2023 Mexico Open at Vidanta – Preview

The PGA Tour returns to stroke play action south of the border for the Mexico Open. Located a few miles off the Pacific coast near the town of Puerto Vallarta, the Vidanta Vallarta Resort (one of the highest-rated hotels in Mexico) and its “Signature Course” designed by LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman, will host this event for the second time after last year’s inaugural tournament which was won by Jon Rahm at 17-under.

Dating back to 1944, the Mexico Open has quite a historic past and has been considered Mexico’s national championship. With the PGA Tour pulling out of certain World Golf Championship (WGC) events two years ago, such as the one at Club de Golf Chapultepec in Naucalpan, Mexico, this tournament is an official FedExCup event with a purse of $7.7 million and 500 points to the winner.

With its considerable length, it is definitely a course that favors bombers off the tee and excellent players on approach from over 200 yards. Like most resort-style courses near the ocean, coastal winds and familiarity with Paspalum grass could play a significant factor in determining the winner.

Field

Overall, the strength of this field is extremely weak. With it being an international event, along with it being a “bombers” course, and a long plane ride to next week’s designated event, the Wells Fargo Championship, it is easy to see why few top-ranked players would choose to make the trip. Headlining the 144-player field is the world’s top-ranked player, and defending Mexico Open champion, Jon Rahm. World No. 16, Tony Finau will also return this year. After him, the next highest-ranked player is No. 49, Alex Noren. This field is so weak that there are only eight total players ranked in the top 100 in the world.

Finish Position and Strokes Gained Course History (2022)

Course Features

Tucked away along the banks of the Ameca River in between the beaches of Nuevo Vallarta and the resort town of Puerto Vallarta sits Greg Norman’s “Signature Course” at Vidanta. Featuring panoramic views of the Sierra Madre mountain range and the Banderas Bay to the southwest, this recent design from 2015 is surrounded by parota trees, native grasses, and patches of lush jungle.

With only one year of data and course history to draw from, there is still some uncertainty on how this course actually plays. One thing that is for sure is that it’s isolated on its own little plot of unspoiled tropical serenity with no housing or commercial developments in sight. Just to get to the course, players will have to cross the Ameca River on the world’s longest golf cart suspension bridge.

Similar to a couple of his other courses at TPC San Antonio and El Camaleon, Greg Norman tries to closely incorporate elements of nature into his layouts. This includes water, elevation changes, native plant life, and an appreciation for the surrounding scenery. While it is a fairly flat piece of property, each of these other elements is definitely seen here at Vidanta.

As Norman said in his own words, “When designing this course, respecting and promoting the conservation of ecologically sensitive areas was of primary concern. As a result, routing was dictated by nature, according to dense vegetation corridors, streams, and wetlands.”

Vidanta Vallarta is a par-71 course that measures out to 7,456 yards. It ranks as the 6th longest course on Tour. It is a unique track that has five par-3s to go with four par-5s and only nine par-4s. Unlike most resort courses, last year’s tournament did not result in a birdie-fest. In fact, it ranked in the middle of the pack for scoring difficulty

Along with its monstrous length, the coastal winds appear to be one of the course’s most prominent defenses. With the Pacific coast just down the road, crosswinds are known to impact the course starting around 11 am on most days. Jon Rahm had this to say about the effects of the wind last year: “There’s a big difference between morning and afternoon. We had no wind for 13, 14 holes, and it was very scorable. Once the wind starts going 20-30 miles an hour, this golf course starts showing some teeth. It’s long. You have a couple really long par 4s. 4 and 8 are straight into the wind. Both of them 500 yards. So you can start seeing higher scores out there.” There are also 12 holes with water danger, 106 bunkers, numerous large sandy waste areas, and patches of indigenous vegetation that can also cause trouble.

The course features wall-to-wall Paspalum grass surfaces. Paspalum is a very common grass used on coastal courses and is known for its “stickiness”. This means that drives will not roll out as much on the fairways and will stop much quicker on the greens. The rough here is quite short and non-penal at only 1.5″. Greens should run between 10.5-11.5 which is in the slow-to-average range on the stimpmeter.

Hole Preview

Vidanta is one of the few PGA courses that has five par-3s to go along with four par-5s and nine par-4s. The par-3s vary in length and play right around even par with the exception of the 226-yard 17th hole which has a bogey-or-worse rate of 28%.

The course gets much of its teeth from some lengthy par-4s. Five of them measure at least 475 yards and are especially challenging when played into the wind. They combined to average 0.26 strokes over par with a birdie or better rate of only 7.9%. Three of the par-5s are massive with two over 600 yards including the 12th hole which is beastly in length at 637 yards and an eagle rate of only 0.9%. In fact, Vidanta Vallarta has the longest combination of par-4s and par-5s on Tour.

Most of the holes are quite straightforward and non-descript with either large waste areas and bunkers or water lining each fairway. The 7th hole is a 297-yard par-4 that is described as risk-reward but it doesn’t really have much risk because the water to the left side of the fairway is non-threatening. Players should have little trouble driving the green and ending up with eagle and birdie chances. The 18th hole should also set up some excitement as in typical Norman fashion there is a closing par-5. At only 548 yards, it is very reachable in two shots even with the jungle area on the right and waste area on the left.

Strokes Gained Analysis

Off the Tee

Off the tee, players will be met with wide landing areas on fairways that are perfect for bombers who love to hit a ton of drivers. Almost 78% of drives were over 280 yards which is one of the highest rates on Tour. Last year, long hitters like Rahm, Finau, Cameron Champ, Kurt Kitayama, and Patrick Rodgers filled the top 10 of the leaderboard as 7 of the top 10 finishers ranked in the top 16 for Driving Distance on the week. Last year, Jonathan Byrd spoke about the “grip it and rip it” mentality here, saying, “When you’ve got so many tee shots where you can just let it go and swing as hard as you want. It kind of gives you plenty of room off the tee and the rough’s not bad, so it’s just kind of swing away.”

Fairways here average over 40 yards wide which makes them the sixth widest on Tour. While there are five holes that present water danger off the tee, only two feature water that is tight to landing areas. Along with the rough being non-penal, the slower paspalum fairways will give an added bonus to those with longer carry distance. Accuracy off the tee is very close to the Tour average but means little with the rough so short.

Approach

With this being such a lengthy track, 44% of approaches were from over 200 yards which is the highest rate by a large margin from any Tour course. This second-shot length does lead to fewer quality scoring chances as the average proximity to the hole is almost 44 feet which was the furthest distance on any course last year. On the flip side, only 20.3% of approach shots were from inside 150 yards.

Last year, when golfers are able to use wedges and short irons, Vidanta was the easiest course to gain on approach. They will also have to take on six different greens that have water in the vicinity on approach. And in typical Greg Norman fashion, most greens have at least two deep bunkers to deal with. So while the greens are larger than average, second-shot accuracy will still be crucial, especially if coastal winds have an impact.

Around the Greens and Putting

Last year Vidanta was the easiest course on Tour in which to gain strokes around the green. Some of the greens are elevated with collection areas behind them which eat up wayward approaches that are long. With all the bunker areas, sand saves will take on added importance. One thing is for sure, with sticky rough areas and slower greens, less touch is involved with regard to chipping which should make the short game much easier. The data from last year definitely back up that assertion. Also, with the greens running on the slower side and not having any severe undulations, short-game skills become even less important.

Putting is the only area that presents a true challenge at Vidanta as last year the course was the 15th toughest to gain strokes with the flat stick. And it was inside the top 10 for difficulty inside of 15 feet. While they don’t have any type of tiered or severe undulations they do have some subtle sloping around many of the pin locations. And because of all the long approach shots along with the greens being larger in size, 3-putt avoidance will be key. Also, Paspalum greens tend to neutralize putting for both good and bad putters alike.

Most Important Stats For Success at the Mexico Open

*In order of importance

  • SG: APP
  • Proximity 200+ yds
  • Driving Distance
  • BoB%
  • Par 5 Scoring
  • SG: Long Courses
  • SG: Winds 15+ mph
  • SG: T2G (Last 24 Rounds)
  • Bogey Avoidance
  • SG: Par 3

Early Weather Forecast – Nuevo Vallarta, Mexico