Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina – site of the 2022 Presidents Cup – was originally designed by George Cobb and opened in 1961. There have been several renovations to the layout including work by Arnold Palmer and, most recently, Tom Fazio.
Quail Hollow ranks No. 4 in North Carolina on Golfweek’s Best list of private courses in each state.
The PGA Tour has shaken up the normal routing of Quail Hollow for the Presidents Cup in an effort to make sure players encounter the club’s Green Mile, which normally is the tough three-hole finishing stretch. Because the Presidents Cup is match play, there’s a chance many matches could end before reaching those holes. Instead, the normal finishing stretch has been moved up in the routing. What is normally No. 16 at Quail Hollow will play as No. 13 in the Presidents Cup, the normal No. 17 will be No. 14 in the Presidents Cup, and the normal No. 18 will be No. 15 in the Presidents Cup.
The shuffling includes 10 of the holes in total. Nos. 1-8 will play as they normally do, but every other hole on the course has been shuffled in the routing. Each of those changes is indicated on the graphic maps of the holes below. The holes are shown in the routing in which they will be played for the Presidents Cup, and their normal place in Quail Hollow’s routing is indicated in the headers below. Each of the holes that has been moved also has a black box upon the graphic indicating its position in the Presidents Cup and in the normal Quail Hollow routing.
In all, Quail Hollow will play to 7,571 yards with a par of 71 for the Presidents Cup.