KAZUSA MONARCH COUNTRY CLUB
🇯🇵 Kimitsu, Chiba, JP
Designed by Jack Nicklaus
Kazusa Monarch Country Club sits in Kimitsu, in the Chiba Prefecture southeast of Tokyo. The course was designed by Jack Nicklaus and represents one of his contributions to Japanese golf during a period when international architects were frequently commissioned to create championship-caliber layouts in the country. The region's rolling terrain provided suitable ground for a course that incorporates elevation changes and strategic bunkering characteristic of Nicklaus's design philosophy.
The routing takes advantage of the natural topography, with holes that move through wooded corridors and across more open ground. Nicklaus courses in Japan typically feature large, contoured greens that reward precise approach play and penalize misses with challenging recovery shots. Water hazards and deep bunkers are positioned to test both distance control and shot shaping, particularly on par threes and the longer two-shot holes.
Kazusa Monarch serves a membership drawn largely from the greater Tokyo metropolitan area, reflecting the course's accessibility from the capital. The club maintains the formal traditions common to many Japanese private clubs, where attention to course conditioning and service standards are emphasized. The facility includes practice areas and clubhouse amenities consistent with the expectations of its membership base, supporting both regular member play and occasional competitive events.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Kazusa Monarch was designed by Jack Nicklaus.
Yes. Kazusa Monarch at Kazusa Monarch Country Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Kazusa Monarch is 72.
Kazusa Monarch plays 7,020 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
Kazusa Monarch is a 18-hole course.