“Cypress Run is one of the finest conditioned golf courses I’ve
seen and we thoroughly enjoyed putting on those greens.” 
Jack Pultorak, Director of Rules & Competition
Florida State Golf Association.

How To Get Unlimited Golf, Endless Practice and the Stroke That You Always Wanted - Guaranteed!

When new members join Cypress Run, they enter an atmosphere totally devoted to golf.  From the layout of the property to the attitude of the membership, love of the game is paramount.

The course is designed with every ability of golfer in mind. From the back tees, the course plays 7,001 yards to a tournament level and the most forward tees shorten the course to 5,372 yards without inhibiting the challenge.

The oak and cypress trees lining the fairways provide the golfer with numerous possibilities. Occasions are available for the low-handicap golfer to cut doglegs, go for the par 5 greens in two and explore the undulations offered by the Tif-eagle greens.

The novice will find the course open at the landing areas with the large greens approachable from the center of the fairway. The five sets of tees offer a stern challenge for the most accomplished player while remaining playable for those who just love to play the game.

Just as pleasurable for every handicap level is the ability to play a round in under four hours, every month of the year. Tee times are not required at Cypress Run, just recommended. If you are looking for a game or someone to play with, you will find it at Cypress Run because there is a game for you everyday!

The course is always a challenge in fact; the final four holes are considered the finest finishing holes in all of Pinellas County. Hole number fifteen is a par 4 which doglegs right around a stand of trees. With the tee shot requiring a demanding shot through a chute of trees across wetlands, the best play is to the left side of the fairway. Water and bunkers flank both sides of a tightly-guarded green which can be reached with a mid to short iron.

The sixteenth is a par 5 which typically plays into the wind. At 570 from the championship tees, tee shots must avoid the pot bunkers right and trees on the left to have any chance to approach the exceptionally long, slender green in two.

Standing on the seventeenth, the golfer typically faces not only the longest par 3 on the course, but also the Gulf headwinds. The wooded area left and huge bunker right must be avoided to find the putting surface.

A monstrous fairway bunker sits just left of the landing area for the par 4 eighteenth. Players of all abilities will find a long iron or fairway wood second shot necessary to cross Hollin’s Creek, which crosses in front of the green. This is the course’s most challenging green to reach in regulation.

Click here to request membership information!  
 



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