
Founded in 1882 and located in Brookline, Mass., The Country Club is one of the oldest clubs in the United States and one of five charter members that founded the United States Golf Association in 1894. It has played host to 16 USGA national championships, more than all but one other club. And it has served as the site for a number of the game's most important events. These include the 1913 U.S. Open, won by amateur and Brookline-native Francis Quimet, which began the golf boom in America; the 1999 Ryder Cup that featured the U.S. team's dramatic Sunday comeback; 1902 U.S. Women's Amateur, the club's first national championship, won by Genevieve Hecker; and three U.S. Opens (1913, 1963, 1988) that all finished in playoffs.
Wind
No Wind
Fairway Firmness
Normal
Green Firmness
Normal
Stimp (default – max)
10 – 12
Total 6,657 yds
Slope / Rating 133 / 72.5

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