Kapalua: Plantation
Lahaina, HI, United States • Public
Courtesy of Dave Sansom
Courtesy of Dave Sansom
Courtesy of Dave Sansom
Courtesy of Dave Sansom
Dave Sansom
Overview
From Golf Digest Architecture Editor emeritus Ron Whitten:
Most golf fans are familiar with Kapalua Golf Club’s Plantation Course, home of the PGA Tour's opening event each year. Located on the north shore of the Hawaiian island of Maui, the Plantation was built from open, windswept pineapple fields on the pronounced slope of a volcano and is irrigated by sprinklers pressured solely by gravity.
As the first design collaboration by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw, it unveiled their joint admiration for old-style courses. The blind drive on the fourth, the cut-the-corner drives on the fifth and sixth are all based on tee shots found at National Golf Links. So, too, are its punchbowl green and strings of diagonal bunkers. It's also a massive course, built on a huge scale, Coore says, to accommodate the wind and the slope and the fact that it gets mostly resort play.
So it's a big course. But what sets it apart in my mind are the little things. When I played the course years ago with Coore, it took only one hole for me to appreciate one of its subtleties. We were on the tee of the par-3 second, an OK hole but nothing riveting, nothing like the canyon-carry par-3 eighth or the ocean-backdropped par-3 11th. The second sits on a rare flat portion of the property. The green sits at a diagonal, angling left to right, and there's a string of bunkers staggering up the right side of the green. The first bunker appears to be directly in front of the green but is actually 40 yards short of it. When pointed out to me, I called it Gingerbread. Bill disagreed.
"The wind quarters off your left shoulder from behind you," he pointed out. "The green goes ever so slightly away from you from front to back and left to right. It is a very obvious situation, given the wind condition and the angle of this green; you know you should hit a shot left-to-right to fit the shot with the green.
"But if the flag is at the front, there’s no way to fly that ball all the way to the hole and stop it close. You may stop it somewhere on the green, but nowhere within a reasonable putt. So you have to aim short of the green. They maintain the approaches so beautifully over here—firm approaches mowed at probably a quarter of an inch; you can literally putt from out there if you chose to do so.
"But that brings that first bunker in play," Coore continued. "When the flag is up front, you are absolutely required to land your ball just over that first bunker in order to get it to bounce and run to that front pin position."
Kapalua's second is a simple-looking hole with a great deal of thought behind it. I suppose a lot of present-day architects would not have placed that forwardmost bunker on the hole, in the interests of playability for high-handicap resort golfers. But most of the old-time architects probably would have used such carry bunkers, especially in the days before irrigation, when greens were hard as a rock and every approach shot had to be bounced aboard.
Another reason why studying the history of architecture might just help your score.
About
Awards
Ranking history:
Second 100 Greatest: Ranked since 2015.
2023-'24 ranking: 149th.
Previous ranking: 139th.
100 Greatest: Ranked 2011-2014.
Highest ranking: 88th, 2011-'12.
100 Greatest Public: Ranked since the inaugural edition in 2003.
2023-'24 ranking (and previous): 23rd.
Highest ranking: No. 17, 2011-'12.
Best in State: Ranked first, 2011-'12. Ranked second 2013-'16, 2019-'20. Ranked third, 2017-'18, 2021-'22, 2023-'24.
Current ranking: 3rd.
Panelists
Ratings from our panel of 1,900 course-ranking panelists
100 GREATEST/BEST IN STATE SCORES
Shot Options
Character
Challenge
Layout Variety
Fun
Aesthetics
Conditioning
Reviews
Review
“Beautiful setting and worth playing while on vacation. Wind is a significant factor."
Read More2023
Review
“Expensive for non-residents but a great golf course where just about every shot is familiar to anyone who watches the Tournament of Champions, Great opportunity for 300+ drives on 17 and 18! Keep an eye out for whales during season,"
Read More2023
Review
“I truly enjoyed playing here both for the challenge and the aesthetics. The change in elevation is quite difficult to making club selection easy, but very much a challenge to all levels of players. The course was in superb condition both fairways and greens were first class. This is a challenge you should try."
Read More2023
Review
“my number one course to play in the US! Fun and very challenging."
Read More2023
Review
“Wide fairways, big slopping greens and unbeatable views make this one of the best places to play in all of Hawaii. A true paradise golf course."
Read More2022
Review
“Hawaii's pre-eminent design offers all-world scenic views, and a wild wind-influenced routing with enormous width and tremendous variability on a day-to-day basis. While I am a big fan of the Plantation course, and the recent changes that have cleaned out a bit of too-close jungle (great job on #5 through #7!), my one complaint is that it never plays as firm and fast as imagined until tournament week."
Read More2022
Review
“One of the most challenging courses in Hawaii. A must see if you haven't visited. The redone clubhouse is fantastic. The new turf conditions and green conditions are great since the renovation in 2020. The wind conditions define the golf experience as you stare out into the blue seas of the pacific all day."
Read More2022
Review
“A must visit when on Maui, fantastic golf experience when you combine the quality of the golf course with the stunning views."
Read More2022
Review
“Amazing views, fun holes, great place. Worth the big price tag."
Read More2022
Review
“If a roller coaster were a golf course this would be it. The course has spectacular views of the Pacific Ocean from 17 holes as you move up and down the mountain, then over and around massive canyons. Greens and fairways are severely sloped. Condition were good, not great for the price."
Read More2022
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