KIAWAH ISLAND, S.C. (AP) - South Carolina just wrapped its first-ever major golf championship. Now officials are looking for more.
Roger Warren, president of the Kiawah Island Golf Resort, and a large group of supporters, including Gov. Nikki Haley, worked last week to bring another major to the state _ and sooner rather than later.
It took 21 years and plenty of tweaks for the PGA Championship to play The Ocean Course after the famed Ryder Cup matches here in 1991. Warren believes the course’s reputation and how it performed for a national audience will draw more of golf’s biggest tournaments, although he understands that’s not fully up to him.
The pros, PGA of America leaders, fans and media will all weigh in over the next few weeks about how things went.
“If all that judgment comes back that it was a great experience, then I would expect we’d get more championships,” Warren said.
South Carolina’s governor arrived Thursday and was spending the weekend watching golf and visiting with corporate clients who might one day want to locate businesses in the state after a favorable experience at Kiawah Island. Haley also said she’d do what she could to make sure the PGA of America knew how delighted the state was to host the year’s final major.
“I stay in contact with the PGA and let them know that we are a very friendly golf state and can handle as many tournaments as they ever want to do,” she said. “And I will work hard to see that they do that.”
It might help if she could build additional access to the island. Most roads leading to Kiawah are two lanes, causing some fans to need two hours or longer to leave the property Saturday. Phil Mickelson thought those issues had to be fixed before asking fans to return for another major.
“They had to park a long ways away, they had to take a big bus ride in, and you walk this difficult course and you don’t get to see much action.
“We are very appreciative of what the fans here go through because it’s not the easiest venue for them to watch and observe,” he said.
Several Kiawah Island residents have long hoped for the extension of I-526 that loops around Charleston and would likely give people a quicker trip to the remote seaside location an hour from downtown. Many Charleston Country residents in James Island and Johns Island on the way to Kiawah are opposed to extending the freeway.
The project, with an estimated cost of $556 million, lies with the South Carolina Department of Transportation with no timetable set for a decision. Warren has said the resort can’t do much to help that along.
Haley has supported golf in South Carolina before. She was on the front lines last year when the state’s regular PGA Tour event, the RBC Heritage, was without a sponsor and on its last financial legs heading into 2012. She flatly declared in April of 2011 that new backing would be found and the Heritage would remain a South Carolina tradition. Two months later, she and other state leaders helped convince RBC and Boeing to back the event and keep it on Hilton Head through 2016.
There’s certainly no debate over the quality of The Ocean Course. Pete Dye’s magnificent layout showed all its faces this week, teasing the world’s best with a mild opening that produced 44 rounds under par on Thursday. The next day, the course struck back with wind gusts off the Atlantic Ocean approaching 40 mph that sent scores soaring to the highest average round of 78.10 since the PGA Championship went from match play to stroke play in the 1950s.
Torrential rains halted Saturday’s round with the leaders still on the course. And Rory McIlroy capped the week with a runaway triumph for his second career major.
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