Cypress Point Club

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Coordinates: 36°34′36″N 121°57′41″W / 36.576686°N 121.961444°W / 36.576686; -121.961444

Cypress Point Club
Club information
Location Pebble Beach, California
Established 1928
Type Private
Total holes 18
Designed by Alister MacKenzie
Par 72
Length 6524
Course rating 72.4

Cypress Point Club is a private golf club in California. The club has a single eighteen hole course, one of eight on the Monterey peninsula near Monterey, California. The course is well known around the world for its series of three holes that play along the Pacific Ocean: the 15th, 16th and 17th, which are regularly rated among the best golf holes in the world. The 16th is a long par three that actually plays over the ocean. The golf course itself was designed by noted golf course designer Alister MacKenzie in 1928. It formerly was one of the courses used for the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, last doing so in 1991.

Meandering through the coastal dunes, this immaculate course journeys into the Del Monte forest during the front nine and reemerges to the rocky coastline for the best set of finishing holes of all time. The signature hole is #16, which requires a 231-yard tee shot over the Pacific to a mid-sized green guarded by strategically placed bunkers, offers all the dynamics you could imagine on a majestic oceanfront par three. With the famous back-to-back par three's, #15 and #16, not to mention the spectacular par four 17th, set in the most exquisite natural location ever imagined for a course, the back-nine is truly the Holy Grail of golf. [1]

It was the scene in 1956 of "The Match" one of the greatest golf games ever played.[citation needed] This was a four-ball better-ball private match between two leading amateur players, Ken Venturi & Harvie Ward, and two of the greatest professional players, Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson. Hogan birdied the 18th to halve the hole and win the match 1-up. In doing so he set a course record of 63 which still stands today. The pros had a net score of 57, fifteen under par, the amateurs were just one behind with a net of 58. The match is the subject of a classic golf book of the same name written by Mark Frost.

Cypress Point Club was ranked #2 on Golf Magazine's 2007 List of The Top 100 Golf Courses in the World.[2]

[edit] The Course

Cypress Point Golf Course
Tee Rating/Slope 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 OUT 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 IN TOTAL
Championship 72.4 / 136 421 548 162 384 493 518 168 363 292 3349 480 437 404 365 388 143 219 393 346 3175 6524
Regular 409 538 155 373 471 509 161 347 282 3245 480 428 397 343 382 127 219 382 329 3087 6332
Par Men's 4 5 3 4 5 5 3 4 4 37 5 4 4 4 4 3 3 4 4 35 72
Handicap Men's 5 1 17 7 11 3 15 9 13 16 4 2 14 8 18 6 10 12
Red 409 510 142 366 416 475 155 319 247 3039 480 401 310 285 323 119 208 355 296 2777 5816
Par Women's 5 5 3 4 5 5 3 4 4 38 5 5 3 4 4 3 4 4 4 36 74
Handicap Women's 11 1 17 7 5 3 13 9 15 2 10 8 14 6 18 16 4 12

[edit] References

[edit] External links


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