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Brookside Golf Course

Brookside Golf Course
Club information
Coordinates 34°09′54″N 118°10′01″W / 34.165°N 118.167°W / 34.165; -118.167Coordinates: 34°09′54″N 118°10′01″W / 34.165°N 118.167°W / 34.165; -118.167
Location 1133 Rosemont Ave.
Pasadena, California, U.S.
Type Public
Owned by City of Pasadena
Operated by American Golf
Total holes 36
Tournaments hosted Los Angeles Open
(PGA Tour - 1968)
Website brooksidegc.com
C.W. Koiner Course (#1)
Designed by William P. Bell
Par 72
Length 7,228 yards (6,609 m)
Course rating 74.5
Slope rating 133
E.O. Nay Course (#2)
Designed by William P. Bell
Par 70
Length 6,046 yards (5,528 m)
Course rating 69.1
Slope rating 121

Brookside Golf Course is a municipal golf facility in the western United States, located in southern California in Pasadena. Adjacent to the Rose Bowl stadium in the city's Arroyo Seco Natural Park, the 36-hole facility offers the C.W. Koiner Course (#1) and the shorter E.O. Nay Course (#2), divided by the concrete-channeled Arroyo Seco.

Both courses were designed by architect William P. Bell and the complex features a restaurant, banquet facilities, meeting rooms, pro shop, two practice putting greens, a chipping area, a practice bunker, and a driving range. The course hosted the Los Angeles Open on the PGA Tour in 1968, won by Billy Casper in late January.

The par-72 C.W. Koiner Course (#1) measures over 7,200 yards (6,580 m), and is centrally run along the western and southern ends of the complex. Relatively flat, it has many strategically placed bunkers, long rough, and tricky greens to place a premium on accuracy. This course is more open than the E.O. Nay Course and also appeals to the better player looking for a challenge.

The E.O. Nay Course (#2) is the shorter of the two courses, measuring just over 6,000 yards (5,490 m), and is centrally run along the northern end of the complex. Similarly featured, this par-70 course is relatively flat, the key difference between the courses is the smaller hitting areas of the E.O. Nay Course, and this course usually serves those of a lesser ability.

Though these courses are beautiful and stretch for a mile in green beauty, during football season and for special events, the courses are used as a parking lot for fans. The Rose Bowl (located next door) uses the course for extra parking during home games for the UCLA Bruins football team (since 1982) and for the annual New Year's Day Rose Bowl Game. In 2010 and 2014, it was used for the BCS National Championship Games. This has not proven detrimental to the quality of the course. It does, however, impact availability of the course during UCLA home games and other special events.


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