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Fans gather around the 13th green during the third round of the 2025 PGA Championship at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte, North Carolina.
As the Truist Championship returns to Quail Hollow Club, players aren’t just preparing for another PGA Tour stop.
They’re preparing for a course that doesn’t give anything away — and one that has a habit of deciding tournaments over its final three holes.
Quail Hollow doesn’t overwhelm you early. It waits.And then it tightens its grip when it matters most.
Every player in the field knows what’s coming.
The closing stretch — holes 16, 17, and 18 — is known as the Green Mile, and it remains one of the most demanding finishes in professional golf.
There’s no easing into the clubhouse here. If anything, the course gets more demanding with every shot.
And that’s exactly why leads rarely feel safe at Quail Hollow.
At more than 7,500 yards, Quail Hollow has the length to challenge anyone. But distance alone isn’t what defines it.
Precision off the tee matters just as much as power. Fairways are tight enough to force decisions, and the rough is thick enough to punish misses.
Around the greens, things don’t get any easier. The putting surfaces are fast and firm, with shaved runoff areas that turn slight misses into scrambling situations.
And late in the round, water becomes a constant presence — not just visually, but strategically.
Players aren’t just hitting shots. They’re managing risk on nearly every swing.
Quail Hollow’s difficulty isn’t confined to the finish.
The middle portion of the course quietly determines who even has a chance when the Green Mile arrives.
By the time players reach the 16th tee, the margin for error is already thin.
This is a course built for volatility.
Players can control their round for 15 holes — and then suddenly:
That’s how tournaments flip here.
Momentum doesn’t just shift at Quail Hollow. It can disappear in a matter of minutes.
At this week’s Truist Championship, the formula is straightforward:
The winner won’t just be the player who makes the most birdies.
It will be the one who stays composed — and keeps the card clean — when the course is at its most demanding.
Quail Hollow doesn’t ask for perfection. It demands control. And over the final three holes, it asks a question every player must answer:
Can you finish when everything tightens? At the Truist Championship, that answer will decide everything.
Maggie MacKenzie Maggie MacKenzie covers NASCAR for Heavy.com. She previously worked for NASCAR.com, where she reported, wrote, and edited race-weekend coverage and traveled to key events throughout the season. She has more than ten years of experience in sports media and is based in Boston, Massachusetts. More about Maggie MacKenzie
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