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"I think I know my golf pretty well,
and I find that Kingsbarns is like Pebble Beach and Ireland
's Old Head of Kinsale combined."
- Ben Wright |
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St. ANDREWS , SCOTLAND -- My return to St. Andrews for the Open
Championship has been more hectic than I could have imagined. I've
been buzzing about the Auld Grey Toon like a blue-assed fly running
into old friends, golfers and members of the media I haven't seen
in years. I'd be lying if I didn't say that I'm palpably excited
to be back at the home of golf and back amongst those that play
and cover the game. Though I may have been away from the game for
a spell, the game has never left me and always occupied the fullest
portions of my heart and soul.
I came to St.
Andrews via London , where I attended the Millennium Dinner of the
Lucifer Golf Society at the Savoy Hotel. I was invited to join HRH
Prince Andrew and Sir Michael Bonallack, who is Secretary and Captain
of the R&A as a guest speaker at the dinner. The Lucifer Society
was founded in 1920 just after the First World War, and Lucifer,
aside from being the devil's moniker, was a slang term used in World
War I to refer to a light, or match. The function of the Society
is to ensure that Commonwealth players have a game or that British
subjects traveling to all corners of the empire have a place to
play.
Representatives
from Australia, New Zealand, Bermuda, Kenya, South Africa, and Canada
listened to Bonallack recount some humorous tales and then heard
me deliver a few of my own lighthearted golf stories. Andrew, the
Duke of York gave a rousing toast to the Lucifers and longevity
of the British Empire . At the end of the program, a woman entered
the room and broke into spirited song, inviting all to join her
in a chorus of " Land of Hope and Glory."
A few days later, and only a few miles
from the Old Course, I was again in the company of Sir Michael when
I visited what has instantly become a "must visit" site
at St. Andrews : Kingsbarns Golf Links. Monday was the first day
that the Kingsbarns Links were open for play, and Bonallack and
his wife Lady Angela joined their children in a fourball as the
first group to play the course.
"This may be the last stretch of
seaside land in Scotland suitable for developing links," Bonallack
said of the Kingsbarns site, located six miles east of St. Andrews
on a bluff overlooking the Firth of Tay. In fact, I discovered that
the sea might be viewed for literally every spot on these magnificent
links.
Kingsbarns
Golf Links collects 85 pounds per round from daily-fee players,
and the club will make a pot load of money once the world discovers
what will quickly become the second most- popular course in St.
Andrews . American architect Kyle Phillips invited me to visit his
creation, where two other American entrepreneurs, Mark Parsinen
and Art Dunkley, are Managing Director and Director of the Links,
respectively.
I covered the spectacular links with former South African Amateur
champion Alan Jackson. My caddie was one of only two women caddies
at Kingsbarns: Emily Thomson, a completely professional caddie who
abandoned the old course to caddie on the links. She plays to a
seven-handicap, and laughed heartily when I told her that I had
to fire the last caddie I employed at the Old Course because he
was plainly drunk. Thomson does not indulge. The seriousness with
which this blond woman performed her duties is a sign of things
to come.
I think I know my golf pretty well, and I find that Kingsbarns is
like Pebble Beach and Ireland 's Old Head of Kinsale combined. The
greatest thing I can say is that this golf course looks as if it
has been here for centuries. It rolls along the dunes and even has
trees, though they don't play an integral role in the playing of
the course. Countless deep bunkers with sod faces challenged for
my attention while I was beguiled by the scenic views. Heather will
be growing everywhere soon.
The signature hole is the
par-three 15th, which played from the championship tees measured
212 yards, requires a shot across the bay to a green built on a
headland. "Tighten yer kilt laddie, a good round can derail
here," reads the Strokesaver guide. The course plays to a yardage
of 7,126. I returned to the tented village at he Old Course and
the grin on my face, evident to my media colleagues, told the tale
of Kingsbarns.
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