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Tour of Ireland 19: Where Faldo’s chin dropped

Torsten Pamp moves further West along the Irish coast, and returns to the Republic and Ballyliffin GC in this chapter of the Tour of Ireland Project.

Tour_of_IrelandBy hired car we take the ferry from Magilligan Point back to the Republic.

We travel towards Ireland’s almost most northerly point, and end up in Ballyliffin. The golf club is from the 50’s but got a stunning reboot in 1993. Then, when «the seals sunbathing for hours at the island Glashedy rock and sea reflected in blue like Naples Bay» landed a helicopter outside the clubhouse and out stepped Nick Faldo. The rest is history.

Faldo was astonished when he saw the old path and his words that this was the world’s most natural course immediately placed the club on the celebrity map. The images from fairways with hardly a single even lie spread with Faldo’s quotation: «Do you play bump-and-run or do you just run and bump?»

However, the layout was also 50 years old and needed to be adapted to fit the new equipment. Of course it ended with Faldo getting the task. The careful renovation was completed a few years ago, and 50 new have joined the previous five bunkers while the character of the course is still maintained. The nature of the course is kept, with the undulating fairways. Just months before Faldos visit the club had taken the decision to build a second track.

Pat Ruddy and Tom Craddock have created the masterpiece Glashedy links, which is quite different from the old course.

Pat Ruddy and Tom Craddock have created the masterpiece Glashedy links, which is quite different from the old course.

The great Irish links designer Pat Ruddy created, together with Tom Craddock, the Glashedy links – a masterpiece very different from the old course. The fairways are smoother with bunkers along the edges, higher dunes, more doglegs and fantastic views. Today play toggles daily between the tracks so that the club members always have a track for themselves while guests are invited on the other.

Next stop: County Sligo – oops, we are not alone

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Tour_of_Ireland Här tappade Faldo hakan

Med hyrbilen vi tar båten över sundet tillbaka till republiken.

Mot Irlands nästan nordligast punkt – och hamnar i Ballyliffin. Klubben är från 50-talet men fick en makalös omstart 1993. Då, när ”sälarna låg och solade sig på ön Glashedy rock och havet speglade sig i blått likt Neapels bukt” landade en helikopter utanför klubbhuset och ur steg Nick Faldo.

Resten är historia.

Faldo häpnade när han såg den gamla banan och hans ord att det här var världens mest naturliga bana satte omedelbart klubben på kändiskartan. Bilderna från fairways som mest liknar en liggande puckelpist med knappast en enda slät stans spreds med Faldocitatet: «Do you play bump-and-run or do you just run and bump?»

Faldo was astonished when he saw the old path, saying this was the world's most natural golf course.

Faldo was astonished when he saw the old path, saying this was the world’s most natural golf course.

Men banan var också 50 år gammal och behövde anpassas till de nya klubborna. Naturligtvis slutade det med att Faldo fick uppdraget. Den försiktiga ombyggnaden blev klar för några år sedan – de tidigare fem bunkrarna har fått sällskap av ett 50-tal nya samtidigt som banans gamla karaktär är kvar – med fairways alla ojämnheter.

Bara månaderna före Faldos besök hade klubben tagit beslutet att bygga en andra bana. Dagens store irländske linksbyggare Pat Ruddy skapade tillsammans med Tom Craddock Glashedy links – ett eget mästerverk mycket olik den gamla banan. Jämnare fairways med bunkrar längs kanterna, högre dyner, mer dogleg och fantastiska vyer.

I dag växlar man dagligen spelet mellan banorna så att klubbmedlemmarna alltid har en bana för sig medan gästerna bjuds in på den andra.

Next stop: County Sligo — hoppsan, vi är inte ensamma