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Sahalee Country Club

Sahalee Country Club
Sahaleelogo.png
Club information
Location Sammamish, Washington, U.S.
Established 1969, 48 years ago
Type Private
Total holes 27
Tournaments hosted Sahalee Players Championship
GTE Northwest Classic (1986)
1998 PGA Championship
2002 WGC-NEC Invitational
2010 U.S. Senior Open
2016 KPMG Women's PGA Championship
Greens Poa annua
Fairways Perennial ryegrass;
Poa Annua
Website Sahalee.com
South & North Combined
(Championship Course)
Designed by Ted Robinson, renovated by Rees Jones in 1996
Par 72
Length 7,003 yards (6,404 m)
Course rating 74.6
Slope rating 139
East & South Combined
Designed by Ted Robinson,
renovated by Rees Jones
in 1996 (South) & 1998 (East)
Par 72
Length 6,952 yards (6,357 m)
Course rating 74.6
Slope rating 139
North & East Combined
Designed by Ted Robinson,
renovated by Rees Jones
in 1996 (North) & 1998 (East)
Par 72
Length 6,966 yards (6,370 m)
Course rating 74.6
Slope rating 139

The Sahalee Country Club is a private golf course and country club in the northwest United States, located in Sammamish, Washington, a suburb east of Seattle. In the Chinookan language, Sahalee means "high heavenly ground." The 27-hole course is located on a heavily forested plateau immediately east of Lake Sammamish.

Sahalee is best known as the site of the PGA Championship in 1998, the first of Vijay Singh's three major titles. It was also the host of the WGC-NEC Invitational in 2002, won by Craig Parry. The course's original architect was Ted Robinson; in preparation for the PGA Championship, Rees Jones renovated the course in 1996, 1997, and 1998. The course has been listed on Golf Digest's Top 100 Courses list for over twenty years, and is the host of the Sahalee Players Championship, a top amateur tournament in the region. It also was the site of the inaugural GTE Northwest Classic in 1986, a former senior tour event.

After the success of the 1998 PGA Championship, Sahalee was selected in 1999 to host the championship again in 2010. That decision was reversed by the PGA of America in January 2005, when the 2010 event was abruptly moved to Whistling Straits in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, which had recently hosted the very profitable 2004 edition and set new attendance records. The PGA of America stated that it was concerned about the possibility of reduced financial support in the Pacific Northwest; it was scheduled to be held less than six months after the conclusion of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, BC.


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