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"Its architect, Kyle Phillips, has
produced a reputation-making course in his first solo project
that one day may stand beside Pebble Beach as Jack Neville's
first time wonder."
- Dave Perkins |
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As the saying goes, not everybody likes the same thing. That's
why they have menus in restaurants.
Similarly, golf course rating is a personal game not everybody
plays the same way. That said, a brand new golf course on the East
Neuk of Scotland , named Kingsbarns, already rests at or very near
the top of this personal list.
The sea-hugging course has been open officially less than two weeks,
but the hype has built to considerable levels already and if a certain
amount of skepticism was included upon approaching the links layout,
some 13 kilometres south of St. Andrews , it evaporated quickly.
Kingsbarns is everything they say it is. Maybe more. Its developers,
Californians Mark Parsinen and Art Dunkley, have hit a home run,
no question. Its architect, Kyle Phillips, has produced a reputation-making
course in his first solo project that one day may stand beside Pebble
Beach as Jack Neville's first time wonder.
Certainly, Pebble Beach has places where the scenery is more breathtaking.
St. Andrews is a more pure links layout, with its clear-cut-out-and-back
layout. Carnoustie is a more difficult course, although from the
tips with the wind blowing, Kingsbarns stretched to 7,126 yards
would give any calibre of player all they wanted. Augusta National
has that manicured finery that no course can duplicate.
Yet, pound for pound, Kingsbarns can stand up to any golf course
that this enthusiastic, if untalented, player has tried. My list
is far from complete; in Scotland alone, Western Gailes , Muirfield,
Turnberry, Cruden Bay and Royal Dornoch all await. The whole of
both Irelands and Australia still beckon. But even for a golfer
with only a partially complete education, Kingsbarns sent up serious
shivers.
All 18 greens and 18 tees offer a view, usually memorable, of the
North Sea and a generally rocky tidal coastline that, denuded of
water at certain times of the day, presents a sculptured face that
looks almost of lava rock. Fabulous scenery, in other words.
When a handful of Canadian reporters played last week, most of
them for at least a second time, they teed off bright and early,
second group of another stunning morning. Leading off was a foursome
including U.S. touring pro Duffy Waldorf. His succinct comment:
“This place is just spectacular.”
Waldorf shot 69, from the championship tees, with mostly centre-cut
pins on the generally enormous greens. Fairways are wide open and
generous at this point. Developers were trying to attract members
of the world press to play and enjoy it, not suffer on it. It wasn't
only the press arriving; several touring pros, including Mike Weir
and Gary Player, headed over for a round.
The design is what's most striking about Kingsbarns. The
marriage, in terms of layout to the gently sloping piece of land
available, is just about flawless.
You could run out of words describing all 18 holes, but two particularly
invite description. The par-five 12 th resembles the 18 th at Pebble
Beach slightly, left-bending around the sea, but stretches to 606
slightly downhill yards and ends with a green a whopping 72 yards
from front to back, pinched by bunkers left front and right rear.
There is also a world-class short hole, the par-three 15 th , that
plays across water to a narrow point of land and plays 212 yards,
almost all carry, from the back tees. It's a less daunting 185 from
the medal tees, which are recommended for golfers with handicaps
of 12 or less.
There are no truly weak holes. The finishing hole, the 18 th ,
is the least favourite here because of a downhill lie on the second
shot across the burn and the stone bridge to a two-level green,
but it provides great action for viewers nestled deep into the leather
chairs at the (needless to say) comfortable and beautiful clubhouse.
It's high-end public and a budget-denter at £85 (about $205
Cdn.) but, even in its infancy, no serious golf trip to Scotland
could be considered complete without a round at Kingsbarns. |