TPC Southwind
TPC Southwind is a private golf club located in the gated Southwind community in southeast Memphis, Tennessee, featuring a championship 18-hole golf course designed by architect Ron Prichard with input from PGA Tour professionals Hubert Green and Fuzzy Zoeller.[1][2][3] Opened in 1988 on the site of a former dairy farm, the course measures 7,244 yards from the championship tees with a par of 70 and is renowned for its challenging layout, including water hazards on 11 holes and a signature par-3 11th hole featuring an island green reminiscent of TPC Sawgrass's famous 17th.[2][1][3] The club has hosted PGA Tour events since 1989, serving as the longtime home of the FedEx St. Jude Classic before it evolved into the FedEx St. Jude Championship, a prestigious FedExCup Playoff opener that it has hosted annually since 2022.[2][3] As the only private golf club in the PGA Tour's TPC Network in Tennessee, TPC Southwind maintains its course to professional tournament standards and offers members access to a 33,000-square-foot clubhouse, practice facilities, dining options, tennis courts, a swimming pool, and fitness center, with no assessments for club improvements.[1][4] The club has earned high acclaim, ranking among the top courses in Tennessee—such as No. 6 in Golf Digest's 2025-'26 state rankings—and No. 23 in Golf World's 2012 Exclusive PGA Tour Course Rankings.[3][1]History
Design and Opening
TPC Southwind was established in 1988 in Shelby County, Tennessee, east-southeast of Memphis, within the gated community of Southwind.[5][2] The course was designed by architect Ron Prichard, who served as the primary designer, with input from PGA Tour professionals Hubert Green and Fuzzy Zoeller acting as consultants to ensure the layout met the demands of elite competitive play.[6][7] Conceived as a private club facility from its inception, TPC Southwind was built with the explicit goal of hosting professional tournaments, featuring an original length of approximately 7,000 yards and a par of 70.[8][9] This design emphasized a challenging, tree-lined layout on former dairy farm land, prioritizing playability for both members and touring professionals.[10] Following its opening, TPC Southwind quickly integrated into the professional golf landscape, hosting its inaugural PGA Tour event, the 1989 Federal Express St. Jude Classic, just one year after completion.[2] The club operated as a private members-only venue, offering individual and corporate golf memberships that provided unlimited access to the course, practice facilities, and clubhouse amenities, fostering a community-oriented environment tied to Memphis's business leaders.[11] In its early operational phase through 1989, the facility focused on establishing itself as a premier destination, balancing member privileges with preparations for annual tour hosting.[12] As part of the broader TPC Network managed by the PGA Tour, it benefited from standards aimed at delivering tournament-quality experiences.[5]Renovations and Updates
Following David Toms' record 20-under-par victory at the 2003 FedEx St. Jude Classic, TPC Southwind underwent its first major renovation in 2004 to modernize the layout and increase its challenge against evolving player equipment and techniques.[2] The project included adding 11 new tee boxes to lengthen select holes, constructing 15 new bunkers, enlarging three ponds to expand water hazards, stabilizing four creeks, and planting over 125 trees to tighten fairways and penalize errant shots.[2] Additionally, the fifth hole was shortened and converted from par 5 to par 4, while the eighth hole—a par 3—was entirely redesigned for greater strategic depth; the greens were also resurfaced with Champion Bermudagrass for improved consistency.[2] These changes elevated the course's overall difficulty, as evidenced by the 2004 tournament winning score rising to 16-under par.[2] In preparation for modern professional play, TPC Southwind initiated a comprehensive renovation in late 2024, with work commencing after the 2024 FedEx St. Jude Championship and spanning through early 2025.[13] This project entailed a full rebuild of all 18 green complexes and practice greens—the first such overhaul since the course's 1988 opening—along with resurfacing for the first time since 2004 to restore original contours while adapting to contemporary golf balls and clubs.[13] The greens were transitioned to Zeon Zoysia grass for superior durability and playability, and over 2,000 tons of sand were incorporated across more than 20 acres surrounding the complexes, enhancing firmness and speed.[13] Tee boxes were fully resurfaced, and select holes, such as the par-4 fifth, were extended—playing at 529 yards in 2025 compared to 485 yards previously—contributing to an overall course lengthening of approximately 50 yards to 7,288 yards.[14] Ahead of the 2025 FedEx St. Jude Championship, final updates focused on optimizing green speeds and drainage to ensure tournament-ready conditions despite regional rainfall challenges.[13] Sub-surface refinements and irrigation system upgrades improved water management around greens and hazards, reducing slowdowns and promoting faster, more consistent putting surfaces.[13] Bunker edges were regrassed and filled with new sand for better drainage and definition, while strategic tweaks to water carry distances and fairway contours demanded greater precision from approach shots, amplifying the course's emphasis on risk-reward decision-making without altering core hole routings.[15] These enhancements collectively raised the par-70 layout's rating and slope, making it a sterner test for elite fields while preserving its tree-lined, water-infused character.[14]Course Characteristics
Architect and Design Features
TPC Southwind was designed by architect Ron Prichard, renowned for his restoration-style approach inspired by classic designers like Donald Ross, which emphasizes the subtle integration of natural landscapes into golf course layouts.[16] In collaboration with PGA Tour professionals Hubert Green and Fuzzy Zoeller, Prichard crafted the course in 1988, focusing on traditional principles that highlight the existing terrain's contours to create a demanding yet aesthetically pleasing environment.[6] This philosophy prioritizes simplistic beauty through nature-based elements, such as undulating fairways and greens that demand precise shot-making over raw power.[16] A 2024-2025 renovation rebuilt all 18 greens and added length, enhancing the strategic elements while preserving the original design intent.[14] The course incorporates numerous water features, including lakes, streams, and ponds that come into play on 11 holes, adding layers of risk and recovery challenges for players.[17] Tree-lined fairways frame the layout, enhancing its strategic depth by narrowing playable areas and encouraging accurate drives, while over 75 bunkers—strategically placed to punish errant shots—contribute to the overall balance of risk and reward.[16][17] Elevation changes, with a total ascent of approximately 74 meters across the 7,288-yard par-70 layout, introduce subtle uphill and downhill lies that further test shot-shaping abilities.[18][19] Key holes exemplify this design ethos, such as the signature par-3 11th, a 162-yard shot over water to a small island green protected by a pot bunker, where precision is paramount to avoid the hazard.[20] The par-5s, including the 554-yard third with its lake interrupting the fairway and the uphill 530-yard 16th, feature strategic bending that rewards calculated approaches over aggressive plays.[21] Undulating greens with severe slopes, like the narrow, contoured target on the 239-yard par-3 14th flanked by water, amplify the emphasis on accuracy, often leaving difficult up-and-downs for misses.[20] Overall, the layout promotes a thoughtful game of position and recovery, where water and bunkers create high-stakes decisions without favoring excessive distance.[6]Grass Types and Maintenance
TPC Southwind's fairways are planted with Zeon zoysiagrass, selected for its exceptional durability, dense growth, and capacity to deliver tight, consistent lies that reward precise shot-making in the demanding humid subtropical climate of Memphis, Tennessee.[17] This warm-season turf thrives in the region's hot summers and occasional winter chills, maintaining playability while minimizing divot recovery time.[22] The putting greens feature TifEagle bermudagrass, a fine-textured cultivar engineered for ultra-smooth surfaces and high ball speeds, enabling the firm and true rolls essential for professional competition.[17] During PGA Tour events, these greens are meticulously groomed to support fast putting conditions that test players' touch and distance control.[23] Surrounding the greens, collars and approaches are also sodded with Zeon zoysiagrass to enhance drainage and firmness, a change implemented during the 2024-2025 renovation to improve overall green complex performance.[14] The rough is composed of 419 bermudagrass, a robust variety maintained at approximately 3 inches in height to create a penal environment for off-line shots, with its thick texture promoting unpredictable lies and fliers that demand accuracy from the fairway.[17] This warm-season mix, often blended with elements of Bermuda and zoysia in transitional areas, aligns with the course's design philosophy by amplifying the consequences of errant play without excessive severity.[24] Maintenance at TPC Southwind emphasizes sustainable agronomic practices tailored to warm-season grasses, including an upgraded irrigation system installed during the recent renovation to optimize water efficiency and support green health amid variable weather patterns.[17] Aeration is conducted periodically, such as with spikers in early spring, to alleviate soil compaction, facilitate root development, and ensure nutrient uptake across the turf.[25] For winter playability, the course avoids traditional overseeding with cool-season grasses like ryegrass, opting instead for applications of turf colorants to restore vibrant green hues during dormancy, thereby preserving the aesthetic and functional integrity in cooler months without disrupting the warm-season turf transition.[26] These strategies collectively sustain the turf's condition, supporting the course's reputation for firm, accurate playing surfaces.Length, Par, and Rating
TPC Southwind is a par 70 layout consisting of four par 3s, twelve par 4s, and two par 5s.[27] The hole-by-hole par distribution includes par 3s at holes 4 (196 yards), 8 (178 yards), 11 (162 yards), and 14 (239 yards); par 5s at holes 3 (554 yards) and 16 (530 yards); and the remaining twelve holes as par 4s ranging from 395 to 490 yards.[27] This configuration, with a predominance of par 4s, emphasizes accuracy and strategic play on the longer holes, where the extended distances—particularly on par 4s exceeding 450 yards—challenge players' driving distance and approach shot precision in stroke play formats, often leading to higher scoring averages on those holes.[28] From the championship tees, the course measures 7,288 yards following the 2024 renovation, which added approximately 50 yards overall, primarily to the par-4 fifth hole (extended from 485 to 529 yards).[14][28] The tournament tees carry a course rating of 75.6 and a slope rating of 149, reflecting the demanding nature of the layout for elite players.[29] For member play, tee options vary in length and difficulty; for example, one set measures 6,750 yards with a course rating of 73.3 and slope of 146, while shorter tees around 6,528 yards offer ratings of 72.2 and slopes of 139, accommodating a range of skill levels while maintaining the course's inherent challenges.[30]Scorecard
TPC Southwind is a par-70 golf course measuring 7,288 yards from the championship tees after the 2024-2025 renovation, which primarily lengthened the par-4 fifth hole by 44 yards while rebuilding all greens and improving drainage.[14][31] Member tees provide a shorter option at approximately 6,528 yards, suitable for regular play.[30] The following table details the hole-by-hole scorecard from the championship tees, including pars, yardages, and men's course handicap ratings (lower numbers indicate tougher holes relative to the course). Handicap allocations highlight challenging holes such as the ninth (handicap 1), a long par 4 closing the front nine, and the seventeenth (handicap 2), a demanding par 4 requiring precision over water. The par-3 fourteenth (handicap 8) stands out among shorter holes for its carry over water to an undulating green. Cumulative totals are provided for the front nine (out), back nine (in), and overall.| Hole | Par | Championship Yards | Handicap |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 4 | 434 | 3 |
| 2 | 4 | 401 | 15 |
| 3 | 5 | 554 | 5 |
| 4 | 3 | 196 | 11 |
| 5 | 4 | 529 | 13 |
| 6 | 4 | 445 | 9 |
| 7 | 4 | 482 | 7 |
| 8 | 3 | 178 | 17 |
| 9 | 4 | 457 | 1 |
| Out | 35 | 3,676 | - |
| 10 | 4 | 465 | 6 |
| 11 | 3 | 162 | 16 |
| 12 | 4 | 406 | 10 |
| 13 | 4 | 472 | 18 |
| 14 | 3 | 239 | 8 |
| 15 | 4 | 395 | 12 |
| 16 | 5 | 530 | 14 |
| 17 | 4 | 490 | 2 |
| 18 | 4 | 453 | 4 |
| In | 35 | 3,612 | - |
| Total | 70 | 7,288 | - |