logo
PGA Championship: How Quail Hollow 3 Green Mile Holes Will Decide a Winner

PGA Championship: How Quail Hollow 3 Green Mile Holes Will Decide a Winner

Newsweek13-05-2025

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
As in every golf tournament (even more so in major championships), the Quail Hollow Club course will be one of the main protagonists of the upcoming PGA Championship. It is one of the most difficult tests of golf on the PGA Tour schedule, and it will certainly be no less so this weekend.
However, all players have their sights set on the so-called "Green Mile", knowing that it is there that their fate will most likely be decided in the second major of the season.
It is the final stretch of Quail Hollow, the last three holes that have the distinction of being the toughest on the course and some of the toughest in America.
Suffice it to say that a player like Rory McIlroy, who has won four times at Quail Hollow, played the "Green Mile" in 1-over in 2021 and 2-over in 2024 to win his third and fourth Wells Fargo Championship titles, respectively.
Meanwhile, Justin Thomas played this stretch at a very rare even-par score during the final round of the 2017 PGA Championship, when he lifted his second Wanamaker Trophy.
A general view of the 18th hole ahead of the 2016 Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow Club on May 11, 2016 in Charlotte, North Carolina.
A general view of the 18th hole ahead of the 2016 Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow Club on May 11, 2016 in Charlotte, North Carolina.The Green Mile measures 1,251 yards. It consists of the 540-yard, par-4 16th hole, the 211-yard, par-3 17th hole and the 505-yard, par-4 18th hole.
Let's take a closer look:
Hole No. 16
The start of the "Green Mile" is the very long par-4 16th hole. At 540 yards, it is only 25 yards shorter than the par-5 15th.
At first glance, this hole presents few difficulties, with only one bunker to the right of the middle fairway and another to the right of the green. But that feeling disappears when you consider the massive water hazard that enters from the left and completely surrounds the green, leaving only a tight access by land.
Add to this the narrowness of the fairway, which becomes even narrower as it approaches the green, pushed inward by the water on the left.
It is a hole where the player must give priority to accuracy without neglecting the long shots.
Every Hole At Quail Hollow in two minutes.
Enjoy. 🍿 pic.twitter.com/JUsVQD4ktz — Golf Digest (@GolfDigest) May 10, 2025
Hole No. 17
The second hole of the Green Mile has practically no fairway, as it is almost entirely occupied by a lake. The water hazard itself reaches the green and almost completely surrounds it.
As if that were not enough, the side of the green that connects to the fairway slopes downhill, so balls that do not hit the putting surface directly run the risk of rolling all the way into the water.
Accuracy is essential for an acceptable score on this difficult hole. Anyone walking away with par will be thrilled and skip on over to 18.
Hole No. 18
Quail Hollow is unique in that the most difficult hole is the last. Hole 18 is another long par 4 with a creek running along the left side of the fairway and green.
A bunker about 300 yards from the tee on the right side of the fairway forces players to stay in the middle of the fairway, which is not easy given its narrow design. The fairway narrows even more as it leads to the green, which has two more bunkers on the right, which together with the stream make for a difficult test.
Once again, players will need to play long and try to minimize the spread of their shots. The players who can best combine accuracy with distance will be the ones who can best overcome this super difficult challenge.
During the 2017 PGA Championship at Quail Hollow, only three players of the 156-man field played this stretch under par.
Meanwhile, 88 double bogeys were recorded.
It is an incredibly difficult stretch of golf that will test the best of the best, and likely determine a champion come Sunday.
More Golf: Rory McIlroy Drops PGA Championship Warning amid Truist Finish

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tommy Fleetwood up three at Travelers Championship, with Hopkinton's Keegan Bradley among pursuers in Connecticut
Tommy Fleetwood up three at Travelers Championship, with Hopkinton's Keegan Bradley among pursuers in Connecticut

Boston Globe

time3 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Tommy Fleetwood up three at Travelers Championship, with Hopkinton's Keegan Bradley among pursuers in Connecticut

Missing are Scheffler and Thomas, both tied for the 36-hole lead with Fleetwood. Advertisement Scheffler had a 29th birthday to forget. Thousands of spectators around the first tee serenaded him. He responded with a triple bogey, the first time he has done that to start a round in his PGA Tour career. The world's No. 1 player never quite recovered, posting a 72, the fifth time in 55 rounds this year he was over par. Scheffler was nine shots behind. Thomas, already a winner at Hilton Head this year, was still in range of Fleetwood when he hit his tee shot onto the railroad tracks left of the par-5 13th, the club slipping out of his hand. And then it got worse. He twice watched chips up a slope to a green that ran away from him come up short and roll back down the hill. Advertisement He missed a 6-foot putt and took a quadruple-bogey 9. Thomas shot 73 and was 10 behind. Without the wind — only extreme heat — the course average was right around 68. The final group of Scheffler and Thomas combined to go 5-over par. Fleetwood was in such control of his game that he didn't realize until after the round that he didn't miss a fairway, key to setting up birdie chances. He also made eagle on the 13th hole for the second day, giving him three for the week. They don't hand out crystal for that at the Travelers, only red umbrellas. But it allowed Fleetwood to get some separation for Henley and Bradley going into Sunday. Fleetwood, a 34-year-old from England, was at 16-under 194. 'I'm on top of a lot of stat lines for people that haven't won on the PGA Tour, so to always be a No. 1 at something is always nice,' he said with a laugh. 'Yeah, of course I would love to win on the PGA Tour. I think it's like an element of your career that everybody wants, and I of course want it. I haven't, this year especially, I don't feel like I've given myself ... I've given myself a back-end chance a couple of times this year, but I've not been in contention. This is like my first real chance, so I'm really excited about that and looking forward to it.' Tommy Fleetwood hit EVERY fairway en route to a 3-shot lead — PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) Jason Day ran off three straight birdies on the back nine to salvage a 67 and was five shots back. No one else was closer than eight shots of Fleetwood. Advertisement Scheffler hasn't finished out of the top 10 since March, and remarkably he ended the day with a birdie to tie for eighth. The start was a shocker. He drove left into the 5-inch rough and hit wedge into a front bunker with a decent lie. But he caught all ball and sent it over the green, leaving him a tough pitch up the slope and over a mound toward the hole. The first pitch came up short and rolled back down into the rough. He hit a flop to 15 feet and two-putted for triple bogey, his first on the tour since the BMW Championship last August. One year ago tomorrow, Keegan got the Ryder Cup call. Tomorrow could be another special one — PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) Bradley, whose name has not vanished from Ryder Cup consideration as a player, He likes his position of chasing. He still knows he needs to play well. 'Oh, man, you're going to have to shoot something at least in the mid 60s, probably where I am, probably lower, but it's doable out here,' Bradley said. 'When you play a course where you've got to make birdies it brings a different challenge. You can't have a stretch of 1-over par for seven holes or you lose a million shots. 'So in some aspects it's difficult just like a hard course would be.'

Tommy Fleetwood leads Travelers as Scottie Scheffler and Justin Thomas fade
Tommy Fleetwood leads Travelers as Scottie Scheffler and Justin Thomas fade

USA Today

time3 hours ago

  • USA Today

Tommy Fleetwood leads Travelers as Scottie Scheffler and Justin Thomas fade

Tommy Fleetwood leads the Travelers after a flawless 63, while Scottie Scheffler falters early and Russell Henley vaults into contention with a 61. CROMWELL, Conn. – On a day when two rounds of 62 had already been posted before he even teed off, something rare happened to Scottie Scheffler at 3:15 p.m. Saturday at the Travelers Championship: his name slid off the first page of the leaderboard. Scheffler, who began the day tied for the lead at 9 under with Justin Thomas and Tommy Fleetwood, made a triple-bogey seven on the first hole and followed it with a bogey on the fourth. Suddenly, the No. 1 player in the world — arguably the steadiest golfer on Earth — had gone from tied for first to a tie for 10th. Then on the fifth hole, Scheffler's frustrations mounted. He watched as an 11-foot par putt burned the right edge and his jaw dropped. He was stunned. Flabbergasted. Pick your adjective. Moments earlier, Fleetwood had buried a 66-foot birdie putt on the fifth to reach 11 under and take the lead. A few seconds later, Keegan Bradley — the Vermont native who won here in 2023 — drained an 18-footer to reach 10 under. Rory McIlroy, meanwhile, tapped in a par and a front-nine 31 to join a logjam at 9 under that included Thomas, Russell Henley, Nick Taylor, and Jason Day. The Travelers Championship was once again delivering excitement, as it does every year, and by sunset, Fleetwood stood alone atop the leadboard following a bogey-free 63. He stands at 16 under, three clear of Henley and Bradley, and five ahead of Day at 11 under. Fleetwood, whose lone bogey of the week came Friday on the par-4 fourth, is ranked No. 17 in the Official World Golf Ranking and took home the silver medal at the Paris Olympics last year. Despite 41 career top-10 finishes, he has yet to win a PGA Tour event. 'I would love to win on the PGA Tour. I think it's like an element of your career that everybody wants,' Fleetwood said Saturday evening. 'I've given myself like a back-end chance a couple of times this year, but I've not been in contention. So this is like my first real chance, so I'm really excited about that and looking forward to it.' Saturday, he was spotless off the tee—14 of 14 fairways—and hit 15 of 18 greens in regulation. But it was the putter that made the difference. He rolled in birdies from 13 feet, 66 feet, and 19 feet. His highlight? A 31-footer from off the green on 13 that dropped for eagle—his second of the week on the par-5. 'Today, hit the ball great off the tee,' Fleetwoods said. 'I didn't really know the numbers but I hit every fairway, so that's a really cool stat, that's a really nice stat.' Russell Henley, who won the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill in March, vaulted up the leaderboard with a 61. 'I putted great, I feel like I did everything pretty well,' Henley said Saturday evening. 'I had a couple really good breaks that kept the round going. I somehow made birdie on four from the left rough -- kind of hit like a chaser kind of shot up to about eight or 10 feet. Also, I saved par on 14 after I skulled a wedge into a tree limb. So, two good things there to kind of keep my round going, but also just putted really well. I feel like I hit it really well, too.' Keegan Bradley, Ryder Cup captain and defending Travelers champ, shot a bogey-free 63 as fans chanted 'USA! USA! USA!' around TPC River Highlands. 'I sort of have come to this epiphany that no one has ever experienced what I'm going through right now,' Bradley said Saturday after being asked about his unique situation, playing on the PGA Tour while also being a Ryder Cup captain. 'Arnold Palmer did in 1962, I think it was, but for the most part, captains are done playing or at the end of their career or playing the Champions Tour. So, it's pretty cool, I'm experiencing something that not a lot of people have.' As strong as Fleetwood's 63, Henley's 61, and Bradley's 63 were, the collapse of Saturday's early leaders may have been more surprising. Scheffler has three wins this season on the PGA Tour — more than the number of tournaments where he's finished outside the top 10 (two: Phoenix and the Players). But a front-nine 39 — thanks to a triple, a double on the par-3 eighth, and two bogeys — had him reeling. He steadied himself with a 33 on the back to finish at 7 under, but would likely need something close to Jim Furyk's record-setting 58 (shot at this event in 2016) just to sniff contention Sunday. Playing in the same group, Justin Thomas opened with a birdie but bogeyed No. 2 and strung together eight pars before disaster struck on the par-5 13th. A tee shot left — way left — onto the train tracks led to a quadruple-bogey nine. Thomas released the driver mid-swing and sent it flying over a volunteer's head, then apologized twice before walking off after his provisional shot. Thomas finished the day with a 73, falling into a tie for 14th at 6 under. Rory McIlroy, surging early, but made a double bogey on the 12th after flying the green with his second and needing two more to get on. He finished the day at 7 under, nine shots behind Fleetwood.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store