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TPC
at Sugarloaf and White Columns
White Columns
White Columns, a Fazio creation in Alpharetta about 40 minutes north of
the city, is superlative. It sits on a majestic land site thick with pines, a few lakes
and dramatic elevation changes. Fazio has taken advantage of these features to build a
fine upscale daily fee course that has enormous visual and strategic appeal. Moreover,
development around the course will be kept to a minimum.
At White Columns, every hole is unique but a few stand out. Number 4 is a dramatic
450-yard test routed from an elevated tee box down to a valley that leaves a long approach
to an equally elevated green. Number 9 is a 590-yard job that goes over a lake and then
upward to a green with a narrow front opening. Number 17 is a spectacular par 3 of 215
yards that features a 60-foot drop from the tee to a green fronted by a stream.
Both the service and course conditions are top-notch (depending on seasonal maintenance
schedules), factors that warrant the relatively high fees.
For tee times at White Columns, call 770-343-9025.
TPC at Sugarloaf
Speaking of drops, the TPC at Sugarloaf, Greg Normans creation which
has hosted the BellSouth Classic since 1997, has one of the best finishing holes anywhere
on what is a magnificent track. The course has prompted raves from Tour players and helped
establish Norman as a golf course architect of truly exceptional artistic skill.
The 18th, a 776-yard exercise in terror starts from a tee box back on a level wooded
plain. At about 300 yards out the fairway slopes some 70 feet down to the right and around
a lake to the green. A large bunker and some trees stand sentinel on the right while the
lake yawns left, so that bold hitters have a nervy second shot of 240-180 yards. From the
green on one of the most exciting holes youll find anywhere, the fairway with its
undulations and curves resembles a furled green ribbon.
The hole is the crown jewel of a diadem of precious gems. They include the 541-yard 5th
which features a tall oak smack in the middle of the fairway and a creek that crosses the
fairway twice to make both the tee shot and second a nervy task. The 412-yard 6th is
perhaps The Sharks best hole. From a recessed tee box you drive to a crest of a hill
flanked by bunkers right. From there, you are left with a wedge-8 iron to a green that is
sloped steeply back to front and is fronted by a stream with a steep bank. A bunker in
back captures long approaches on a hole whose wooded green complex reminds you a little of
the 12th at Augusta.
The 9th is a 470-yard dogleg right through a tunnel of trees with a green that slopes
sharply from left to right, making it arguably the most difficult on the course. Norman
was criticized for the hole but he kept the hole as is, in spite of the fact he doubled
the hole twice and bogied before parring it on his fourth try, according to Club Marketing
Director Chris Nowak.
As for Normans choice as
architect, Chris Nowak explained that the owners of the project wanted a renowned golf
architect but not from the list of usual suspects like
Nicklaus, Fazio, and Palmer who
already had courses in the Atlanta area. Norman designed many beauties throughout Asia and
Australia. Aside from his collaboration on his private Florida club, The
Medalist, with
Pete Dye, Sugarloaf was his first North American effort. As of late 1999, the Aussie was
putting the finishing touches on a third nine that promises to be the equal of the first
18.
As for the club itself, it is in a country club community of lavish homes that first
sold for around $300 K when it opened in the mid-1990s. In rural Gwinnett County, this was
a princely sum, but buyers gobbled the homes up so quickly that builders raised the ante.
Now, the average home is close to seven figures.
The country club includes a family sports center featuring exercise facilities, arcade
and movie theater, three swimming pools and tennis facilities. A kind of Tara on the turf,
the classic Southern styled golf clubhouse is as ornate as many of the homes. It sits
Parthenon-like atop a hill overlooking the 18th green, offering a magnificent vista for
the visually minded.
If Sugarloaf has a flaw, it is that too many homes have been built too closely to the
golf course. Though they sit atop bluffs well away from play, they are very much in
evidence throughout the round. Windstorms have taken down a lot of trees that would
otherwise have provided a thicker partition.
The 1500-acre community lies on the former horse farm of businessman Wayne Rollins. The
site was briefly owned by the Eastern Airlines employee retirement fund until Crescent
Resources, a subsidiary of Duke Energy, bought it in 1994. It is one of the showcase
TPCs that has been a worthy host of the BellSouth Classic since that PGA event moved
from the Atlanta Country Club in 1997.
For TPC Sugarloaf membership and real estate information,
call 770-495-7660.
NOTE: Propelled by the success of Sugarloaf and lured by the potential
for development in Gwinnett County, Jack Nicklaus in
November 1999 announced the launch of one of his most
ambitious projects to date -- to build in the county a
course composed of the best holes in his portfolio. According to the announcement, no
detail would be spared to make each hole a carbon copy of his favorites from Muirfield
Village and other of his signature designs. 
_______________
Alan B. Nichols is
a professional golf-travel writer residing in Bethesda, MD.
He is the featured golf-travel writer
for GolfLink. Alan appreciates your
comments on his features and the courses he has written
about.
E-MAIL ALAN NICHOLS

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