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Green Bay Country Club

Coordinates: 44°26′58″N 87°57′41″W / 44.44944°N 87.96139°W / 44.44944; -87.96139
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Green Bay Country Club
Club information
LocationBellevue, Wisconsin, U.S.
Established1995
TypePrivate
Total holes18
WebsiteGreen Bay Country Club - Home
Green Bay Country Club
Designed byDick Nugent
Par72
Length7097
Course rating74.2
Slope rating141

Green Bay Country Club (GBCC) is a country club located in Bellevue, Wisconsin. The club was established in 1995 and has two sections, a sports center and a golf course.[1]

Sports center

The sports center contains a swimming pool with a waterslide, beach volleyball, a cabana, six tennis courts, a nine-hole putting course, a practice putting and chipping green, and a six-hole par three golf course, also called the Quarry Course.

Golf course

Tournaments

Green Bay Country Club was the home of the Great Lakes Classic, an event played during the first three years of the Women's Senior Golf Tour (now the Legends Tour). In 2000, the initial year of the tour, the tournament was sponsored by ShopKo and won by Vicki Fergon.[2][3] In 2001 it was again sponsored by ShopKo, and won by Hollis Stacy.[4] In 2002 the tournament was renamed the Copps Great Lakes Classic, and the winner was Patty Sheehan.[5]

The course has also been the venue for the Wisconsin State Golf Association Match Play Championship.[6]

Golf Digest has listed the course as one of the top 10 courses in Wisconsin.[7]

Layout

The golf course has eighteen holes and has a total of eight teeing options.

Scorecard

Green Bay Country Club
Tee Rating/Slope 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Out 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 In Total
Black 74.2 / 141 326 550 350 188 387 634 469 175 450 3529 540 203 410 200 439 398 430 557 391 3568 7097
Blue 71.9 / 135 314 517 324 170 375 591 437 154 430 3312 526 174 366 178 417 376 420 537 391 3385 6697
Blue-Gold 70.8 / 132 314 517 300 170 359 516 409 154 398 3137 526 174 366 178 395 363 389 537 367 3295 6432
Gold 70.3 / 131 301 510 300 149 359 516 409 142 398 3084 508 142 348 156 395 363 389 520 367 3188 6272
Gold-White 69.0 / 128 301 477 275 149 359 516 382 142 363 2964 508 142 348 156 366 346 375 476 330 3047 6011
White 68.1 / 126 272 477 275 130 356 473 382 131 363 2859 494 137 331 149 366 346 375 476 330 3004 5863
SI Men's 11 3 9 17 5 7 13 15 1 6 18 12 16 8 10 4 2 14
Par 4 5 4 3 4 5 4 3 4 36 5 3 4 3 4 4 4 5 4 36 72
SI Women's 1 7 3 17 11 9 13 15 5 4 18 14 16 12 6 8 2 10
Green 70.6 / 125 261 419 275 109 240 442 330 131 363 2570 442 137 264 149 316 321 337 465 308 2739 5309
Red 69.0 / 121 249 419 233 109 240 442 330 91 300 2413 412 120 264 108 316 321 337 428 282 2588 5001

References

  1. ^ D’Amato, Gary (May 13, 2007). "'I've become a day care center' Private clubs find that family amenities are key to building membership". Journal Sentinel (Milwaukee, Wisconsin). Retrieved 2009-03-09.
  2. ^ Legends Tour 2000 Tournaments Recap (accessed 2012-07-11).
  3. ^ Joe Juliano, "A Force Of Will Creates A Tour De Force Four Years In The Making, The Women's Senior Golf Tour Was Born Because Of The Never-say-die Spirit Of Jane Blalock." Philadelphia Inquirer, August 27, 2000.
  4. ^ Legends Tour 2001 Tournaments Recap (accessed 2012-07-11).
  5. ^ Legends Tour 2002 Tournaments Recap (accessed 2012-07-11).
  6. ^ Gary D'Amato, "Long-shot Hill wins match play: 24-year-old pars 10 of last 11 holes to take title.", Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, June 16, 2006  – via HighBeam Research (subscription required)
  7. ^ "Two State Courses Among Magazine's Top 100", The Capital Times, March 29, 2001  – via HighBeam Research (subscription required)

44°26′58″N 87°57′41″W / 44.44944°N 87.96139°W / 44.44944; -87.96139