Known
in some circles as the "Dornoch of Ireland", the Old Course
at Ballyliffin has long been regarded by those in the know, as the
ultimate hidden gem. Boasting an unsurpassable setting and with
terrain so perfect for golf, it seems that those who did stumble
across Ballyliffin felt compelled to speak about it in whispers.
Upon visiting the course in 1993, Nick Faldo
immediately fell under Ballyliffin's spell. With its amazingly
contoured fairways, this was a course that added new meaning to
the phrase "a natural golf links". 1995 saw the addition
of the Glashedy Links, a more than worthy sibling to its elder
brother. And even today, despite their growing reputations, the
courses of Ballyliffin, nestled beneath towering mountains and
overlooking Pollan Bay remain two of the world's best kept golfing
secrets.
Nothing quite prepares you for your first sight
of the Old Links at Ballyliffin. Standing on the 1st tee, the
overpowering sensation is one of total bewilderment. Like most
fairways here, the terrain twists and tumbles in every conceivable
direction. During his visit in 1993, Faldo remarked: "Do
you play bump and run here or do you just run and bump?"
Unfortunately, there is no one person from whom one can seek advice
at Ballyliffin, as the principal architect of the Old Links was
Mother Nature, the greatest of all course designers.
The Old Course is an unashamedly old fashioned
links that bristles with charm, character and curiosity. And what
a course it is! By the time you reach the elevated 2nd green and
before you contemplate a severely sloping putt, you will be stunned
by the sweeping ocean view. Here for the first time, the golfer
can appreciate the full glory of the links as it unravels between
the sea and encircling hills.
The Old Links offers countless superb holes
including the 3rd, played directly towards the ocean along a perilously
narrow fairway and the legendary par 3, 5th with its elusive green
perched between two large sand hills but arguably the best hole
is kept until last, where the fairway wriggles along its entire
length, coming to rest at the foot of the clubhouse no doubt one
of the finest finishing holes in golf.
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