Open or closed: Golfweek’s Best top 25 resort courses

Amid the international coronavirus pandemic, more than half the top 25 courses on Golfweek’s Best list of resorts are temporarily closed.

After weeks of trying to keep their courses open during the international coronavirus pandemic, more than half the top 25 courses on Golfweek’s Best list of resort tracks have shuttered their operations temporarily or plan to this week.

Several of these resorts, stretched from the Atlantic to the Pacific, have posted to their websites or sent emails that operations have been halted. At others, the courses remain open while the hotel operations have ceased or been dramatically curtailed, and some are maintaining full operations.

Several of the top 25 are northern courses that have not started their golf seasons yet and as of now are still planning to open when their seasons begin.

Related: Live look at Pebble Beach, Bandon Dunes and more

The situation is fluid and likely to change for some of these resorts that do remain open. Several of the courses that have closed have posted that they plan to reopen in April or May. Following are details on each.

 

1. Pebble Beach Golf Links

Pebble Beach, California (pictured atop this story)

CLOSED

Reopens April 17. The entire resort is closed.

 

2. Bandon Dunes (Pacific Dunes)

Bandon, Oregon

CLOSING

The resort will suspend operations March 26 and plans to reopen April 6.

 

3. Pinehurst (No. 2)

Pinehurst, North Carolina

OPEN

The courses remain open, but all lodging operations have ceased. Limited to-go dining is available.

 

4. Whistling Straits (Straits)

Mosel, Wisconsin

CLOSED, OUT OF SEASON

The courses are scheduled to open in April as weather permits, but all lodging and dining at Destination Kohler is closed.

 

No. 7 on Old MacDonald at Bandon Dunes

5. Bandon Dunes (Old Macdonald)

Bandon, Oregon

CLOSING

The resort will suspend operations March 26 and plans to reopen April 6.

 

6. Bandon Dunes (Bandon Dunes)

Bandon, Oregon

CLOSING

The resort will suspend operations March 26 and plans to reopen April 6.

 

7. Shadow Creek

North Las Vegas, Nevada

CLOSED

MGM has ceased all casino and entertainment options until April 16.

 

8. Kiawah Golf Resort (Ocean Course)

Kiawah Island, South Carolina

OPEN

The resort has modified its services and dining availability, but the courses are open. The pro shops are closed, with booking and check-in being handled remotely.

 

9. Bandon Dunes (Bandon Trails)

Bandon, Oregon

CLOSING

The resort will suspend operations March 26 and plans to reopen April 6.

 

10. TPC Sawgrass (Players Stadium)

Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida

OPEN

The Players Championship was canceled, but the golf courses are open for play.

 

No. 3 at Spyglass Hill (Ben Jared/PGA Tour)

11. Spyglass Hill

Pebble Beach, California

CLOSED

Part of the resort at Pebble Beach, which reopens April 17.

 

12. Sand Valley (Mammoth Dunes)

Nekoosa, Wisconsin

CLOSED FOR SEASON

The resort plans to open its two courses April 24 as planned after standard winter closures.

 

13. Sand Valley (Sand Valley)

Nekoosa, Wisconsin

CLOSED FOR SEASON

The resort plans to open its two courses April 24 as planned after standard winter closures.

 

14. Streamsong Resort (Red)

Bowling Green, Florida

OPEN
Group caddies are mandated instead of normal carrying caddies to promote maintaining a recommended distance between people.

 

15. Streamsong Resort (Black)

Bowling Green, Florida

OPEN
Group caddies are mandated instead of normal carrying caddies to promote maintaining a recommended distance between people.

 

Gamble Sands (Courtesy of Gamble Sands)

16. Gamble Sands

Brewster, Washington

OPEN

The course opened earlier than planned after a mild winter.

 

17. Kapalua (Plantation)

Lanai, Hawaii

CLOSING

The course will close March 25 and plans to reopen April 30.

 

18. Arcadia Bluffs (Bluffs)

Arcadia, Michigan

CLOSED FOR SEASON

The course will open as planned April 1 after the winter season.

 

19. Sea Pines Resort (Harbour Town Golf Links)

Hilton Head Island, South Carolina

OPEN

The course is open, but the Inn and Club at Harbour Town has been closed through April 16. The PGA Tour’s RBC Heritage Classic was canceled.

 

20. Streamsong Resort (Blue)

Bowling Green, Florida

OPEN
Group caddies are mandated instead of normal carrying caddies to promote maintaining a recommended distance between people.

 

No. 18 at Fallen Oak (Courtesy of Fallen Oak)

21. Fallen Oak

Saucier, Mississippi

CLOSED

The Beau Rivage Resort and Casino has ceased all operations temporarily, including golf.

 

22. Four Seasons Resort Lanai (Manele)

Lanai, Hawaii

CLOSED

The resort has shuttered all operations until April 30.

 

23. Omni Homestead Resort (Cascades)

Hot Springs, Virginia

CLOSED FOR SEASON

The Cascades Course is scheduled to open as planned May 1 after the winter season. This Omni property is still open, but eight others have closed.

 

24. Sea Island (Seaside)

St. Simons Island, Georgia

CLOSED

The resort is closed until May 15.

 

25. Blackwolf Run (River)

Kohler, Wisconsin

CLOSED, OUT OF SEASON

The courses are scheduled to open in April as weather permits, but all lodging and dining at Destination Kohler is closed.

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Coronavirus: Ryder Cup still a go for Whistling Straits

The biennial contest, run by the PGA of America, between the U.S. and Europe is still set for September at Whistling Straits.

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First it was the Masters postponing to a later date.

Then the PGA Championship.

But don’t add the Ryder Cup just yet.

A report in The Telegraph on Tuesday said the Ryder Cup would be postponed to 2021. But the PGA of America said reports of postponement were inaccurate in a tweet posted to the official Ryder Cup account.

While the PGA of America postponed the PGA Championship earlier in the day, and the PGA Tour announced four additional tournaments would be canceled, the biennial contest between the U.S. and Europe is still on the schedule for Sept. 25-27 at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin.

The last time time the Ryder Cup was moved was in 2001, when the matches were postponed to 2002 following the terrorist attacks on the U.S. on Sept. 11.

Europe has won 9 of the last 12 contests, including a 17½-10½ trouncing in Paris in 2018.

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As a young golf designer, here’s what Pete Dye meant to me

My idea of Pete Dye has evolved over the years as I’ve spent time with his associates and watched golf raters tackle his layouts.

I only met Pete Dye once. I was 21, he was 73. We spoke for two minutes in the parking lot at Whistling Straits. And yet, Dye had a profound impact on me and my career as a golf designer. I imagine the same is true for golfers and golf designers far and wide.

Over time my idea of Pete Dye has evolved.

As a kid, he was a hero. The famous golf designer who created Harbour Town and Blackwolf Run. The same way I idolized Jordan and Magic, I idolized Dye.

Truth be told at that time I really didn’t know much about Pete other than what might have been said on a TV broadcast. Or that he was the guy who designed the courses on my Nintendo golf game.

In college I read his book Bury Me in a Pot Bunker and was fascinated by his story. Stomping off the course while caddying for his future wife and design partner Alice. Giving up selling insurance to design golf courses. Cutting trees and running off before Herb Kohler could catch him at Blackwolf Run. An interesting life to say the least.

More: Pete Dye dies at 94 | Reaction | Photos

Reading the book gave me a much better sense of who he was as a person and a designer.

Over the years I’ve played a number of his courses including Blackwolf Run, Whistling Straits, Harbour Town, PGA West Stadium and more. While each course occupies a unique canvas, they have much in common: the use of angles, the par sequence, deep punishing hazards and more. More than any other designer, Pete Dye gets in the player’s head and gets him or her to try things they shouldn’t. While MacKenzie may be the master of camouflage in golf design, Pete is the master of angles. Often asking players to work the ball one way off the tee and the opposite way on the approach, he gave you options but fooled you into the wrong one.

Playing his courses gave me an infinite number of small things to file away in the young designer brain.

His work at Whistling Straits was as inspiring as any course I’ve played. Now there are dozens of courses I like more and believe are better, but they didn’t inspire me in the same way. Knowing that Pete started with a flat site and used grading to create a series of terraced holes that felt as if they were along the lake even if they were inland was so powerful to me.

A few years later when I was working for Robert Trent Jones II and we were designing Chambers Bay, I “borrowed” Pete’s terracing idea as we crafted holes 2 and 16. Thanks, Pete!

Having now been in the business for 19 years, I have a completely different perspective. Just in the past few years, I’ve toured some of his courses, spent quality time with his associates, talked at length with clients and friends of Pete, and watched as golf raters tackled his layouts. Each of those experiences provides a unique sense for the impact Pete has had on the game.

Simply put, Pete Dye could capture your heart and head in an instant and keep it for a lifetime.

Pete’s legacy

How should we remember Pete Dye? Fifty years from now, what will be the simple takeaways from his life and work?

I’m a big fan of the TV show The Profit with Marcus Lemonis on CNBC. Lemonis talks about the key factors to a successful business being people, process and product.

The 94th PGA Championship at the Ocean Course of the Kiawah Island Golf Resort. (Bruce Chapman-Imagn)

Here is how I believe 50 years from now we will look back on Pete’s career.

People – Bill Coore and Tom Doak

While Pete’s own work and career (which was always a collaboration with wife Alice) is one of a kind in the golf world, I believe people will be equally thankful for his gift of mentorship.

Most notably the influence he had on Bill Coore and Tom Doak. In addition to Coore and Doak and their respective “family trees of designers,” Pete also mentored:
• Perry Dye
• PB Dye
• Cynthia Dye McGarey
• Jack Nicklaus
• Bobby Weed
• Lee Schmidt
• Tim Liddy
• Chris Lutzke and countless others

Process – Design / Build

Pete is known in design circles as the guy who transitioned golf design from the Robert Trent Jones era to the current era. Pete not only transitioned the game away from the Jones aesthetic and strategy, but he brought a different approach to building golf courses. Pete was hands on. He was on site regularly, he got on equipment and he had a team of golf builders working with him as opposed to working for a contractor.

Coore and Doak have employed a similar approach and their influence on the next generation has the design / build method as a staple more than a one-off.

Product – Tournament golf

While other architects may have designed more courses in more countries or may have more courses ranked in the top 100, it would be hard to find another designer who was able to watch more tournament golf on their courses.

Pete is probably best known for creating (and tinkering with) TPC Sawgrass, home of the the Players Championship. The Tour thinks so highly of the course it serves as its headquarters, and officials have gone out of their way to brand it as the fifth major.

The 2015 PGA Championship at Whistling Straits (Thomas J. Russo-USA TODAY Sports)

While the Players Championship is not a major, think about the list of major venues that Pete designed where he could have been on hand to watch the game’s best battle his creation:

Ryder Cup

1991 – Kiawah Ocean Course

Solheim Cup

2017 – Des Moines Golf & Country Club

PGA Championship

1988 – Oak Tree
1991 – Crooked Stick
2004, 2010, 2015 – Whistling Straits
2012 – Kiawah Ocean Course

Senior PGA Championships

2006 – Oak Tree
2007 – Kiawah Ocean Course
2015 – French Lick Resort

U.S. Women’s Open

1998, 2012 – Blackwolf Run

The 2012 U.S. Women’s Open at Blackwolf Run in Kohler, Wis. (Dwight Nale, Gannett WIsconsin Media)

U.S. Senior Open

1999 – Des Moines Golf & Country Club
2007 – Whistling Straits
2009 – Crooked Stick
2014 – Oak Tree

 

Pete Dye’s top 10 courses according to Golfweek’s Best rankings

Pete Dye designed more than 250 courses around the world, many of which have hosted major championships and PGA Tour events.

Pete Dye, who died Thursday at the age of 94, designed more than 250 courses around the world, many of which have hosted major championships and PGA Tour events.

Known for making tough courses that would challenge – even infuriate – the best players in the game, Dye left a lasting impression on course architecture. While perhaps most famous for his island green at No. 17 at the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass, his contributions to golf go way beyond that pond.

More: Pete Dye dies at 94 | Reaction | Photos

Following are the top 10 Dye courses in the Golfweek’s Best rankings for 2019, as compiled by our hundreds of raters. Nine are in the United States, and one is in the Dominican Republic. Each course was judged by 10 criteria before being assigned a total score between one and 10 by each rater, then those scores were averaged to compile the rankings below.

1. Whistling Straits (Straits)

Where: Mosel, Wisconsin

Year opened: 1997 (resort)

Average rating: 8.28

Golfweek’s Best: No. 7 Modern Courses in the U.S.

2. The Golf Club

Where: New Albany, Ohio

Year built: 1967 (private)

Average rating: 7.86

Golfweek’s Best: No. 12 Modern Courses in the U.S.

3. Kiawah Island Golf Resort (Ocean)

Where: Kiawah Island, South Carolina

Year built: 1991 (resort)

Average rating: 7.85 

Golfweek’s Best: No. 13 Modern Courses in the U.S.

4. Pete Dye GC 

Where: Bridgeport, West Virginia

Year built: 1994 (private)

Average rating: 7.78

Golfweek’s Best: No. 16 Modern Courses in the U.S.

5. Honors Course 

Where: Ooltewah, Tennessee

Year built: 1983 (private)

Average rating: 7.75

Golfweek’s Best: No. 19 Modern Courses in the U.S.

No. 17 at the TPC Sawgrass Players Stadium Course (Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports)

6. TPC Sawgrass (Players Stadium) 

Where: Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida

Year built: 1981 (resort)

Average rating: 7.74

Golfweek’s Best: No. 22 Modern Courses in the U.S.

Casa de Campo’s Teeth of the Dog course (Courtesy of Casa de Campo)

7. Casa de Campo (Teeth of the Dog)

Where: La Romana, Dominican Republic

Year built: 1971 (resort)

Average rating: 7.54

Golfweek’s Best: No. 3 in the Caribbean and Mexico

8. Oak Tree National

Where: Edmond, Oklahoma

Year built: 1975 (private)

Average rating: 7.45

Golfweek’s Best: No. 41 Modern Courses in the U.S.

Harbour Town Golf Links (Courtesy of Sea Pines)

9. Sea Pines (Harbour Town GL)

Where: Hilton Head Island, South Carolina

Year built: 1970 (resort)

Average rating: 7.35

Golfweek’s Best: No. 54 Modern Courses in the U.S.

10. Long Cove

Where: Hilton Head Island, South Carolina

Year built: 1982 (private)

Average rating: 7.14

Golfweek’s Best: No. 77 Modern Courses in the U.S.

Renowned golf course architect Pete Dye is dead at 94

Pete Dye, who built some of the most famous and toughest golf courses in the world, has died at age 94.

World Golf Hall of Fame member Pete Dye, who designed some of the world’s most famous golf courses, is dead at age 94.

The PGA of America announced the news on Thursday, and its president, Suzy Whaley, released a statement in tribute of Dye.

“Pete Dye left an imprint on the world of golf that will be experienced for generations, painting wonderful pictures with the land that continue to inspire, entertain & challenge us,” Whaley wrote. “The PGA is saddened by the passing of this dear friend of the PGA Professional. Pete & his late wife Alice formed the greatest force in golf design history. The Dye family will forever be linked to many of the thrilling championships in PGA history & for something that they intended all along – that we embrace golf’s life values.”

Dye, who was born in Urbana, Ohio, and lived most of his life in Indianapolis, originally was an insurance man before transitioning into golf course design in the 1960s. Among his most notable designs were TPC Sawgrass, home of The Players Championship, the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island Resort in South Carolina, which has hosted both a Ryder Cup and a PGA Championship, and Whistling Straits, site of the 2020 Ryder Cup in Kohler, Wisconsin.

Dye used his vast powers of visual deception to create holes where desire and disaster often converge. Perhaps his most famous was the 17th-hole island green at TPC Sawgrass.

“Life is not fair, so why should I make a course that is fair?” Dye once said.

Dye received numerous awards for his work in the golf industry. The Golf Course Superintendents Association of America presented him the Old Tom Morris Award, its highest honor, in 2003. Dye was the 2004 recipient of the PGA Distinguished Service Award and in 2005 he was honored with the PGA Tour’s Lifetime Achievement Award.

“The ardent golfer would play Mount Everest if somebody put a flagstick on top,” Dye once said.

Dye’s wife and partner in course design, Alice, passed away Feb. 1, 2019.