Check the yardage book: TPC Scottsdale Stadium Course for the WM Phoenix Open

How long is No. 16 at TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course, and for that matter, every other hole at the Wm Phoenix Open?

TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course in Arizona, home to the PGA Tour’s WM Phoenix Open this week, was designed by the team of Tom Weiskopf and Jay Morrish. It opened in 1986 and was renovated in 2014, and the desert layout has been the site of the Tour event since 1987.

Most famous for its par-3 16th hole, site of a massive party and ringed by coliseum-like grandstands during the Tour event, the Stadium Course ranks No. 5 in Arizona on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access layouts. It will play at 7,261 yards with a par of 71.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the pros face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.

Tee times, TV info | PGA Tour Live streaming on ESPN+

Re-routing Pebble Beach into a figure 8? One golf architect says it would enhance the experience

The course is a national treasure, but it perhaps could stand to use some tweaking, at least according to one leading architect.

Pebble Beach Golf Links provides magnificent backdrops for the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am each year, the famous course taking center stage on the final day of the event.

But while the course is a national treasure — and leads Golfweek’s Best list of the top 100 courses you can play — it could perhaps stand to use some tweaking, at least according to one leading course designer.

Jay Blasi is a golf architect who has worked on courses such as Chambers Bay, The Patriot and Santa Ana Country Club. He also serves as a Golfweek’s Best rater ambassador and contributes frequently to Golfweek.

In 2019, Blasi tweeted that he felt the experience at Pebble could be even better. We caught up with Blasi at a Golfweek Raters event in Las Vegas this week, to ask his thoughts.

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“If you take a hard look at it, there would be an opportunity to create a figure 8 out at the end of the property away from the clubhouse,” Blasi said.

Blasi’s point is valid — although the dynamic stretch of holes through the last five holes of the front and first after the turn offers breathtaking ocean views, the cliff consistently plays along the right side, making it more dangerous with those who play a fade.

But a re-routing could bring a figure 8 into play that offers more variety and a better all-around experience.

According to Blasi, the changes would bring a little added distance while creating a wider variety of shots needed.

To end his tweet stream in 2019, Blasi summed up his thoughts.

“All told, the refinements would add 66 yds to championship length. Add variety to par 5 orientation. Add variety to par 3 distances. Add a cliffside green. Add variety to coastline. Use compression and release to build drama. Fit the natural terrain. YOUR THOUGHTS????”

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New club Old Barnwell in South Carolina in development with fresh ideas, big plans

Club founder Nick Schreiber living a golf dream with visions of a welcoming South Carolina setting.

Teeing it up around charming Aiken, South Carolina, once named “Best small town of the South” by Southern Living, is about to get quite a bit more, well, charming.

Two new layouts – Old Barnwell and Zac Blair’s Tree Farm – will join a regional roster of layouts that includes classical treasure Palmetto Golf Club and the uber-upscale Sage Valley. The new kids on the block will offer tee times of a different stripe.

Ground has been broken on Old Barnwell, a planned twin-course complex with an expected 2023 opening of the initial private eighteen. The structure and approach on the second course are still under discussion, but expect it to be a Bryson DeChambeau drive different from the first.

Barnwell is the realization of a longtime dream of Nick Schreiber, Chicago born and now a resident of Charleston, South Carolina.

The early Windy City days found Schreiber on summer breaks caddying on classical gems such as Old Elm, Onwensia and Shoreacres. Those layouts as well as family getaways to the Wisconsin resort course at Maxwelton Braes – followed by young-adult trips to National Golf Links, The Old Course and other heralded layouts – spawned then cemented in Schreiber a curiosity and love for classical golf. He dreamt of someday doing something in golf; he just didn’t know what.

Fast forward 20 years. With family established and a successful business under his belt – he was a co-founding executive at a human resources technology company that was purchased by a private equity firm in 2017 – Schreiber found himself thinking again of golf. Now with the time and means, his dream started to coalesce. He wanted to build a club that would not just make a mark but a statement.

Old Barnwell
Old Barnwell founder Nick Schreiber with his family on the site of the planned golf club near Aiken, South Carolina (Courtesy of Old Barnwell)

First things first: a site was needed. Schreiber knew sandy soil is the essence of quality golf land, so he and his team set out to locate a Southeastern site to fit that bill. When an ideal plot just outside Aiken became available, Schreiber, along with architects Brian Schneider and Blake Conant, jumped.

Schneider and Conant?

“The only problem with living in the ‘second golden age of golf architecture’ is that all the best opportunities are going to the same few architects (Tom Doak, Coore and Crenshaw, Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner, et al),” said Schreiber, who has one founding member interested in taking a small equity stake in Old Barnwell but otherwise is financing the project himself. “The preeminent architects of the last 20-30 years have helped create such a remarkable crop of young talent. When Old Barnwell was just an idea, I knew that I wanted to not just find a great site but to also give an opportunity to someone who has earned the chance to do something great.”

There’s an intriguing back story here.

Many of the old guard, having designed the lion’s share of golf courses in the past half century, have reached or approaching the end of their architectural careers. Arnold Palmer, Arthur Hills, Robert Trent Jones Sr., Bob Cupp and Pete Dye are gone. Tom Fazio, Jack Nicklaus, Rees Jones, Robert Trent Jones Jr., Tom Weiskopf and others can see much of their work in the rear-view mirror. Doak, Hanse and the team of Crenshaw and Coore, meanwhile, are becoming more selective in their projects.

Where does that leave the world of course architecture? We might soon see a new face or two.

Fazio’s son, Logan, is taking on major duties in his dad’s firm. Brandon Johnson and Thad Layton, associates for the Palmer group, and Jack Nicklaus Jr. are now the principal designers for their storied founders.

Patrick Burton, who once worked for a number of architectural firms, is supporting Dana Fry and Jason Straka as well as doing renovation and alternative golf projects on his own. As is Crenshaw and Coore associate Jim Duncan, who has taken a prominent role in the development of the new Brambles in California while also designing his first solo course in northern Africa. Jay Blasi, associate designer at Chambers Bay who once worked for Trent Jones Jr., is off on his own. (Editor’s note: Blasi also works with the Golfweek’s Best rater program and contributes stories to Golfweek.)

A number of Doak associates and supporting shapers and designers work both for Doak and on their own, including Schneider and Conant, the team Schreiber tapped for Old Barnwell as their first joint effort.

“My associates are in a different place in their lives,” Doak said. “They want to take on more consulting work, while I was thinking more of slowing down.”

Even Straka, president of the American Society of Golf Course Architects, is a member of the new breed. A longtime associate of Michael Hurdzan and Dana Fry, Straka – who stepped up to partner with Fry as Hurdzan reduced his workload – is credited with several recent joint designs.

The guard is changing, and Old Barnwell, in the hands of Schneider and Conant, stands to benefit.

Per the membership prospectus, “Old Barnwell’s 575 acres of sandy loam stretch across valleys and ridges, through prairies, secluded timber forests and spacious corridors winding in and out of native vegetation.”

The Old Barnwell course will be a neo-classical layout, a tip of the cap to famed English heathland designs. Shotmaking and strategy will be championed on a lay-of-the-land 18 well-suited for the ground game rather than aerial attacks. Hole lengths will not be daunting. Forced carries and lost balls will be few. Creativity, especially around the greens, will be promoted. The goal at Old Barnwell is for a round to be as rewarding for the accomplished as it is for the not-so-accomplished player, bringing a smile to all walking off the 18th. Schreiber even hopes the design boasts a little “sense of humor.”

The second course, called The Gilroy and nominally slated to open in 2025, scratches a much different itch. More of a training course, The Gilroy likely will be short with friendly channeled landing areas, bowled greens and more subtle putting surfaces.  A “holiday course,” as coined by Conant, The Gilroy may or may not be eighteen holes.

Old Barnwell’s mission statement is both simple and noble: “Bring people together through golf.” At one end Old Barnwell will stand as a private club boasting sought-after national and tiered memberships, while at the other end it will be a retreat for a broad range of younger members, families, collegiate golfers and those who aspire to a professional career in the game.

One goal of the club is to annually sponsor, including housing and full club access, four recent female college graduates pursuing careers in golf. Old Barnwell is also in discussions with several local historically black colleges and universities about providing access for golf programs as well as all students and faculty at select times.

The club plans a vibrant caddie program at Old Barnwell, where guaranteed pay, playing privileges and scholarship opportunities will be available for area teenagers. Even training on the agronomy side has not been forgotten.

“We will promote a one-year apprenticeship in local high schools for any graduating senior to earn salary plus benefits and on-the-job training under John Lavelle, one of the most respected leaders in the maintenance industry,” Schreiber said.

Expect a high-end practice area that facilitates group and youth clinics. Greens with surfaces matched to the main course may lure post-round players, drinks in hand, to putting contests. An intimate clubhouse will include a Southern-style wraparound porch. Upstairs rooms as well as a small 10-room lodge will be available for overnight guests.

And a somewhat non-traditional theme of welcoming will be a core of the club, a promotion of inclusivity for people of all walks in both the game and community. The complex, inside and out, will be arranged in such a way to physically bring people together.

Unique, indeed, and there is one additional distinction for Old Barnwell. Not only is this the first joint design effort for Old Barnwell architects Schneider and Conant, it also is the first joint design effort ever by two Golfweek’s Best course raters.

Cool. In fact, very cool.

Jonathan Cummings is a Golfweek’s Best rater who contributes extensively to the compilation of this publication’s course rankings.

Check the yardage book: Pebble Beach Golf Links for the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

The acclaimed coastal layout was designed by amateur architects. Take a look at all the challenges they created, courtesy of StrackaLine.

The famed Pebble Beach Golf Links, one of three courses used in this week’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am on the PGA Tour, was designed by amateur architects Douglas Grant and Jack Neville. The layout on cliffs above the Pacific Ocean opened in 1919.

The first three rounds of the Pebble Beach Pro-Am – Thursday through Saturday – also will be played on nearby Spyglass Hill and Monterey Peninsula Country Club’s Shore Course. Sunday’s final round after the cut will be played only on Pebble Beach Golf Links.

A public-access layout and part of a popular resort of the same name, Pebble Beach ranks No. 9 on Golfweek’s Best list of classic courses built before 1960 in the U.S. and No. 1 in California on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list. 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.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the pros face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.

Check the yardage book: Monterey Peninsula Country Club’s Shore Course for the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Check out StackaLine’s hole-by-hole maps for Monterey Peninsula’s Shore Course for the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

Monterey Peninsula Country Club’s Shore Course in Pebble Beach, California – one of three layouts used in this week’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am on the PGA Tour – opened in 1959 but was extensively renovated by architect Mike Strantz beginning in 2003.

Taking advantage of the unique coastal setting, Strantz designed 12 new holes and remodeled the others that originally were laid out by Bob Baldock and Jack Neville. The result of Strantz’s work has elevated the private club to a tie for No. 27 on Golfweek’s Best list of top modern courses built in or after 1960 in the United States. It also ranks No. 8 in California on Golfweek’s Best list of private courses.

The first three rounds of the Pebble Beach Pro-Am – Thursday through Saturday – also will be played on nearby Spyglass Hill and Pebble Beach Golf Links. Sunday’s final round after the cut will be played only on Pebble Beach Golf Links.

The Shore Course will play to 6,957 yards with a par of 71 in the PGA Tour event.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the pros face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.

Check the yardage book: Spyglass Hill for the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

StrackaLine provides hole-by-hole maps for the Robert Trent Jones Sr. layout in California that will host the PGA Tour event.

Spyglass Hill in Pebble Beach, California – one of three courses used in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am on the PGA Tour – was designed by Robert Trent Jones Sr. and opened in 1966. The layout features an opening five holes through dunes to the water’s edge before climbing into a forest for the rest of the round.

The first three rounds of the Pebble Beach Pro-Am – Thursday through Saturday – also will be played on nearby Pebble Beach Golf Links and Monterey Peninsula Country Club’s Shore Course. Sunday’s final round after the cut will be played only on Pebble Beach Golf Links.

Spyglass Hill, part of Pebble Beach Resorts, ranks No. 31 on Golfweek’s Best list of modern courses built in or after 1960 in the United States. It also is No. 3 in California on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access layouts, and it is No. 12 on Golfweek’s Best list of top 200 resort courses in the U.S.

Spyglass Hill will play to 7,041 yards with a par of 72 for the Tour event.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the pros face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.

Golfweek’s Best 30 under 30: The top golf courses opened since 1992 in the U.S.

Count down the top 30 courses of the past three decades, as judged by Golfweek’s panel of raters.

It’s been a crazy string of decades in golf design, with construction going gangbusters through the 1990s and early 2000s before grinding nearly to a complete halt after the financial crisis of 2007 and ’08. Things have picked up a bit in recent years, especially when considering high-end destinations scattered in far-flung locales around the U.S.

Through it all, these are the best 30 courses opened in the past 30 years in the U.S., as voted by Golfweek’s Best panel of raters.

The hundreds of members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on our 10 criteria. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings on each course are averaged to produce a final, cumulative rating.

This ranking is compiled from data included in the 2021 Golfweek’s Best Modern Courses list, and it focuses on the golf courses themselves, not on resorts or private clubs as a whole or other amenities. Each golf course included is listed with its average rating from 1 to 10, its location, architect(s), the year it opened and its status as a private club (p), a resort (r), a daily-fee operation (d) or a real estate development (re).

Other Golfweek’s Best lists include:

Check the yardage book: Torrey Pines South for the Farmers Insurance Open

StrackaLine provides hole-by-hole maps for the PGA Tour event in San Diego.

Torrey Pines’ South Course in San Diego is the site for three of the four rounds in this week’s PGA Tour’s Farmers Insurance Open alongside the Pacific Ocean, which will be played Wednesday through Saturday.

The first two rounds of the event will be on the South Course and the North Course at the municipal facility, and the final two rounds will be played on the South after a cut is made. The South was home to Jon Rahm’s U.S. Open victory in 2021 and Tiger Woods’ U.S. Open title in 2008.

The South was designed by the father-son duo of William P. Bell and William F. Bell and opened in 1957. The course has been changed significantly over the years. While the Bells’ routing remains, all greens, tees and bunkers were redesigned by Rees Jones in a 2001 major renovation with later refinements in 2019.

The South ranks No. 4 in California on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access layouts, with the North No. 8 on that list. The South also ties for No. 107 on Golfweek’s Best list of classic courses built before 1960 in the U.S.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the pros face this week on the South. Check out the maps of each hole below.

Streamsong to add new 18-hole short course by Bill Coore, Ben Crenshaw

The short course will be built near Streamsong’s lodge and feature holes stretching from 70 to 300 yards.

BOWLING GREEN, Fla. – Streamsong, already home to three highly ranked courses built by some of the biggest names in modern golf architecture, plans to add a fourth course that will open in late 2023 or 2024.

The design duo of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw have signed on to construct their second course at the resort, this one an 18-hole, non-traditional layout for which the early routing shows holes ranging from 70 to nearly 300 yards. The yet-to-be-named short course will be built on lumpy, bumpy, and sandy land just east of the resort’s main lodge, easily within walking distance of guest rooms.

Streamsong – which celebrates its 10th anniversary this year – also will add another putting course near the new course and lodge. It is projected to be larger than the resort’s popular Gauntlet putting course at the Black Course’s clubhouse. Food and beverage components will be constructed alongside the new short course and putting course with a dedicated clubhouse.

All combined, the new amenities should make for a perfectly relaxed way to spend an afternoon after playing one of the resort’s traditional 18s. The Red Course by Coore and Crenshaw ranks No. 2 on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list of public-access layouts in Florida and is tied for No. 37 on Golfweek’s Best rankings of all modern courses built since 1960 in the United States. Streamsong’s Black Course by Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner is No. 3 among Florida’s public-access layouts and ties for No. 44 among all modern U.S. courses, and the resort’s Blue Course by Tom Doak ranks No. 4 in Florida and ties for No. 55 among modern courses in the U.S.

Streamsong Resort
Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw also designed Streamsong’s Red Course. (Courtesy of Streamsong/Laurence Lambrecht)

Coore recently visited the site with course shaper and architect Keith Rhebb, who frequently works for the Coore/Crenshaw team, and they set out initial stakes on the land that cuts across a scrubby, roughly 100-acre site with several lakes in play.

Because it’s a non-traditional course, it’s entirely possible to introduce exciting features that might not work on a traditional course. Think imaginative greens, big run-offs, and other opportunities to show off creative design that might not work as well on a traditional, full-size course.

It’s a similar concept to the new par-3 courses that have become incredibly popular at many top destinations, only longer in spots. Streamsong already is home to a par-3 course, the seven-hole Roundabout near the Black Course’s clubhouse.

And because the new course won’t stretch to a traditional total length, it will be possible to play it with fewer than 14 clubs – players can leave their drivers in their rooms, if they so choose, and tackle it with just a handful of irons, wedges, and a putter.

Coore and Crenshaw often include devilish short par 3s on their traditional courses, including the 147-yard eighth hole on the Red at Streamsong. These holes typically feature extreme putting surfaces and surrounds that can frustrate even good players who have only a short iron or wedge into the green, making them among the most interesting holes on the course despite their diminutive length. Their experience building such holes, as well as par-3 courses such as the much-heralded Preserve at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort in Oregon, should help make for a very interesting 18 holes at Streamsong’s new short course.

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Casa de Campo: The definition of oceanside golf in the Dominican Republic

Pete Dye’s Teeth of the Dog splashes salt spray into your face as you tackle seven holes laid out tight to the Caribbean Sea.

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You can see the water early. It’s the Caribbean Sea, blue and perfect, and of course there’s no missing it. Visitors likely saw plenty of it on the flight to this island nation. 

Before a player ever sets off the first tee of Teeth of the Dog, the sea is seemingly right there in view from the main Casa de Campo clubhouse, down and across the ninth and 18th holes. There are glimpses of blue on the early holes. It’s oh-so-close on the third and fourth holes, just a skosh more than a hundred yards away, providing a taste of salt on the air to make you think you know what it means to play golf alongside the ocean. 

But it’s not until you step onto the fifth tee box that you experience the sensory overload of playing golf directly alongside the sea. Salt spray. Trade winds. Palm trees. A tiny green perched above the waves – take one too many steps backward while reading a putt, and you might make a splash. It’s almost too much for the golf-travel obsessed. 

No. 5 at Casa de Campo’s Teeth of the Dog in the Dominican Republic (Gabe Gudgel/Golfweek)

Right there on that tee box is where many golfers learn what it means to play tight to the ocean. Not playing near the water with a restricted view through some condo towers or mansions, not on a cliff high above the waves, not on the inland side of a beach dune with the wet stuff a full wedge away. Instead, this fifth tee shot is an incredible introduction to swinging so close to the sea that you might get your socks wet – a real possibility if your approach shot falls short and you go for a bold recovery from the rock-strewn beach. 

“I remember the first time I played Teeth of the Dog and I pulled up to No. 5,” said Robert Birtel, director of golf operations at the sprawling Dominican resort, “and I was like ‘Whoa, what’s going on here?’ ” 

What’s going on is up to 176 yards of bravado, beauty and visual intimidation. It’s the late Pete Dye at his finest – an unforgettable golf shot set in a postcard. 

And it’s just the beginning. No. 5 is only the first of seven holes on Dye’s Teeth of the Dog – so named because the sharp rocks along the shore called to mind a canine’s canines – where it’s not only possible you blast a ball into the sea, it’s frequently surprising if you don’t.