COURSE
REVIEWS
The Ospreys at
Belmont Bay Proves
Looks Are Often Deceiving
By Jeffrey
A. Rendall,
TravelGolf.com Senior Writer
Images courtesy Keith Paton and The Ospreys at Belmont Bay
WOODBRIDGE, VA - Believe only half of what you see, and none of what you read. This assertion may be the ultimate pessimistic anthem, but when it comes to the Ospreys Golf Club at Belmont Bay, theyre words to live by. At first perusal of the scorecard, youll no doubt note the course measures only 5,567 yards from the back tees, yet plays to a par of 70. Immediately executive course pops into your head, and you start taking all your woods and long irons out of your bag.
Dont do it. Looks (and a scorecards printing) are often deceiving, and thats never more true than for this tricky little target golf course set alongside the banks of the Occoquan river in Woodbridge, Virginia. Despite its short yardage, the layout will test all the golf skills you bring with you (including driving distance), and youll need to leave every club in the bag for the trip around the linksand use them effectively, too.
Yard for yard, the Ospreys might be the toughest course in Northern Virginia. There are very few holes where there isnt something threatening on every shotand on most links, theres more than one challenge to overcome. The course lies in and around wetlands, woods, ponds, deep ravines and the Occoquan riverand when you throw in the manmade golf hazards of bunkers and fast greensyouve got more than enough to contend with.
Further, because of the courses exposed presence along the river, wind is often a factor. When you play at the Ospreys, ignore the scorecard yardage figures and try to keep your thoughts on where the ball needs to go. Pay particularly close attention to hazard locations and wind direction, then fire away. The layout is the ultimate placement golf course.
Its also the antithesis of the grip it n rip it adventure.
There are certainly several holes where theres reasonable
room for error off the tee, but if youre in trouble, in
most cases youre dead. Charity events collecting fees for
penalty strokes would do very well here.
Despite the tight nature of the track and its considerable challenge, its an enjoyable golf round. If you play within your game and hone your club selection, youll have a reasonable opportunity to score wellafter all, the longest hole at the Ospreys measures only 487 yards (a par five). If youre accurate, there will be scoring chances. Take them when they comeyoull need some to make up for the times when your ball disappears into an abyss.
Bob Felty, the Ospreys Head Pro, says scale, not lack of difficulty, is what separates the course from its longer, more traditional siblings. Our course isnt real long, but what it lacks in yardage it makes up for with tight fairways, fast greens and creative bunkeringits very much a shotmakers course. You just cant just go flailing away with a driver because youre gonna end up off the track.
Felty also points to the courses conditioning as a good
reason to visit. We have all bent grass tees, greens and
fairways. Our greens are very fastthey normally run about
a nine on the Stimpmeter, and during the high season, are almost
always in excellent shape. Thats certainly no exaggeration--theres
very little to complain about in terms of grounds neglect or lack
of greenery.
And based on our experiences, youll probably get to see all the conditions up close from many different angles. Its a good thing the starter (Fred Smith) sends everyone off the first tee with some suggested placements on each hole, because without them, first timers wont have a clue. Great length is not required from the tee box, but approximate yardage isand the guide helps immeasurably.
The round begins with a 172 yard, slightly downhill par threewith a lake short and to the left. The shot suggestion guide neglects to mention a huge oak tree that also guards short and left, but youd have to be sightless to fail to notice that obstacle. Needless to say, avoid it. There is considerable bail out room to the right, but losing it in that direction will leave you a treacherous downhill chip to try and save par.
The course then takes a half-mile detour to a relatively flat and marshy patch of ground, with a mixture of tree-lined fairways and open space covering the next twelve holes. Here is where several changes were made to the course two years ago, stretching the layout from a par 66 to its current par 70 arrangement.
Briefly, new tees were added to stretch the third hole from a par three to a par four; the fourth hole (par four) was newly added; the old fourth (new fifth) hole received a new set of tee boxes farther back, lengthening it from a par four to a par five; and the old sixth and seventh holes were combined to create another par five (sixth). The changes made are seamless to the eyeeven to someone who never saw the course prior to its metamorphosis. The only sign of the old layout that still exists is an abandoned green on the right side of the fairway along the sixth hole.
The Ospreys eighth hole would fit in well at any regulation length course. Measuring 412 yards from the back, it plays mostly uphill and often into the prevailing wind. From the back tees, its a 190 yard carry over an environmentally protected wetlands area, leaving a mid to long iron to the elevated, severely sloping green for your second shot. Quite challenging.
The ninth hole is a picturesque 182 yard par three, also into
the wind, protected by a lake on the right and a bunker on the
left. Short is okay, as theres a false green in frontwhich
leaves a relatively easy pitch up the slope if you didnt
tee with enough club.
Holes ten through thirteen continue through a mixture of open space and trees, and what seems like a constant threat of water or wetlands on every tee shot. This stretch would seem to favor a high ball flight, but then youre contending with wind. Again, precise shotmaking is the key.
Holes fourteen through eighteen parallel the Occoquan riverand its more than just pretty scenery. The course is laid on top of a high bluff, and any shot hit to the right will certainly end up down where you cant get to it.
Sixteen is the most intriguing 125 yard par three Ive ever
seen. In between the tee boxes and the green is a deep ravine.
In back of the green to the center and left is a steep hillside
covered with thick grass and brush. To the right is the river.
The only bailout possibility is long and left, but thats
the direction the wind usually blows from. The green is fairly
large for such a short hole, but this is trifling compensation
for all the trouble abounding.
Seventeen is 429 yard par five, and the second shot is severely downhill. Easy eagle try, right? Not so fast. First off, youll realistically get only 210 yards off your tee shotagain, which plays into the wind (taking a long iron or three wood). If your tee ball isnt long enough, the second shots blind down the severe slope, and theres trouble all around the green. Pars not such a bad score here.
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Its fitting that the last hole has a semi-blind tee shot, and that even a short hole can be deceptively difficult. But thats true for virtually all of the Ospreys layout. Itll certainly make you remember that looks can often be deceivingand in some cases, thats not so bad, either.
The Ospreys Golf Club at Belmont Bay
13401 Potomac Path Drive
Woodbridge, VA 22191
Phone: (703) 497-1384
FAX: (703) 497-0722
Website: Under ConstructionSome information can be found
at:
www.belmont-bay.com
Head Golf Professional: Bob Felty
Rates:
M-F: $33. After 2 p.m, $ 28.
Sat, Sun & Holidays: $45. After 2 p.m., 32.
All prices include cart.



