-putting was sometimes a distinct possibility, and not because anyone was a bad putter. On the third hole, a short, straight uphill putt rolled straight back down the slope a few feet from the direction it came up, just after it had stopped a foot short of the hole. In truth, I haven’t seen that anywhere in a few years.
Some conclusions: Connecticut National presents fair challenges on every hole: a varied, tough, strategic, engaging test that’s about smart golf and that rewards careful shotmaking along with a solid short game. Sometimes demanding on certain shots, always featuring balance and variety, and, despite some ultra-speedy slopes around the greens, among the very top public courses in Connecticut.
Like Mungeam’s equally stunning Oxford Greens, it’s at the top of the heap among anything designed here within the last fifty years. And while playing this track is hardly a day at the beach, I’m already looking forward to my next visit.
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3rd: par-4, 430. This Cape design tempts you to take the shortest route down the fairway toward the green (on left). Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 08/07/2021
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7th, par-3, 220. A well-guarded and contoured green; a pleasant backdrop. Seen here from its left flank. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 08/07/2021
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8th: par-4, 352. Green complex at this short and steeply downhill hole--made perilous by a pond. Eagle potential, however. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 08/07/2021
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The par-4 14th, 447. Long, beautiful, and possibly deadly. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 08/07/2021
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Sixteen is another excellent, long par-4 concluding on this green. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 08/07/2021
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18th, par-5 of 588. The signature hole? I’ll go for that. Great bunkering from Mungeam. Photo submitted by AptlyLinked on 08/07/2021
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