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Pinehurst Resort

Coordinates:35°11′22″N79°28′04″W / 35.1895°N 79.4678°W /35.1895; -79.4678
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromPinehurst No. 2)
Golf resort in North Carolina, United States

Pinehurst Golf Resort
Course No. 4
Pinehurst Resort is located in North Carolina
Pinehurst Resort
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Pinehurst Resort is located in the United States
Pinehurst Resort
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Map
Interactive map of Pinehurst Golf Resort
Club information
Coordinates35°11′22″N79°28′04″W / 35.1895°N 79.4678°W /35.1895; -79.4678
LocationPinehurst,North Carolina,United States
Established1895
TypeResort
Total holes171
Websitewww.pinehurst.com
Course No. 1
Designed byDr. Leroy Culver:
First Nine
John Dunn Tucker:
Second Nine
Par70 (72)
Length6,089 yards (5,568 m)
Course rating68.4
Slope rating118
Course No. 2
Designed by
Par70 (72)
Length7,588 yards (6,938 m)
Course rating76.5
Slope rating138
Course No. 3
Designed byDonald J. Ross
Par68
Length5,155 yards (4,714 m)
Course rating64.9
Slope rating112
Course No. 4
Designed byGil Hanse
Par72
Length7,227 yards (6,608 m)
Course rating74.9
Slope rating138
Course No. 5
Designed byEllis Maples
Par72
Length6,828 yards (6,244 m)
Course rating73.1
Slope rating135
Course No. 6
Designed byGeorge Fazio &Tom Fazio
Par72
Length7,053 yards (6,449 m)
Course rating74.7
Slope rating139
Course No. 7
Designed byRees Jones
Par72
Length7,216 yards (6,598 m)
Course rating75.5
Slope rating143
Course No. 8
Designed byTom Fazio
Par72
Length7,099 yards (6,491 m)
Course rating74.1
Slope rating137
Course No. 9
Designed byJack Nicklaus
Par72
Length7,118 yards (6,509 m)
Course rating74.2
Slope rating135
Course No. 10
Designed byTom Doak Angela Moser
Par70
Length7,020 yards (6,420 m)

Pinehurst Resort is agolf resort inPinehurst,North Carolina,United States. It has hosted a number of prestigious golf tournaments including fourU.S. Open Championships, oneU.S. Women's Open, threeU.S. Amateurs, onePGA Championship, and theRyder Cup.

Pinehurst consists of ten 18-holegolf courses, each named simply by a number, an 18 hole putting course, and a 9-hole short course. Pinehurst No. 2 has consistently been ranked as one of the top courses in North Carolina and among the best in the United States.[1] In addition to the golf courses, Pinehurst has threehotels, as well as many villas,condos,restaurants, and other leisure facilities. Pinehurst Resort was inducted intoHistoric Hotels of America, the official program of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, since 1991.[2]

History

[edit]
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Pinehurst was founded by Boston soda fountain magnateJames Walker Tufts. He purchased 5,500 acres (22 km2) for approximately $1.25 per acre in 1895, and opened the Holly Inn New Year's Eve of that year. The first golf course was laid out in 1897-98, and the first championship held at Pinehurst was the United North and South Amateur Championship of 1901. Pinehurst's best known course, "Pinehurst No. 2," was completed in 1907 to designs byDonald Ross, who became associated with Pinehurst for nearly half a century. After Pinehurst No. 2 was opened in 1907, Donald Ross said that the course was, "The fairest test of championship golf I have ever designed."[3]

From 1902-1951, Pinehurst was the home of theNorth and South Open, which was one of the most prestigious golf tournaments in the United States at that time. Pinehurst is still home to the annual North and South Amateur Golf Championships, a series of tournaments which includes aMen's Championship, inaugurated in 1901, and theWomen's Championship that began two years later.

Pinehurst in 1901. The No. 1 course had square sand greens at that time. The No. 2 course was converted from oiled sand greens to Bermuda turf in 1935.

The firstPGA Tourmajor staged at Pinehurst was thePGA Championship in1936, won byDenny Shute. In1951, the resort hosted theRyder Cup, and, in 1991 and 1992, it was the venue forThe Tour Championship.

In1999, Pinehurst staged its second major, theU.S. Open, won byPayne Stewart at the No. 2 course. There is currently a statue behind the 18th hole at Pinehurst No. 2 showing Stewart's famous victory pose after making a putt on the 18th hole to defeatPhil Mickelson.[4] The U.S. Open returned in2005, won byNew Zealand'sMichael Campbell. In 2011, Pinehurst No. 2 completed a $2.5 million, year-long renovation led by Bill Coore andBen Crenshaw. The goal was to revert the course back to the original Donald Ross design.[5]

In an unprecedented move, the USGA brought both the men's U.S. Open and theU.S. Women's Open to Pinehurst No. 2 in 2014. The U.S. Open was scheduled at its normal time, ending on the third Sunday in June (Father's Day), and the women played the following week.

The resort now has nine golf courses, three hotels, a spa and extensive sports and leisure facilities. It was ranked as the world's largest golf resort by theGuinness World Records before it was surpassed byMission Hills Golf Club inChina. The property’s old-growthlongleaf pine trees are home to the federally endangered Red-cockaded Woodpecker.[6]

The No. 2 course is included in theLinks and theTiger Woods PGA Tour video game series; the No. 8 course is also available for theLinks game. Both Pinehurst No. 2 and Pinehurst No. 8 are available to play on E6 software.[7]

Pinehurst was owned by the Tufts family until 1970, when it was sold toMalcom McLean. The Tufts Archives are located in the Given Memorial Library in Pinehurst.[8] After the property was acquired by a set of banks in 1982, it was sold toRobert H. Dedman, Sr., founder ofClubCorp.[9] When the Dedman family sold ClubCorp, they retained Pinehurst.[10]

In June 1999,National Public Radio reported that the Pinehurst Resort was using threats of trademark infringement lawsuits to prevent any businesses located in the area ofPinehurst village from using the term "Pinehurst" in their business names.[11]

Major tournaments hosted

[edit]
YearTournamentWinnerWinner's
share ($)
1936PGA ChampionshipUnited StatesDenny Shute1,000
1951Ryder Cup United Statesn/a
1962U.S. AmateurUnited StatesLabron Harris Jr.n/a
1994U.S. Senior OpenSouth AfricaSimon Hobday145,000
1999U.S. OpenUnited StatesPayne Stewart625,000
2005U.S. OpenNew ZealandMichael Campbell 1,170,000
2008U.S. AmateurNew ZealandDanny Leen/a
2014U.S. OpenGermanyMartin Kaymer1,620,000
U.S. Women's OpenUnited StatesMichelle Wie720,000
2019U.S. AmateurUnited StatesAndy Ogletreen/a
2024U.S. OpenUnited StatesBryson DeChambeau4,300,000[12]
2027U.S. Women's Amateur
2029U.S. Open
U.S. Women's Open
2035U.S. Open
  • All professional tournaments and 1962 U.S. Amateur held at Course No. 2. 2008 and 2019 U.S. Amateur qualifying rounds played on No. 2 & 4. 2019 U.S. Amateur played final on No. 2 & 4.[13]

World Amateur Team Championships hosted

[edit]
YearTournamentWinnerOrganizer
1980Espirito Santo Trophy United States
(Juli Inkster,Patti Rizzo,Carol Semple)
World Amateur Golf Council
1980Eisenhower Trophy United States
(Jim Holtgrieve,Jay Sigel,Hal Sutton,Bob Tway)
World Amateur Golf Council
  • Both tournaments held at Course No. 2.

Golf courses

[edit]

Pinehurst Resort operates ten golf courses; the best known, Course No. 2, opened in 1907. Designed byDonald Ross, it has hosted several major tournaments. Several notable golf course architects have designed courses for the resort. These architects include Donald Ross, Ellis Maples, Tom Fazio, Jack Nicklaus, and Gil Hanse. Houses border most of the courses but only one course was created specifically as a housing development: Pinehurst #7.

Pinehurst No. 1

[edit]

The first nine of what would become Pinehurst No. 1 was designed by Leroy Culver in 1897 and the second nine by John Dunn Tucker in 1898.Donald Ross however came in 1901 to tie it all together into a full 18-hole course, beginning a long career at what would become Pinehurst Resort.[14][15] While there have been many changes to No. 1 over the years, many to accommodate the construction and renovation of the other courses, the original design is still there. The course is currently grassed with CertifiedTifway 419 Bermuda tees, fairways, and rough and Mini Verde ultradwarf greens.

Pinehurst No. 1[16]
TeeRating/Slope123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Blue68.4 / 118391401353466173375167366148284036741022241433735239033142632496089
WhiteM:67.4/113 W:73.0/126365391345458143355161338126268235739421836932434538131841831245806
GreenM:65.5/109 W:70.8/120365358345422118355143338126257032739415733132432430331841828965466
Par444534343344434444453670
SI317171151513982106121441618
RedM:64.1/107 W:69.1/115319358331422118281143249109233032738513636931632430328838928375167
YellowM:61.0/95 W:63.2/10323735825034090215104249106194924226213633122723522728830022484197
ParRed/Yellow454534343354435444453772
SIRed/Yellow418281261416103117115791513

Pinehurst No. 2

[edit]

Pinehurst No. 2, the most famous course at Pinehurst Resort, was first opened in 1907 and designed byDonald Ross. Pinehurst is considered to be Ross' best work and he continued to perfect it until his death in 1948.[17] The course is famous for its exceptionally difficult green complexes[18] which were a signature of Ross designs and many of the greens are crowned causing shots that are short to roll off the green, leaving a difficult chip shot.Johnny Miller once famously compared trying to land a shot on a Pinehurst green as "like trying to hit a ball on top of aVW Beetle".[19] Pinehurst, like manySandhills courses, was without long rough for much of its early history but in 1974 a redesign by RT Jones led to the installation of thick bermuda rough throughout the course, which lasted until a restoration in 2010 by Bill Coore andBen Crenshaw, who removed all of the rough and reshaped the fairways and bunkers to restore the course to its original Ross design.[17] In lieu of rough, golfers now find hardpan sand and native scrub bordering the fairways. The course since its inception has been host to many significant tournaments including 5 men's majors (1936 PGA Championship, and 1999, 2005, 2014, 2024 U.S. Opens). Additional U.S. Opens are scheduled in 2029, 2035, 2041, and 2047 under a partnership with theUSGA announced in September 2020 naming Pinehurst as the USGA's first "anchor site".[20] It also hosted the1951 Ryder Cup and the2014 U.S. Women's Open played the week after the men's. Not only has the course hosted numerous professional events, but it has also hosted theU.S. Amateur three times (1962, 2008, and 2019).[17] The course is currently grassed with Tifway Bermuda tees and fairways and Champion Ultradwarf greens.[21] For its 2019-2020 course rankings,Golf Digest ranked No. 2 as the 29th best golf course in theUnited States and the 6th best public course in the country.[22][23]Golf Magazine for its 2020-2021 rankings named No. 2 as the 11th best course in the country and the best inNorth Carolina.[24][25]

The North Carolina Golf Panel has consistently ranked it as the best course in the state, both public and private.[26] A statue ofPayne Stewart is beside the 18th green, showing him celebrating his winning putt from the1999 U.S. Open – his second and final U.S. Open and third and final major championship before his death in October of that year.[27]

Pinehurst No. 2[28]
TeeRating/Slope123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
2024 U.S. Open- / -395504387528588228426488184372861748248638147219753020744838207548
Par444453443355444434343570
Blue73.7 / 133393439350474508203393469174340358045541937543318351318541535586961
White70.7 / 126376411330434462178385440148316445537536035841917047816236631436307
Par444453453365444435343672
SI113911557171318810621216144
GreenM:68.0/123 W:73.3/129366390309326432170313419140286543835833632734715343715235829065771
RedM:65.5/117 W:70.3/127340342283316417116306400124264442132029327833712441114532926585302
SIGreen/Red953111171315710141268184162

Pinehurst No. 3

[edit]

Pinehurst No. 3, which is by far the shortest 18-hole course at the Resort, was designed by Donald Ross in 1910. The course is known for its very small greens placing a premium on accuracy and ball position, a hallmark of Ross courses.[29] No. 3 underwent minor renovations in 2017 to make room for the new short course "The Cradle," and return the course to a more traditional Pinehurst appearance of sandscape and native scrub with minimal rough. These renovations led by Kye Goalby lowered the par to 68 from 70 and shortened the length of the course.[30] The course is currently grassed with Certified Tifway 419 Bermuda tees, fairways, and rough and Champion Ultradwarf greens.[29]

Pinehurst No. 3[31]
TeeRating/Slope123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
WhiteM:66.1/123 W:71.2/125283119346151296166327111327212633850219642319132831934638630295155
GreenM:64.8/118 W:69.2/12126310931612428514930499311196032145817741117731629733637028634823
Par434343434324535344443668
SI111517139517321661812141084
RedM:63.0/109 W:66.4/1182519830711327613427883283182330942912440312829626730626225244347
YellowM:60.4/105 W:63.0/11019360267821879725276244145823828911932910925624125125221843642
SIRed/Yellow131531179117521214818610416

Pinehurst No. 4

[edit]

Pinehurst No. 4, debatable as the second best course at the Resort was originally laid out by Donald Ross in 1919 but has undergone many significant changes in the years since, so significant that Ross is not credited by the Resort as the course's architect.[13] The course was redesigned in 1973 byRobert Trent Jones, in 1982 byRees Jones and in 1999 byTom Fazio.[13] Most recently the course reopened in 2018 after a major redesign byGil Hanse which saw the course stripped of its rough much like No. 2 replacing it instead with native sandscapes. Also removed by Hanse were Fazio's numerous pot bunkers which some considered to be out of place at Pinehurst.[32] No. 4 assisted its sister course No. 2 during the 2008 and 2019 US Amateurs by hosting several rounds in addition to those played on No. 2.[13]Golf Magazine in its 2020-2021 rankings named No. 4 the 92nd best course in the country and the 4th best inNorth Carolina.[24]

Pinehurst No. 4[33]
TeeRating/Slope123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Orange74.9 / 138450512431153489217439409527362743217445352921639832159048736007227
Blue73.7 / 135420498411140481200421402517349042016544052120738629857346134716961
WhiteM:70.8/131 W:76.9/140404473378119460184404374484328039213738750417933127453640831486428
Par454343445364345344543672
SIOrange/Blue/White713111719315541810812161462
GreenM:68.5/123 W:73.8/133382443359100355159380350464299236812436047416124526051037628725864
RedM:65.4/116 W:70.1/12431940227683341231356331436267634510234045511522824442632925845260
SIGreen/Red139151711137521848161412106

Pinehurst No. 5

[edit]

Pinehurst No. 5, which opened in 1961 was designed by Ellis Maples, an understudy of Donald Ross and one of the leading figures inNorth Carolina golf course architecture.[34] The course differs from the four courses that predate it in that it takes on a more classic parkland style than the traditional rugged courses the Sandhills region is known for. The course is currently grassed with Certified Tifway 419 Bermuda tees, fairways, and rough and Champion Ultradwarf greens.[34]

Pinehurst No. 5[35]
TeeRating/Slope123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Gold73.1 / 135412484393428168407374434381348136938618552318843750438437133476828
Blue72.0 / 132403480352420168403353435372337636338118051118039749737036232416617
WhiteM:69.8/126 W:75.9/136375450327392160391327389363317433432415847916137047136034330006174
GreenM:67.4/119 W:73.0/129337443315351141368317338353296330031113843912135042032931427225685
Par454434444364435345443672
SI157311751311924166181014812
RedM:64.9/112 W:70.2/121310414289323128319288290315267629228711041510632240730330525475223
YellowM:61.9/105 W:65.4/1212353572892611202342882202852289210237923408727434724124020684357
SIRed/Yellow713151731511924121816614810

Pinehurst No. 6

[edit]

Pinehurst No. 6, designed byGeorge Fazio and his nephewTom Fazio, opened in 1979 and much like No. 5 before it, deviated from the earlier courses in that it took on a more typical parkland style with numerous lakes and more traditional bunker shapes.[36] Additionally No. 6 was different from the five before it in that it was the first course at the Resort to not play out of the main clubhouse. With the Resort out of room for a new course on the same site as the five other, No. 6 was built several miles away.[37] Tom Fazio made some minor renovations in 2005, including the addition of new bunkers and installing faster greens.[36] The course is currently grassed with Certified Tifway 419 Bermuda tees, fairways, and rough and Champion Ultradwarf greens.[36]

Pinehurst No. 6[38]
TeeRating/Slope123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Gold74.7 / 139441537198402415515213385441354750041741321239149922341543635067053
Blue72.6 / 134411529176379391492171371420334050039835918636849018138742532946634
White70.7 / 125381515163342366467159344401313844237634417234046514935739730426180
GreenM:68.3/120 W:73.5/128355461136310339452151324381290940335532214631341313533235527745683
Par453445344365443453443672
SI951711571113381221861416104
RedM:64.3/112 W:69.7/12032242211223932439713129433525763772782691322723999230629124164992
YellowM:62.2/105 W:65.6/10823433011223924033813127525021493142782001002723409223522020514200
SIRed/Yellow571517191311314841621018612

Pinehurst No. 7

[edit]

Pinehurst No. 7 which opened in 1986 was designed byRees Jones. This course, which was built on the site of a forgotten 9-hole employee course designed by Donald Ross, was the second at the Resort to play from a clubhouse other than the main one, even though No. 7 backs up to several holes on No. 2.[39] The course features some of the most uneven topography of any course at the Resort and is as such a unique experience.[40]Tiger Woods won the Big I Junior Classic in 1992 on No. 7.[40] In 2002 the course underwent minor renovations by its original designer Rees Jones to keep it modern and in premium shape.[40] The course is currently grassed with Certified Tifway 419 Bermuda tees, fairways, and rough and Champion Bermuda greens.[40]

Pinehurst No. 7[41]
TeeRating/Slope123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Gold75.6 / 142520462406418205479394543191361839942152520740843519740660035987216
Blue74.0 / 139493440387405179463365517174342337039550318938841317739257434016824
White71.7 / 134476411367386145438329495153320033738046416536438714937352831476347
GreenM:68.7/121 W:74.1/13646039129534011141129144512428683163234319833736612835249028415709
Par544434453364453443453672
SI511311173971561041681418212
RedW:71.3/13042032328532210335326140211325822942864059131432611730846026015183
YellowM:61.0/108 W:63.6/11231821318421720322821530511318961882293059120323311721735419373833
SIRed/Yellow971551711131314128184216106

Pinehurst No. 8

[edit]

Pinehurst No. 8, No. 4's contender for second best at the Resort, was designed byTom Fazio and opened in 1996 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Pinehurst.[42] The course is a classic Fazio design which puts a premium on playability with a nod to the tradition of Ross' signatures including many difficult green complexes. The course has the least amount of housing bordering it of any course at the Resort and as such is a more tranquil round, winding through wetlands and forests, earning it a Signature Sanctuary designation from theAudubon Society in 1996.[42] No. 8 has played host to the PGA Club Pro Championship twice and hosted the 2017 US AmateurFour Ball with No. 2. The course is currently grassed with Certified Tifway 419 Bermuda tees, fairways, and rough and Champion Ultradwarf greens.[42] No. 8 has ranked in the Top 100 public courses in theUnited States.

Pinehurst No. 8[43]
TeeRating/Slope123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Gold74.1 / 137361559382464149605370236442356844157937320440418739850044535317099
Blue72.3 / 131334532374437138585346204416336641657335318136316536848942033286694
WhiteM:70.3/128 W:76.8/141316502358408115565323181392316038755033516536314532546441731516311
GreenM:68.0/121 W:73.7/13130249233937998453313155328285935851329713235213131145639629465805
Par454435434364543434543672
SI159115171137364181281610142
RedW:70.4/1242814183013389445027181323255733942928912630712528639929625965153
SIRed/117911531317526161441810128

Pinehurst No. 9

[edit]

Pinehurst No. 9 which opened in 1988 and was designed byJack Nicklaus was originally a private club known as "National Golf Club" separate from the Resort but was purchased by Pinehurst in 2014, and became No. 9, available just like all the other courses to Resort guests.[44][45] The course is a true Nicklaus original with all the hallmarks, including lush playing conditions and tricky greens. As with the others newer than No. 5, No. 9 plays out of its own clubhouse but is not far from the main resort, sitting just across the road from No. 7. The course underwent minor renovations in 2012 to keep it up to date and the course is currently grassed with Certified Tifway 419 Bermuda tees, fairways, and rough and Penn A-1/A-4 creeping bentgrass greens, the only course at the resort with bentgrass greens.[44]

Pinehurst No. 9[46]
TeeRating/Slope123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Gold74.8 / 143411190404572431421419536176356051542317543741753038421944635467106
Blue72.5 / 139394180364548389389373503160330049039016039640250335719541433076607
White70.5 / 132375168327527375361355488142311845733715134937547931717938530296147
GreenM:68.00/121 W:72.6/130296161304498342316320453122281242331413232632940430914834127265538
Par434544453365434454343672
SI513713119151710141862128164
RedW:69.8/12127010226941430731027538691242437029110127731835926813933224554879
YellowM:60.4/106 W:63.2/10723110222127420221921830691186427623710121521430017413924719033767
SIRed/Yellow131771591131521218864141610

The Cradle

[edit]

The Cradle is a 9-hole par 3 course designed byGil Hanse; it opened in 2017 and is Pinehurst's shortest course.[47]

The Cradle[48]
TeeRating/Slope123456789Total
Yardage113856612756589280112789
Par33333333327

Pinehurst No. 10

[edit]

Pinehurst Number 10 started construction in 2023 and opened in 2024. Golf architects Tom Doak and Angela Moser led the design.[49][50][51] The site is the former location of The Pit Golf Course.[52]

Pinehurst No. 10[53]
TeeRating/Slope123456789Out101112131415161718InTotal
Blue74.1 / 142447182555342400489150385468341863418254450826438547717543336027020
White71.5 / 137400163532308374437122357439313258517049448322436144314240533076439
GreenM:68.2/129 W:73.5/140351129492300348415100268431283453614745044821335335210734529515785
Par435444344355354344343570
SI513111591177361416210124188
RedM:64.3/117 W:69.0/12433610044326030636482242309244242812341534417431931210132725434985
SIWomen315913711711514166210812184

Croquet

[edit]

Pinehurst is also the home of three championship croquet courts and a lawn bowling court. Players from around the country are attracted to this resort to play six wicket championshipcroquet. Mack Penwell is a US national champion, member of theUnited States Croquet Association hall of fame and, now retired, croquet professional at Pinehurst resort. Ron Lloyd took over as the croquet professional in 2004.

In May 2015 Pinehurst hosted the Solomon Trophy, the international match between teams representing the USA and Great Britain.[54]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Pinehurst Resort & Country Club - No. 2".Golf Advisor. RetrievedJune 29, 2022.
  2. ^"Hotel History - Pinehurst Resort".Historic Hotels of America. RetrievedDecember 14, 2022.
  3. ^"Virtual Golf Course: Pinehurst – Donald Ross's Masterpiece".TruGolf. September 26, 2014.
  4. ^Kelley, Brent."1999 US Open: Payne Stewart's Last Win".about.com.
  5. ^"Crenshaw-led restoration of famed Pinehurst No. 2 complete".PGA Tour. AP. April 11, 2011. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  6. ^Graham, Rex."Resilient Woodpeckers hard to knock – or stop".Birds News. Archived fromthe original on April 4, 2016.
  7. ^"Golf Courses".E6Golf.
  8. ^Landau, Sara (January 31, 2014)."Jewel of Pinehurst".Fayetteville Observer.
  9. ^Shipnuck, Alan (June 14, 1999)."The Prince Of Pinehurst".Sports Illustrated. pp. G35 –G48. RetrievedJuly 21, 2020.
  10. ^"ClubCorp sells Pinehurst, portfolio for $1.8B".Triangle Business Journal. October 10, 2006. RetrievedJune 22, 2014.
  11. ^"Pinehurst".National Public Radio. June 17, 1999. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  12. ^Jourdan, Cameron (June 12, 2024)."2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2 to feature record purse, first-place prize money".Golfweek. RetrievedJune 13, 2024.
  13. ^abcd"No. 4".Pinehurst Resort. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  14. ^"No. 1".Pinehurst Resort. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  15. ^Tucker, Brandon (April 29, 2011)."Pinehurst No. 1: A lesson in the ageless golf course design of Donald Ross".Golf Advisor. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  16. ^"Pinehurst No. 1 Scorecard"(PDF).Pinehurst. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  17. ^abc"No. 2".Pinehurst Resort. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  18. ^"Pinehurst Resort & Country Club".Triple Golf. December 13, 2023.
  19. ^Ersek, Kaitlyn (June 17, 2014)."Sustainability Is A Hot Topic As Pinehurst Hosts The U.S. And Women's Open".Holganix.
  20. ^"With Pinehurst as an 'anchor site,' USGA signals shift in philosophy for picking future U.S. Open venues".
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  22. ^"Pinehurst Resort No. 2".Golf Digest. January 3, 2019. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  23. ^"America's 100 Greatest Public Courses".Golf Digest. May 2019. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  24. ^ab"It's here! GOLF's 2020-21 ranking of the Top 100 Courses in the U.S."
  25. ^"Best golf courses in North Carolina, according to GOLF Magazine's expert course raters".
  26. ^"Pinehurst area courses dominate 2019 N.C. Golf Panel rankings".Sandhills Sentinel. May 9, 2019. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  27. ^Ferguson, Doug (June 19, 2005)."Stewart remembered at U.S. Open".Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Associated Press. p. 1C.
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  29. ^ab"No. 3".Pinehurst Resort. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  30. ^Lambert, Rebecca (April 18, 2017)."Donald Ross design characteristics return to Pinehurst No. 3".Golf Course Architecture. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  31. ^"Pinehurst No. 3 Scorecard"(PDF).Pinehurst. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  32. ^Hennessey, Stephen (October 13, 2018)."The new Pinehurst No. 4: Behind Gil Hanse's bold changes at the historic North Carolina resort".Golf Digest. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
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  34. ^ab"No. 5".Pinehurst Resort. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  35. ^"Pinehurst No. 5 Scorecard"(PDF).Pinehurst. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  36. ^abc"No. 6".Pinehurst Resort. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  37. ^Tucker, Brandon (April 8, 2010)."Tom Fazio's Pinehurst No. 6 course: A stepping stone to the North Carolina resort's modern era".Golf Advisor. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  38. ^"Pinehurst No. 6 Scorecard"(PDF).Pinehurst. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  39. ^"Pinehurst No. 7 – The Fairwoods".Quintessential Golf. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  40. ^abcd"No. 7".Pinehurst Resort. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  41. ^"Pinehurst No. 7 Scorecard"(PDF).Pinehurst. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  42. ^abc"No. 8".Pinehurst Resort. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  43. ^"Pinehurst No. 8 Scorecard"(PDF).Pinehurst. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  44. ^ab"No. 9".Pinehurst Resort. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  45. ^Crittenden, Jack (June 3, 2014)."Pinehurst Resort acquires 9th course".Golf Inc. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  46. ^"Pinehurst No. 9 Scorecard"(PDF).Pinehurst. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  47. ^"The Cradle".Pinehurst Resort. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  48. ^"Pinehurst Short Course Score Card"(PDF).Pinehurst Resort. RetrievedApril 14, 2020.
  49. ^"Tom Doak to break ground on Pinehurst No. 10".
  50. ^"Fescue - New Golf Construction".
  51. ^"The Fried Egg - Thoughts on Tom Doak Getting the Pinehurst No. 10 Job".
  52. ^"Pinehurst Resort taps Tom Doak to build resort's 10th course on site of the former The Pit".{{cite magazine}}:Cite magazine requires|magazine= (help)
  53. ^"Pinehurst No. 10 Scorecard".Pinehurst. RetrievedFebruary 4, 2024.
  54. ^"Pinehurst Resort". The Croquet Association. RetrievedMay 7, 2015.

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