Backspin Volume 3, Issue 10 | Page 19

Channel makes flags on the pin stand at attention. The channel provides deep draft access to the Port of Lake Charles and some interesting scenery when the big ships are being escorted. It also provided a generous helping hand to Eckenrode when he was building the golf course.  Constant dredging to keep the channel at the proper depth gave the architect wonderful material – silt and soil to work with and it shows best on the links-like holes. The closing four holes are Director of Golf John Hurt’s favorite. “Those have a wonderfully natural look,’’ he said. “And the 18th, when it’s playing into the wind, can be an incredibly stern challenge. The clubhouse provides a beautiful backdrop. It’s a great way to end the round.’’ Another day, a different golf course with Gray Plantation, the granddaddy of the quartet, playing the starring role. What’s more, the 589-yard, par 5 seventh hole would secure an Academy Award nomination as best supporting actor. It qualifies as one of the most unique holes in Louisiana, but you’ll have to play it more than once to understand it is golf ’s equivalent of a “come to Jesus” meeting. The risk-reward beauty tilts and rolls, bends and eventually breaks your heart. It tempts players who launch solid drives too good at the green, firing a second to the left over a marsh inlet filled with a thick ball-gobbling scrub. The more prudent play is to the well-bunker right where a hybrid will leave a third within scoring range. A narrow green and a forced carry over the inlet again awaits. This hole is only part of the reason Gray, a semiprivate course, has been named one of America’s 100 Greatest Public Courses by Golf Digest. It is a constant on Golf Magazine’s and Golf Digest’s lists of the best courses in the state. Stretching to almost 7,200 yards and playing to a slope of 140 from the back tees the Rocky Roquemore design bobs and weaves through a series of lakes and bayous that provide scenic views and a pleasurable golf experience. Golf architect Tom Fazio’s reputation precedes him. He is held in the highest regard worldwide as a dirtmoving, land-shaping Picasso. Fifteen of his works dot the list of Golf Digest’s top 100 Courses in America. So it figures that after he said “abracadabra,’’ waved his magic wand and turned some swampy ground in Lake Charles into the only public Fazio course in Louisiana, the accolades were sure to follow. Contraband Bayou Golf Club has been an every-year fixture in Golfweek’s Best Places to Play in Louisiana, beginning in 2010. It hasn’t missed Golfweek’s list of Best Casino Courses since 2010, Contraband Bayou at L’Auberge Casino Resort 19 Photo by Brian Weis at Golftrips.com