PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. ā Itās one of the most beautiful golf courses on Tour, but it doesnāt come without hard work.
āItās a great responsibility, but itās a beautiful place with a lot of history, and to think that youāre a small part of that is pretty awesome,ā TPC Sawgrass director of golf course operations Jeff Plotts said.
If you know the history of TPC Sawgrass, you know that while the Stadium Course was being constructed, designer Pete Dye used goats to clean up the course. That was back in the 1970ā²s and ā80ā²s. Now, in 2025, course maintenance is a bit different.
āItās a long process, but itās a lot of fun,ā Plotts said. āThe coordination that goes into it, we just have a great team that has been doing this for a long time. It becomes much easier.ā
Itās all led by Plotts, who oversees 85 year-round staff members and the 100 additional volunteers from around the world who help out just for The Players Championship. Volunteers work at other golf courses or are college students gaining experience.
āIām really proud of our team and our teamās effort,ā Plotts said. āIt takes a lot of dedication to get up at 3 oāclock in the morning and get here to work and try to go through it all day, and you may not leave until 10 or 11 oāclock at night.ā
Take a guess how long you may think almost 200 agronomy crew members take to get the entire 7,245-yard course up to par for each round of competition?
āMowing the greens to changing the hole locations to preparing all the short grass, we can do that in about a two, two-and-a-half-hour timeline,ā Plotts said.
Each year, the course changes, and it takes about that long to prepare for the tournament, too.
āWe start to prepare for this yearās event a year in advance,ā Plotts said. āActually, during this event is when we begin our prep and plans.ā
While thousands of fans roam around the course admiring the best golfers in the world and equally admiring the scenery, Plotts is more of a perfectionist with his craft.
āIn the heat of the battle, the day-to-day type stuff, I donāt really focus on the things that are good,ā Plotts said. āIām focused on the things that are not. To some degree, thatās a curse, but itās what we do for trying to provide the best products that we can.ā
But every once in a while, he has that one pinch-me moment.
āCertainly, a beautiful golf course and to be able to experience it first thing in the morning,ā Plotts said. āItās quiet and the shadows and those types of things as the sunās rising and then you get a chance to do it again in the evening. Those are the moments that you kind of go, āthis is pretty coolā.ā
Plotts enjoys every part of the course. Itās too hard to pick a favorite.
āThe reality is every hole is like a child,ā Plotts said. āI donāt have one particular hole that I favor over another. Thereās just some that give me a little bit harder time than others.ā
Plottās staff also manages the Dyeās Valley Course, including the entire landscape of TPC Sawgrassās footprint. He has worked for the course for a decade and moved to Florida after working at TPC Scottsdale. The University of Georgia alum graduated with a degree in Horticulture Science. He chose this career because his grandfather introduced him to gardening, and his father wanted him to get into coaching, but he wanted to get into agriculture.
āItās kind of like coaching,ā Plotts said. āYou have a big team, and youāre kind of working towards goals and very similar to coaching. Yet Iām still a farmer, an urban-type farmer, but Iām a farmer nonetheless.ā
