Play San Juan Oaks Like You've Seen It 100 Times
Download a mobile-friendly and printable hole-by-hole guide built from local caddy knowledge and thoughtfully enhanced by AI.
This is NOT a yardage book. This CaddyTips® guide delivers hole-by-hole written strategy, telling you exactly where to aim, what to avoid, and how to think your way around the course—before you ever step onto the first tee.
Whether you're a low-handicap player looking to fine-tune your approach or a higher-handicap golfer trying to avoid big numbers, this guide gives you a clear, confident plan for every hole.
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✅ Local course knowledge from pro caddies
✅ Hole-by-hole strategy and shot guidance
✅ Mobile-friendly viewing on any device
✅ Printable tournament-ready PDF format
✅ Smarter targets, safer misses, & better decisions
✅ Instant download + lifetime access in your library
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Built By Local Professional Caddies
Every guide starts with insights from local caddies who know the course, hole-by-hole, shot-by-shot. They understand from experience where players of all skill levels gain strokes.
Enhanced by AI
We combine caddy knowledge with AI-powered analysis to uncover strategic patterns, risk-reward opportunities and smarter decisions on every hole.
Here is a snippet from the San Juan Oaks CaddyTips®
Hole 1 - Opening Oak
Easy starter — bunkers in the middle of the
fairway
Par 4 - 432 / 410 / 380 yds.
Tee Shot
Welcome to Couples & Bates' California debut. Unusual feature: BUNKERS in the CENTER of the fairway— they split your driving options. Conservative line: LEFT of the center bunkers — play to go no more than 250 yds from Black (225 White) to stay short of them. Aggressive
line: CARRY the center bunkers — needs 260 yds in the air from Black (230 White). Where to miss: short-left of the bunkers, leaves a clean angle in. Avoid: the right rough (native grass + scattered oaks = lost ball). The center-fairway bunker concept is classic Couples — it forces a decision on the opening tee shot. Most golfers should stay short and play a comfortable wedge in. Low handicap: driver over the bunkers for a sand wedge approach. Mid handicap: 3-wood center-left, stay
short of trouble. High handicap: 5/7 wood or hybrid left-center — accept a 7-iron approach and a good chance at par. CaddyTips® always recommends that the last couple of swings you take on the driving range should be practicing this tee shot and visualizing your success.
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