GOLF.com: Sam Snead's Lifelong Home Club Gets a $150M Refresh While Keeping Its Timeless Soul
A Living Monument to Golden-Age Golf
The Omni Homestead Resort & Spa in Hot Springs, Virginia carries a pedigree few American resorts can match. Sam Snead—holder of the PGA Tour's all-time wins record at 82—spent his formative professional years here and never really left. In 1983, at age 71, he carded a course-record 60 on the Cascades Course, a mark that still stands four decades later.
What the $150M Renovation Actually Changed
Three years ago, Omni completed a sweeping renovation touching guest rooms, dining, the spa, and landscaping. Crucially, the golf layouts were left structurally intact. The philosophy: refresh the experience, preserve the bones.
Two Courses Worth Traveling For
- The Old Course: Its opening tee has stood in the same spot since 1892—the longest continuously operating first tee in America. Later reworked by Golden Age legends William S. Flynn and Donald Ross. - The Cascades Course: Flynn's mountain design ranks 35th on GOLF's Top 100 Courses You Can Play and first among all public-access courses in Virginia. Elevation changes and demanding angles reward precision over power.
Beyond Golf: The Full Buddies'-Trip Package
Snead reportedly played golf to fund his fishing habit. That spirit lives on: guided fly fishing, expanded hiking trails, and one of the country's oldest mineral spring spas round out a package that balances exertion with recovery. The mix is intentional—Omni positions Homestead as part of a curated portfolio that now spans nearly 30 courses across 12 resorts nationwide.
Strokeslab Perspective
From a performance standpoint, the Cascades' terrain and angular routing demand the kind of precise approach play that Strokes Gained metrics quantify best. Snead's record 60 at age 71 is a testament to elite short-game mastery—exactly the skill set this course rewards.
The Cascades' Flynn-designed angles and elevation changes create conditions where SG: Approach and SG: Around the Green are the primary score drivers—fitting that Snead, one of history's great short-game artists, called it home for life.
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GOLF.com: Sam Snead's Lifelong Home Club Gets a $150M Refresh While Keeping Its Timeless Soul
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