Netherby House
Bed and Breakfast Edinburgh

Edinburgh accommodation tourist attractions

St Andrews (New)

St Andrews
(New)

 

In the late 1800s, the Old Course was getting too popular, largely due to the extra visitors flocking to St Andrews on the trains. The R&A decided to pay for the New course to be built in return for allocated tee times on the Old. These rights are still enclosed in an Act of Parliament passed in 1894, the precursor to the current Act of 1974, which specifies how the public St Andrews links courses are managed.

The New course was designed by Old Tom Morris and B Hall Blyth and opened for play in 1895.This makes it one of the oldest “new” courses in the world!

Situated adjacent to the Old course, the New is often referred to as the local's favorite because it is tighter and more defined that the Old. It possesses some similarities to the Old, shared fairways, a double green at the 3rd and 15th and the traditional out and back layout many ways it plays and feels better than the Old - it;s certainly less quirky and prettier too, with swathes of dense gorse providing brilliance of seasonal colour.

The fairways are undulating, but they don't have the same slopes and curves as the Old. Consequently, there are fewer hangling lies. There are some great holes on the New, especially in the dunes around the turn for home. The 10th hole, a tough 464-yard par 4, has been singled out and is featured in the book, the 500 World's Greatest Golf Holes. Bernard Darwin also liked the 10th, but thought that it was not in the Old course mould. In his 1910 book, The Golf Courses of the British Isles, he wrote: "This is nevertheless a really fine one, running down a narrow gorge b etween two ranges of hills, with a fine, slashing second shot with the brassey, albeit more or less a blind one".

We think that if the New Course could be transported to virtually any other coastal stretch of the British Isles, away from the shadow of its auld mater, it would surely have a higher reputation and be recognised as the excellent links course it is. Who knows? If the course had not been in the shadows for so long and perhaps updated to a similar extent as many other links courses, it might well have played host to an Open Championship.

In 1910, Darwin wrote: “Still there occasionally comes a time when we grow sick to death of the crowding and waiting on the old course, and then we are glad enough to steal away on to the new course and have a round, which will probably be at anyrate a comparatively quick one.”Could this really be the answer as to why the locals prefer the New course?

 

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