California, USA
Pebble Beach Golf Links
Course Highlight
Ranked 8th in the world, this legendary Monterey Peninsula course has perched dramatically on Pacific cliffs for over a century, renowned for its thrilling 106-yard par-3 7th and spectacular oceanfront 18th, having hosted six U.S. Open Championships.
Tournament History
U.S. Open (1972, 1982, 1992, 2000, 2010, 2019), PGA Championship (1977), U.S. Amateur (1929, 1947, 1961, 1999)
About the Course
Ranked among the world's top 10 public courses and host to six U.S. Open Championships, Pebble Beach Golf Links stands as the Monterey Peninsula's most luminous golfing shrine. It has witnessed Jack Nicklaus's iconic 1-iron strike in 1972, Tom Watson's legendary chip-in at the 17th in 1982, and Tiger Woods's dominant 15-stroke victory in 2000. This course isn't just decorated with honors—it's a living monument to golf history. The layout unfolds along the Pacific coastline, where the 7th hole's mere 107-yard par-3 perched on cliff edges earns its reputation as 'the world's shortest yet most heart-stopping hole'—any miscalculation in the ocean wind sends balls plunging into crashing waves. The par-4 8th demands courage and precision as it stretches across a dramatic ocean chasm, while the par-5 18th returns to the sea's embrace as golf's most iconic finishing hole—waves thundering left, century-old lodge right, every shot scripting your own Pebble Beach legend.