Charles Schwab Cup Championship
Thursday Oct 31 – Sunday Nov 3, 2013
  • Purse: $2,500,000
  • Winning Share: $440,000
Course
TPC Harding Park
Course Par Value:
Course Yardage:

The 2013 tournament marks the 24th Anniversary of the Charles Schwab Cup Championship, and as the event celebrates two decades, tournament officials are pleased, to return over $750,000 to local Bay Area non-profit organizations, which brings the cumulative giving total to more $3 million. After a year away, TPC Harding Park will once again play host to the culminating event on the Champions Tour. Join us November 2013 to see the Top 30 players of the season compete in the final event of the year! Both a winner of the tournament, as well as the year-long Charles Schwab Cup winner, will be crowned at TPC Harding Park on November 3.

Located in San Francisco, California, as a uniquely municipal golf course, TPC Harding Park offers two impressive courses that are open to the public - Harding Park and Fleming 9. The combined 18 hole Harding Park and Fleming 9 hole courses create not only a challenging experience for each golfer, but also a scenic one, while amidst lush vegetation, towering, unique Monterey Cypress trees, and tranquil Lake Merced. TPC Harding Park has been honored as "#13 Municipal Golf Course in the United States," as well as the "#24 Best Course to Play in California," by Golfweek Magazine. Golf Digest Magazine has also named it as, "one of the Best Places to Play," ranking it a 4.5 star golf course. Since its recent renovations in 2005, TPC Harding Park has been honored to host the WGC-American Express Championship in 2005, the President's Cup in 2009, and the Champions Tour Charles Schwab Cup in both 2010 and 2011. Spanning over almost a full century, and enduring a Herculean journey, TPC Harding Park is proud to say the course has returned to its 1920s' former glory.

Hole Par Yards  
1 4 A fantastic starting hole that is not only fair, but offers a perspective of what TPC Harding Park's character has to offer. Take a close look at the Monterey Cypress Pine trees lining the right side of the fairway. You'll see not only some of the oldest Cypress trees in the state, but the wide fairway allows a view into the green that will give you a great scoring opportunity to start off your round.
2 4 This hole is a little tougher test to get the "Grit" of the golf course in your system. Many of the holes have been reconstructed with fairway bunkers that may force you to choose another club or play a differently shaped shot than you might be use to. This second hole is just exactly that and then some. The green has a sloping front edge that will potentially force a tough chip into a very subtly sloped green.
3 3 Uphill and over the top! This devilish little par 3 will require you to play it as accurately as you can. The terrain on the green is the true test. Multiple slopes will force some very odd shots not only off the tee but in the player's short game, as the bunkers and the rough around the green will dictate the ability to score.
4 5 This dogleg left is the longest hole on the course and by many is also considered to be the toughest. After a tee shot that could wrap around a generous corner, it is still a difficult shot to make in two. As you stand amongst the tallest trees on the course, most will play for the third and have a better scoring opportunity. The fairway is generous in width as it is in green size. Ideally the approach to the green is the shot that counts. The pin placements are plentiful on this green.
5 4 Tree lines on both sides shape this short but testy par 4. The hole sets up for a variety of shots both short and long off the tee, but make no mistake the test comes as you make your way to the green. Deep in length and with a couple contours this dance floor will even make the best of the professionals take a step back.
6 4 This is one tough test of the game. A tree bordered chute to the middle of the fairway will test the anxiety of players at all levels. As the fairway wraps around to the left, the visual of the bunker laden green will force anyone's first instinct to be questioned. The green is large and is another composite of architectural talent.
7 4 The most difficult hole for how short it is. This David amongst Goliaths in golf may leave many scratching their heads. Playing the hole correctly for where the flag is positioned is crucial. Anyone will see as they stand on the green, that in hindsight could have led to a better score for the hole.
8 8 The longest par 3 on the course may be the easiest even if you don't hit the green in regulation. If the short game is tuned anyone can still make an easy par. The true test comes for those that hit a lengthy ball, but will have to test the flat stick to get the ball down. The green has a couple sneaky contours and collections that potentially could have your round take a turn for the worse.
9 5 A fair and fun hole to finish the front side. Straight away with a couple trouble spots on the right side, but remember that it could take you three shots to reach the green. It might be worth using them. The green is large, but still offers a chance to score as you head into the back nine. As for those with a need to get there in two, it has the potential for a low number if the targets are hit accurately.
10 5 Back to back par 5's with another just around the corner. This is where the golf course and the challenges really begin. Accurate shots are a must for scoring. The bunkers on the right are just where the players do not want them in order to make a run at the green in two shots. The green, the tree on the left, and the pot bunker in the back of the green will force players to focus on making a third shot they may not want to make.
11 3 This is a difficult hole in length and for accuracy. The bunkers will force players to play longer than they want to. Especially if the flag is in front, in a tight little swale that is next to impossible to hit. The slope and tiers of the green from back to front will test the best of those that roll the ball well.
12 5 Our last par 5 is potentially the last scoring opportunity for those that have will tend to miss their shots one way or the other. The hole is short enough to make up a shot and still score, or give the big hitters a good chance for a low number. Fair warning, the green is tougher than it looks and the bunkers that surround the front side will seemingly grab balls from mid-air.
13 4 Two very accurate shots can offer a chance for a birdie. Missing one of those shots will either force a difficult shot out of the tree lines on either side or make you chip or pitch from and awkward lie, or even worse...force you to putt at an impossible pin position. Unfortunately, there is not one position on the green that is safe, even if you are close to the hole.
14 4 An ominous tee shot with trees and one precarious limb close to the tee box that is considered to be a round wrecker. Playing to the right side is key, but playing a second shot that has the ball above your feet is no bargain with a bunker in the front left of the green. Players will have to gauge their distance, accuracy, and shot-making skills just right. Then they have to deal with a speedy green that from back to front might make a table top look inviting.
15 4 Take a number for the right club on this whole. Even a short iron is an appropriate play off the tee. This short par 4 has a tremendous amount of history behind it. The bunker on the right was placed there because of a few high profile amateurs and professionals used the slope of the hole to get a close chip shot into the green and pencil in a low score. This is the hole that Ken Venturi beat U.S. and British Amateur Champion Harvie Ward in 1956.
16 4 Another short par 4 like that of number 13, will require two very accurate shots in order to avoid a large number on the score card. If the bunkers on the left don't keep the ball from diving into Lake Merced, the trees on the right will just keep the ball. The green is a little more difficult to hit and to control the break and speed. Again, the accurate shot-maker will be rewarded to the green, and the flat stick master will survive the green.
17 3 The shortest par 3 is a brief rest before the finale. Or is it? The prevailing wind might have something to say about the flight of the shot into the green. The trees on the left will also make the player think again and again before anxiety takes over. The green offers quite a few precarious pin positions. Most of which are very fair, but speed of the green might be the true test on this hole.
18 4 The Coup de Grace and signature hole for TPC Harding Park, and rightfully so. With the view of the lake and the spectacular curvature of this hole as it is laid out right in front of each player. The hole doglegs around to the left, with the safe play towards the trouble of the fairway bunkers. A tee shot either short or long and the player has the opportunity to score. The left front bunkers, and the collection area to the right make for a difficult up and down. What's even more difficult is the front of the green and the severe slope back into the fairway. The green itself is multi-level and has deceiving speed throughout. This is a great finishing hole on any course, and we are very proud to call it our own.