
The 18th Hole, Caves Valley Golf Club, Par 4 , 460 Yards, Owings Mills, Maryland
The 18th Hole, of the Caves Valley Golf Club is a difficult but beautiful finishing hole. Playing 460 yards from the back tees, the real challenge of this hole is in the approach shot. A two-tiered green is surrounded by five bunkers, the most penal being a rather large deep bunker directly in front of the green, which has tremendous speed from right to left. Par is a very good score, birdie exceptional on one of Tom Fazio's stronger finishing holes. Caves Valley has hosted the 1995 U.S. Mid-Amateur, won by Jerry Courville, the 2002 U.S. Senior Open and 2005's NCAA Division One Men's Championship. The 18th Hole at Caves Valley figures prominently in determining the winner in many Championships. World renowned golf landscape artist, Linda Hartough, has created this magnificent oil painting of the dramatic 18th Hole in a glorious fall scene. It is available in a limited edition of 850 lithograph prints each signed and numbered by the artist.
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The 3rd Hole, RYDER CUP, The Country Club, Par 4, 448 Yards, Brookline Massachusetts
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The 15th Hole, Haig Point G. C. cosigned by Reese Jones, Par 3, 204 Yards, Daufuskie Island, South Carolina
The Haig Point Golf Course opened in October, 1986 and received immediate acclaim. The natural setting of Daufuskie Island with its sandy soil, mature vegetation, saltwater marshes and spectacular vistas of Calibogue Sound and the Atlantic Ocean provided the ideal canvas for renowned golf course architect Rees Jones to create twenty-nine distinctly beautiful golf holes. The 15th hole embodies all the natural elements of Haig Point. The Calibogue tee plays away from the ocean across a saltwater marsh to a green guarded by a massive bunker. The Haig tee is protected from the wind by trees and allows for a shorter shot without marsh carry. Each limited edition print is countersigned by Rees Jones.
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The 18th Hole, Harbour Town Golf Links, Par 4, 450 Yards, Sea Pines Resort Hilton Head Island, SC
Thanks to the familiar candy-striped lighthouse at the end of the 18th hole, the Harbour Town Golf Links is one of the most recognizable courses in America. In addition to its scenic backdrop, the 18th Hole is as treacherous as it is famous. Only inspired shotmaking can transcend a fairway bordered by the salt marshes and waters of the scenic Calibogue Sound. The Pete Dye designed Harbour Town has received accolades from the American Society of Golf Course Architects, who named it one of the top three American courses built since 1962. In addition, Golf Magazine ranks Harbour Town as "one of the top thirty in the world," while Sports Illustrated refers to this gem as "nothing short of a work of art." Harbour Town has also played host to the PGA Tour's Heritage Golf Classic since 1969 where Arnold Palmer won the inaugural event, beginning a tradition unsurpassed in professional golf history.
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The 18th Hole, Laurel Valley Golf Club, Par 5, 506 Yards, Ligonier, Pennsylvania
This demanding finishing hole at the distinguished Laurel Valley Golf Club acquired its present appearance in the late 1980's. The green and its bunkering were lowered, creating the amphitheater setting that challenges the players and provides excellent spectator vantage points when significant tournaments are played there.The present configuration of the 18th hole, along with numerous other hole alterations, is the work of member Arnold Palmer and his Palmer Course Design Company, updating the splendid original design of architect Dick Wilson when the course was built in the 1950's.
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The 18th Hole, Muirfield Village Golf Club, Par 4, 437 Yards, Dublin, Ohio
Selected by a national panel as one of America's ten greatest courses since its first year of eligibility, and voted a favorite venue time and again by the PGA Tour players, Muirfield village opened in 1974, with the initial staging of the Memorial Tournament coming two years later. Created by Jack Nicklaus with the tournament always in mind, all of Muirfield's holes are demanding, but none more so than the magnificent 18th. After 17 Memorial Tournaments, it has played the toughest of all for the world's best golfers.
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The 7th Hole, Pebble Beach Golf Links, Par 3, 107 Yards, Pebble Beach, California
Host to several prestigious U.S. Opens, its famous seventh Hole is considered by experts to be one of the most challenging and beautiful par 3's in existence. It plays downhill to a green squeezed onto a tiny spit of land, a green on which waves crash, a green which at its narrowest point is only eight steps wide. It's the shortest hole in major championship golf, but yard for yard, it is the hardest hole in the world.
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Updated in 2008 - The 7th Hole at Pebble Beach by Linda Hartough is available on canvas measuring 12 x 20 and 36 x 60.
The 7th Hole, Pebble Beach Golf Links, Par 3, 107 Yards, Pebble Beach, California.
Host to several prestigious U.S. Opens, its famous seventh Hole is considered by experts to be one of the most challenging and beautiful par 3's in existence. It plays downhill to a green squeezed onto a tiny spit of land, a green on which waves crash, a green which at its narrowest point is only eight steps wide. It's the shortest hole in major championship golf, but yard for yard, it is the hardest hole in the world.
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Created in 2010 - The 8th Hole at Pebble Beach by Linda Hartough is available on canvas measuring 12 x 20
Rimmed by rocky bluffs and the rolling waves of the Pacific Ocean, Pebble Beach Golf Links is a magnificent meeting of land, sea and sky. Designed by renowned golf architects Jack Neville and Douglas Grant in 1919, the course has attracted the legends of golf (Jones, Hogan, Nicklaus, Palmer), the legends of Hollywood (Gable, Hope, Crosby, Lemmon), and golfers from around the world.
Pebble Beach Golf Links has a rich championship history, having hosted the U.S. Open in 1972, 1982, and 1992; U.S. Amateur Championships in 1929, 1947, 1961, 1999 and 2010; and U.S. Woman's Amateur Championships in 1940 and 1948.
Well-known American golf landscape artist Linda Hartough has captured the beauty and challenge of Pebble's breathtaking 8th hole. Her meticulous rendering of this famous view is offered as a limited edition of 350 Canvas Giclées and 35 AP's, each signed and numbered by the artist.
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The 17th Hole at Pebble Beach by Linda Hartough is available on canvas measuring 12 x 20.
The site of two of the greatest shots in US Open history. Jack Nicklaus' pin-rattling 1 - iron in 1972, and Tom Watson's chip-in in 1982.
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The 18th Hole, Pebble Beach Golf Links - 543 Yards, Par 5
The 18th hole is a medium length par 5 (over 550 yards) with Pacific Ocean all along the left. What may be the greatest closing hole in golf was originally an unremarkable par 4. In 1922, William Herbert Fowler added almost 200 yards to the hole. This unique hole also features a tree in the middle of the fairway and a long 100+ yard bunker running along the ocean from the green, guarding the left side.
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The 18th Hole, Pebble Beach Golf Links - 543 Yards, Par 5
The 18th hole is a medium length par 5 (over 550 yards) with Pacific Ocean all along the left. What may be the greatest closing hole in golf was originally an unremarkable par 4. In 1922, William Herbert Fowler added almost 200 yards to the hole. This unique hole also features a tree in the middle of the fairway and a long 100+ yard bunker running along the ocean from the green, guarding the left side.
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The 17th Hole, No 2, Pinehurst Golf Club
The first PGA Tour major staged at Pinehurst was the 1936 PGA Championship which was won by Denny Shute. In 1951 the resort hosted the Ryder Cup and in 1991 and 1992 it was the venue for The Tour Championship. In 1999 Pinehurst staged its second major, the U.S. Open, which was won by Payne Stewart at the #2 course. It also hosted the 2005 U.S. Open, which was won by New Zealand's Michael Campbell.
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The 18th Hole, No 2, Pinehurst Golf Club
Pinehurst's best known course, Pinehurst No.2 was completed in 1907 to designs by Donald Ross, who was associated with Pinehurst for nearly half a century.
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The 18th Hole, No 4, Pinehurst Golf Club
In an unprecedented move, the USGA will bring both the men's and women's U.S. Opens to Pinehurst #2 in 2014. The men will play their Open at its normal time, ending on the third Sunday in June, and the women will play the following week.
The resort now has eight golf courses, three hotels, a spa and extensive sports and leisure facilities. In 1996 Pinehurst was designated a National Historic Landmark by the U.S. Department of the Interior. It was ranked as the world's largest golf resort by the Guinness World Records before it was surpassed by Mission Hills Golf Club in China.
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The 9th Hole & Clubhouse, Quaker Ridge Golf Club, Par 3, 165 Yards, Scarsdale, New York
The 9th Hole is an outstanding par 3 with a slightly elevated green protected by bunkers on all sides. The green presents a challenging target from the tee where wayward shots make for a difficult recovery. Set in the background of the 9th Hole is the beautiful English Tudor Clubhouse constructed in 1923. Quaker Ridge Golf Club was designed in 1916 by one of the great golf architects, A. W. Tillinghast. It is a classically styled parkland course which places and emphasis on strategic shot-making and course management.
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The 18th Hole, Eden Course, Royal Hong Kong Golf Club, Par 4, 417 Yards, Fanling, New Territories, Hong Kong
The Ultimate is one of the best finishing holes in Asia. The club has three 18 hole courses in Hong Kong's New Territories at Fanling, just south of the Chinese border. Founded in 1889 in Happy Valley, the club moved to Deepwater Bay in 1898 where it still maintains a nine hole course and clubhouse on Hong Kong island. In 1911, the Old Course was laid out at Fanling followed by the New Course in 1931 and the Eden in 1970. The clubhouse at Fanling, originally known as the "Dormie House" was built in 1913.
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The 13th Hole, Seaside Course, Sea Island Golf Club, Par 4, 408 Yards, St. Simons Island, GA
The genius of H.S. Colt and Charles Alison, which was honed on the preeminent seaside links of Great Britian and Ireland, is reflected in its purest form at Seaside's 13th hole. Designed in 1929, the 13th is defined by the salt marshes that must be negotiated in front of the tee and along the entire left side, the strong side, of the dogleg. The three widely flashed fairway bunkers, so faithfully restored by Tom Fazio's reworking of the course in 1999, give the hole depth and definition on the right and signal the way to the windswept green around the corner. Like so many great linksland holes, the 13th is not terribly long, but it demands precision and finesse, particularly when the wind blows.
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The 10th Hole, West Course, Winged Foot Golf Club, Par 3, 191 Yards, Mamaroneck, New York
Called "Tillie's finest," because America's renowned golf architect, A.W. Tillinghast, said it was the finest par 3 he ever built. Ben Hogan calls it "A 3 iron into someone's bedroom," and Tommy Armour called it "the last word as a strategic hole, testing the golfer's best. Winged Foot is considered a classic strategic course, and its varied trees that enhance each hole are called a work of art.
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