Virginia Golfer Nov / Dec 2019 | Page 33

E VEN THE LONG-TIMERS HERE WONDER HOW 2022 WILL BE CELEBRATED. Sixty years of Hilton Head Island golf is fast approaching, and if not for the Island’s sheer amount of change in that time, the diamond anniversary party planning would already be underway. But how do you honor everything that South Carolina’s “Shoe” has become, and how it has helped shape a state’s golf scene previously established in Charleston or Myrtle Beach long before the first bridge connecting the island to the mainland was built? It’s simple. See how much higher the bar can be set. “You’ve got to look at reinvesting,” said Cary Corbitt, the Vice President of Sports & Operations at The Sea Pines Resort and also the President of the Lowcountry Golf Course Own- ers Association. “I think some of them have. As long as you keep your product good and fresh, that’s what players want.” Getting them to Hilton Head Island is easier now than it has ever been. The Island’s airport has a recently extended runway and has increased its number of direct flights to compete with Savannah/ Hilton Head International Airport about 43 miles to the south. That is key for golfers from Ohio, Georgia and Virginia (via Dulles), the top three out-of-state markets for Hilton Head Island visitors. For Virginians, the drive down I-95 is also a relatively easy travel path. And once you get there, you’ll see a constant quest for improvement in a place some already believe to be a finished product. Despite its reputation of prestige, there are nine figures worth of vague blueprints of capital improve- SC ments at several of the big resorts (led by The Sea Pines Resort). New rooms, new entertainment options, new restaurants—they’re all evolving as the area attempts to put its best foot forward to attract the next generation. On Hilton Head Island, the beach will always be No. 1. But with 16 public golf courses, 250-plus eateries, and a vast entertainment realm checking off the next parts of the priority list, this can be a trip that appeals to everyone. Over the span of four days in Sep- tember, members of the LGCOA gave us a first-hand tour of the island. We swung the clubs, saw some of the renovations, learned about the history of the island—and we dined like never before. Hole 18 at Harbour Town Golf Links plays parallel the scenic Sound, with the Harbour Town Lighthouse and Marina as the backdrop. N OV E M B E R / D E C E M B E R 2 0 19 | V I R G I N I A G O L F E R 31