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Check the yardage book: Bay Hill for the PGA Tour's Arnold Palmer Invitational

Check the yardage book: Bay Hill for the PGA Tour's Arnold Palmer Invitational

USA Today06-03-2025
Check the yardage book: Bay Hill for the PGA Tour's Arnold Palmer Invitational
Bay Hill Club & Lodge in Orlando, site of the 2025 Arnold Palmer Invitational Presented by Mastercard on the PGA Tour, opened in 1961 with a design by Dick Wilson. Arnold Palmer took over the property on lease in 1970, bought it in 1975 and made adjustments to the course multiple times over the following decades.
Bay Hill, which has been the site of the Tour event since 1979, ranks No. 6 in Florida on Golfweek's Best list of public-access layouts in each state. It also ties for No. 64 on the list of all resort courses in the U.S. Bay Hill will play to 7,466 yards with a par of 72.
Thanks to yardage books provided by PuttView – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the pros face this week at Bay Hill.
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LIV Golf Star Reveals 'Fractured' PGA Tour System After 5-Year Ban Shocker
LIV Golf Star Reveals 'Fractured' PGA Tour System After 5-Year Ban Shocker

Newsweek

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LIV Golf Star Reveals 'Fractured' PGA Tour System After 5-Year Ban Shocker

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. For years, there has been a lingering question in professional golf: What happens when LIV Golf pros want to find their way back to the PGA Tour? Would they be welcomed? Penalized? Or quietly reinstated under new terms? Hudson Swafford, a 37-year-old ex-LIV Golf pro and three-time PGA Tour winner, appears to have found the answer the hard way. The American golfer recently appeared on the "Subpar" podcast and revealed that he's been handed a five-year suspension by the PGA Tour, barring him from competition until 2027. The decision, he says, came after months of silence and uncertainty from Tour officials. 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