The 18-hole "Pebble Beach" course at the Pebble Beach Golf Links facility in Pebble Beach, California features 6,828 yards of golf from the longest tees for a par of 72.
There is no agreed upon signature hole at Pebble Beach Golf Links, but the most obvious candidate would be 8. Notable holes include the short par 3 7th, which plays to just over 100 yards even during major championships, is one of the most photographed holes in the world.
In April 1920, Pebble's owner, Samuel Finley Brown Morse, invited British golf architect W. Herbert Fowler to inspect Pebble Beach. Sure enough, Fowler suggested an ocean-side tee for 18, and this time, Morse had it built.
The best walk in golf is meant to be that — walked. When you play Pebble Beach Golf Links, it is our recommendation that you do so with a caddie. The course knowledge and camaraderie our caddies provide only add to your bucket-list round of golf. Caddies are available for all rounds at Pebble Beach Resorts.
about 550 yardsThe 18th hole is a medium length par 5 (about 550 yards) with Pacific Ocean all along the left.
It is also Golfweek's Best highest-ranked resort course in the U.S. Pebble Beach has been home to six U.S. Opens and slated to host the event again in 2027. It also hosted the 1977 PGA Championship and has been home to the pro-am since 1947. This week Pebble Beach Golf Links will play to 6,972 yards with a par of 72.
par-5The 18th Green at Pebble Beach Golf Links Did you know it originally opened as a par-4? Now it's an unforgettable par-5 that sweeps around spectacular Stillwater Cove, testing you off the tee with ocean left, a Cypress tree in the fairway, and out-of-bounds right.
208 yardsThe hole, a par-3, measures 208 yards on the scorecard, headed straight for the ocean. Wind often blows briskly, swirling at times. There's a far-back, across-the-road tee from which the hole could play more than 220 yards, though the USGA may not use that tee this week.
Pebble Beach green fees for a standard round are a whopping $550 per person and will increase to $575 on April 1, 2020. In addition to that initial price, it costs $45 per person to use a cart. If you choose to go the caddie route and walk, which is recommended, the caddie fee will run you another $95 per bag.
106-yardThe 106-yard seventh hole at Pebble Beach Golf Links is one of the most iconic in golf. The hole is situated on a cliff overlooking the Pacific Ocean, the tee perched up well above the green below.
Now the 18-hole golf course is central to the game of golf. There is a lore that a golf course is made up of 18 holes because it takes exactly 18 shots to polish off a fifth of Scotch. Drinking only one shot per hole meant a round of golf was finished when the Scotch ran out.
Par 4Par 4, 465 yards The closing hole has become a 465-yard challenge with the extension of the tee in 2002. An accurate drive is a must, and an expanded bunker complex requires a clout of 335 yards to carry. Trees to the left of the bunkers prevent a bailout on that side, and the elevated green is guarded by bunkers.
43 yards wideFairways. The fairways average 43 yards wide for resort play, which feels plenty narrow with the ocean bordering half the holes. For the U.S. Open, the fairways shrivel to an average of less than 30 yards.
An investment group that includes actor Clint Eastwood, golf master Arnold Palmer and former baseball commissioner Peter Ueberroth on Thursday announced they have agreed to acquire the legendary Pebble Beach golf resort near Monterey for $820 million.
It's not a requirement that you need to stay to play, though it's strongly advised. That's because if you're a guest of one of the Pebble Beach Resorts properties (The Lodge at Pebble Beach, The Inn at Spanish Bay), you can book Pebble Beach times up to 18 months in advance.
The 14th annually ranks as one of the toughest par-5s on the PGA TOUR. It was the third-hardest hole in the 2010 U.S. Open, playing to a 5.44 scoring average. That's the highest scoring average on a par-5 on the entire PGA TOUR since 2000. Pebble Beach's 543-yard final hole is one of the most famous in golf.
Morse commissioned Jones to design a course between Cypress point and Pebble Beach. Spyglass Hill is an annual co-host to the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, formerly known as the Crosby.
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 four hundred acres of land in the central region of the Monterey Peninsula. The Shores Course was designed by Bob E.
Spyglass Hill Golf Course was designed by Robert Trent Jones, Sr., as a 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.
The Shores Course was designed by Bob E. Baldock and Jack Nevillein 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.
In 1929, Pebble hosted its first major—the U.S. Amateur. A match play event, it was won by Jimmy Johnston of Minnesota, while Bobby Jones tied for medalist honors in the stroke play qualifier, but lost his first-round match to Johnny Goodman .
A large sand trap guards the front and left. The 18th hole is a medium length par 5 (about 550 yards) with Pacific Ocean all along the left. What may be the greatest closing hole in golf was originally an unremarkable par 4. In 1922, William Herbert Fowler added almost 200 yards to the hole.
The 16th hole runs alongside the 3rd hole to complete the figure eight, and bring the dramatic closing holes along Stillwater Cove. These include the long par 3 17th, whose place in golf history was assured when Jack Nicklaus (1972) and Tom Watson (1982) made key shots there to win U.S. Opens .
The green is long and thin, tilted about 45 degrees from the angle of the golfer on the tee. Depending upon pin position and wind, a golfer may use a great variety of clubs for the tee shot and, although the green is large in area, the landing area for any approach is relatively small.
In 2023 , Pebble Beach will be the first course to host a men's, women's, and senior men's golf tournament in the same calendar year, as the course will host the U.S. Women's Open.
In 1947, Pebble Beach began its run as one of the host courses for the Bing Crosby National Pro-Am tournament, sometimes known as the "Clam Bake", and now the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. The tournament is held annually, usually in February, and is an unusual four-round tournament.
The course was designed by Jack Neville and Douglas Grant and opened on February 22, 1919.
1 Golf Resort in America. With three Top 50 public courses canvasing the spectacular coastline that wraps around California’s Monterey Peninsula, golf at Pebble Beach Resorts is a truly unforgettable experience. Whether you are skirting the scenic sand dunes at Spanish Bay, threading the towering pines of Spyglass Hill, ...
The course will host its first Women’s U.S. Open Championship in 2023 , and the Men’s Championship will return for seventh time in 2027.
Spyglass Hill is Pine Valley-by-the-Sea meets Augusta National , says Sports Illustrated. Other major golf publications propose it is the best course yet to have hosted a Major. See for yourself!
Play Tournaments at Pebble Beach. In addition to hosting some of the most famous golf tournaments in history—including six U.S. Open Championships plus the upcoming 2023 U.S. Women’s Open—Pebble Beach is home to a variety of tournaments where you can stay, play and compete.
As you meander along 17-Mile Drive, you'll catch yourself rubbernecking as you pass a total of eight courses — seven championship layouts that populate just about every golfer's bucket list, plus Peter Hay, the only par-3 design on the Monterey Peninsula. Read More »
Pebble Beach has been rated the greatest public golf course in America by Golf Digest since its rankings came out in 2003. It hosted its sixth U.S. Open in 2019, and will stage its first U.S. Women’s Open in 2023.
Prior to pebble's first Open, in 1972 , Tatum headed a committee that revamped the course. When the Open returned in 1982, Tatum urged officials to implement a couple of renovations that didn't get done 10 years before. One was the deepening of a fairway bunker on the right side of the par-4 16th.
When pebble Beach opened in 1919, its 18th hole was a short, straight par 4. In defense of the original designers, Jack Neville and Douglas Grant, it was the best they could do. Their topographic map shows they positioned the green just in front of a deep ravine, with the Pacific on the left and a 75-cent toll road called 17 Mile Drive, soon relocated, close on the right. It wasn't their fault the green was only 325 yards from the tee. They'd proposed an ocean-side tee box to stretch the hole to 379 yards, but it wasn't built. Funds were limited.
He approved of a new bunker along the left side of the first green because there was one there in the 1929 Amateur. But he also insisted on adding three bunkers in a hillside on the outside corner of the dogleg-left third, even though there'd never been any bunkers there.
One of the first lots Morse sold in 1915 was a 5½-acre parcel on a bluff overlooking Stillwater Cove. William Beatty, who had paid a little more than $6,000, refused to sell it back to Morse. So Neville and Grant had to design around it, forcing them to create a par-3 fifth hole that played away from the ocean.
Jack nicklaus, the victim of Watson's heroics, later called it "one of the great shots in the history of the game." Watson was tied with Nicklaus for the lead in the final round of the 1982 U.S. Open when his tee shot at the par-3 17th went left and landed in deep rough between the green and the sea. With the ball above the hole, it looked like an extremely difficult up-and-down. But after Watson's caddie, Bruce Edwards, told him to knock it close, Watson famously responded, "Close? Hell, I'm going to sink it."
Still, the evolution of Pebble Beach Golf Links has been messier than most , mainly because it has been incessantly poked and prodded by well-meaning amateurs, professionals, architects, engineers, artists and committees, committees, committees.
In laying out the course, Jack Neville attempted to bring as many holes to the rocky coastline as possible. The first two holes are inland, the third runs toward the ocean, and the fourth and fifth holes run along the Stillwater Cove. This arrangement allowed Neville to make use of a peninsula which juts straight out into the Pacific Ocean. Prior to 1998, the fifth hole was an uphill par 3, but afte…
The course began as part of the complex of the Hotel del Monte, a resort hotel in Monterey, California, built by Charles Crocker, one of the California's Big Four railroad barons, through Southern Pacific Railroad's property division, Pacific Improvement Company. The hotel first opened on June 10, 1880. The famous 17-Mile Drive was originally designed as a local excursion route for visitors to the Del Monte to take in the historic sights of Monterey and Pacific Grove an…
The first professional tournament at Pebble Beach was the Monterey Peninsula Open in 1926, which had a $5,000 purse. "Lighthorse" Harry Cooper of Texas won with a 72-hole score of 293 (+5). In 1929, Pebble hosted its first major—the U.S. Amateur. A match play event, it was won by Jimmy Johnston of Minnesota, while Bobby Jones tied for medalist honors in the stroke play qualifier, but lost his first-round match to Johnny Goodman.
Pebble Beach has hosted the U.S. Open six times: 1972, 1982, 1992, 2000, 2010, and 2019 and is scheduled a seventh time in 2027.
The U.S. Open was first held at Pebble Beach in 1972, won by Jack Nicklaus, who captured his 11th major title (of an eventual 18) as a professional. It was a historically important win, as Nicklaus tied Bobby Jones with 13 major titles; a lifelong amateur, Jones' major titles were in the …
There has been continuing controversy between recreational interests and environmental protection, related to a proposed new golf course development by the Pebble Beach Company. The new golf course proposal has existed in some form since the early 1990s; while the environmental protection issues center on the potential damage to rare and endangered species in this locale. The Pebble Beach Company agreed to leave 635 acres of forest area on the Pebble B…
• Official website
• Golf Course Histories aerial comparison 1938 v 2014
• Monterey Peninsula Golf: Pebble Beach Golf Links - course information, photos, and interactive map.
• Golf Nation: overhead views of each hole