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Carnoustie Golf Links

Carnoustie Golf Links is in Carnoustie, Angus, Scotland. Carnoustie has four courses – the historic Championship Course, the Burnside Course, the Buddon Links Course and a free-to-play short, five-hole course called The Nestie. Carnoustie Golf Links is one of the venues in the Open Championship rotation and has hosted golf's oldest major on eight occasions (1931, 1937, 1953, 1968, 1975, 1999, 2007, 2018), as well as the Senior Open Championship in 2010 and 2016 and the Women's British Open in 2011 and 2021.

Carnoustie Golf Links

Club information
Location in Scotland
Location in Angus, Scotland
Location Carnoustie, Scotland
Established1842; 181 years ago (1842)
TypePublic
Total holes54
Websitehttps://www.carnoustiegolflinks.co.uk/
Championship
Designed byAllan Robertson and
Old Tom Morris;
James Braid (1926)
Par72 (71 for The Open)
Length6,941 yards (6,347 m)
(7,402 yards (6,768 m) for the
2018 Open Championship)
Course record63 by Tommy Fleetwood
Burnside
Designed byJames Braid
Par68
Length5,963 yards (5,453 m)
Buddon Links
Designed byPeter Alliss and Dave Thomas
Par68
Length5,921 yards (5,414 m)

History

 
View of Carnoustie Links in the 1910s

Golf is recorded as having been played at Carnoustie in the early 16th century. In 1890, the 14th Earl of Dalhousie, who owned the land, sold the links to the local authority. It had no funds to acquire the property, and public fundraising was undertaken and donated to the council. The original course was of ten holes, crossing and recrossing the Barry Burn; it was designed by Allan Robertson, assisted by Old Tom Morris, and opened in 1842.[1] The opening of the coastal railway from Dundee to Arbroath in 1838 brought an influx of golfers from as far afield as Edinburgh, anxious to tackle the ancient links. This led to a complete restructuring of the course, extended in 1867 by Old Tom Morris to the 18 holes which had meanwhile become standardized. Young Tom Morris won a major open event there that same year. Two additional courses have since been added: the Burnside Course and the shorter though equally testing Buddon Links.

Carnoustie first played host to The Open Championship in 1931, after modifications to the course by James Braid in 1926. The winner then was Tommy Armour, from Edinburgh.

Later Open winners at Carnoustie include Henry Cotton of England in 1937, Ben Hogan of the USA in 1953, Gary Player of South Africa in 1968, Tom Watson of the USA in 1975, Paul Lawrie of Scotland in 1999, Pádraig Harrington of Ireland in 2007 and Francesco Molinari of Italy in 2018. The 1975, 1999 and 2007 editions were all won in playoffs.

The Championship course was modified significantly (but kept its routing used since 1926) prior to the 1999 Open, with all bunkers being rebuilt, many bunkers both added and eliminated, many green complexes expanded and enhanced, and several new tees being built. A large hotel was also built behind the 18th green of the Championship course.[2]

The Amateur Championship was first hosted by Carnoustie in 1947; the winner was Willie Turnesa. The world's oldest amateur event has returned three times since: 1966 (won by Bobby Cole), 1971 (won by Steve Melnyk), and 1992 (won by Stephen Dundas).

The British Ladies Amateur was first hosted by Carnoustie in 1973, and also in 2012.

The Senior Open Championship was held at Carnoustie for the first time in 2010, with Germany's Bernhard Langer winning. The Women's British Open was held here for the first time in 2011; the winner was Yani Tseng.

Carnoustie is one of the three courses hosting the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship, an autumn event on the European Tour; the others are the Old Course at St Andrews and Kingsbarns.

The Golf Channel's reality series The Big Break, in which aspiring golfers compete for exemptions on professional tours and other prizes, filmed its fourth season at Carnoustie in 2005. As that year also saw the Ryder Cup at The K Club in Ireland, that year's show was based around a US vs Europe theme, with the two teams competing for European Tour exemptions.

In North America, the course is nicknamed "Car-nasty," due to its famous difficulty, especially under adverse weather conditions. Carnoustie is considered to be the most difficult course in the Open rota, and one of the toughest courses in the world.[3][4][5]

The 1999 Open Championship is best remembered for the collapse of French golfer Jean van de Velde, who needed only a double-bogey six on the 72nd hole to win the Open—and proceeded to score a triple-bogey seven, tying Paul Lawrie and 1997 champion Justin Leonard at 290 (+6). Lawrie won the four-hole aggregate playoff and the championship.

The Open Championship was once again contested at Carnoustie in July 2007. The eight-year absence was far shorter than the lengthy 24 years it took to return to Carnoustie, between 1975 and 1999. Harrington triumphed over García in a four-hole playoff. The 18th hole once again proved itself among the most dramatic and exciting in championship golf. Harrington had a one-shot lead over García as he approached the final hole in the fourth round, but proceeded to put not one but two shots into the Barry Burn, on his way to a double-bogey 6. García, playing in the final pairing of the day, reached the 18th with a one-shot lead over Harrington, but bogeyed the hole after missing a putt from just under ten feet away, setting up the playoff. In the four-hole playoff, which ended on the 18th, Harrington took no chances with a two-shot lead on the 18th; his bogey was enough to defeat García by one shot.

The Open Championship returned to Carnoustie in 2018,[6] where Francesco Molinari became the first Italian major winner, and Europe's third consecutive Open champion at Carnoustie. Molinari's final round was a bogey-free 69, which saw off challenges from several players including past champions Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy.

 
The 18th hole at Carnoustie and the Barry Burn.

On 17 January 2014, Carnoustie Golf Links appointed its first-ever female chairman, Pat Sawers.[7]

Carnoustie Golf Links won the title of World's Best Golf Course 2019 at the World Golf Awards, Abu Dhabi.[8]

The Open Championship

 
Carnoustie is known as 'Golf's Greatest Test'. It is one of the venues for The Open Championship.

This is a list of The Open Championship champions at Carnoustie Golf Links:

Year Winner Score Winner's
share (£)
R1 R2 R3 R4 Total
1931   Tommy Armour 73 75 77 71 296 (+8) 100
1937   Henry Cotton 2nd 74 72 73 71 290 (+6) 100
1953   Ben Hogan 73 71 70 68 282 (−6) 500
1968   Gary Player 2nd 74 71 71 73 289 (+1) 3,000
1975   Tom Watson 1st 71 67 69 72 279 (−9) PO 7,500
1999   Paul Lawrie 73 74 76 67 290 (+6) PO 350,000
2007   Pádraig Harrington 1st 69 73 68 67 277 (−7) PO 750,000
2018   Francesco Molinari 70 72 65 69 276 (−8) 1,625,387
  • Note: For multiple winners of The Open Championship, superscript ordinal identifies which in their respective careers.

The Women's British Open

Winners of the Women's British Open at Carnoustie Golf Links.

Year Winner Score
R1 R2 R3 R4 Total
2011   Yani Tseng 2nd 71 66 66 69 272 (−16)
2021   Anna Nordqvist 71 71 65 69 276 (−12)

The Senior Open

Winner of The Senior Open Championship at Carnoustie Golf Links.

Year Winner Score
R1 R2 R3 R4 Total
2010   Bernhard Langer 67 71 69 72 279 (−5)
2016   Paul Broadhurst 75 66 68 68 277 (−11)

Course

Championship Course

Championship scorecard (as of August 2021):[9]

Hole Name Yards Par Hole Name Yards Par
1 Cup 405 4 10 South America 465 4
2 Gulley 459 4 11 John Philip 380 4
3 Jockey's Burn 355 4 12 Southward Ho 504 4
4 Hillocks 412 4 13 Whins 171 3
5 Brae 411 4 14 Spectacles 510 5
6 Hogan's Alley (formerly "Long") 573 5 15 Lucky Slap 471 4
7 Plantation 409 4 16 Barry Burn 249 3
8 Short 183 3 17 Island 470 4
9 Railway 474 4 18 Home 499 4
Out 3,681 36 In 3,719 35
Total 7,400 71

Lengths of the course for previous Opens (since 1930):[10]

  • 2018 : 7,402 yards (6,768 m) , par 71
  • 2007 : 7,421 yards (6,786 m) , par 71
  • 1999 : 7,361 yards (6,731 m) , par 71
  • 1975 : 7,065 yards (6,460 m) , par 72
  • 1968 : 7,252 yards (6,631 m) , par 72
  • 1953 : 7,200 yards (6,600 m) , par 72
  • 1937 : 7,200 yards (6,600 m) , par 72
  • 1931 : 6,701 yards (6,127 m) , par 72

The 12th hole was played as a par-5 in 1975, and the 18th hole was played as a par-5 in previous Opens (1931−1968).

Length of the course for Women's British Open

  • 2011: 6,490 yards (5,934 m), par 72
  • 2021: 6,606 yards (6,041 m), par 71

Length of the course for Senior Open Championship

  • 2016: 7,345 yards (6,716 m), par 72
  • 2010: 7,297 yards (6,672 m), par 71

Course record

Player Country Score Tournament Date
Tommy Fleetwood   England 63 (−9) Alfred Dunhill Links Championship 6 Oct 2017

Source:[11][12]

Scorecard

Hole  1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
Par 4 4 4 4 4 5 4 3 4 4 4 5 3 5 4 3 4 4
  Fleetwood E −1 −1 −2 −2 −3 −3 −3 −3 −3 −4 −5 −6 −7 −8 −8 −8 −9
Birdie
  • The course was par 72 at 7,394 yards (6,761 m), with the 12th hole as a par 5 at 504 yards (461 m).

Source:[12][13]

Burnside Course

Hole Name Yards Par Hole Name Yards Par
1 Peninsula 319 4 10 Kopje 330 4
2 Ravensby 456 4 11 Deil's Ha' 372 4
3 Fence 172 3 12 Heather 383 4
4 South America 457 4 13 Punchbowl 379 4
5 Burn 158 3 14 Scoup 228 3
6 Camp 335 4 15 Sou' Western 490 5
7 Shelter 362 4 16 Whins 171 3
8 Battery 424 4 17 Sinkies 461 4
9 Grog 163 3 18 Lismore 303 4
Out 2,846 33 In 3,117 35
Total 5,963 68

Buddon Links Course

Hole Name Yards Par Hole Name Yards Par
1 Alma 423 4 10 Somme 395 4
2 Corunna 171 3 11 The Hook 411 4
3 Wadi Akarit 364 4 12 St Valery 398 4
4 Ypres 164 3 13 Marne 170 3
5 Kohima 323 4 14 Waterloo 399 4
6 Vimy 401 4 15 Falaise 165 3
7 Mareth 193 3 16 Cassino 493 5
8 El Alamein 517 5 17 Tobruk 159 3
9 Caen 358 4 18 Rhine 417 4
Out 2,914 34 In 3,007 34
Total 5,921 68

See also

References

  1. ^ The World Atlas of Golf, second edition, 1988; Scotland: Where Golf is Great, by James W. Finegan, 2010
  2. ^ Scotland: Where Golf is Great, by James W. Finegan, 2010
  3. ^ Catling, Michael (3 July 2018). "Why is Carnoustie so difficult?". Today's Golfer. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  4. ^ "Carnoustie (Championship)". National Club Golfer. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  5. ^ Whitten, Ron (11 July 2007). "Is Carnoustie the world's toughest course?". ESPN. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  6. ^ . R&A Championships Limited. Archived from the original on 29 July 2014. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  7. ^ "Carnoustie appoints first female chairman". bunkered. Retrieved 17 January 2014.
  8. ^ "Winners 2019". World Golf Awards. Retrieved 12 December 2019.
  9. ^ . The Open Championship. 2011. pp. 22, 203. Archived from the original on 18 April 2012. Retrieved 1 July 2012.
  10. ^ "Fleetwood makes history to lead at Carnoustie". PGA European Tour. 6 October 2017. Retrieved 30 June 2018.
  11. ^ a b "Tommy Fleetwood shoots record 63 at Carnoustie in Dunhill Links". PGA of America. Associated Press. 6 October 2017. Retrieved 30 June 2018.
  12. ^ "Albert Dunhill Links Championship". PGA European Tour. (leaderboard). 8 October 2017. Retrieved 30 June 2018.

External links

  • Official website
  •   Media related to Carnoustie Golf Links at Wikimedia Commons

Coordinates: 56°29′49″N 2°43′01″W / 56.497°N 2.717°W / 56.497; -2.717

carnoustie, golf, links, carnoustie, angus, scotland, carnoustie, four, courses, historic, championship, course, burnside, course, buddon, links, course, free, play, short, five, hole, course, called, nestie, venues, open, championship, rotation, hosted, golf,. Carnoustie Golf Links is in Carnoustie Angus Scotland Carnoustie has four courses the historic Championship Course the Burnside Course the Buddon Links Course and a free to play short five hole course called The Nestie Carnoustie Golf Links is one of the venues in the Open Championship rotation and has hosted golf s oldest major on eight occasions 1931 1937 1953 1968 1975 1999 2007 2018 as well as the Senior Open Championship in 2010 and 2016 and the Women s British Open in 2011 and 2021 Carnoustie Golf LinksClub informationLocation in ScotlandShow map of ScotlandLocation in Angus ScotlandShow map of AngusLocationCarnoustie ScotlandEstablished1842 181 years ago 1842 TypePublicTotal holes54Websitehttps www carnoustiegolflinks co uk ChampionshipDesigned byAllan Robertson andOld Tom Morris James Braid 1926 Par72 71 for The Open Length6 941 yards 6 347 m 7 402 yards 6 768 m for the2018 Open Championship Course record63 by Tommy FleetwoodBurnsideDesigned byJames BraidPar68Length5 963 yards 5 453 m Buddon LinksDesigned byPeter Alliss and Dave ThomasPar68Length5 921 yards 5 414 m Contents 1 History 2 The Open Championship 3 The Women s British Open 4 The Senior Open 5 Course 5 1 Championship Course 5 2 Course record 5 2 1 Scorecard 5 3 Burnside Course 5 4 Buddon Links Course 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory Edit View of Carnoustie Links in the 1910s Golf is recorded as having been played at Carnoustie in the early 16th century In 1890 the 14th Earl of Dalhousie who owned the land sold the links to the local authority It had no funds to acquire the property and public fundraising was undertaken and donated to the council The original course was of ten holes crossing and recrossing the Barry Burn it was designed by Allan Robertson assisted by Old Tom Morris and opened in 1842 1 The opening of the coastal railway from Dundee to Arbroath in 1838 brought an influx of golfers from as far afield as Edinburgh anxious to tackle the ancient links This led to a complete restructuring of the course extended in 1867 by Old Tom Morris to the 18 holes which had meanwhile become standardized Young Tom Morris won a major open event there that same year Two additional courses have since been added the Burnside Course and the shorter though equally testing Buddon Links Carnoustie first played host to The Open Championship in 1931 after modifications to the course by James Braid in 1926 The winner then was Tommy Armour from Edinburgh Later Open winners at Carnoustie include Henry Cotton of England in 1937 Ben Hogan of the USA in 1953 Gary Player of South Africa in 1968 Tom Watson of the USA in 1975 Paul Lawrie of Scotland in 1999 Padraig Harrington of Ireland in 2007 and Francesco Molinari of Italy in 2018 The 1975 1999 and 2007 editions were all won in playoffs The Championship course was modified significantly but kept its routing used since 1926 prior to the 1999 Open with all bunkers being rebuilt many bunkers both added and eliminated many green complexes expanded and enhanced and several new tees being built A large hotel was also built behind the 18th green of the Championship course 2 The Amateur Championship was first hosted by Carnoustie in 1947 the winner was Willie Turnesa The world s oldest amateur event has returned three times since 1966 won by Bobby Cole 1971 won by Steve Melnyk and 1992 won by Stephen Dundas The British Ladies Amateur was first hosted by Carnoustie in 1973 and also in 2012 The Senior Open Championship was held at Carnoustie for the first time in 2010 with Germany s Bernhard Langer winning The Women s British Open was held here for the first time in 2011 the winner was Yani Tseng Carnoustie is one of the three courses hosting the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship an autumn event on the European Tour the others are the Old Course at St Andrews and Kingsbarns The Golf Channel s reality series The Big Break in which aspiring golfers compete for exemptions on professional tours and other prizes filmed its fourth season at Carnoustie in 2005 As that year also saw the Ryder Cup at The K Club in Ireland that year s show was based around a US vs Europe theme with the two teams competing for European Tour exemptions In North America the course is nicknamed Car nasty due to its famous difficulty especially under adverse weather conditions Carnoustie is considered to be the most difficult course in the Open rota and one of the toughest courses in the world 3 4 5 The 1999 Open Championship is best remembered for the collapse of French golfer Jean van de Velde who needed only a double bogey six on the 72nd hole to win the Open and proceeded to score a triple bogey seven tying Paul Lawrie and 1997 champion Justin Leonard at 290 6 Lawrie won the four hole aggregate playoff and the championship The Open Championship was once again contested at Carnoustie in July 2007 The eight year absence was far shorter than the lengthy 24 years it took to return to Carnoustie between 1975 and 1999 Harrington triumphed over Garcia in a four hole playoff The 18th hole once again proved itself among the most dramatic and exciting in championship golf Harrington had a one shot lead over Garcia as he approached the final hole in the fourth round but proceeded to put not one but two shots into the Barry Burn on his way to a double bogey 6 Garcia playing in the final pairing of the day reached the 18th with a one shot lead over Harrington but bogeyed the hole after missing a putt from just under ten feet away setting up the playoff In the four hole playoff which ended on the 18th Harrington took no chances with a two shot lead on the 18th his bogey was enough to defeat Garcia by one shot The Open Championship returned to Carnoustie in 2018 6 where Francesco Molinari became the first Italian major winner and Europe s third consecutive Open champion at Carnoustie Molinari s final round was a bogey free 69 which saw off challenges from several players including past champions Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy The 18th hole at Carnoustie and the Barry Burn On 17 January 2014 Carnoustie Golf Links appointed its first ever female chairman Pat Sawers 7 Carnoustie Golf Links won the title of World s Best Golf Course 2019 at the World Golf Awards Abu Dhabi 8 The Open Championship Edit Carnoustie is known as Golf s Greatest Test It is one of the venues for The Open Championship This is a list of The Open Championship champions at Carnoustie Golf Links Year Winner Score Winner sshare R1 R2 R3 R4 Total1931 Tommy Armour 73 75 77 71 296 8 1001937 Henry Cotton 2nd 74 72 73 71 290 6 1001953 Ben Hogan 73 71 70 68 282 6 5001968 Gary Player 2nd 74 71 71 73 289 1 3 0001975 Tom Watson 1st 71 67 69 72 279 9 PO 7 5001999 Paul Lawrie 73 74 76 67 290 6 PO 350 0002007 Padraig Harrington 1st 69 73 68 67 277 7 PO 750 0002018 Francesco Molinari 70 72 65 69 276 8 1 625 387Note For multiple winners of The Open Championship superscript ordinal identifies which in their respective careers The Women s British Open EditWinners of the Women s British Open at Carnoustie Golf Links Year Winner ScoreR1 R2 R3 R4 Total2011 Yani Tseng 2nd 71 66 66 69 272 16 2021 Anna Nordqvist 71 71 65 69 276 12 The Senior Open EditWinner of The Senior Open Championship at Carnoustie Golf Links Year Winner ScoreR1 R2 R3 R4 Total2010 Bernhard Langer 67 71 69 72 279 5 2016 Paul Broadhurst 75 66 68 68 277 11 Course EditChampionship Course Edit Championship scorecard as of August 2021 9 Hole Name Yards Par Hole Name Yards Par1 Cup 405 4 10 South America 465 42 Gulley 459 4 11 John Philip 380 43 Jockey s Burn 355 4 12 Southward Ho 504 44 Hillocks 412 4 13 Whins 171 35 Brae 411 4 14 Spectacles 510 56 Hogan s Alley formerly Long 573 5 15 Lucky Slap 471 47 Plantation 409 4 16 Barry Burn 249 38 Short 183 3 17 Island 470 49 Railway 474 4 18 Home 499 4Out 3 681 36 In 3 719 35Total 7 400 71Lengths of the course for previous Opens since 1930 10 2018 7 402 yards 6 768 m par 71 2007 7 421 yards 6 786 m par 71 1999 7 361 yards 6 731 m par 71 1975 7 065 yards 6 460 m par 72 1968 7 252 yards 6 631 m par 72 1953 7 200 yards 6 600 m par 72 1937 7 200 yards 6 600 m par 72 1931 6 701 yards 6 127 m par 72The 12th hole was played as a par 5 in 1975 and the 18th hole was played as a par 5 in previous Opens 1931 1968 Length of the course for Women s British Open 2011 6 490 yards 5 934 m par 72 2021 6 606 yards 6 041 m par 71Length of the course for Senior Open Championship 2016 7 345 yards 6 716 m par 72 2010 7 297 yards 6 672 m par 71Course record Edit Player Country Score Tournament DateTommy Fleetwood England 63 9 Alfred Dunhill Links Championship 6 Oct 2017Source 11 12 Scorecard Edit Hole 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18Par 4 4 4 4 4 5 4 3 4 4 4 5 3 5 4 3 4 4 Fleetwood E 1 1 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 4 5 6 7 8 8 8 9BirdieThe course was par 72 at 7 394 yards 6 761 m with the 12th hole as a par 5 at 504 yards 461 m Source 12 13 Burnside Course Edit Hole Name Yards Par Hole Name Yards Par1 Peninsula 319 4 10 Kopje 330 42 Ravensby 456 4 11 Deil s Ha 372 43 Fence 172 3 12 Heather 383 44 South America 457 4 13 Punchbowl 379 45 Burn 158 3 14 Scoup 228 36 Camp 335 4 15 Sou Western 490 57 Shelter 362 4 16 Whins 171 38 Battery 424 4 17 Sinkies 461 49 Grog 163 3 18 Lismore 303 4Out 2 846 33 In 3 117 35Total 5 963 68Buddon Links Course Edit Hole Name Yards Par Hole Name Yards Par1 Alma 423 4 10 Somme 395 42 Corunna 171 3 11 The Hook 411 43 Wadi Akarit 364 4 12 St Valery 398 44 Ypres 164 3 13 Marne 170 35 Kohima 323 4 14 Waterloo 399 46 Vimy 401 4 15 Falaise 165 37 Mareth 193 3 16 Cassino 493 58 El Alamein 517 5 17 Tobruk 159 39 Caen 358 4 18 Rhine 417 4Out 2 914 34 In 3 007 34Total 5 921 68See also EditGolf in ScotlandReferences Edit The World Atlas of Golf second edition 1988 Scotland Where Golf is Great by James W Finegan 2010 Scotland Where Golf is Great by James W Finegan 2010 Catling Michael 3 July 2018 Why is Carnoustie so difficult Today s Golfer Retrieved 19 July 2022 Carnoustie Championship National Club Golfer Retrieved 19 July 2022 Whitten Ron 11 July 2007 Is Carnoustie the world s toughest course ESPN Retrieved 19 July 2022 Royal Birkdale and Carnoustie to host The Open in 2017 and 2018 R amp A Championships Limited Archived from the original on 29 July 2014 Retrieved 25 July 2014 Carnoustie appoints first female chairman bunkered Retrieved 17 January 2014 Winners 2019 World Golf Awards Retrieved 12 December 2019 Carnoustie Golf Links Championship Course Media guide The Open Championship 2011 pp 22 203 Archived from the original on 18 April 2012 Retrieved 1 July 2012 Fleetwood makes history to lead at Carnoustie PGA European Tour 6 October 2017 Retrieved 30 June 2018 a b Tommy Fleetwood shoots record 63 at Carnoustie in Dunhill Links PGA of America Associated Press 6 October 2017 Retrieved 30 June 2018 Albert Dunhill Links Championship PGA European Tour leaderboard 8 October 2017 Retrieved 30 June 2018 External links EditOfficial website Media related to Carnoustie Golf Links at Wikimedia Commons Coordinates 56 29 49 N 2 43 01 W 56 497 N 2 717 W 56 497 2 717 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carnoustie Golf Links amp oldid 1127928304, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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