To experience a variety of great golfing in a week, you used to have to go to Ireland or Scotland. Then along came Bandon Dunes Resort in Oregon, which shot to the top of most traveling golfers’ bucket lists by offering four courses by different architects in one central location. (A fifth will be added by 2020.) Other resorts, most notably Pinehurst, have upped their game in recent years following Bandon’s approach with back-to-nature minimalist designs.
But if you have the itch to move around and hit some open road, go Midwest, young man. Wisconsin-home of the “frozen tundra” during fall football season and the NBA’s Greek Freak in the spring-is a golfing nirvana during summer. Tom Dunne, an architecture panelist for Golfweek, says Wisconsin offers golfers a little bit of everything. “Golfers like variety, and Wisconsin has that in a relatively compact area.”
In the latest Golf Digest rankings of America’s top 100 public courses, 10 of them are in the Badger State. And nine of those are fewer than three hours from the Milwaukee airport. If you wanted to try to hit all nine, the road trip would barely register 500 miles.
Golf is big business now in Wisconsin. In 2017, the U.S. Open at Erin Hills brought an economic impact of $130 million, according to Visit Milwaukee, the city’s tourism nonprofit. For next year’s 2020 Ryder Cup, to be held at Destination Kohler’s Whistling Straits course, the agency expects a slight uptick of $135 million in impact. Last year alone, Wisconsin tourism brought in $21.6 billion of economic impact, bolstered, no doubt, by the more than 40,000 visitors to Sheboygan County alone, home of Destination Kohler.