Tommy, Mike, and Bill - Musgrove is indeed a difficult course! And yes, Bill, drainage has always been a problem for the course as most of it resides in a flood plain. The best time to play Musgrove is in the summer when the course is dry and firm... during any moderate rainy season the property remains damp and soft and it reverts to a "carry the ball from A to B" course.
As Tommy says, the teeshots do not seem so scary after a couple of plays... but, you have to execute, execute, execute to score well at Musgrove on a consistent basis. It is know locally as a "players" course and moderate to high handicappers do not have much fun there.
I'm sure I can speak for Turboe when I say that you guys are welcome back to Musgrove (and the Palmetto state in general) anytime your busy schedules allow. All you have to do is ask!!! But, come when it is warm and the grasses are in season so you can get the full flavor.
The new owner, John McConnell, has a great reputation with the other courses he has bought and we have high hopes that Musgrove will finally get the funds necessary to correct the drainage problems and raise the course to an even higher standard.
Here is a brief article from Raleigh's News & Observer about McConnell:
Golf Magnate Buys Fourth Course
South Carolina links expand network for golfers who like change of scenery
Jonathan B. Cox, Staff Writer
Some golfers get excited buying new clubs. John McConnell gets his kicks collecting courses.
The former software entrepreneur on Friday bought his fourth, the Musgrove Mill Golf Club in Clinton, S.C. McConnell made millions selling two companies -- Medic Computer of Raleigh in 1997 and A4 Health Systems of Cary last year -- and is now trying to turn his favorite hobby into his next success.
McConnell Golf buys courses designed by the sport's masters, including Donald Ross and Tom Fazio. And it offers customers a deal: Pay the initiation fee at one and get access to all. It's a value in the sport, where golfers can pay $20,000 or more to join a course.
"I wish there had been something like this before I joined my first club," McConnell said.
The business started in 2003 when McConnell bought Raleigh Country Club out of bankruptcy. Last year, he bought Treyburn Country Club in Durham and Cardinal Golf & Country Club in Greensboro.
He played 16 holes at Musgrove Mill about five years ago -- a storm cut his time short -- and was struck by its natural beauty. The course sits on 330 acres between Greenville and Columbia. McConnell said he didn't see much more than wild turkeys and deer when he played.
"It's a different golf course," he said. When he got word the club, designed by Arnold Palmer and among the top 10 in South Carolina, needed help, he called.
McConnell declined to say how much he paid for it, but he's getting a reputation for buying courses struggling to attract members.
And he isn't done yet. "We definitely intend to grow the company," he said.