Aronimink is not the longest course on this year's major circuit. It is not the most dramatic. What it is — and what Donald Ross designed it to be when he called it his masterpiece in 1928 — is the most intellectually demanding. Par 70. Twelve par-4s, two par-5s, four par-3s. Bentgrass greens averaging 8,200 square feet, restored by Gil Hanse to Ross's original crowned-and-canted vision. One hundred eighty bunkers. Fescue rough at 3.25 inches, narrow landing areas averaging 30 yards wide, and green complexes that punish the wrong quadrant more than the wrong club. The winner here will not bomb-and-gouge their way to the Wanamaker Trophy. They will out-think, out-shape, and out-putt 155 of the best players in the world.
The green complexes are the real defense
Penn A-1/A-4 bentgrass cut at .100 inches. Average green size of 8,200 square feet — large by PGA Tour standards, but deceptive. Ross designed many of these surfaces with strong back-to-front tilt, pronounced shoulders, canted edges, and internal ridges that divide the putting surface into quadrants. The 10th, 11th, 12th, 17th, and 18th greens are specifically noted for this complexity. The 11th is the most notorious: a short uphill approach with excessive backspin can race back 50 yards down the fairway. Big greens at a Ross course do not mean easy greens — they mean more ways to be on the wrong side of the hole.
Aronimink's twelve par-4s and three demanding par-3s produce a clear statistical fingerprint. The 2018 BMW Championship — the last professional event played here — provides the closest model. Keegan Bradley won that week gaining 4.4 strokes tee-to-green and 7.2 strokes putting. The putting number was not noise: Aronimink's bentgrass surfaces at major speed create a volume of difficult lag putts that cannot be survived with an average stick. But the primary separator is approach play — specifically mid-iron precision from 150–200 yards, the range that dominates this par-70 layout's twelve two-shot holes.
Aronimink plays as a par 70 at 7,394 yards — two par-5s, four par-3s, twelve par-4s. The front nine contains the lone par-5 at hole 9, a 605-yard closing test. The back nine features the second par-5 at 16, a reachable 555-yard birdie window before the closing drama. The par-3s are long and dangerous. The par-4s are relentless. And the finishing hole — a 607-yard par-4 on the scorecard, the longest in major championship history by that measure — is where tournaments will be decided.
HOLE 1 · PAR 4 · 434 YDS
MANAGEMENT HOLE
Downhill tee, uphill approach — no gimme opener
The opening hole drops from the clubhouse before climbing back to a green with significant back-to-front movement. Four bunkers guard the right side of the landing area. Two bunkers flank the green entry — misjudging the elevation here catches players who assume the downhill tee shot carries to distance. Par is a quality result.
HOLE 2 · PAR 4 · 413 YDS
PRECISION REQUIRED
Dogleg left with a blind landing zone
A left-bending two-shotter where the landing area slopes right-to-left and features a cluster of six bunkers at the corner. The green is large and heavily contoured with collection areas behind. Players who miss right off the tee face awkward approach angles to a surface that rejects offline entries.
HOLE 3 · PAR 4 · 455 YDS
DANGER ZONE
A dozen bunkers, options, and nowhere to hide
Twelve bunkers staggered on both sides of the fairway force a tee-shot decision on every round. The dogleg right creates a blind fairway for the conservative line. The green is severely sloped with deep bunkers guarding left and front-right. Despite the hazard volume, this is projected to play as one of the more accessible par-4s on the front.
HOLE 4 · PAR 4 · 607 YDS
SIGNATURE HOLE
The longest par-4 in major championship history
A new tee box extended this into a 607-yard par-4 — the longest par-4 ever played in a major. The fairway slopes left. Approach is to one of the largest greens on the property, with an open front that allows players to run the ball onto the surface. At 607 yards, this hole requires two committed, controlled strikes. There is no shortcut. This is the scorecard's defining number.
HOLE 5 · PAR 4 · 430 YDS
BIRDIE OPPORTUNITY
Aggressive line reachable — dogleg right with blind tee
A dogleg right where the aggressive line cuts the corner and leaves a short-to-mid iron approach. The fairway is blind from the tee on the conservative line. The green is sharply contoured — approaches that find the wrong section can reject to bogey range despite a good strike. Birdie is the expected output for contenders.
HOLE 6 · PAR 4 · 400 YDS
BIRDIE OPPORTUNITY
Front-9 birdie window — uphill approach demands commitment
One of the shorter par-4s on the front. The uphill approach rewards the committed strike — anything short with too much spin can roll back significant yardage down the fairway. The 11th hole mirrors this risk on the back nine. Players who execute birdie here build a front-nine buffer.
HOLE 7 · PAR 3 · 215 YDS
PRECISION REQUIRED
Long par-3 — exposed to wind, green demands exact quadrant
One of four par-3s at Aronimink, this one playing at major-championship length into a demanding green complex. Club selection under varying conditions separates the field. The wrong quadrant on this green sets up a genuine bogey or worse. Morning and afternoon wave differentials here can be significant depending on wind direction.
HOLE 8 · PAR 3 · 242 YDS
DANGER ZONE
Downhill par-3 — long and demanding
A downhill one-shotter that can play from multiple tee boxes, creating flexibility for PGA Championship setup. The green nearly connects with the 10th green behind it. Length and accuracy are both required — this is not a pitch-and-putt par-3. Under tournament conditions at 242 yards, it becomes one of the more demanding one-shotters in professional golf.
HOLE 9 · PAR 5 · 605 YDS
BIRDIE OPPORTUNITY
Front-9 sole par-5 — long and straight, bunkered to both sides
The front nine's only par-5, and it is not an easy one. Long and straight with bunkers bordering both the tee shot landing area and the layup zone, this is slightly uphill toward the green. Reachable in two for the longest hitters only. Players who birdie 9 arriving at the turn gain a structural advantage heading into a back nine with just one more par-5.
HOLE 10 · PAR 4 · 450 YDS
PRECISION REQUIRED
Back-9 opener — severe green complex, water in play
The back nine opens immediately with one of Aronimink's most demanding green complexes — water, rough, and awkward recovery areas all in play around a putting surface that punishes approach shots to the wrong section. A strong drive is required to create any realistic birdie chance. Short-game disasters are common here.
HOLE 11 · PAR 4 · 410 YDS
DANGER ZONE
The trickiest green on the course — short approach, long rollback
Aronimink's most notorious hole. The approach is uphill and short — but backspin on a wedge approach can send the ball racing 50 yards back down the fairway. The green is divided by an internal ridge. The wrong execution on this hole turns birdie attempts into genuine double bogey threats. Patience and landing-zone discipline over aggression.
HOLE 12 · PAR 4 · 466 YDS
DANGER ZONE
Downhill tee, elevated two-tiered green
The tee shot plays downhill to a fairway that appears narrow because of a dozen bunkers on both sides. The approach is to an elevated, two-tiered green with a deep bunker guarding the right side. The back-to-front slope on this surface makes anything above the hole particularly dangerous. Par and move on.
HOLE 13 · PAR 4 · 385 YDS
BIRDIE OPPORTUNITY
Shortest par-4 — depends on setup
The shortest par-4 on the course at 385 yards, with a new forward tee installed that can make it a genuine birdie opportunity — or bring out-of-bounds left into play. The fairway landing zone is squeezed by bunkers, and front-of-green bunkers narrow the entry. Players who commit to the aggressive line and execute cleanly are rewarded.
HOLE 14 · PAR 4 · 485 YDS
MANAGEMENT HOLE
Bunker-laden, momentum hole — card management
Another exacting two-shotter with bunkering divided on both sides of the fairway and around the green. The short uphill approach demands precision — and the same rollback risk present at the 11th applies here. Players who force the issue on 14 often pay. Par and stay composed is the correct approach entering the back-nine stretch.
HOLE 15 · PAR 4 · 490 YDS
PRECISION REQUIRED
Elevation changes and bunkering — momentum before 16
A demanding two-shotter where elevation changes complicate both shots and bunkering squeezes the tee ball and the uphill approach. This hole consistently produces momentum swings — a bogey here arriving at the par-5 16th costs more than just a stroke. Players who escape 15 with par are in position to birdie 16 and control their destiny.
HOLE 16 · PAR 5 · 555 YDS
BIRDIE OPPORTUNITY
Back-9 par-5 scoring window — reach it and hold it
The second and final par-5, and the best scoring opportunity on the back nine. Reachable in two for most of the field — but the wide, shallow green guarded by long deep bunkers on each side demands a high-trajectory approach to hold. Players who cannot flight the ball high enough are laying up. Birdie here is the expected output for contenders; par is a quiet loss of position.
HOLE 17 · PAR 3 · 229 YDS
DANGER ZONE
Water left — the par-3 that decides tournaments
A pond runs the entire left side of this green from tee to green. The safe shot plays to the middle of the large surface, leaving a demanding lag putt. The front-right pin position — just over a bunker — is the most exciting hole location in the tournament setup. Any ball leaking left finds the water. This hole will produce the week's most memorable moments and most expensive mistakes.
HOLE 18 · PAR 4 · 490 YDS
SIGNATURE HOLE
A proper finishing hole — tiered green, uphill approach
The championship finishes with a demanding drive setting up an uphill approach into a large, tiered green where awkward pin positions can create real chaos on a Sunday afternoon. The green's internal complexity means that even players who hit the putting surface face difficult reads. Four-putt avoidance is not a joke here. This is where the Wanamaker Trophy is won and lost — and where the best players in the world separate themselves from everyone else.
Run every player through this framework. The more boxes they check, the stronger the play. CADDIE's highest-confidence targets clear all five filters.
01
SG: Approach from 150–200 yards — top 20 in recent form
The primary filter at Aronimink. Mid-iron precision is what this course tests above all else. Cameron Young leads the field in proximity from this range. Adam Scott leads the Tour in SG: Approach. Matt Fitzpatrick built his Aronimink DFS case before the field sheet was finalized. Every CADDIE target this week clears this filter — no exceptions.
⚠ SG: Approach inside 125 yards is significantly less predictive here. This is not a wedge-and-putt course. Weight 150–200 yard proximity specifically — the quadrant matters more than the total number.
02
Bentgrass putting floor — no chronic bentgrass weakness
Check East Lake, BMW Championship at Aronimink (2018), and Wilmington Country Club results as bentgrass surface comps. Players who lose 2+ strokes per round on bentgrass are structurally faded this week — the green size and complexity create a putting volume that overwhelms poor bentgrass putters before approach quality can compensate. Keegan Bradley won the 2018 BMW here gaining 7+ strokes putting.
⚠ Any player averaging negative putting strokes on bentgrass in their last 6 rounds is a hard fade at this venue, regardless of approach quality.
03
Aronimink / comp course history — weight 2018 BMW, 2020 KPMG
Prior Aronimink results carry real signal because the green complexes and course management demands repeat. Use the 2018 BMW Championship and 2020 KPMG Women's PGA Championship results as primary history filters. Comp courses: East Lake (bentgrass, green complexity), Riviera (par-4 gauntlet, controlled distance), Winged Foot (major pressure, course management over aggression). Xander Schauffele finished 3rd at the 2018 BMW and placed high on projection models for this week.
⚠ The 2018 AT&T National results (2010, 2011) were played on a shorter, less demanding setup. Weight the 2018 BMW results over those earlier events.
04
Par-5 conversion rate — top quartile
Two par-5s at Aronimink vs. the typical two-to-four. Players in the top quartile of par-5 scoring efficiency in recent form build a structural baseline advantage that compounds across four rounds. With only two par-5 scoring opportunities per round, failure to convert birdies on 9 and 16 leaves a player fighting uphill through twelve demanding par-4s. Cameron Young ranks among the field's best in par-5 efficiency.
⚠ Players who lay up every par-5 and average par on them for the week cannot win this championship at this field depth.
05
Driving position — shape control, not raw distance
The 30-yard average fairway requires controlled trajectory, not maximum distance. Players who spray left in recent form face Aronimink's rough, collection areas, and bunkers at the holes that decide the tournament — specifically 4 (607-yard par-4), 12, and 17. Shape control and landing-zone discipline are the filters. Check recent ball-in-play rates, not total driving distance.
⚠ Distance without shape is a bogey-generator at Aronimink. Fade any player with a left-miss pattern in recent form.