A fter an agreeable, inland six-mile drive south
on the A917 from St. Andrews, turn left past a rusty old gate, meander
through a towering grove of beech trees and emerge onto a brief
porch of land revealing, not a mile distant, the shimmering teal
and gray of the North Sea. In the space between you and the sea
sits the world's newest ancient golf course, Kingsbarns Golf Links,
which is routed beautifully across land on which golf was played
as early as 1793. In 1939, the site was usurped by the British Ministry
of Defence during World War II and was left unrestored until now.
Thanks, in part, to an interest-free loan of one million pounds
from the R&A, American entrepreneur Mark Parsinen hired former
Robert Trent Jones Jr. associate Kyle Phillips to transform this
unique littoral property into a course created less by the elements
than for them. A par-seventy-two layout measuring a punishing 7,100
yards, Kingsbarns has a true linksland sensibility. Not a single
hole is without an ocean view, and nowhere will you find shelter
from the gales. Man-made swales bow gently toward the sea like monks
kneeling for prayer. Or perhaps they are genuflecting to such eye-popping
holes as the 590-yard par-five twelfth that scythes hard along the
shoreline, or the 215-yard par-three fifteenth, which calls for
a Cypress Point-like carry across a ragged elbow of an inlet.
Although the price of playing this gem ($135) will be similar to
that of the Old Course, Kingsbarns will have to cope with a problem
the Old Course manages well: the pace of play. Kingsbarns is a very
difficult test. If the wind howls ( Scotland 's meteorological equivalent
of death and taxes) and you are finding the thatched fescue, a round
could last considerably longer than the four hours locals consider
the outer limits of acceptability. Still, it's a problem worth having.
There have been rumblings of one day slotting the course into the
Open rota. There's a new temple in St. Andrews. Let the pilgrimages
begin. For a tee time, call 011-44-1334-880222 |