By
Brad King
Jack Nicklaus may have hailed from landlocked Columbus, Ohio, but his career has been tied to the
ocean from the very earliest days. While practicing for the 1961 U.S. Amateur
Championship he would go on to win, where Nicklaus first lost his heart to
coastal California and the Pebble Beach Golf Links.
Later, he would win the ’72 U.S. Open and three Crosby National Pro-Ams at
Pebble.
In his second career as a golf course architect, Nicklaus has
continually returned to the sea. Nicklaus returned to Pebble Beach in 1998 to design the course’s new
5th hole, an oceanfront par 3 to replace the inland one.
Nicklaus designed the spectacular Ocean Course at Cabo del
Sol and 27 equally stunning holes at Palmilla Resort, both on the Sea of Cortez
in Mexico. He has fashioned a number of
ocean courses in Hawaii. And, for almost four decades, Nicklaus
and his wife, Barbara, have lived in North Palm
Beach, Florida—a smooth 6-iron from
the Atlantic.
Another Nicklaus connection to the sea is Ocean Hammock Golf
Club, the new centerpiece of northeast Florida’s Palm Coast Resort. It features six
holes overlooking the Atlantic and is Florida’s first true oceanfront course in more
than 70 years.
Ocean Hammock features plenty of classic Nicklaus design
features: visually stimulating yet daunting par 4s to close each nine; a mix of
reachable yet demanding par 5s; and a variety of holes that dogleg left and
right, flow uphill and downhill, and play to greens both large and small. In
many ways, Ocean Hammock is a perfect resort layout—dramatic yet
player-friendly, visually explicit yet possessing plenty of options for
low-handicappers. And in general, the greens are far more soothing and playable
than the notoriously difficult putting surfaces drawn by Nicklaus in the mid
’80s.
The golf course begins in relatively sedate fashion. The
first hole
is a 380-yard par 4 that doglegs right into an elevated green
surrounded by a bunker on the left and a grass hollow on the right.
Then, with a
favoring wind, golfers may attempt to reach the 540-yard
2nd in two.
After a handshake and a pat on the back, Ocean Hammock then
sends
you on your way with a boot to the seat of your pants. Manmade lakes and
plenty of twists and turns come into play on the par-3 4th, the par-4
5th, the
par-5 6th and the treacherously long par-4 7th—all exciting
inland holes on
which you could use every club in your bag.
The Atlantic
makes its
introduction on the 185-yard 8th, which often plays into a
northeasterly wind.
The 468-yard 9th may be the course’s best, most
eye-catching and certainly the
toughest hole. The back nine is similar
to the front side in its variety and
dramatic build-up. The interior
holes are strategically challenging,
particularly the 433-yard
13th.
The final four holes have been dubbed “the Bear’s Claw” for
good
reason: They can maul a scorecard. No. 15 is a 450-yard par 4 that plays
uphill and toward the ocean. The approach shot must be struck through
two dune
formations to an elevated green, and any missed approach shots
face a steep
pitch back up to the putting surface. Holes 17 and 18, are
a longish par 3 and
par 4 that can make or break a round.
Ocean Hammock is the second Nicklaus course at Palm Coast, an
appealingly uncongested resort set on 700 acres of ancient oaks and
palms,
midway between St. Augustine and Daytona Beach.
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