BEST DAY PRINTSCOURSE MAPS
Whistling Straits golf course map print

Traced from real course data — every bunker, green, and fairway. Course data © OpenStreetMap contributors.

Whistling Straits

Ireland, conjured from a flat Wisconsin army base on the shore of Lake Michigan.

Haven, Wisconsin · Par 72 · Est. 1998 · Pete Dye & Alice Dye

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The Story

In the mid-1990s, Herb Kohler Jr. — the plumbing magnate who had already turned his company town into a golf destination at Blackwolf Run — walked a flat, abandoned military site called Camp Haven on the Lake Michigan shore and saw the coast of Ireland. He gave Pete Dye a simple, impossible brief: make it look as if the links had always been there. Dye answered with one of the great acts of earthmoving in golf history, hauling in thousands of truckloads of sand to sculpt dunes, bluffs, and hollows along two miles of shoreline.

The name came to Kohler on a walk during construction, a north gale whistling down the bluffs and whitecaps breaking on the rocky straits below. When the Straits course opened in 1998 the illusion was complete: fescue fairways, windswept dunes, a flock of Scottish blackface sheep wandering the property, and a caddie at your side — the Straits is walked, never ridden. Only the freshwater horizon gives away that this is Wisconsin.

Then the championships came, faster than for almost any course ever built. The PGA Championship arrived in 2004, barely six years after opening, and returned in 2010 and 2015 — three PGAs producing Vijay Singh, Martin Kaymer, and Jason Day, plus the most infamous bunker ruling in major history. The U.S. Senior Open came in 2007. And in 2021, Whistling Straits hosted the Ryder Cup, where an American team captained by Wisconsin's own Steve Stricker delivered a 19–9 rout, the largest margin of the modern era.

For the golfers who make the pilgrimage, the Straits is the closest thing America has to a links fever dream: a course where nobody can agree how many bunkers there are, the wind off the lake rewrites your plans hourly, and every hole ends with the water somewhere in view. You come off the 18th windburned and grinning, already telling the story.

Championship Ground

PGA Championship2004, 2010, 2015Three PGAs in twelve years — extraordinary for a course that opened in 1998.
Ryder Cup2021A 19–9 American rout on the lakeshore, the largest winning margin of the modern era.
U.S. Senior Open2007The USGA's first visit to the Straits.

The Champions

Vijay Singh
PGA Championship · 2004

The Fijian outlasted Justin Leonard and Chris DiMarco in a three-hole playoff to claim his third major — the crown jewel of a nine-win season that carried him to world No. 1.

Martin Kaymer
PGA Championship · 2010

The 25-year-old German won his first major in a three-hole playoff over Bubba Watson — after Dustin Johnson was famously penalized two strokes for grounding his club in one of the Straits' thousand bunkers on the 72nd hole, costing him a spot in that playoff.

Jason Day
PGA Championship · 2015

Day became the first player ever to finish a major at 20 under par, beating Jordan Spieth by three and weeping on the 18th green as his first major finally arrived.

Team USA
Ryder Cup · 2021

Captained by Wisconsin native Steve Stricker, the youngest American side ever assembled won 19–9 — the most lopsided Ryder Cup since continental Europe joined the matches in 1979.

Course Lore

The course was built on Camp Haven, an abandoned Army anti-aircraft training base — Pete Dye hauled in thousands of truckloads of sand to turn dead-flat ground into dunes.
Nobody agrees how many bunkers Whistling Straits has — 'about a thousand' is the standard answer. When we traced the course for this print, we counted 1,383.
A flock of Scottish blackface sheep grazes the property in season, completing the British Isles illusion.
Herb Kohler named the course on a walk during construction, when a gale was whistling down the bluffs and whitecaps were breaking on the straits of Lake Michigan below.
The Straits course is walking-only, with caddies — golf the way the links it imitates have always been played.
Dustin Johnson's two-stroke penalty on the 72nd hole in 2010 — for grounding his club in a trampled patch of sand that was, by local rule, a bunker — remains the most debated ruling in modern major history.