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'Old-school' no dirty word in Sin City

Traditional Vegas tracks are great golf finds

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By Chris Baldwin, West Coast Bureau Chief
updated 8:00 p.m. ET July 13, 2006

LAS VEGAS - If it was built yesterday, there's a good chance it's out of date in Las Vegas. At least that's the way it sometimes seems in this land of glitz, games and bulldozers.

Forget Sin City. Try Construction City.

With new casinos and high-priced condo buildings going up left and right (everyone from George Clooney to Ivana Trump has something in the works), it's easy to be considered old news before you've even opened.

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This attitude carries over to the region's golf courses as well. Tracks that would be considered relatively new in many markets are all but cast aside as old and tired here. Sometimes the Las Vegas golf scene is amazingly like the Las Vegas club scene. The "hot" courses draw tee-sheet competition; others are largely played by locals, unless it's Super Bowl or March Madness time.

But going old-school in Vegas golf shouldn't be just a last resort when demand gets frenzied. Turning to some of Sin City's traditional tracks with steep history (which in this town means anything more than 12 years old) can result in memorable rounds under good conditions.

Who knows? You might never go trendy again.

Finding a course with interesting holes, no traffic jams at the tees and Vegas-reasonable greens fees has a way of becoming more addictive than any passing fashion.

"We would rather play this course in under four hours for half the price of any of those new courses," visiting Canadian golfer Ron Rivit said, standing with his wife, Marlene, at Painted Desert Golf Club's cart return. Nearby, the driving range was filled with Vegas-area families getting in some late-afternoon practice. Kids hit golf balls next to their parents. Teenagers on local golf teams challenged each other to long-drive contests.

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The Rivits appeared to be the only tourist golfers around. It's good to be in on the secret. They paid $109 each to play Painted Desert in high season, less than half the cost of a round at a course like Reflection Bay in Lake Las Vegas Lake Las Vegas and about a fifth of the greens fee at the new Wynn Las Vegas Tom Fazio.

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Now, no one's claiming Painted Desert is the equal of Reflection Bay or the $500 Fazio, but in terms of relative value? Slam-dunk for old-school.

Yes, it may be time to expand your view of Las Vegas golf.

FORGOTTEN-TRADITION KINGS

Las Vegas National Golf Club: If you want to go historic in Sin City golf, you have to start with Las Vegas National. It's been going strong for 45 years and counting (try finding buildings in Vegas that old), and it's anything but a tired track.

Las Vegas National is more like an old Palm Springs course than a new-age Vegas one. Built back in 1961, it shares the green look of most of that era's desert tracks. This is the kind of place Frank Sinatra and Bob Hope would love, with towering palm trees, green as far as the eye can see and lakes spread around. It's about as desert looking as San Diego.

And there's actual tradition here. Las Vegas National doesn't depend on Wendy's 3 Tour Challenge winners or other such silly-season stuff to tout a PGA Tour link. Arnold Palmer set the first course record. Jack Nicklaus won here. Tiger Woods's won his first pro tournament in a course rotation that included Las Vegas National in 1996.

Add in the fact that Las Vegas National has $79 twilight rates throughout the year and $159 high-season weekend rates and it's hard to understand how this course ever fell out of style. Plus it's only a short drive from The Strip.

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"Las Vegas National is one of those really good older courses that often get overlooked," said Scott Bowles of Las Vegas Golf Travel, a golf and hotel packaging company. "But once guys play it, it becomes one of their favorite courses.

"It's just something different."


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