Before the Cuban Revolution, there were about a dozen -- from all accounts -- top-notch golf courses in Cuba. Ross built two courses in Havana, including the CC of Havana and Havana's Biltmore Club. Even Dev Emmet designed 18 holes for the CC of Santiago.
When Castro took over, he had all but one nine-holer, the Club de Golf Havana, plowed under.
In 1998, Varadero, the first golf course built in nearly 40 years, joined the European tour. (Varadero was built on a coral peninsula that was once part of Pierre DuPont's estate.) At the time, the Office of Tourism estimated that nearly 150 courses would be needed should America lift its restrictions on tourists and businessmen visiting the country. They even had planned to open golf schools to introduce golf to younger players, who are weened on baseball from an early age.
There's some pretty nice real estate in Cuba, most -- if not all -- of it unspoiled. Problem is, much of it was expropriated from exiled Cubans who could seek to recover it.
What do you think are the chances that golf will ever see a renaissance in Cuba with today's news of Castro's "resignation" as Cuba's president?
I'd particularly like to hear what the architects think.