We experienced 11 great golf courses over 7 magical days under great conditions (just 4 holes of rain!). Because we had a larger group (8 golfers rather than 4 last year) than we had last year in Ireland, we decided to get a driver and van and were very pleased with the experience as all 8 of us could travel together.
Since we all seem to like rankings, I will give you my rankings of the courses from least to best. Please note that every single course was a great golf course.
11) New Course
We all thought this was a solid, albeit probably the least challenging course that we played. I thought the par-3 9
th hole was a real stand-out, a long par 3 with out of bounds running along the rear and left of the hole with water in the background.
10) Carnoustie
Carnoustie was easily the most difficult course that we played. I really enjoyed the strong finish (16-17-18 must be one of the best in tournament golf) and the challenge of the course. I must say that the town was the least attractive (a bit of a dump) of the courses within a town that we played. It was the most difficultly bunkered golf course I have ever played (more so than Oakmont), especially since the fairway bunkers were as steep (and sometimes steeper) than the greenside bunkers.
9) Kingsbarns
Kingsbarns had some of the best views of any course I have played. I really enjoyed the stretch of holes in which we cross the forest line. It was definitely a modern course and was the least “natural” course we played. While we enjoyed it a lot, we felt that Castle Stuart did modern better.
Castle Stuart
Castle Stuart is a fun, modern golf course with wide fairways and spectacular views. The Par-3 4
th hole with the Castle in the background was as well framed a golf-hole that one could design. The only drawback was the stretch of holes into the same wind direction was a bit of a bear coming back and showed how penal the course could be into a stiff breeze. Overall, a lot of fun to play!
7) Old Course
Let the hating begin. I am strictly reviewing the golf course, and trying not to get caught up in the hype and history. The great holes of the Old Course meet expectations (both Par-5s, the Road Hole, and 18
th), but there are just a few indifferent holes in the front nine. I loved the room on the golf course (very friendly to someone fighting a hook!) and the constant movement in the fairways. There was nothing more exhilarating on my trip than ripping a 3-wood on the 1
st hole down the middle in front of hundreds of people. One member of our foursome nearly holed out on 18 as well! Note: two of us got out on the old course with about 30 minutes of lead time at around 4:30 for a second crack at the course.
6) Royal Troon
We played this golf course under unusually benign conditions, although it was our first round of the trip, so we really appreciated it! After a somewhat slow start, the course really takes off towards the back of the front nine and has a tremendous finish. The 11
th hole might be the toughest Par 4 I have ever played with out of bounds in play on every shot. It’s only ten feet or so from the green to out of bounds! The Postage Stamp 8
th was such a fun golf hole. Any up-and-in on that hole should feel like a birdie.
5) Prestwick
Without a doubt, Prestwick is the most unique golf course I have ever played. It was thrilling to hit the tee shot on 1 while the commuters boarding the train watching. Name me one golf course in the world that has a blind par-3 and a blind par-4 approach! Some may argue that such features are unfair, but I beg to differ. Everyone in our group from the highest handicapper to the scratch golfer loved this golf course.
4) Muirfield
Muirfield was perhaps the best test of golf that we played. I loved the ingenious routing in which it seemed like we were never in the same wind direction more than twice. It made me appreciate one of the benefits of returning nines (every other course we played but Kingsbarns was out-and-back) as it usually results in more varied wind direction. It reminded me a lot of Shinnecock, in which you have brief glimpses of the water. The Muirfield lunch is also the best lunch in all of golf!
3) North Berwick
North Berwick had the quirkiness of Prestwick with some amazing views of the water. While its strange to hit a 6-iron on your opening tee shot, I really enjoyed the start and it never really let up until the 18
th hole. The stretch from 13 through 15 was as good of a three-hole stretch as you’ll ever play. The 13
th features a wall running along the left side of the hole which becomes more in play the more you avoid it. Somehow, I bounced a hybrid over the wall but holding the green was impossible. And, the 15
th is the original Redan hole! The original Redan is not the best Redan (I gotta go with Shinny’s), it is the most deceptive as you don’t quite appreciate the hole’s slopes and dangers from the tee. Finally, this might be the only golf course in the world that doesn’t have their own parking lot!
2) Royal Dornoch
I can see why people think this is the best golf course in Scotland, and the best in the world. I really liked how the gorse was concentrated and entirely on one side of the golf course, except for one hole. If you are in the gorse, you deserve to re-hit! While the Foxy hole is the most famous hole, I actually thought the 8
th and 16
th were better and both reminded me of RCD’s 9
th hole. The golf course is a bit remote, but well worth the drive.
1) Turnberry (Alisa)
I have a new favorite golf course in the world, the Alisa course at Turnberry. I kept comparing the course to Royal County Down as it was my prior favorite course, and I just thought that the back nine was stronger. Its unfortunate that people’s views of this course will be shaped by the course’s owner, but one most look at this golf course entirely on its merits. The 8,9, and 10 hole stretch might be the finest stretch in all of golf. The fairways have plenty of width and the bunkers are not overly penal. Turnberry has everything – spectacular setting, great shot values, and a fair test of golf.