In reality, Kingwood Country Club (just northeast of Houston, Texas) was used for much of the movie. Kingwood Country Club is comprised of five courses (Island, Lake, Marsh, Forest and Deerwood).
Since there were none on the course the filmmakers built one and named it "Tin Cup Lake". Many of the golf shots by Kevin Costner's character were actual shots by Costner himself.
The movie was filmed in the tiny town of Tubac, Arizona, as well as Kingwood, Texas. The fictional U.S. Open in the film is supposedly North Carolina but was shot at Kingwood's Deerwood course.
The film's climactic scenes take place at a fictional U.S. Open tournament set in North Carolina. Some of the film was shot in Kingwood, Texas, and some was shot at Tubac GC in Tubac, Arizona.
Hollywood endings tend to distort reality when the fact is that Costner is an estimated 14 handicap. “I don't play enough to even keep up with it,” said Costner. “The few times that I actually do play golf, it feels like it's in front of like a billion people. I don't really practice.
1. Chip Beck at the 1993 Masters was the inspiration for the movie. During the final round of the 1993 Masters, Beck trailed Bernhard Langer by three with four holes to play, yet he laid up on the par-5 15th at Augusta National.
The Tubac Golf Resort and SpaThe Tubac Golf Resort and Spa was made famous by Kevin Costner's 1996 movie Tin Cup, where many iconic scenes were filmed.
The scene below is the location of Roy's driving range. The location is on Highway 83, just north of Sonoita, AZ.
Pitt Meadows Golf Club in Happy Gilmore Happy Gilmore is a film about an ex-hockey player who takes up golf. Pitt Meadows is a golf course in hockey-obsessed Canada (just east of Vancouver). Seems fitting, eh?
Tin Cup got his movie nickname in connection with a personal protection device commonly used by baseball players.
Alberta, CanadaBased on the novel, The Open Range Men, by Lauran Paine. Filmed in CinemaScope on location at the Stoney Indian Reservation and other locations in Alberta, Canada. Released on video in 2004.
Holywood, United KingdomRory McIlroy / Place of birthHolywood is a town in the metropolitan area of Belfast in County Down, Northern Ireland. It is a civil parish and townland of 755 acres lying on the shore of Belfast Lough, between Belfast and Bangor. Holywood Exchange and Belfast City Airport are nearby. The town hosts an annual jazz and blues festival. Wikipedia
Kevin Costner plays Roy "Tin Cup" McAvoy and many of the golf shots shown in the movie are actually made by Costner himself.
George Clooney, 61, cuts a dapper figure as he hits the golf course at the Omega Masters tournament in Switzerland. George Clooney cut a dapper figure as the guest of honour at the Omega Masters tournament at the Crans-sur-Sierre Golf Club in Switzerland on Saturday.
TULSA, Okla. – Major League Fishing (MLF), the world's largest tournament-fishing organization, announced today a sponsorship agreement with TINCUP Whiskey, one of the fastest-growing brands within the whiskey category.
Definition of 'tin cup' 1. a cup made out of tin, esp. one used by beggars to solicit money. 2. a request for unearned money.
Deerwood Country Club is a ClubCorp-operated private club in the quiet woods of Northeast Houston (Kingwood, Texas), and its 13th hole is in fact the site of the famous "Tin Cup" scene. Pretty cool—the producers didn't change the hole at all. There's even a plaque, marking the site where Costner attempted the shot.
As one of golf's most beloved movies turns 23 years old today ("Tin Cup" was released on this date in 1996), we'd like to wax some nostalgia on the cinderella story of Roy McAvoy, played gloriously by Kevin Costner, but also remind golfers that they must make a pilgrimage at some point in their lives.
Happy 62nd Tin Cup (The story behind the hole) In reality, Kingwood Country Club (just northeast of Houston, Texas) was used for much of the movie. Kingwood Country Club is comprised of five courses ( Island, Lake, Marsh, Forest and Deerwood ). Scenes for “Tin Cup” were shot on the Forest Course and Deerwood, as well as at ...
The famous final scene of the movie — the par-5 18th hole in the U.S. Open — is actually Deerwood’s par-4 fourth hole. “It’s just an incredibly demanding par 4,” said Darrell Fuston, Director of Golf for Kingwood Country Club.
Phenicie said all the scenes shot on the fourth hole – including the climactic final scene where Costner takes a 12 after finding the water with shot after shot before holing out with the only ball he had left – took the better part of three days to shoot.
Even in a state as big as Texas that’s so rich in great golf courses, the fourth hole at Deerwood is regarded by many as one of the most difficult in the Lone Star State. “It’s a hole that has stood the test of time,” Phenicie said. “It’s a hard hole. And a famous one, too.
That, anyway, was the venue’s name back then. Today, the course is known as Grande Oaks Golf Club . 3. Kingwood Country Club in Tin Cup. Though Roy McAvoy didn’t seem too bothered by all those water balls, he might be bummed to learn that the hole he played as the par-5 closer in the movie was a par-4 in real life.
Though the scene was shot at an English club called Stoke Park, historians of golf (and cinema) agree that the inspiration for the course we see in the film was Royal St. George’s, where author and Bond creator Ian Fleming was a member. With a nod to the 149th Open Championship at Royal St. George’s this week, here are 9 golf courses that have enjoyed cameos on the silver screen.
9 golf courses that star in popular films, from ‘Tin Cup’ to ‘Happy Gilmore’. Here are the golf courses where such films as, from left, 'Tin Cup,' 'Caddyshack' and 'My Favorite Brunette' were shot. His name was Bond, James Bond, and the match he played in Goldfinger against the titular villain ranks among the most famous golf scenes in movie ...
Bandon Dunes in ‘Golf in the Kingdom.’
It's a delightfully unconventional golf resort that's off the beaten path, and a spot where golfers can walk in the footsteps of Roy McAvoy, Kevin Costner' s character in the classic golf film, 'Tin Cup.'. Most golfers love nothing more than to follow the sport's lore.
The only unnatural aspect of Tubac is Tin Cup Lake , dug for the filming of the movie.
Other than the Rancho nine, the other two nines at this 27-hole resort are labeled Anza and Otero . After finishing the Tin Cup holes on the Rancho nine, golfers are introduced to the Tubac Triangle, a scenic but difficult three-hole stretch that features the longest par 4, par 3 and par 5 at Tubac. The par-5 eighth hole - named Train Wreck – tips ...
The Tubac Triangle boasts the longest par 4, par 3 and par 5 at Tubac Golf Resort. TUBAC, Ariz. – A 45 minute drive south of Tucson sits Tubac Golf Resort and Spa, an oasis in the middle of the Arizona desert.
At 377 yards from the tips, this uphill, dogleg left is a fun par 4. The closer you cut the corner, the shorter your approach shot. For McAvoy, it's two solid 7-irons.
Situated along the banks of the Santa Cruz River, Tubac is naturally green - a fresh deviation from the arid, dusty landscape that dominates the region. Instead of cacti as far as the eye can see, Tubac serves as home to old oaks and the largest cottonwood grove in the United States.
For casual golf fans, Tubac Golf Resort and Spa is a fun experience. But for the serious golfer, it's more than that. It's an opportunity to walk in the footsteps of one of the most famous underdogs in golf history. This story originally published on ArizonaGolf.com.
Shelton, who directed and co-wrote Tin Cup, talked to John Norville, who co-wrote the film with him, after he saw Beck’s lay up on 15. “When Chip Beck laid up, we immediately called each other and said, That’s the key to our guy: He won’t lay up!”. Shelton said. 2.
4. PGA Tour players’ agents wanted big bucks for their clients to appear in the movie — as much as $50,000 — but McCord came to the rescue with a brilliant idea.
During the final round of the 1993 Masters, Beck trailed Bernhard Langer by three with four holes to play, yet he laid up on the par-5 15th at Augusta National. The conservative approach didn’t pay off (Langer won by four), but it gave Ron Shelton the idea he needed for his movie.
7. Saturday filming usually didn’t go well, and it changed how they shot scenes.
Shelton and Norville wanted the movie to look as authentic as possible, so stars Costner and Johnson received swing lessons. Johnson, previously an “8 or 9” handicap, said he couldn’t break 100 for the first week after Kostis and McCord revamped his swing, but about three weeks into the film he started seeing a big improvement.