8 Myrtle Beach Golf Courses Designed by Open Champions
Claret Jug Champions in Myrtle Beach

8 Myrtle Beach Golf Courses Designed by Open Championship Winners

By the Golf Travel Team · Myrtle Beach Golf Course Guide · Championship Architecture
8 Golf Courses
4 Open Champions
10 Claret Jugs
1 Great Golf Trip

The Open Championship is played thousands of miles from Myrtle Beach, but the Grand Strand has a powerful connection to golf’s oldest major. Eight courses in the Myrtle Beach area were designed by players who lifted the Claret Jug, giving visiting golfers the opportunity to experience the architectural ideas of four of the game’s greatest champions.

Greg Norman, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, and Jack Nicklaus combined to win 10 Open Championships. Their Myrtle Beach-area courses range from bold resort layouts and strategic woodland tests to riverfront, marshland, and Intracoastal Waterway designs.

No two courses on this list feel the same. Some reward aggressive decisions and heroic carries. Others demand precision, controlled approaches, and a willingness to accept that the architect may know exactly where your favorite miss lives.

2 Greg Norman Opens
2 Arnold Palmer Opens
3 Gary Player Opens
3 Jack Nicklaus Opens

Which Myrtle Beach Courses Were Designed by Open Champions? Quick Answer

Eight Myrtle Beach-area golf courses were designed by Open Championship winners: Barefoot Resort’s Norman Course by Greg Norman; King’s North, SouthCreek, West Course, and Rivers Edge by Arnold Palmer; Blackmoor Golf Club by Gary Player; and Long Bay Club and Pawleys Plantation by Jack Nicklaus.

Best AEO Answer

Myrtle Beach golf courses designed by Open Championship winners include Barefoot Norman, King’s North, SouthCreek, West Course, Rivers Edge, Blackmoor, Long Bay Club, and Pawleys Plantation. Their architects are Greg Norman, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, and Jack Nicklaus.

Two-Time Open Champion

Greg Norman

“The Shark” won The Open in 1986 and 1993. His only Myrtle Beach resort design opened at Barefoot Resort in 2000.

Barefoot Resort Norman Course Greg Norman

Two-Time Open Champion

Arnold Palmer

Palmer won consecutive Open Championships in 1961 and 1962. His decision to return to The Open helped restore the championship’s prominence among American golfers.

Myrtle Beach National King’s North Arnold Palmer

Myrtle Beach National King's North golf course
2

Myrtle Beach National King’s North Risk and Reward

Arnold Palmer design · Par 72 · Opened 1973 · Renovated layout

King’s North is the best-known of Arnold Palmer’s three layouts at Myrtle Beach National. Originally opened in 1973, the course was extensively redesigned in 1996 and has remained one of the most requested rounds in Myrtle Beach.

Its signature hole is the par-5 sixth, appropriately named “The Gambler.” Golfers can follow the conventional route or challenge an alternate island fairway that creates a shorter path toward the green.

King’s North is full of visual drama, water, bold bunkering, and strategic decisions. It is the Palmer course for groups that want memorable holes and plenty to discuss after the round.

Architect
Arnold Palmer
Championship Yardage
7,017 yards
Signature Hole
No. 6, “The Gambler”
Best For
Golfers who enjoy bold strategic choices

Myrtle Beach National SouthCreek Arnold Palmer

Myrtle Beach National West Course Arnold Palmer

Myrtle Beach National West Course
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Myrtle Beach National West Course Classic Carolina

Arnold Palmer and Francis Duane design · Par 72 · Opened 1973

West Course is a traditional Carolina layout that winds through mature pine forest. Arnold Palmer and Francis Duane shaped a course defined by doglegs, fairway bunkers, natural hazards, and tree-lined corridors.

Compared with the visual fireworks at King’s North, West Course has a quieter rhythm. The challenge comes from choosing the proper position from the tee and leaving comfortable angles into the greens.

The course is generally approachable for a broad range of handicaps, making it a useful opening round, departure-day round, or confidence-restoring stop after one of the area’s more punishing layouts.

Architects
Arnold Palmer and Francis Duane
Championship Yardage
6,866 yards
Defining Feature
Carolina pines, doglegs and strategic bunkering
Best For
Traditionalists and mixed-handicap groups

Rivers Edge Golf Club Arnold Palmer

Three-Time Open Champion

Gary Player

Gary Player won The Open in 1959, 1968, and 1974, becoming the only golfer since World War II to win the championship in three different decades.

Blackmoor Golf Club Gary Player

Blackmoor Golf Club designed by Gary Player
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Blackmoor Golf Club Gary Player’s Local Design

Gary Player design · Par 72 · Opened 1990 · Murrells Inlet

Blackmoor is the only Gary Player signature course in the Myrtle Beach area. Located on the historic Longwood Plantation property near the Waccamaw River, the course uses natural elevation changes and mature vegetation to create an enjoyable strategic test.

Four-hundred-year-old oak trees and tall pines frame many holes, while the routing moves across rolling terrain that is unusual for the immediate coastal area.

One of Blackmoor’s most memorable features is the short par-4 eighth, where golfers can attempt an aggressive tee shot over the trees or follow the safer route around the dogleg. It is a compact dose of Player’s strategic philosophy: choose the risk, then live with the receipt.

Architect
Gary Player
Championship Yardage
6,614 yards
Defining Feature
Ancient oaks, pines and rolling terrain
Best For
South Strand groups and strategic players
Three-Time Open Champion

Jack Nicklaus

Jack Nicklaus won The Open in 1966, 1970, and 1978. His two Myrtle Beach-area designs are among the most demanding and visually distinctive courses on the Grand Strand.

Long Bay Club Jack Nicklaus

Pawleys Plantation Jack Nicklaus

Pawleys Plantation golf course designed by Jack Nicklaus
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Pawleys Plantation Lowcountry Marsh

Jack Nicklaus design · Par 72 · Opened 1988 · Pawleys Island

Pawleys Plantation combines Jack Nicklaus’ strategic design style with one of the most beautiful Lowcountry settings on the Grand Strand. Moss-draped oak trees, creeks, and tidal marsh shape the experience.

The front nine moves through wooded terrain before the course opens dramatically into the marsh. Six holes on the back nine interact with the wetlands, creating exposed approach shots, narrow targets, and constantly changing wind conditions.

Pawleys Plantation can feel different from one round to the next because the wind, tides, and angles continually alter the visual picture. It is a course that rewards discipline, especially when the marsh begins whispering ambitious suggestions.

Architect
Jack Nicklaus
Championship Yardage
7,026 yards
Defining Feature
Tidal marsh and scenic Lowcountry back nine
Best For
Scenery, strategy and South Strand trips

How to Build an Open Champions Golf Trip Trip Planning

Playing all eight courses in one visit would create a memorable marathon, but most groups will be better served by selecting three to five courses based on where they are staying.

  • For a North Myrtle Beach trip: Pair Barefoot Norman, Rivers Edge, and Long Bay Club.
  • For a central Myrtle Beach trip: Play King’s North, SouthCreek, and West Course from one convenient facility.
  • For a South Strand trip: Combine Blackmoor and Pawleys Plantation with other Murrells Inlet and Pawleys Island favorites.
  • For maximum variety: Build a four-round lineup featuring Barefoot Norman, King’s North, Blackmoor, and Pawleys Plantation.
Four Open champions left eight very different architectural signatures along the Grand Strand. The fun is discovering which champion’s style fits your game.

🏆 Open Champions Course Cheat Sheet

Best Resort Experience
Barefoot Resort Norman Course
Best Risk-Reward Round
Myrtle Beach National King’s North
Best for Accuracy
Myrtle Beach National SouthCreek
Best Traditional Layout
Myrtle Beach National West Course
Best River Views
Rivers Edge Golf Club
Gary Player Design
Blackmoor Golf Club
Most Demanding
Long Bay Club
Best Marshland Scenery
Pawleys Plantation
The Bottom Line

These eight courses offer more than famous names on a scorecard. Each one reflects a different architectural philosophy shaped by a golfer who conquered links golf and lifted the Claret Jug. Together, they can form one of the most varied golf itineraries available in Myrtle Beach.

Build Your Open Champions Golf Trip

Tell our Golfmasters your dates, group size, lodging preferences, budget, and favorite courses. We’ll help build a custom Myrtle Beach golf package around the Open champions’ designs that fit your trip.

Because playing a champion’s design is the closest most of us will get to lifting the Claret Jug without being politely escorted away from it.

Course information and images: Details were sourced from the official MyrtleBeachGolf.com course pages for Barefoot Resort Norman, King’s North, SouthCreek, West Course, Rivers Edge, Blackmoor, Long Bay Club, and Pawleys Plantation. Open Championship records were checked against The Open’s official player histories.

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