Winged Foot has a storied history of hosting national championship golf on our two Albert W. Tillinghast-designed courses. We have hosted six U.S. Opens, the 1940 U.S. Amateur, the 1949 Walker Cup, and a PGA Championship on our West Course. Our East Course has been the site of two U.S. Women's Opens and the inaugural U.S. Senior Open. The 2004 U.S. Amateur was …
Joseph McGovern, Designed Winged Foot Golf Course Give this article May 22, 1966 The New York Times Archives See the article in its original context from May 22, 1966, Page 87 Buy Reprints View on...
· Clifford Wendehack collaborated with course architect A.W. Tillinghast when he designed Winged Foot's iconic clubhouse in the early 1920s. (Winged Foot)) It was designed to look as if it were rising out of the ground. The idea was to make Winged Foot’s clubhouse part of the essential backdrop to the greens closest to the famed building.
Reviews for Winged Foot (West) Description: The West course at Winged Foot Golf Club is the work of A.W. Tillinghast, one of America’s greatest golf course designers, and this is Tilly’s finest creation. Written by: Top100 Aggregated Rating Rating: 8.5 out of 10 Reviews: 13.
· Of course, these founding members wanted to differentiate themselves from the NYAC, so in 1922, Winged Foot’s board decided to keep …
That's exactly what architect Clifford Charles Wendehack (1885-1948) had in mind when he collaborated with golf course designer A.W. Tillinghast on Winged Foot Golf Club in the early 1920s. The two architects achieved this by careful site selection and alignment of the building.
Clifford WendehackHe soundly defeated Al Espinosa (standing on left) in a 36-hole playoff. A vintage view of Winged Foot's iconic clubhouse that was designed by the world-renowned architect, Clifford Wendehack. Even today the clubhouse retains all of the classic elements of his design, placing it among the top clubhouses in the world.
A.W. TillinghastWinged Foot is home to two 18-hole layouts, the East Course and the West Course, both designed by A.W. Tillinghast, a giant of golf architecture's Golden Age.
The name comes from the logo of the New York Athletic Club. The NYAC logo pictures — you guessed it — a foot with a wing attached to it. Several members of the NYAC at the time were part of the group that founded Winged Foot in 1921, so they brought some of the club's flavor with them to the golf course.
Bobby Jones, Billy Casper, Hale Irwin and Fuzzy Zoeller also won U.S. Opens at Winged Foot. The club also hosted the 1997 PGA Championship. Davis Love III won, which means four of the six men's majors at Winged Foot have been won by members of the World Golf Hall of Fame.
According to Winged Foot's head pro, Mike Gilmore, the club has 650 regular members and roughly 1,000 across the different categories.
It's long, it's hard, there's really not a whole lot of birdie holes, so I think that's a perfect venue for a U.S. Open golf course.” Of the five U.S. Opens at Winged Foot, '74 was probably the hardest (especially with old equipment), but '06 was hardest to watch.
PrivateWinged Foot Golf ClubClub informationLocationMamaroneck, New YorkEstablished1921, opened 1923TypePrivateTotal holes3627 more rows
The winged foot is a symbol of the magical sandals worn by the Roman god Mercury. Mercury is the messenger god in Roman mythology, responsible for being the go-between for Olympians and mortals. The winged foot is often associated with running, but it is also associated with speed and progress.
Tillinghast was one of the most prolific architects in the history of golf; he worked on more than 265 different courses.
Mamaroneck, New YorkWinged Foot Golf Club is a private club with two 18-hole golf courses located in Mamaroneck, New York.
2020The 2020 United States Open Championship was the 120th U.S. Open, held September 17–20 over the West Course at Winged Foot Golf Club in Mamaroneck, New York, a suburb northeast of New York City.
Mantle was a fiercely competitive golfer himself, bringing the same power he unleashed behind 536 career home runs to the resort fairways, Wise said. ``He had forearms like Popeye. He hit the ball 250 yards off the tee,″ Wise said.
9 ways you can play Winged Foot Contact the club here. Apply for membership. Get accepted for membership. Play golf at Winged Foot, which reopens for members on Sept.
Winged Foot Golf Club is a private golf club in the northeastern United States, located in Mamaroneck, New York, a suburb northeast of New York City. The club was founded in 1921, by a group largely made up of members of The New York Athletic Club, and opened in June 1923. Winged Foot's name and logo are taken directly from a sculpture in ...
Claude Harmon, Sr. was the head professional at Winged Foot G.C. when he won the 1948 Masters and collected a check for $ 2,500. He was the last club professional to win a major championship.
Major championships held at Winged Foot. Winged Foot's West Course has hosted the U.S. Open six times and the PGA Championship once. The East Course has hosted the U.S. Women's Open twice and the U.S. Senior Open . Winged Foot Golf Club has also hosted the U.S. Amateur twice; in 2004, the tournament was contested on both courses.
Winged Foot has two 18-hole golf courses, the West and the East, both of which were designed by A. W. Tillinghast. The West Course is a par 72 that measures 7,477 yards (6,837 m); it has a course rating of 76.4 and a slope of 140. The East Course is a par 72 that measures 6,750 yards (6,172 m); it has a course rating of 73.6 and a slope of 140. Golf Digest ' ranked the West Course 8th and the East Course 65th in its 2009-10 listing of America's 100 Greatest Golf Courses.
For USGA championships, the West Course has been typically set up at par 70. In this configuration the 514-yard (470 m) converted par five ninth hole becomes one of the longest par fours in major championship history. The 640-yard (585 m) par five twelfth is the sixth longest hole in major championship history.
The 1949 Walker Cup was played on the West Course. In January 2013, the United States Golf Association announced that Winged Foot Golf Club would host the 120th U.S. Open in 2020. With its sixth U.S. Open, only Oakmont Country Club and Baltusrol Golf Club have hosted the tournament more times.
In 2019 Winged Foot was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, as the last course Tillinghast designed that was complemented by a Clifford Charles Wendehack clubhouse.
Description: The West course at Winged Foot Golf Club is the work of A.W. Tillinghast, one of America’s greatest golf course designers, and this is Tilly’s finest creation. Written by: Top100 Aggregated Rating Rating: 8.6 out of 10 Reviews: 11
A few members of the New York Athletic Club founded Winged Foot in 1923 and the name originated from the athletic club’s emblem and now Winged Foot is synonymous with a everything American and it’s a true classic. Tillinghast has certainly created a serious golf course with no weak holes.
In the '74 US Open Jack Nicklaus hit the 1st green in regulation -- having a birdie putt from 25-feet. His next putt was 28 feet coming back to the hole. Two additional putts had the Golden Bear flummoxed as he left the green.
Since the West plays as a par-70 during key events it has only two par-5 holes and a quartet of par-3's. However, it is the strong two-shot holes where Tillinghast pushes the player to deliver time after time. Nine of the twelve are at 450 yards or more. Unfortunately, the club has decided to keep fairway widths close to 25 yards and the rough encountered is often dense and quite deep. Why this is done is beyond me. The West doesn't need to be "helped" given the inherent design characteristics.
The closing six holes are brutal, starting with the 13th, a 210-yard par three an followed by five par fours all measuring in excess of 400 yards. The closing hole is perhaps the finest finishing hole in the USA and the 10th hole is one of the best par threes in the world.
Three of the four par 5 holes played as half par holes, with only the 12th playing over 515 yards. It’s obvious why it plays as a par 70 in major championships. While some would view this as a weakness, I think the cross bunkering and hazards made these some of the more interesting holes, especially in match play format.
The final hole -- aptly named "Revelations" -- is one of the strongest concluding holes in American golf. A lone right fairway bunker is there to push players back to the middle and is well-positioned. The approach must then carry a false front that can derail many a player. One need only ask Colin Montgomerie whose approach at the 72nd hole in the '06 Open came up woefully short after deciding to take one less club when Monty's original decision was likely the right call.
The last three holes at Winged Foot West are called Hells-Bells (16), Well-Well (17) and Revelations (18).
Golf. That’s it. In all of golf, it's the best combination of great golf course and great golf club and great golf history.
Tillie was a master on the property of combining trees, tees and greens together. And the best example is the Elm on 2. Because if you look at it from above, you realize, Holy cow, 2 West green, 3 West tee, 5 West green, 6 West tee – they're all right around that tree. The naming of holes sounds really interesting.
I’ll keep it simple. I'm going to echo what Gil Hanse said: "Your third putt on West No. 1." [ ed.’s note: Gil restored Winged Foot in 2017]
No, the difference in the proper read could be 90 degrees. That is to say, if you aim a few inches outside the hole, that ball could lip out; on the same putt, if you aim with your back to the hole, that could be the line that the ball goes in on.
Davis is an accomplished course architect and he can talk about the raised, tiered green on the long, bunker-free 17th hole of Winged Foot’s East Course right through the soup course. But when we talk about Winged Foot and its courses, he always returns to one thing above all else and that is atmosphere.
A Met fan in Westchester County eats lunch by herself.) OK, Hale Irwin won, ’74 at Winged Foot. You’ve probably seen the photos of him, wearing those wire-framed glasses. If ever a man looked well-suited to handling golf’s math and engineering problems, Hale Irwin at Winged Foot in ’74 would be your guy.
Winged Foot's aura is fueled by more than just its two Tillinghast courses.
I recall, loosely, a quote from Trevino about the Winged Foot rough in ’74: “Your caddie would put the bag down to look for the ball and you’d lose the ball, the bag and sometimes the caddie.” Perfect. (Except for height, Trevino had every kind of gift a person can have, including the gift of hair.) I’ve often wondered how that quote settled in me. Via Red Smith? Or maybe Dave?
I knew about Tillinghast, Winged Foot’s godfather, because of Frank Hannigan’s landmark piece about him in the USGA magazine, Golf Journal . “Give us a man-sized course,” the founding members told the architect. I wasn’t there to play on that winter day. I was an unlikely candidate to ever play Winged Foot.
My host for that winter lunch at Winged Foot in 1985 was Jerry Tarde. I was 24 and Jerry was probably 28. I didn’t know what I was doing, then or now. Jerry did then and does now. He was already the editor of Golf Digest . (I was trying to become a Tour caddie.) He joined Winged Foot at 22. Wodehouse had a character, The Oldest Member. That was not Jerry, despite the uncommonly mature manner he had, even then. A recent (and slightly edited) text from him:
Dave Anderson and Red Smith, New York Times sports columnists, were already heroes to me. I remember, through the gift of spilled ink on newsprint, player complaints about how hard Winged Foot was. That was the year Sandy Tatum of the USGA said, “We’re not trying to embarrass the best golfers in the world, we’re trying to identify them.”
Winged Foot Golf Club is a private golf club in the northeastern United States, located in Mamaroneck, New York, a suburb northeast of New York City. The club was founded in 1921, by a group largely made up of members of The New York Athletic Club, and opened in June 1923. Winged Foot's name and logo are taken directly from a sculpture in the lobby floor of the New York Athletic Club in Ma…
Winged Foot member Tommy Armour won three major titles: the 1927 U.S. Open, 1930 PGA Championship, and the 1931 Open Championship.
Claude Harmon, Sr. was the head professional at Winged Foot G.C. when he won the 1948 Masters and collected a check for $2,500. He was the last club professional to win a major championship. Previously, Winged Foot head professional Craig Wood won the 1941 Masters and U.S. Open, the fi…
Winged Foot's West Course has hosted the U.S. Open six times and the PGA Championship once. The East Course has hosted the U.S. Women's Open twice and the U.S. Senior Open.
Winged Foot Golf Club has also hosted the U.S. Amateur twice; in 2004, the tournament was contested on both courses. The 1949 Walker Cup was played on the West Course.
In January 2013, the United States Golf Associationannounced that Winged Foot Golf Club woul…
• National Register of Historic Places listings in southern Westchester County, New York
• Official website
• Official US Open website
• The Itinerant Golfer - Winged Foot Golf Club (West Course)