Holes #6, #14, #16 & #18 are featured in the
book "The 100 Greatest Holes along the Grand Strand," published
by The Sun News Named "South Carolina's 1997 Course of the
Year by the National Golf Course Owners Association" "America's
Top 10" - Golf Digest, New Upscale Courses For over twenty-five
years, the North Course at Myrtle Beach National was the most
requested and best recognized course on the Beach. The par-3,
3rd hole with its island green and SC shaped sandtraps is
the signature hole for Myrtle Beach. In 1996, Arnold Palmer
and the Palmer Design Group returned to Myrtle Beach National
and transformed the North Course into a brand new course ---
one of the most visually exciting and challenging courses
in America. By moving over 400,000 cubic yards of dirt, adding
bulkheading, 7,000 azaleas and 600 hardwood trees, enlarging
lakes, bunkers and greens, and planting new "Crenshaw" bentgrass
greens, Palmer created what many believe to be the finest
course on the Grand Strand--King's North. King's North features
some of the most dramatic and unique holes in all of golf.
The par-5, 6th hole -- nicknamed "The Gambler" -- features
an island fairway which offers golfers a "risk-reward" short-cut
to the green for a chance at eagle, but the two precise shots
required bring to mind Kenny Rogers' song: "You've got to
know when to hold 'em; Know when to fold 'em; Know when to
walk away; and Know when to run." The famed par-3 island green
has been redesigned, with the addition of a wooden bulkhead
to create greater definition to an enlarged green. It has
retained the distinctive "SC" sandtraps. The front and back
nines have been reversed, so the island green is now the 12th
hole. The 18th hole, nicknamed "The Bull's-eye" by Golf Magazine,
has over 40 sandtraps guarding either side of the fairway,
and the green reaches out into a lake offering a number of
very tempting pin placements.