Lying
in the bosom of beautiful Donegal Bay and backed by the magnificent
Blue Stack Mountains, Donegal Golf Links (or Murvagh Golf Club as
it is also known) was designed by the master of Irish golf course
architecture, Eddie Hackett. Following his designs at Connemara
and Waterville Golf Links, the links at Donegal was his third such
project and it was destined to be on a similarly grand scale as
his two previous creations.
It will always be a matter of dispute whether
golf originated in Scotland or Holland but in Donegal, similar
to Lahinch, it was the Scottish influence that brought it to our
shores. While on overseas service in Ireland, the Scottish army
regiments saw beautiful links land, similar to the lands upon
which the great Scottish links were built, and they encouraged
the local gentry to do the same.
Configured in two loops of nine holes, Donegal
Golf Links is often described as the Muirfield of Ireland and
the course can provide a fearsome challenge when the wind rises,
as is reflected in its standard scratch of 75. Isolated from the
rest of the mainland by a thick mass of woodland, the site is
spectacular by any standards. And as the designer recalled with
a crushing simplicity "The greens are on natural sites, only
the levels of some were adjusted by hand. All I had to do was
to develop the course on what nature provided."
There are so many excellent holes at
Donegal Golf Links that it is hard to know where to begin but
the stretch from the fifth to the eighth is generally regarded
as being the most exciting. The par 3, fifth measures over 190
yards from the tee to a plateau green, which is receptive for
a well played shot, while the par 5, sixth offers a stunning view
of the beach from a high tee box. The seventh plunges downwards
to a two tiered green and requires two excellent shots and so
the eighth, an exceptional par 5, measuring 550 yards. Two cracking
woods will leave a pitch to a massive green, where slackness is
ill advised if you want to avoid three putts.
|