Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Trump National Doral Miami is a golf resort in Doral in South Florida in the United States. It was founded by real estate pioneer Alfred Kaskel in 1962, with the name "Doral" coming from an amalgamation of the first names of Kaskel and his wife, Doris. It currently has 72 holes of golf and its signature course is the Blue Monster at Doral.
The 2015 WGC-Cadillac Championship was a golf tournament played March 5–8 on the TPC Blue Monster course at Trump National Doral in Doral, Florida, a suburb west of Miami. It was the 16th WGC-Cadillac Championship tournament, and the first of the World Golf Championships events to be staged in 2015. The tournament was won by Dustin Johnson. [1]
The Doral Open was a professional golf tournament on the PGA Tour in the southeastern United States. It was played annually for 45 seasons, from 1962 to 2006, on the "Blue Monster" course at the Doral Golf Resort & Spa in Doral, Florida, a suburb west of Miami. The introduction of the FedEx Cup in 2007 caused a change in the PGA Tour schedule.
The tour that produced last year’s top four at The Masters returns to Doral a week before golfers head for Augusta National Golf Club and the year’s first major.
Sergio Garcia lines up his putt as he competes to keep the lead while playing with Matthew Wolff, and Taylor Gooch at the LIV Golf Miami at the Trump National Doral on Sunday, April 7, 2024 in ...
So the LIV Golf Invitational Series concludes its inaugural eight-event season this Friday through Sunday on the venerable Blue Monster course at Doral, and it truly is a match made in hell:
The 2014 WGC-Cadillac Championship was a golf tournament played March 6–9 on the TPC Blue Monster course at Trump National Doral in Doral, Florida, a suburb west of Miami. It was the 15th WGC-Cadillac Championship tournament, and the second of the World Golf Championships events to be staged in 2014.
The live element will be a significant new development; the stated goal is to create an environment much like the Waste Management Open’s famed 16th-hole stadium — minus the drunken revelry ...