
As players reach the 15th tee on the PGA National Champions course, they are greeted by a giant bear statue. This is no silly on-course tchotchke, it's more of a stern reminder fo what lies ahead -- one of the toughest three-hole stretches of golf on the PGA TOUR.
When Jack Nicklaus redesigned the George and Tom Fazio-designed layout in 1990, he added particular teeth to the 15th, 16th and 17th holes. Accordingly, that stretch picked up a Nicklausian nickname -- The Bear Trap.
How tough of a three-hole march is it? ShotLink's Alex Turnbull put together some statistics, then found out how the entire Honda Classic field has fared on the holes over the years.
They've had a bear of a time.
MORE BEAR TRAP: How every player has fared | How champs have played Bear Trap
| Toughest 3-hole stretch on TOUR (non-majors, any 3 holes) | ||||||||||||||||||
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With such a stretch of holes, it is no surprise that the entire back side at PGA National was the toughest this side of a major championship last year:
| Toughest back nine on TOUR in 2010 | ||||||||||||||||||
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The Bear Trap starts with an intimidating par-3 over water that is even more daunting when the wind blows. There wasn't a harder par-3 on TOUR last year (and note that the 15th is the only PGA National hole represented here):
| Toughest holes on TOUR (non-majors) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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What does it all add up to? A three-hole stretch that, collectively, rivals the rest of the course for relation-to-par difficulty:
| Bear Trap vs. the rest of the course (since 2007) | ||||||
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To find out how your favorite player this week has fared at The Bear Trap, click here.