Torrey Pines Golf Course is a 36-hole municipal public golf facility in La Jolla, San Diego, California, owned and operated by the City of San Diego. Perched on coastal cliffs overlooking the Pacific Ocean, it features two 18-hole courses — the South Course (7,802 yards, par 72) and the North Course (7,258 yards, par 72) — both designed by William Bell Sr. in 1957. The South Course is the longest on the PGA Tour and has hosted two U.S. Open Championships (2008, 2021). Both courses are ranked on Golf Digest’s Top 100 Public Courses in America (North at #9, South at #36). Torrey Pines is home to the annual PGA Tour event formerly known as the Farmers Insurance Open, rebranded as The Sentry starting in 2027. The South Course was redesigned by Rees Jones in 2001 and again in 2019. The facility hosts approximately 92,000 rounds per year on the South Course alone and draws 100,000–125,000 spectators during tournament week in peak years. Built on the site of Camp Callan, a WWII Army training center, the course is named for the rare Torrey pine tree native to the area.
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Torrey Pines Golf Course is a 36-hole municipal public golf facility in La Jolla, San Diego, California, owned and operated by the City of San Diego. Perched on coastal cliffs overlooking the Pacific Ocean, it features two 18-hole courses — the South Course (7,802 yards, par 72) and the North Course (7,258 yards, par 72) — both designed by William Bell Sr. in 1957. The South Course is the longest on the PGA Tour and has hosted two U.S. Open Championships (2008, 2021). Both courses are ranked on Golf Digest’s Top 100 Public Courses in America (North at #9, South at #36). Torrey Pines is home to the annual PGA Tour event formerly known as the Farmers Insurance Open, rebranded as The Sentry starting in 2027. The South Course was redesigned by Rees Jones in 2001 and again in 2019. The facility hosts approximately 92,000 rounds per year on the South Course alone and draws 100,000–125,000 spectators during tournament week in peak years. Built on the site of Camp Callan, a WWII Army training center, the course is named for the rare Torrey pine tree native to the area.
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