|
Whether on tour or a tourist, golfers dream of perfect blue skies, verdant fairways that roll gracefully to massive greens… and three-foot putts for a birdie. All golfers dream of taking on “Amen Corner” at the Augusta National or the “Blue Monster” at the Doral.
They want to lumber across the old stone bridge at Swilcan Burn as they finish the Old Course in St. Andrews.
The degree of difficulty has a tendency to rise as the hole is better known by name than number, and the International World Tour Golf Links has more signatures and nicknames than a hih school yearbook.
The course is laid out as a collection of three nine-hole courses, with each nine representing a specific challenge. The Open Nine includes holes featured in the British and U.S. Opens, as well as some of the top-rated courses in the world. The Championship Nine is derived from all four men’s majors – The Masters, U.S. Open, PGA Championship and British Open. And The International Nine features holes from three continents and four countries.
A typical course has one hole or a big finish that everyone talks about at the clubhouse. They wish they could play it again, or differently. What sets the International World Tour apart is that it takes holes that everyone is talking about and places them back-to-back in nine-hole segments. For more information, call (843) 236-2000, toll free at (877) 377-7773 or visit the website at www.worldtourmb.com.
|