The Tournament Players Club (TPC) in
Ponte Vedra Beach,
Florida is, arguably, the
Mecca of Golf in the U.S. Located in the development of Sawgrass, the TPC is just down the drive from
Tour headquarters. As the Tour's "home" club, the TPC boasts two terrific Pete Dye courses, the
Valley Course and the
Stadium Course,
which hosts The Players Championship in late March. The Championship has become known as "The Fifth Major."
The Stadium Course
Opened in 1982, the
Stadium Course
became a sensation and a topic of considerable controversy for its departure from traditional design.
It was the first course of its kind, featuring mounds, high banks and earthen amphitheatres specifically
designed to accommodate larger golf-ravenous crowds.
17th Hole at The Players Championship Stadium Course
Former Tour Commissioner Deane Beman pioneered the concept of stadium golf,
recognizing the crescendo of ringing cash registers in football-game size crowds.
Though it continues to be controversial as a style of golf course architecture, stadium
golf has grown enormously since 1982 and now the Tour owns, operates or is building
no less than 32 other stadium courses around the U.S.
Beman, who captained the Tour's move from Washington, D.C., to Ponte Vedra Beach in
1979, also had the foresight to establish a permanent home course for the PGA Tour.
In a land deal coup on a par with the purchase of Manhattan from the Indians, Beman bought
the 400-acre TPC property from Fletcher Land Co. for a mere $1.
But the Fletcher Brothers weren't dummies. In the late '70s, they knew that a world-class
golf course hosting a "major" championship would be a major draw to the area and give
a boost to the sagging real estate market. A specific goal at the time was to pump new life
into Sawgrass Country Club and community, which is also part of the Sawgrass development
and which lies directly across A1A, a major north-south highway, from the TPC.
A fine traditional golf course of 27 holes, Sawgrass CC hosted The Players Championship
before it moved permanently to the Stadium Course. It also hosted the Mazda Senior
Tour Players Championship before that event moved briefly to the Valley Course and later
to Dearborn, Mich., its permanent home.
Despite its raised profile from these tournaments, the golf course and community failed
financially and was put into receivership. Eventually, it was acquired by Arvida, a
Disney company. Now Sawgrass CC is a flourishing equity membership club, and
homes in the community are fetching top dollar.
As for the Stadium Course, Beman's choice of Pete Dye as designer was no less brilliant
than his previous decisions. As Dye's resume confirmed, here was a superbly imaginative
course architect who could do wondrous things with pans and bulldozers. Notwithstanding
the controversy that first greeted it, the Stadium Course is a marvel in golf course design,
engineering and construction. [The same can be said for the entire TPC property, which,
in addition to the two golf courses, includes a superb clubhouse and a first-class practice
facility including an airport size driving range behind which is a line of furling flags, golf's version of the U.N.]
Prior to construction, the TPC site was a forested lowland far more suited to hunting
and alligator habitat than golf. Drainage was a major hurdle, especially after the completion
of A1A, which effectively dammed the site on the east. The problem was resolved by a
network of constructed lakes and canals which meander prominently through the property,
providing both drainage and ample irrigation water.
This network is a principal feature of the course, as water comes into play on no fewer than 16
holes, including the signature 17th. This famous short par 3 with its island green was not part
of the original routing plan. When Dye finished designing the first 16 holes, he had no space for
17, only the lake separating No. 16 and his route for No. 18. Like No. 13 at Harbour Town, Dye's wife
Alice stepped in with an idea--to put the green out in the lake. Now one of the most widely
photographed holes in golf, No. 17 provides great tournament drama and not a little heartache.
Yet, as Dye told me in 1998, "17 was an accident."
Aerial view of the Sawgrass Marriott Resort
Lake construction, of course, provided the earth for the mounds and amphitheatres,
including the tiered grass seat structure around the No. 1 tee box that looks like a miniature
football stadium. In some places, like behind No. 18 tee box, banks rise up 15 feet high or
more and resemble the haunches of slumbering behemoths. The relocation of huge volumes
of dirt also allowed Dye to create fascinating elevation changes. For example, the tee boxes
on No. 4, No. 5 and No. 16 sit substantially higher than fairway level.
Aside from accommodating fans, mounds are strategically placed to make life miserable for
the wayward. For example, the large 8-foot high berm left of No. 12 fairway blocks a view
of the green from that side of this fine 342-yard dogleg left hole. And elsewhere, like on No. 5,
some of the greenside sand and grass bunkers have high lips, obscuring pin placements
from the wrong approach.
Though the course, at 6,937 yards from the back, does not require Olympian distance,
precision is essential to score well here. Most of the tee shot landing areas are extremely
narrow, pinched in to 25 yards by high rough, mounds, waste bunkers, water, trees or a
combination of all these. Dye designed the abundant live oaks on the site to play a critical
role on a few holes, notably No. 16. On this 496-yard risk-reward par 5, a tall oak front and left of
the green catches shots even slightly off line left. The lake immediately right of the green catches
right-leaning shots like a preying mantis catches his supper. Here Dye is saying,
"How are your nerves? You can get home in two, but you will have to hit a career shot."
Nerves aside, the golf course is superbly conditioned and visually stunning. While every hole
is artistically exciting, No. 9 is an artistic and strategic masterpiece. It is a 582-yard double
dogleg that is golf's equivalent of Paris Island. From the tee box in the woods, you drive to a
wide landing area flanked on the right by a waste bunker and lake. A creek bisects the fairway
about 350 yards out. The fairway bends to the right about 300 yards from the tee. Depending on
the wind, the second shot requires a medium iron to fairway wood to a tiny bull's eye target guarded
left and right by oaks. There is also another large waste bunker on the left. If you hit too far left on
the fairway, the oaks completely block the approach to the green. From 130 yards out, the fairway
bends back to the left to a small, severely sloped green guarded by sand and high-lipped grass bunkers
that resemble bowls of wire clippings.
So what's playing the Stadium Course like? While target golf enthusiasts will be in hog heaven here,
the traditionalists will squeal all the way home. If you mix in the wind, the course is a famished bear
on amphetamines. Bring your "A" game, plenty of patience, and a dozen sleeves of
golf balls.
Sawgrass Golf: