When I write about Pete Dye's courses, especially those I think are his best, I find that I write the same thing over and over -- Pete Dye has a phenomenal appreciation for both the importance of temptation/doubt in the golfer's mind, and his use of angles. The same holds true at LCC.
I was told that LCC was built shortly after TPC Sawgrass had been negatively received. As such, Pete shied away from designing what golfers would call 'unfair' and instead focused on width, angles and interest around the green. And boy was he successful. Is this Dye's greatest set of greens? They are remarkably varied -- size, shape, tilt, contour -- no two greens are alike and all are interesting. I hope this is made clear throughout the photo tour.
As the golfer nears Hilton Head Island, his GPS lets him know he is entering golf country!
At the 1st, Dye tempts the golfer to play near the bunker/hazard running the right side of the hole, but it is approaches from the left that have the preferred angle. An excellent reverse-dogleg.
The 1st green, as seen from behind, is massive. Two ridges create bowls at the front and right portions of the green.
At the 2nd, a 175 yard par-3, Dye cleverly varies the angle from different sets of tees. The back tees play near 200 yards and well to the left, demanding a longer forced-carry over the hazard.
As seen from behind, the green is much larger than it appears from the tee, but its front-right to back-left tilt makes it a very elusive target. Tee shots that bailout away from the water leave a very difficult recovery.
The third is a mid-length par-5 that twice crosses an angled water-hazard before leaving this seemingly innocuous approach:
But, the green lays at a sharp angle, tilts severely from back-left to front-right, and is guarded by swales both short...
And long!