Marlborough Country Club

Marlborough Country Club is a private country club open to the public on Mondays and Tuesdays located in Marlborough, Massachusetts, United States. The club formally opened on June 3, 1922. The feature event was a four-ball best-ball match in which Francis Ouimet and his partner Larry Paton defeated Ed Childs and Parker Schofield. Ouimet played a round in 78.[1]

Marlborough Country Club
The Marlborough Country Club building in Marlborough, Massachusetts.
Club information
Coordinates42°21′24.1″N 71°31′24.4″W
LocationMarlborough, Massachusetts, U.S.
TypePrivate
Total holes18
Websitewww.marlboroughcc.com
Designed byWayne E. Styles

History

In 1921, the current back nine at Marlborough was designed by Wayne E. Styles. In 1992, three holes at Marlborough Country Club were selected to a list of "The Most Outstanding 18 Holes" in the region by professionals in the area. They selected the 12th, 14th, and 16th holes. Especially the 16th hole because it is the hardest hole on the back nine. The front nine was designed by the team of Geoffrey Cornish and William G. Robinson in 1968.

Marlborough Country Club was host of Senior PGA Tour Event The Marlborough Classic from 1981 to 1983. Bob Goalby won the event in 1981, with Arnold Palmer winning in 1982 and Don January winning in 1983. The event has since changed locations to the Nashawtuc Country Club in Concord, Massachusetts and is now called Bank of America Championship.

The current Marlborough Country Club champion (2020) is Brian Valencia of Marlborough, Massachusetts.

Scorecard

Marlborough Country Club (All measurements made in yards)
Tee Rating/Slope 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Out 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 In Total
Black M: 72.4 / 138 W: 78.8 / 145 3614433783442363801625384043246 32554117046440737841337818332596505
Blue M: 70.2 / 137 W: 76.5 / 140 3294163613152183551484973813020 31652015644736535939537017431026122
White M: 68.5 / 135 W: 73.8 / 134 3183983492941993331374783402846 30546613942334330632731916627945640
Red/White M: 67.0 / 130 W: 72.2 / 132 3093883402871403331264782342635 29446013942331428127631915826645299
Red M: 65.2 / 126 W: 70.2 / 127 3093883402871402871264002342511 29446010035731428127624015824804991
Par Men's 44443435435 4535444433671
Par Women's 45443435436 4535444433672

* Source: [2]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.