Inside the courses: Pebble Beach Golf Links

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This tournament is known best for its stunning host course -- Pebble Beach Golf Links.
Badz/PGA TOUR
This tournament is known best for its stunning host course -- Pebble Beach Golf Links.
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Feb. 9, 2011

The TOUR heads north to Pebble Beach, Calif., this week for the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, where the pros, celebrities and amateurs will tee it up on three different courses.

PEBBLE BEACH GOLF LINKS

Fast facts
Course Superintendent Chris Dalhamer
Original architect Jack Neville and Douglas Grant, 1919
Redesign Ed Conner and Jack Nicklaus, 1991; New fifth hole by Jack Nicklaus, 1998
Par value 72
Number of TOUR events as host venue 65 (including 2011)
Course ranking Ranked 31 (out of 52) in difficulty on the PGA TOUR in 2010
Yardage history 6,815 yards (1947-1994)
  6,799 (1995-1999)
  6,816 (2000-2004, 2006-present)
  6,737 (2005)
Grass Perennial ryegrass (tees, fairways, rough); Poa annua (rough)
Tournament Stimpmeter 10 ft
Sand bunkers 111
Water hazards Ocean on nine holes
Course tour Click here
Course record
Player
Tom Kite
David Duval
Year
1983
1997
Round
3rd
3rd
Finish
1st
T2
Holes-in-one
Player Hole Year
Bill Glasson 5 2005
Mike Heinen 7 2003
David Morland IV 5 2000
Gil Morgan 12 1996
David Graham 7 1995
Vijay Singh 7 1994
Olin Browne 12 1994
Greg Hickman 12 1992
Billy Mayfair 17 1989
Brett Upper 5 1988
Nick Price 17 1988
Rex Caldwell 7 1986
Hubert Green 7 1985
Lou Graham 7 1984
2010 Rankings
Most Difficult Hole
The par-4 466-yard 9th This is the toughest hole on the golf course. Because the fairway slopes severely toward the ocean, the approach must be hit from a hanging lie. What usually happens is that the player leaks it to the right a little or overcompensates and ends up in the left rough or the greenside bunker. The approach to No. 8 may be the most critical on the course, but the approach to the ninth is just as difficult and if you've missed the eighth, the ninth is not place to pick up lost strokes.
2010: 0 eagles, 18 birdies, 141 pars, 57 bogeys, 9 double bogeys, 1 other.
Easiest hole
The par-5 502-yard 2nd The green is quite narrow, which means you want to leave as short an approach as possible. That means that, even though the fairway is only 30 yards wide, players will be hitting driver as hard as possible.
2010: 9 eagles, 112 birdies, 86 pars, 14 bogeys, 3 double bogeys and 0 others.
Pebble Beach Golf Links 2010 rankings Last 26 years
Hole Par Yards Average score Rank Average score Rank
1 4 381 4.08 6 4.108 7
2 5 502 4.524 18 4.593 18
3 4 390 3.987 9 4.012 12
4 4 331 3.862 15 3.939 16
5 3 188 3.044 7 3.142 6
6 5 513 4.56 17 4.715 17
7 3 106 2.84 16 3.008 13
8 4 418 4.244 2 4.276 2
9 4 466 4.253 1 4.344 1
10 4 446 4.164 4 4.273 3
11 4 380 3.969 10 4.025 11
12 3 202 3.107 5 3.173 4
13 4 399 3.929 13 4.041 9
14 5 573 5.187 3 5.144 5
15 4 397 3.902 14 4.003 14
16 4 403 4.036 8 4.072 8
17 3 178 2.938 11 3.037 10
18 5 543 4.938 11 4.990 15
Course origins
The par-three 5th hole at Pebble Beach was rebuit and reopened in 1998. The redesign was performed by Jack Nicklaus and is located along the pacific coastline on a 50-foot cliff. At a cost of $3 million, No. 5 is possibly the most expensive new hole in championship golf.
Pebble Beach was the site of the 100th U.S. Open Championship in 2000, which produced a record-setting 15-shot victory for Tiger Woods at 12 under par. Graeme McDowell won when the U.S. Open returned to Pebble Beach again last summer.

MONTEREY PENINSULA COUNTRY CLUB -- SHORE COURSE

Fast facts
Original architect Bob E. Baldock and Jack Neville, 1959
Par value 70
Number of TOUR events as host venue 4
Yardage 6,838
Grass Poa annua (greens); Bent (tees, fairways)
Holes in one
Monterey Peninsula Country Club
Player Hole Year
Adam Scott 7 2010
Derek Lamely 14 2010
Course origins
Monterey Peninsula Country Club originally opened in July 1926, with the Dunes Course, a vision of Pebble Beach founder, Samuel F.B. Morse. The club properties account for roughly 400 acres of land in the central region of the Monterey Peninsula. The Shores Course was designed by Bob E. Baldock and Jack Neville in 1959 after the members purchased the club from Del Monte Properties.
In 2003, more than 40 years later, the members decided to hire Mike Strantz to redesign a layout on par with the stunning land it was first sowed. "I wanted to shape the course to sweep with the natural terrainthe rocks, the trees and grasses, the ocean," Strantz said. "I dreamed that the course would appear to dance among the cypress trees on this coastline forever." Strantz designed 12 new holes and remodeled the other six to add more than 500 yards to the par-72 layout.
This wonderful layout is located along 17 Mile Drive in Pebble Beach. Views of the rugged coastline are spectacular. The proximity to the open ocean means wind is a major factor at times. Since the course is private and gets very little traffic, it is in pristine condition.
The Shores Course was part of the Crosby golf tournament hosted by Bing Crosby, currently the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, from 1965, 1966 and 1977. 2010 was a rebirth for the Shores Course as the Monterey Peninsula Foundation announced it would be replacing Poppy Hills Golf Course in the rotation last year. -- www.montereypeninsulagolf.com
Monterey Beach 2010 rankings
Hole Par Yards Average score Rank
1 4 454 4.045 4
2 4 391 3.877 13
3 3 155 2.852 15
4 4 401 4.116 2
5 4 349 3.858 14
6 5 548 4.761 17
7 3 226 3.032 5
8 4 454 4.077 3
9 3 224 2.994 7
10 5 544 4.613 18
11 3 176 2.974 9
12 5 599 4.768 16
13 4 401 4 6
14 3 190 2.955 11
15 4 415 3.974 9
16 4 500 4.148 1
17 4 430 3.994 7
18 4 381 3.91 12

SPYGLASS HILL GOLF COURSE

Fast facts
Course Superintendent Robert C. Yeo
Original architect Robert Trent Jones Sr., 1966
Par value 72
Number of TOUR events as host venue 42 (including 2011)
Course ranking Ranked 30 (out of 52) in difficulty on the PGA TOUR in 2010
Yardage history 6,810 yards (1967-1976, 1978-1979, 1981-1995)
  6,859 yards (1997-1999)
  6,817 yards (2000-2001)
  6,862 yards (2002-2006)
  6,953 yards (2007-2009)
  6,833 (2010)
Grass Perennial ryegrass (tees, fairways, rough); Poa annua (tees, fairways, greens, rough)
Tournament Stimpmeter 10 ft
Sand bunkers 62
Water hazards 4
Course tour Click here
Course record
Player
Phil Mickelson
Luke Donald
Year
2005
2006
Round
1st
1st
Finish
1st
T7
Holes in one
There have been nine aces recorded at Spyglass Hill GC
Player Hole Year
James Oh 15 2009
Derek Fathauer 15 2009
Brad Fabel 15 2000
Sam Randolph 5 1998
John Joseph 12 1991
Carl Cooper 5 1990
Gil Morgan 3 1989
Tom Watson 15 1989
Hal Sutton 3 1985
2010 Rankings
Most Difficult Hole
The par-4 476-yard 16th A drive too long may run through this fairway. A tree, which cannot be seen from the tee, blocks the right side. However, when past this tree, the green opens up, so it may be worth the gamble.
2010: 0 eagles, 12 birdies, 96 pars, 43 bogeys, 5 double bogeys, 0 other.
Easiest hole
The par-5 528-yard 11th A dogleg-right par-5 is characterized by a necklace of bunkers protecting the right side of the green. While beautiful to look at from a distance, these bunkers are very costly to play from.
2010: 6 eagles, 77 birdies, 61 pars, 9 bogeys, 3 double bogeys and 0 others.
Spyglass Hill Golf Course 2010 rankings Last 26 years
Hole Par Yards Average score Rank Average score Rank
1 5 595 4.756 16 4.996 13
2 4 349 4.026 9 4.079 9
3 3 165 2.994 11 3.043 12
4 4 370 3.859 13 4.066 10
5 3 197 3.135 6 3.215 4
6 4 446 4.173 5 4.268 3
7 5 529 4.609 17 4.774 17
8 4 399 4.199 2 4.312 2
9 4 431 4.071 8 4.201 7
10 4 407 4 10 4.146 8
11 5 528 4.526 18 4.705 18
12 3 178 3.096 7 3.058 11
13 4 460 4.186 3 4.204 6
14 5 560 4.821 15 4.925 16
15 3 130 2.865 12 2.960 14
16* 4 476 4.263 1 4.332 1
17 4 325 3.84 14 3.953 15
18 4 408 4.186 3 4.207 5
Course origins
Spyglass Hill Golf Course takes its name from Robert Louis Stevenson's classic novel, Treasure Island, published in 1863. Local legend maintains that Stevenson once wandered the Spyglass area gathering ideas for his novels. A unique aspect of this course is that the holes are named after characters in Treasure Island. Hole names such as, "Black Dog" and "Billy Bones" are hints for the unwary.
As players attempt to master this difficult course, they may hear the laughter of pirates in the distance. Spyglass Hill was designed by Robert Trent Jones Sr., as part of the master plan for the Pebble Beach ocean front. S.F.B. Morse, founder of Pebble Beach Company, and Chairman of the Board of Del Monte Properties, envisioned a string of golf courses around Del Monte Forest's shoreline. Morse commissioned Jones to design a course between Cypress Point and Pebble Beach. After six years of planning, Spyglass Hill opened March 11, 1966.
The design features two dinstinctly different kinds of terrain that influence the way the holes look and play. The first five holes roll through sandy seaside dunes, challenging the golfer to carefully pick the safest path. The following 13 holes are cut through majestic pines with elevated greens and strategically placed bunkers and lakes to grab the errant shot. Spyglass Hill is rated one of the toughest courses in the world from the Championship Tees, boasting a course rating of 75.5 and a slope rating of 147. The PGA TOUR consistently lists Spyglass Hill's holes 6, 8, and 16 among the toughest on the TOUR, and during the 1999 United States Amateur, the stroke average of the field during medal play was in excess of 79.
Tournament course history
Course Location Years
Rancho Santa Fe CC Rancho Santa Fe, Calif. 1937-1942
Pebble Beach GL Pebble Beach, Calif. 1947-present
Cypress Point CC Pebble Beach, Calif. 1947-1990
Monterey Peninsula CC Pebble Beach, Calif. 1947-1952, 1954-1966, 1977, 2010
Spyglass Hill GC Pebble Beach, Calif. 1967-1976, 1978-1979, 1981-present
Poppy Hills GC Pebble Beach, Calif. 1991-2009
This week's Kodak Challenge hole
HOLE: The par-5, 543-yard 18th at Pebble Beach Golf Links
LAST YEAR: The 18th played to a stroke average of 4.938, with players recording 3 eagles, 59 birdies, 124 pars, 27 bogeys and 12 double bogey
DESCRIPTION: A new tee further out to sea actually makes the tee shot a little easier, but it still must negotiate the coastline. Only the longest hitters will be able to reach the green in two if they keep their balls in the fairway, although a good, hard drive will bounce considerably because these fairways run firm and fast in the summer. (Click here for more)
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