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Butler golf courses: These 5 greens throughout the county will test your putting skills

Each course in Butler County seems to offer at least one green that can keep golfers up at night.

We polled five courses in the area for the trickiest, toughest greens they have to keep even the most seasoned golfers on edge.

Looking for a challenge in your next round of golf this season? These greens, one at each of five county courses, should do just the job. Make sure to bring your A-game, or you may be facing a three-putt (or worse).

Related Article: Golf courses in Butler: Best and toughest holes, tips, food and drinks, and what to know in 2026
All About Golf
The green at All About Golf’s No. 5, seen here on Thursday, April 16, is particularly challenging because of the slope and requires golfers to hit short of the flag. Matthew Brown/Butler Eagle

No. 5, 200-yard par-4: Putting is tough due to a sloped green.

“Your best bet is to come in short of the hole,” course owner Ken Macadaeg said. “There’s a sharp break to the side of the green.”

Conley Resort & Golf Club
The par-4 No. 6’s green, seen here Monday, April 20, 2026, has some “sneaky tilt” and might be its toughest green, according to course general manager Josh DeNinno. Matthew Brown/Butler Eagle

No. 6, 368-yard par-4: Conley course general manager Josh DeNinno believes there might be a slight misconception about the toughest green on this course.

“Many might say it’s No. 15, with the ‘tier,’ but I think it’s No. 6,” DeNinno said. “Can have some sneaky tilt to it and it’s a very long green.”

Hiland Golf Course
Hiland Golf Course considers the No. 14, seen here Wednesday, April 15, 2026, to have their toughest green because of its undulating hills and long approach. Matthew Brown/Butler Eagle

No. 14: You’re gonna have to adjust with this one.

“Very undulating,” course general manager Terry Rottman said. “It’s tough to get a second shot. No. 14 is kind of a long hole, so you’re kind of a long shot in there. You’re probably hitting in anywhere from 120-160 yards.”

Krendale Golf Course (West and South)
Krendale Golf Course operations manager Marc McGinnis puts on the No. 2 West green Wednesday, April 15, 2026. Matthew Brown/Butler Eagle

No. 2 West, 138-yard par-3: Severely sloped left to right. Golfers are in trouble if they hit the ball above the pin.

“If you hit it there, your ball is rolling off the green,” course owner Eric Krenitsky said.

Suncrest Golf & Grille
Suncrest Golf & Grill’s No. 3, seen here Monday, April 21, 2026, has a challenging green with a back-to-front slope. Matthew Brown/Butler Eagle

No. 3, No. 5 and No. 10: DeNinno had a hard time picking between these three. According to the course’s website, the par-3 third’s green “slopes back to front.” The lengthy par-5 has an elevated green that makes for a “tricky” approach.

They “often seem to send me sideways on controlling the speed of my putts,” DeNinno said.

This is part of a series of promotional articles on Butler County-area golf courses.

View and purchase Eagle photos at photos.butlereagle.com

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