Stay & Play Minnesota: An Unheralded Golf Destination

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The Pines Course at Grandview Resort
The Pines Course at Grandview Resort is regularly ranked as one of the top golf courses in Minnesota. (Courtesy Grandview Resort)

Searching for your next stay and play? Here’s a golf destination you probably haven’t considered: Minnesota.

There are a pair of affordable destinations in the Land of 10,000 Lakes that between them grant access to the majority of the state’s finest public golf.

If your goal is to check in, unpack and stay put for a few days while playing top-ranked golf courses, each destination should fill the bill.

Destination No. 1 is Brainerd, Minnesota – located about two and a half hours northwest of Minneapolis, also known as the Brainerd Lakes area.

If you haven’t heard of Brainerd, it’s likely you’ve never played golf in the Golden Gopher State. You’ll find most of Minnesota’s consensus top 10 public courses situated around the Brainerd Lakes, all within 15 to 20 minutes of one another.

All are affiliated with old-line Minnesota resorts clustered around Gull Lake. The courses are: The Classic at Madden’s Resort, Breezy Point Resort’s Deacon’s Lodge course, and the Grandview Resort’s Pines Course.

18th hole at the Dutch course at Cragun's Resort
The par-5 18th hole at the Dutch course at Cragun’s Resort in Brainerd is a design by Minnesota native Tom Lehman. (Courtesy Cragun’s Resort)

Also in Brainerd are the Cragun’s Resort & Conference Center’s two new Tom Lehman designs, the Lehman Course and the Dutch Course. Both, unveiled in 2023, are likely to find their way into the state’s top 10 lists as the national golf magazines’ raters take note.

Glenn Hagberg, head golf professional at Madden’s Resort on Gull Lake, said the local resorts recognize their guests will likely want to try other courses. “If someone from out of state calls and says, we’d like to come to the Brainerd Lakes area, we’ll house them at Madden’s, and that’ll be their home base for the week, and we’ll line them up to play at Cragun’s or at Breezy Point’s Deacon’s Lodge.”

Destination No. 2 is farther north, where you’ll find the consensus No. 1 and 2 courses in Minnesota: Giants Ridge and the Wilderness at Fortune Bay. Stay at the tribally owned casino hotel at The Wilderness or in one of the cabins at Giants Ridge and play those two courses, plus Giants Ridge’s second course, the Legend, which has ranked in the state’s top 10.

17th hole at Giants Ridge's Legends Course
The 17th hole at Giants Ridge’s Legends Course. (Photo by Evan Shiller)

For ambitious road trippers, it’s possible to play all the above in a week or so, starting at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, heading northwest to Brainerd (151 miles), then north of Duluth to Tower and Biwabik, Minnesota, (178 miles) and back to Minneapolis (228 miles).

You can cut out some of the driving by visiting just one destination. Or you can fly directly into Brainerd via Delta’s daily flight and start your road trip there.

All of these courses are bargains considering the design quality and conditioning, with rates running between $115 to $160, with the three up north costing $115 to $130.

When should you go? Minnesota’s relatively short golf season runs from May through October, but the best chance of good weather is June through September. Rates drop near the end of the season.



Here’s your guide to the best public golf in Minnesota:

Cragun’s Resort’s Lehman and Dutch Courses

This resort, established in 1940, used to have a pair of too-difficult Robert Trent Jones Jr. courses. For a drastic makeover, the resort called in Minnesota native Tom Lehman, who in 2022 bulldozed both.

par-4 1st hole at the Dutch course at Cragun's Resort
The par-4 1st hole at the Dutch course at Cragun’s Resort in Brainerd, Minnesota (Courtesy Cragun’s Resort)

The resort’s two new courses afford players more generous fairways and fewer forced carries. Both are eminently playable resort courses, but the Dutch Course (destined to be a 27-hole rotation by next summer) is enough of a test to host a PGA Tour Americas event over the Labor Day weekend.

Lehman Course: Par 72, 7,258 yards, 74.4/134
Dutch Course: Par 72, 7,491 yards, 70.2/129
Accommodations: 1-BR suites to 10-BR cabins
Website: Craguns.com


The Classic at Madden’s Resort on Gull Lake

The Classic is one of several of Madden’s golf offerings, one of which dates to 1926. But by all accounts, The Classic, which opened in 1997, is the best of the lot.

The Classic at Madden's on Gull Lake
The Classic is consistently rated in America’s Top 100 Greatest Public Courses by Golf Digest. (Courtesy Madden on Gull Lake Resort)

The track is T2 by Golfweek among public courses in Minnesota, and it’s a long-time fixture on Golf Digest’s list of the top 100 public courses in the U.S.

Madden’s is an uphill-downhill parkland-style affair with tight tree-lined fairways which can prove difficult for bogey golfers.

The Classic Course: Par 72, 7,102 yards, 71/136
Accommodations: 1-BR units to multi-BR homes
Website: Maddens.com


Breezy Point Resort’s Deacon’s Lodge Course

This Arnold Palmer-Ed Seay design, which opened in 1999, is unique among Brainerd’s courses in that neither houses nor the sound of nearby roads intrude on your round. Poor tee shots can lead to severe sidehill lies in thick hay if you miss its elevated fairways.

Deacons Lodge course Breezy Point Resort Minnesota
The Deacons Lodge course is a par 72 that stretches to nearly 7,000 yards. (Photo courtesy of Breezy Point Resort)

Deacon’s Lodge is the other T2 on Golfweek’s best-of-Minnesota list, and it was formerly ranked among Golf Digest’s list of the top 100 U.S. public courses.

Deacon’s Lodge Course: 72, 6,943 yards, 70.1/130
Accommodations: 1-BR hotel units to multi-BR homes
Website: BreezyPointResort.com


Grand View Lodge’s Pines Course

This tree-lined parkland course, one of two at the resort, has a friendly, local country club vibe.

Pines Course at Grandview Resort
Tall Pine trees line the fairways at the Pines Course at Grandview Resort. (Photo: Grandview Resort IG)

Its three nines are the Lakes, Woods and Marsh, with the longest combination being the Lakes-Woods combination – a deceptively difficult layout that’s quite tight with plenty of water.
For big hitters, it’s best to play conservatively off the tee during your first round.

The Pines Course’s Lake-Woods Combo: Par 72, 7,003 yards, 70.6/1
Accommodations: 1-BR hotel units to multi-BR homes
Website: GrandViewLodge.com


Giants Ridge’s Quarry and Legend Courses

The Quarry owns the top spot in Minnesota. Opened in 1997 on the site of a former sand and gravel quarry and an iron mine, some of the terrain features employed by designers Jeffrey Brauer and Lanny Wadkins are evocative of golf in Ireland.

18th hole at The Quarry course
The 18th hole at The Quarry course. (Photo by Evan Shiller)

The signature hole, No. 13, a short downhill par 4 features a blind approach over a tall ridge, echoing The Dell at the Old Course at Lahinch.

Also opened in 1997, The Legend, another Jeffrey Braurer design, is a kinder, gentler version of the Quarry. It has few visual tricks and is a “What You See is What You Get” course, even if your eye is often drawn to intimidating ravines between the tee and its generous fairways. The Legend has had its own turn on Golf Digest’s top 100 public courses in the U.S. list.

Quarry Course: Par 72, 7,301 yards, 70.5/132
Legend Course: Par 72, 6,930 yards, 70.2/132
Accommodations: 1-BR suite to 4-BR villa
Website: GiantsRidge.com


The Wilderness at Fortune Bay

Wide fairways plus the occasional split fairway and numerous exposed rock outcroppings are the Wilderness’s most notable features. The elevation changes are significant and the greens are wildly undulating two-tiered mostly elevated affairs.

The Wilderness at Fortune Bay's 3rd hole par 3
The Wilderness at Fortune Bay’s 3rd hole is a magnificent par 3, measuring 133 yards from front tees and 220 from the tips. (Courtesy The Wilderness at Fortune Bay)

Notable is the green of the Par 4 5th hole, which has its own Valley of Sin, a four-foot-deep swale, that bisects the putting surface. The green surrounds, if mown down, would see borderline approach shots dribbling off the green and rolling many yards downhill. This 2005 course, also by Jeffrey Brauer design, is a visual feast.

The Wilderness at Fortune Bay: Par 72, 7,207 yards, 70.4/131
Accommodations: 1-BR hotel & RV park
Website: GolfTheWilderness.com

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