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Once lost, now Founders Club |
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Sunday, 18 March 2007 |

The
venerable Sea Gull Golf Club was one of the original 19 courses in the Myrtle
Beach area around 1970 when I played my first rounds of golf on the Grand
Strand. Over the next four decades, it was joined by 100 other courses, each
vying for the hundreds of thousands of golfers that came every year to the
Strand to feast on golf’s grandest buffet . All that choice seemed too good to
be true, and it was.
In the last few years, nearly two-dozen courses have
closed on the Strand, and one has gone totally private (the Surf Club).
Competition and September 11 sealed the fate of the more mundane layouts. Even
the “Grandaddy” of them all, Pine Lakes, has closed until 2008 to redo the
course and add housing to its perimeter.
Sea Gull never closed, never
gave in to an offer it couldn’t refuse from developers looking to convert the
fairways to condos and patio homes. But the course did fall on hard times; its
original layout by Gene Hamm came to be seen as a somewhat boring throwback to
an era when the architect’s name didn’t matter and when large fairways and
greens ruled. But with dramatically festooned courses nearby by Mike Strantz
and Jack Nicklaus, Sea Gull was ignored, despite bargain basement greens fees.
And as revenues decreased, so too did maintenance standards. Add to that the
club’s location at the farthest southern extremity of the Strand, 40 miles from
the popular beach hotels, and Sea Gull didn’t have a chance.
Enter the
Classic Golf Group, which was willing to commit $7 million saving an enhancing
their only course on the south end of the beach to complement their other four
courses further north. The Classic Group hired Palm City, FL, architect Thomas
Walker, former lead designer in the Gary Player shop, who started moving earth
around last July. We stopped by yesterday and were impressed with the activity,
although a promised fall opening still looks like a stretch…unless they mean the
last day of fall. The holes are laid out, and the greens have their mix of
foundation soils in place, waiting for seed. It looks to us as if it will be
close.
A peek at a few holes indicates Walker has brought water closer to
play, especially on the 9th along Highway 17. An innocent narrow lagoon that
ran halfway down the left side of the fairway has been widened, and the landing
area from the tee box appears extremely narrow. It may either be a short par 5
or long 4, but whatever it is, the tee ball will be crucial. Behind the green
are the largest mounds we have seen on a golf course; they will offer a backstop
to overly aggressive approach shots but we think they may be more an aesthetic
than strategic consideration. They block most of the view from the fairway of
the two floors of the adjacent, rather tacky Best Western motel.
The
brand new clubhouse is nearing completion. It is modest sized but Low-Country
sleek and certainly fine for a daily fee course. The motel will need to be
upgraded to keep the entire ensemble from looking a little cheesy, but with all
those other fine courses mentioned above less than three miles from the Founders
Club, and with proper marketing, the hotel should have a good excuse to spruce
itself up and generate solid income by offering competitive golf packages.
The Founders Club will be part of the recently formed Waccamaw Golf
Trail on the South Strand, and we’re hoping the new club provides a little price
competition to Caledonia and the other courses on the Trail. When we called
Caledonia three days ago for a walk-in golf rate, we were told the current fee
is $192. At least the cart is included.

Magazines like
Golfweek bash some community courses for letting homes get too close.
One remedy is to hide them, as Thomas Walker will do at The Founders Club, set
to open in the fall. Walker's mounds behind the 9th green attempt to hide a
two-floor hotel.
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