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      The Golf Club at Yankee Trace in Centerville, Ohio

July 12-15, 2011    

 

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Dayton, Ohio - The Golf Club at Yankee Trace has been selected as the championship course for the 2011 United States Deaf Golf Championships to be held on July 12-15, 2011. The club is a premier upscale public golf course in southwestern Ohio. It features 18-Hole championship golf course and a 9-hole Vintage courses, along with a 32,000 square foot clubhouse, a complete practice facility, and friendly and professional staff. Yankee Trace Golf Club has been awarded the “Best Public Golf Course in Dayton and  in Miami Valley” for five consecutive years. The course hosted the Nationwide Tour’s Dayton Open from 1999 to 2003.

 

The Golf Club at Yankee Trace is widely recognized as having one of the best practice facilities in southwest Ohio.  A dual-ended driving range with comprehensive short game areas and indoor netted range which presents an unequalled year-round practice opportunities.

 

Yankee Trace is a well manicured, challenging course but yet fun to play, especially if you like dogleg holes. You’d better score well early in your round especially on the short opening par 5 hole where one can make an easy birdie or perhaps an eagle. A well-bunkered short par 4 5th hole is an excellent hole that will challenge anyone who dares to go for the green on one’s drive. The last four very challenging holes will demand the best from any golfers who’s brave enough to play those holes.

 

The 17th is perhaps the toughest hole at Yankee Trace Golf Club. This hole is described as a strong par-4 dogleg left with a marshy area right at the turn, where most people might expect a well-struck drive to end up or to tempt longer hitters to fly over a creek that crosses the fairway. Would you risk the chance of hitting it over the creek for a shorter approach shot? Or, go with something you can control by hitting it short of the creek and leave a long approach to the green? The final hole is a 564-yard par-5 with water along most of the right side of the fairway and OB along the entire left side of the hole. It gave many Nationwide Tour professionals fits during Dayton Open.

 

 

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