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Pinehurst Resort | Forest Creek |
Pine Needles/Mid Pines |
The National
Legacy | Hyland Hills |
Foxfire |
Woodlake | Pine
Crest Inn
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Legacy:
A Quality Course for Golfers of All Levels
Jack Nicklaus II cut his teeth working with
his famous father on a host of designs and now the
thirty-something Jack II is a legitimate golf course designer
in his own right. Having first designed his own courses
overseas, Jack II made his solo debut in the States in 1991
with Legacy Golf Links in the Pinehurst area. Located 6 miles
east of Highway 1 in Aberdeen, about a 20 minute drive from
The Village of Pinehurst, Legacy is a finely crafted upscale
daily fee course. Much to son Jack’s credit, the course is a
triumph of restraint over creative overindulgence. The result
is a very playable, vista-filled course that has the subtlety
and length to challenge the long-ball hitters and the
forgiveability from the forward tees to provide a congenial
golfing experience for the higher handicappers. Legacy
stretches from 7018 yards to 4948 yards and plays to a par of
72. The slope is 132 from the championship markers and 116
from the middle tees.
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Awarded 'Top
Course in North Carolina 2000', the scenic
Legacy course is a delight for golfers of any
handicap.
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"We hear a lot of, ‘I shot my best
score here,’ from golfers," said Legacy’s head
professional Mike Riddle, "but it is not a walk-over by
any means." Awarded the top course in North Carolina for
2000 by the National Golf Course Superintendents Association,
Legacy hosted the 2000 U.S. Women’s Amateur Public Links
Championship, a highly successful event that has players and
sponsors delighted with the performance of the course under
top tournament conditions.
In designing Legacy, Jack II worked with
Jim Lipe, a long-time lead designer with Golden Bear Design
whose credits include Williamsburg National. In the summer of
2000, Jack II became president of Golden Bear Design.
Legacy is owned and managed by Legacy Golf
Management based in Atlanta. According to Riddle, the company
has no plans to develop the property, a decision that company
officials think will ensure Legacy’s popularity for years to
come. There are NO houses anywhere in site of the course.
"Golfers like it because they feel they are out there in
the woods with nothing but themselves and the golf
course," Riddle explained.
Indeed, the site is ideal for golf. The
heavily wooded land parcel with several large lakes meandering
through it afforded Nicklaus ample opportunities to sculpt
holes with scenic vistas through the pines. The site, which
includes four lakes and connecting streams, was once a farm
where catfish were harvested. In some spots on the course, New
Englanders could well imagine they are in Vermont or Maine.
Water comes into play on no less than 12 holes including all
four par 3s, none of which measures over 191 yards from the
tips.
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The 17th green
is bordered by Legacy's largest lake.
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With the exception of the finishing hole, a
432-yard (459 yards from the back) monster up a steep hill for
the drive and over water for the approach shot to the green,
the course is very fair and uncontrived. On this moderately
rolling landscape, the fairways are generous and not overly
contoured or mounded, a refreshing feature in this age of
overly frisky, harshly penal designs. The small greens feature
modest slopes that get your attention without sending you to
the medicine cabinet. The majority of the greens allow for
bump-and-run approaches. Wide and shallow, the bunkers are
relatively un-penal and very sparing on this course. Fourteen
greens have just one bunker and four holes have no greenside
bunkers at all. The Bermuda rough is kept fairly close and
beyond the rough are areas of pine straw from which you can
extricate your ball without too much trouble.
Jack II’s design philosophy of
interspersing difficult and less difficult holes is best
illustrated by the par 5’s. Two of the three-shotters are
very long and unreachable, and two are reachable with two good
shots. The signature hole is the downhill 174-yard 5th. On
this picturesque hole, an accurate tee shot must avoid going
left where it could end up in the lake or left-hand bunker. As
in so many of the holes, however, Nicklaus has created bailout
areas, in this case the right-hand side. Two other one-shotters—the
162-yard (191 from the back) 9th and the 170-yard (181) 11th
also require water-avoiding tee shots. From the back and
middle tees, the tee shot on the 11th is over water but
Nicklaus has positioned the forward tee to take out the
over-water carry.
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A pine tree's
view of Legacy's interesting 8th hole
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One of the best holes is the 387-yard 8th.
Though relatively short for a par 4, it is beautiful and
testy, requiring a tee shot through the pines to the crest of
a hill from where the fairway meanders downhill to a wide but
very narrow green backdropped by an amphitheater bank. The
12th and 13th holes are also gems. The 12th measures 385 from
the middle tees and traverses up an incline almost all the way
to the hole. The 13th is 527 yards long and starts from a
lowland tee box up to another crest at the landing area. From
there, the holes slide down to a green bordered right by the
property’s largest lake. It is a very pretty hole.
Judging from the responses of the Public
Links Championship contestants, sponsors and the public,
Legacy got high marks as tournament host, and the course could
well stage another major event. "We are evaluating that
now," according to Riddle.
It speaks volumes about the caliber of a
golf course that it can successfully host a national
competition and yet offer the middle or high handicap golfer a
rewarding round of golf. Add Legacy to your list on your next
visit to the Pinehurst area.
For more information, call
1-800-344-8825. 
Click On A Course Below To Continue:
Pinehurst
Resort | Forest
Creek | Pine
Needles/ Mid Pines | The
National
Legacy
| Hyland
Hills | Foxfire
| Woodlake
| Pine
Crest Inn
Pinehurst
Area Introduction
_______________
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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