Rio Pinar Country Club

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Rio Pinar Golf
Rio Pinar Country Club is located in the United States
Rio Pinar Country Club
Location in the United States
Rio Pinar Country Club is located in Florida
Rio Pinar Country Club
Location in Florida
Interactive map of Rio Pinar Golf
Club information
28°31′30″N 81°15′54″W / 28.525°N 81.265°W / 28.525; -81.265
Coordinates28°31′30″N 81°15′54″W / 28.525°N 81.265°W / 28.525; -81.265
LocationRio Pinar, Florida, U.S.
Established1957, 69 years ago
TypeSemi/private
Total holes18
Events hostedFlorida Citrus Open
Lady Citrus Open
Designed byMark Mahannah (1957)
Lloyd Clifton (1995)
Par72
Length7,001 yards (6,402 m)
Course rating73.9
Slope rating130 [1]

The Rio Pinar Country Club is a semi-private golf club located in Rio Pinar, Florida, a suburban subdivision of Orlando.

The golf course at Rio Pinar was initially designed by Mark Mahannah in 1957, and featured medium-sized greens, strategically placed bunkers and narrow fairways framed by pine and oak trees. Lloyd Clifton was hired by the club in 1995 to give a refresh to Mahannah's then forty-year old design. Clifton put a focus on enlarging the greens and reshaping bunkers while staying true to the original vision for the course.[2]

Established in 1957, the golf course was the original site of the Florida Citrus Open (now Arnold Palmer Invitational) on the PGA Tour from 1966 through 1978. with the initial purse being $110,000, with a $21,000 cut for the winner.[3] The winner's share increased to $40,000 by 1975.[4]

In the 13-year span that Rio Pinar hosted the Open, the tournament was a popular stop on the PGA Tour, with winners of the event including Lee Trevino, Hale Irwin, Julius Boros, and Arnold Palmer, all of which are members of the World Golf Hall of Fame. Palmer's win in the 1971 Citrus Open was his first of four wins during the 1971 PGA Tour, which would be his final tournament wins as a solo player. After purchasing the nearby Bay Hill Club and Lodge in 1974, Palmer lobbied PGA officials to move their Orlando tournament to his course, which they did in 1979.[5]

After the departure of the PGA, Rio Pinar was the site of the LPGA Tour's Lady Citrus Open from 1979 to 1982 until the tournament moved to the Cypress Creek Country Club in 1983. The event was dropped from the LPGA schedule altogether after the 1984 tour season. Plaques commemorating winners of both tournaments and other course record-holders sit just outside the club's pro-shop.[6]

Scorecard

Rio Pinar Country Club[7]
Tee Rating/Slope 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Out 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 In Total
Black 79.3 / 130 569380414194391410566213422355950742016538541251522135542934096968
Gold 72.2 / 127 5383694071803583995491714093380 48439815135938849019734240132106590
Blue 70.4 / 125 5203533911593443845331523893225 45837313533835946818032438330186243
White 67.0 / 117 4573043091543293284771363652859 42433910030829941816328030726385497
SI Men's 1311151375179 61214161021884
Par 54434453436 5434453443672
SI Ladies' 1311151375179 61214161021884
Blue 76.2 / 135 5203533911593443845331523893225 45837313533835946818032438330186243
White 72.0 / 128 4573043091543293284771363652859 42433910030829941816328030726385497
Red 71.0 / 125 4533003041413153244731293522791 4123269629529040114927029425335324

Tour winners

References

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