Josh Sens
Courtesy Trout National
In recent months, status reports involving Tiger Woods have focused largely on his latest round of rehab. Here’s a more uplifting update. It concerns Trout National-The Reserve, Woods’ collaboration with baseball star Mike Trout.
If you keep up with golf headlines, you’re likely familiar with the outline of the project, a private destination golf club in Trout’s hometown of Vineland in southern New Jersey, featuring a championship course by Woods’ golf architecture firm, TGR Design. In the nearly two years since word of Trout National first got out, details about the property have been kept on the down-low. But as work progresses, a clearer picture of the club has taken shape.
The course itself was finished in October, and, thanks to a stretch of forgiving weather, all 18 holes are now fully grassed. They make up a brawny par-72 layout that tips out 7,455 yards, with a routing that takes advantage of the rumpled terrain of what used to be a silica sand mining site. The course design is meant to bring out imaginative shot-making, with many greens accessible by the ground game and runoffs around them that allow for creative recoveries.
“It’s going to be challenging,” says Tyler Trout, Mike’s brother, who heads the club’s development team. “But I don’t see people losing a lot of balls around here.”
As the turf takes deeper root, construction continues on a slate of Trout-inspired amenities. In a cap-tip to baseball, a comfort station called the Dugout is nearing completion behind the 14th and 16th teeing areas. True to its name, its design mirrors that of dugouts in MLB stadiums, with stadium seating as a perch to watch shots from ground level and a digital scoreboard displaying scores from players around the course.
A more expansive stopping point, meanwhile, is already finished. A full food-and-beverage hangout (it’s called Aaron’s, in honor of Mike’s late brother-in-law, who enjoyed a life-of-the-party reputation) is set between the 6th and 11th holes in a location that golfers pass several times throughout a round and boasts wrap-around terraces, fire pits, outdoor cooking and an indoor-outdoor bar that is meant to be a place where members and their guests can kick back, spectate and, if the spirit moves them, treat their friends in other groups to light-hearted heckles.
Trout National is situated within easy striking distance of Philadelphia and Atlantic City, in a region that is home to some of the country’s most storied courses, but it aims to strike a classic-contemporary balance by appealing to golfers with a course designed for purists in a setting free of stuffiness or starch.
“It’s going to have a feel that has been growing in golf over the past decade or so,” Trout says. “It’s pure golf. You don’t see any houses. But the culture and vibe are more modern and relaxed.”
In keeping with that ethos, the golf offerings will include a fully lit short course, the Bullpen; a 30,000-square-foot under-the-lights putting course and short-game area; and a performance center with three hitting bays, one of which will double as a fitting station, along with high-tech training tools such as TrackMan, Force Plate by Swing Catalyst and an indoor putting lab.
Anchoring the club will be an expansive clubhouse, designed in the style of a stately manor, with slate roofs, limestone walls and timber accents, and amenities such as a spa, a 2,500-bottle wine cellar, a barber shop, a bowling alley and a fitness center designed by Trout. Like all the other infrastructure at Trout National, which includes a helipad, and five cottages and two lodges for those staying overnight, the clubhouse is scheduled to be completed before the club’s grand opening in April, 2026.
Prior to that, member play is expected to begin in 2025, though the exact timing for that has not yet been determined. According to Tyler Trout, membership ranks will be kept small, and composed of athletes, young business professionals, entrepreneurs, and “other avid golfers who enjoy the game the way we’re going to be doing it.”
Among those avid golfers is Mike Trout, who doesn’t keep a handicap but can shoot in the 60s when his game is sharp. He hasn’t been playing lately, though. Like Woods, he has been sidelined by injuries this season, but that hasn’t kept off the course entirely. In a get-together this past summer that made a splash on social media, Trout joined Woods for a walking tour of Trout National, where the two talked through details as the course pushed toward completion. Rehab is not their only shared pursuit.
Josh Sens
Golf.com Editor
A golf, food and travel writer, Josh Sens has been a GOLF Magazine contributor since 2004 and now contributes across all of GOLF’s platforms. His work has been anthologized in The Best American Sportswriting. He is also the co-author, with Sammy Hagar, of Are We Having Any Fun Yet: the Cooking and Partying Handbook.