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The Links at Spanish Bay golf course map print

Traced from real course data — every bunker, green, and fairway. Course data © OpenStreetMap contributors.

The Links at Spanish Bay

Scotland on the Monterey coast, piped home at every sunset.

Pebble Beach, California · Par 72 · Est. 1987 · Robert Trent Jones Jr., Tom Watson & Sandy Tatum

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The Story

Spanish Bay takes its name from the explorers who camped here first — Gaspar de Portolá's Spanish expedition came ashore on this beach in 1769, searching for Monterey. Two centuries later the land had been all but used up: since the early 1900s the dunes had been strip-mined for sand to feed a glass works, leaving a scarred coastal flat at the northern gate of the Del Monte Forest. What happened next is one of golf's great reclamation stories.

In the 1980s, Pebble Beach Company set out to build a true links on the ruined ground, and assembled an unlikely trio: architect Robert Trent Jones Jr., five-time Open champion Tom Watson, and former USGA president Sandy Tatum — three men united by their love of Scottish golf. The irony was rich: more than half a million cubic yards of sand had to be hauled back onto a site that had spent decades shipping sand out. The rebuilt dunes were planted with more than 100,000 native seedlings a year from an on-site nursery, one of the most ambitious habitat restorations ever attempted alongside a golf course.

On November 5, 1987, the course opened, and Watson shot 67 in the inaugural round. Walking off, he declared: 'It's so much like Scotland, you can almost hear the bagpipes playing.' The remark became the course's identity. Ever since, a kilted bagpiper has walked the dunes at dusk, piping the course to sleep — golf's most beloved closing ceremony, and reason enough for guests who have never swung a club to gather on the boardwalk at sunset.

Now Spanish Bay is being reimagined again. Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner — restorers of major championship venues across the country — will close the course on March 18, 2026 and rebuild it as a modern California coastal masterpiece, reopening in spring 2027, just before the U.S. Open returns to Pebble Beach. A print of the original is a keepsake of the links as Watson, Tatum, and Jones first dreamed it.

Championship Ground

Tournament history coming soon.

The Champions

Champion profiles coming soon.

Course Lore

The Spanish explorer Gaspar de Portolá landed on this beach in 1769 while searching for Monterey — the bay, and the course, carry his expedition's legacy in their name.
The dunes were strip-mined for glassmaking sand for most of the 20th century — so builders had to haul more than half a million cubic yards of sand back in to create the links.
Tom Watson shot 67 in the opening round on November 5, 1987, and said, 'It's so much like Scotland, you can almost hear the bagpipes playing' — the line that launched the tradition.
A kilted bagpiper still plays the course closed at dusk every evening, walking in from the dunes to the Inn — one of the most photographed rituals in golf.
The dune restoration was among the largest ever paired with a golf course: an on-site nursery supplied more than 100,000 native plants a year in the early seasons.
Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner will renovate the course beginning March 18, 2026, reopening in spring 2027 — making original-routing keepsakes a piece of history.