
The Green Mile lives up to billing at Quail Hollow
At a combined 1,246 yards – 514 yards short of its popular moniker – the Green Mile at Quail Hollow Club might not live up it to its name in distance. But the three closing holes in this year's PGA Championship still strike fear with plenty of length and even more water.
As calculated by average score over the past three Truist Championships (formerly the Wells Fargo Championship, among other names) at Quail Hollow, the closing three holes are the most difficult on the course. Come Sunday, no lead will be safe on the Green Mile.
No. 16 is a 529-yard dogleg par 4 that was rerouted by architect Tom Fazio in recent years. The hole tees off toward a lake before bending right around a menacing bunker, playing to a green perched above the water's edge. In Thursday's first round of the PGA Championship, No. 16 played to a 4.41 average with only four birdies, 50 bogeys and nine doubles or worse. It ranked as the hardest hole on the course in that round. In Thursday's marquee grouping of Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele and Scottie Scheffler, each player made double bogey on No. 16.
No. 17 intimidates at every angle. The 223-yard par 3 crosses the lake to a firm green with water at the front, left and back. The safe miss is to the right, but a subtle mound at the green's edge forces players who bail out to play up and over to a green that slopes away to the water. No. 17 played to a 3.37 average Thursday with 10 birdies, 52 bogeys and seven doubles or worse, making it the second-toughest hole of the round.
At 494 yards long, No. 18 features a narrow creek that ambles up the left side all the way to the green. Players must challenge the water to set up the best angle into the green – for a creek that many players could leap over, it gobbles up plenty of golf balls. And most dramatically, it plays with the mind on the tee shot and the approach. No. 18 gave up 15 birdies in Thursday's first round against 42 bogeys and 11 doubles, adding up to a 4.31 average and a relatively gentle ranking of fourth hardest hole on the course for the day.
To see everything the contenders are up against, check out this video of the Green Mile at Quail Hollow.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Woad finds lost golf balls during AIG Women's Open
Similar to Rory McIlroy at the Open Championship earlier this month, young star Lottie Woad found some surprise golf balls during the first round of the AIG Women's Open at Royal Porthcawl Golf Club in Porthcawl, Wales.
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
PGA Tour FedEx Cup: Scottie Scheffler's British Open victory clinches regular-season race
Scottie Scheffler's victory in the British Open last week clinched the FedEx Cup regular-season championship for the second year in a row. Scheffler picked up 750 points (the highest number for a winner, reserved for major champions or The Players champion) and has 4,806. He's 1,362 ahead of No. 2 Rory McIlroy and since the final two points events (this week's 3M Championship and next week's Wyndham Championship) give 500 each to the winner, Scheffler's lead is secure heading into the FedEx Cup Playoffs beginning Aug. 7-10 at the FedEx St. Jude Championship. Since Scheffler has first locked up, the rest of the leaders will be taking a bit of a vacation the next two weeks. Only five players among the top 30 on the current points list are in the field at the TPC Twin Cities for the 3M Championship: No. 11 Maverick McNealy, No. 22 Sam Burns, No. 23 Chris Gotterup, No. 28 Ryan Gerard and No. 29 Sungjae Im. Who made the biggest moves last week? Wyndham Clark, +27 spots (78th to 51st), tied for fourth at the British Open Jesper Svensson, +22 spots (133rd to 111th), tied for 16th at the British Open Matt Fitzpatrick, +18 spots (60th to 42nd), tied for fourth at the British Open Erik van Rooyen, +18 spots (80th to 62nd), second at the Barracuda Championship Martin Laird, +18 spots (212th to 194th), tied for 11th at the Barracuda Championship FedEx Cup bubble watch The top 70 on the FedEx Cup points list advance to the FedEx Cup Playoffs beginning Aug. 7-10 at the FedEx St. Jude Classic. There are two points events remaining, this week's 3M Championship and next week's Wyndham Championship. Players on the No. 70 bubble (position required in 3M Championship to tie or pass No. 70 Keith Mitchell) 70. Keith Mitchell 589 71. Emiliano Grillo, 2 points behind Mitchell (80th or higher). 72. Davis Thompson, 37 points behind Mitchell (24th or higher). 73. Eric Cole, 42 points behind Mitchell (21st or higher). 74. Alex Smalley, 45 points behind Mitchell (20th or higher). 75. Christaan Bezuidenhout, 55 points behind Mitchell (15th or higher). 76. Kevin Roy, 57 points behind Mitchell (14th or higher). 77. Chris Kirk, 59 points behind Mitchell (13th or higher). PGA Tour FedEx Cup points leaders Through British Open, Barracuda Championship 1. Scottie Scheffler 4,806 2. Rory McIlroy 3,444 3. Sepp Straka 2,595 4. Russell Henley 2,391 5. Justin Thomas 2,280 6. Harris English 2,232 7. Ben Griffin 2,212 8. J.J. Spaun 2,144 9. Tommy Fleetwood 1,783 10. Keegan Bradley 1,749 11. Maverick McNealy 1,672 12. Andrew Novak 1,625 13. Corey Conners 1,620 14. Ludvig Åberg 1,559 15. Robert MacIntyre 1,479 16. Shane Lowry 1,438 17. Nick Taylor 1,438 18. Collin Morikawa 1,427 19. Brian Harman 1,413 20. Patrick Cantlay 1,275 21. Hideki Matsuyama1,265 22. Sam Burns 1,262 23. Chris Gotterup 1,234 24. Justin Rose 1,220 25. Viktor Hovland 1,210 26. Lucas Glover 1,191 27. Daniel Berger 1,167 28. Ryan Gerard 1,158 29. Sungjae Im 1,142 30. Ryan Fox 1,126 This article originally appeared on Florida Times-Union: PGA Tour FedEx Cup: Scottie Scheffler clinches regular-season points race


Bloomberg
a day ago
- Bloomberg
TaylorMade Golf's Owner and Lender Hire Bankers Over Control
TaylorMade, which has clubs in the bags of men's world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy, is now at the center of an ownership dispute between two South Korean companies that could reshape its future. California-based TaylorMade Golf Co. has built a name by turning out drivers, irons and putters used by many of the world's top pros, and holds an estimated 15% to 20% market share of the global golf equipment market. Its gear is a staple on the tours, where TV audiences from Tokyo to Toronto watch the likes of the top-ranked women's golfer Nelly Korda and Collin Morikawa swing the maker's clubs.