
Municipal Golf Course - Historic municipal course, home of the Tucson Open
Andrew Heberling
Greens and fairways were in good shape for August. Very fun and great pace of play especially for the convenience factor.
Bill Lin
I'll say the CP value of this course is undebatable, though the condition was not impressed, but the course design is fantastic. The characteristics of Randolph Dell Urich course is that there's a lot big ditches alongside the fairways, though not bunkers, but still going to cost you if you don't handle the next shot well.
Jake11j
Extremely over priced during “in season” months. It’s a good course but the fairway and “rough” are cut the same. This is a $40 course definitely don’t pay $60+
Da Kaitee
For years the range ball dispensers have not worked properly. Anything from not working at all to double charging credit cards. Now the dispensers only handle codes or supposedly cash, but you can't count on either. Bathrooms renovated a few years ago only to start failing again. At best, inconsistent playing conditions. This past summer, no drinking water on some of the courses. How do you run a golf course in AZ, in the summer, and not provide adequate drinking water. Seems like a legal trouble waiting to happen. Fee structure changes that started in Jan of 2025 that cut on resident card point earnings, extended seaonal peak rates into non-peak season (summer). Higher greens fees. Higher fees for resident card. I'm hearing that management is going to be running a differential rate so golfers pay more when the course is busier. I'd really like to know how any of this promotes MUNICIPAL golf. Overall, Troon gets an F for running Tucson muni golf and that F has been going on for a long time. I'd rather have course management go back to the City of Tucson.
Dante Alegre
Tucson City Golf Courses have a history of good and bad times, when the courses have been well and poorly maintained. It's currently in a phase of good condition after an overhaul some years ago. Dell Urich like Randolph North is unassuming as it is generally flat with few turns or challenging corners and traps, but it was developed about 100 years ago. The distance is still tour length and there's little rough to speak of unless you hit one of the numerous trees that separate the links, otherwise it's fairly wide enough for most bogey or better players. Carts are included, but you can get a discount for walking and there are plenty of those. The pace is fair and there are several putting practice locations.
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