TPC Sawgrass is one of the most iconic golf courses anywhere in the world and is on the bucket list of many an amateur. It has also hosted over 40 editions of The Players and acted as the stage for so many memorable victories by legends of the game such as Tiger Woods and Jack Nicklaus.
Yet, while it is now known as one of the premier locations in the sport, the Floridian property has undergone a significant transformation throughout its history – starting with the moment the land on which it now stands was purchased.
As anyone who may have been lucky enough to experience a tour around modern-day TPC Sawgrass will know, the location has a lot to thank the PGA Tour’s second-ever commissioner for.
Deane Beman – who served from 1974 to 1994 – was a former professional golfer who won four times on the PGA Tour before injuries curtailed his career and he set off for a life in golfing governance instead.
Noticing a plethora of private golf courses on the tour’s schedule during the 1970s, Beman wanted to buy somewhere that would ultimately be player-owned and host a layout befitting its flagship event. He also planned for it to become the PGA Tour’s headquarters as the circuit aimed to grow.
Opting for Florida, due to its favorable climate and tax laws, Beman initially set out to buy Sawgrass Country Club in Ponte Vedra Beach – a neighbor to what is now TPC Sawgrass. However, the then-owners – a local real estate and development company – did not want to sell.
Said company’s chairman, Charles Cobb, was so confident that Beman would never achieve his dream that he bet the commissioner $100 it would never happen. But, as the saying goes, he who laughs last, laughs longest – and Beman is almost certainly still chuckling to himself about it now.
Undeterred, Beman chose to take the long route towards building his version of a golfing utopia and negotiated a deal with a pair of Floridian landowners – named Paul and Jerome Fletcher – to buy 415 acres of swampland in the very north-eastern corner of the state for exactly $1. He wrote a check out to the pair which, these days, is proudly displayed inside the TPC Sawgrass clubhouse.
Beman vowed to transform a seemingly unusable area into his version of paradise – a stadium course with patrons in mind. His first port of call was to hire the renowned course designer, Pete Dye and put him in charge of bringing the property to life.
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