2021 US PGA championship to be played at
Kiawah Island, South Carolina
KIAWAH ISLAND, South Carolina -- The US PGA Championship is returning to the Ocean
Course on Kiawah Island in 2021, three decades after the seaside lay-out made its debut
at the 1991 Ryder Cup.
This will be the second time Pete Dye's course has hosted golf's final major -- in 2012 Rory McIlroy won by eight shots.
The course was commissioned specifically for the Ryder Cup, and Bernhard Langer's missed par putt lifted the U.S. to victory in the "War at the Shore."
But
the course's difficulty and harsh seaside winds kept major events away
from the barrier island for the next few years. After some alterations
by Dye through the years, the PGA of America brought its signature event
to the Ocean Course three years ago.
"I think it's a great, fair
test of golf for the best players in the world who were ere in 2012 and
will be back in 2021," Kerry Haigh, the PGA of America's chief
championship officer, said Friday.
While the golf was magnificent,
the logistics of moving people on and off the seaside island near
Charleston was not as smooth. Shuttles for fans and media from downtown
Charleston took up to 90 minutes to make the 40-mile trip. A parking
field turned to muck after a Saturday rainstorm, making it near
impossible for people to leave the area in a timely fashion.
Kiawah Island Golf Resort President Roger Warren acknowledged the missteps and vowed to fix them in time for 2021.
Parking
"didn't meet our standards," Warren said. "Our goal is to improve and
fix that so it doesn't become the issue that people talk about."
Part
of the solution, Warren said, will be relocating parking areas further
from the island and using shuttles to bring more fans to the course,
hopefully, easing congestion entering the island. He also wants people
who bus in from Charleston to understand that it's not a quick trip.
"We need a better plan and we're going to have a better plan," he said.
South
Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, sitting alongside Warren, said she has
spoken with Kiawah Island leaders about how state leaders can help.
The
tournament, the governor said, generated $75 million in advertising for
South Carolina. PGA of America President Derek Sprague added the 2012
tournament had an economic impact of $193 million on the state.
"South Carolinians love their golf," Haley said.
Haigh
said organizers again planned to limit spectators, as they did in 2012,
because of the location. Three years ago, access was limited to about
27,000 people each day, including competitors, support personnel, media
and spectators. In 2009, Hazeltine National in Minnesota had about
44,000 people each round.
Dye said he expected no changes to the course in the next six years.
"It's OK with me," he said.
The
Ocean Course has had an up-and-down history with professional golf.
After the splashy, Ryder Cup debut, pros were deterred by the strong
winds, fast greens and tricky layout. It served as the misty backdrop
for "The Legend of Bagger Vance," the 2000 movie directed by Robert
Redford.
The course hosted the Senior PGA Championship in 2007 before entertaining the world's best golfers five years later at the PGA.
McIlroy devoured the competition, finishing eight shots ahead of runner-up David Lynn to break Jack Nicklaus' mark for margin of victory at the PGA Championship.
Haigh said the feedback from pros was strong after 2012.
"Why would we not come back to this wonderful venue," he sai
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