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Calamity Corner: Open players will want to steer clear of 16th's ‘card wrecker' chasm

Calamity Corner: Open players will want to steer clear of 16th's ‘card wrecker' chasm

Irish Times7 hours ago
'Of all the hazards, fear is the worst'
– Bobby Jones.
For most of us mere mortals, the sight from the tee to the green on the 16th hole of the
Dunluce
links at
Royal Portrush
is both mesmerising and fear invoking.
Calamity Corner, as it is known, is unquestionably one of
golf's
great par 3s, with a deep chasm to the right and a tiny bailout landing area short left of the green. Off the championship tee which, obviously, will be in play for the 153rd Open in the next week, it is a monster of a hole. It is also the highest point on the course, and one of the most exposed.
Back in his amateur days of playing in the North of Ireland championship,
Pádraig Harrington
recalls using a driver for one tee shot into a strong wind.
READ MORE
While a driver is unlikely to be in hand for any of these modern-day professionals in their quest to claim the
Claret Jug
, the task for one and all – of finding the green – will, in itself, be a challenge and especially so given that it comes so late in the round where the ability to rescue a card is lessened.
Calamity overlooks the Valley course to the right, where part of that links has been turned into a driving range during The Open, and, hands up, the majority of times that I've played (to use the word loosely) the hole, my time has invariably involved negotiating a way down the sheer drop in search of a ball that has been attracted into the chasm as if by some magnetic force. Mountain goat terrain, for sure.
Keith Mitchell on the 16th hole during a practice round before the 2019 Open at Royal Portrush. Photograph: Mike Ehrmann/Getty
Such a fate will surely befall some poor soul at some stage during the week ahead, when the fourth and final Major of the season returns to the Co Antrim links for a third staging, and its reputation as a 'card wrecker,' as Royal Portrush's club professional Gary McNeill describes it, is one that will prey on the minds of some more than others.
When the 148th Open returned to Royal Portrush in 2019, only 41 per cent of the field – through the four rounds of the championship – managed to find the green with their tee shots on 16. That statistic ranked as the lowest of any green found in regulation. The 16thranked as the third-toughest hole on the course, behind the 11th and 14th holes.
In the run-up to the championship, former champion Henrik Stenson, on first playing the hole in practice, later quipped: 'Sixteen is that short, drivable par-4, isn't it?'
For sure, it is not one that anyone forgets.
'It's a hole where if you get it wrong you can easily run up a double-bogey or worse, particularly if the player pushes it out to the right and doesn't make the carry across. The ball has a tendency to bounce and make its way right down to the base of that chasm and then you're at the mercy of what lie you get down there and you're trying to play a shot up a very steep bank to a blind target,' explained McNeill of the challenge.
The bottom of the chasm is close to 30m (100ft) below the green, which says all that needs to be said about players ensuring that such an escape act is not required.
'Mountain goat territory': The 16th on the Dunluce course. Photograph: David Cannon/Getty
In 1951, on The Open's first visit to the links, the great South African player Bobby Locke made sure such a feat did not fall to him by aiming left of the green in all four rounds. Locke identified a small bowl-shaped hollow to the left, short of the green, and found it, making pars in all four rounds. That small plot is, to this day, known as 'Locke's Hollow'.
Back then, Calamity was actually the 14th and only became the 16th after Martin Ebert of Mackenzie & Ebert golf course architects – who work closely with the R&A on links which form the Open rota – was brought in ahead of the 2019 championship to make course changes which saw the old 17th and 18th holes removed and two new holes, what became the seventh and eighth, created in the dunes of the Valley course, in such a way that it would seem they were always part of Dunluce itself.
'The general feeling was that the course changes led to an improvement of the Dunluce Links. Subsequently, the members and visitors seem to have accepted the changes as having had a positive impact. The immediate sight of the seventh, stretching away in the distance when you turn the corner of the road leading to Portrush, is one of the most exciting views in golf and one that leads to a huge sense of anticipation of what is to come if you are playing the Dunluce,' remarked Ebert of the additions.
Calamity, though, was untouched because it didn't need to be. It remains as it was when Harry Colt created his masterpiece, his vision for the par 3 for the tee shot to be played across the chasm with all the peril involved.
Calamity Corner – at 236 yards – is not the longest par 3 on the Open rota. The 16th at Carnoustie comes in at 248 yards. The 17th at Royal Troon at 242 yards. Unlike those two, however, it is that chasm – which Colt used so tellingly all those years ago – that, visually, makes it so different.
And, for all its difficulty, and the notoriety that the 16th hole has gained, the examination will be a tough one but a fair one with, as ever, the wind a factor too.
As Darren Clarke, who knows the Dunluce Links as well as any other man, put it, 'the thing about Royal Portrush, it's a fair golf course. If you play well around Portrush you should have the opportunity to score well. If you're missing too many shots you're not going to get around Portrush, and that's the way it is. That's why it's a Harry Colt masterpiece.'
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Golf stars return to Portrush for Open, but it's a different set-up to 1951's £300 prize and pick of parking spaces
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I would pay good money to see how my late granny, a former Portrush bed and breakfast landlady, would react to the idea of paying up to £50,000 (€58,000) to stay for a week in her beloved Co Antrim seaside town. When the Open first casually rolled into Portrush in 1951, many of the top players found lodgings in boarding houses around the town. More than seven decades later the difference in the price of accommodation, prize money, spectator numbers and media coverage is inconceivable. In 1951, the total purse amounted to £1,700 (€1,970) with the winner receiving £300 (€350). Royal Portrush Golf club proudly announced the installation of 16 new telephones for the use of the press covering the event and the post office installed a mobile facility so that, over the three days of the tournament, the 7,000 spectators could send postcards from the course. They say home favourite, 1947 Open champion Fred Daly, slung his clubs over his shoulder and strolled each day from the family home on Causeway Street the short distance to the first tee on the Dunluce course. READ MORE As a 16-year-old, my father Maurice, now 89, gladly accepted a lift with a commercial traveller who was a guest in his mother's B&B in one of the few cars to be seen in the town in the early 1950s. They drove nonchalantly straight through the entrance gates and had their pick of parking spaces. Many years later, he confessed that on another day he and his friends sneaked in under the ropes without a ticket between them. Anne Marie and her father Maurice McAleese at Royal Portrush This year, as in 2019 when the Open last came to Portrush, we are taking no chances, and, much to his amusement, our tickets have been secured via the QR code on the app on my phone. 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Calamity Corner: Open players will want to steer clear of 16th's ‘card wrecker' chasm
Calamity Corner: Open players will want to steer clear of 16th's ‘card wrecker' chasm

Irish Times

time7 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Calamity Corner: Open players will want to steer clear of 16th's ‘card wrecker' chasm

'Of all the hazards, fear is the worst' – Bobby Jones. For most of us mere mortals, the sight from the tee to the green on the 16th hole of the Dunluce links at Royal Portrush is both mesmerising and fear invoking. Calamity Corner, as it is known, is unquestionably one of golf's great par 3s, with a deep chasm to the right and a tiny bailout landing area short left of the green. Off the championship tee which, obviously, will be in play for the 153rd Open in the next week, it is a monster of a hole. It is also the highest point on the course, and one of the most exposed. Back in his amateur days of playing in the North of Ireland championship, Pádraig Harrington recalls using a driver for one tee shot into a strong wind. READ MORE While a driver is unlikely to be in hand for any of these modern-day professionals in their quest to claim the Claret Jug , the task for one and all – of finding the green – will, in itself, be a challenge and especially so given that it comes so late in the round where the ability to rescue a card is lessened. Calamity overlooks the Valley course to the right, where part of that links has been turned into a driving range during The Open, and, hands up, the majority of times that I've played (to use the word loosely) the hole, my time has invariably involved negotiating a way down the sheer drop in search of a ball that has been attracted into the chasm as if by some magnetic force. Mountain goat terrain, for sure. Keith Mitchell on the 16th hole during a practice round before the 2019 Open at Royal Portrush. Photograph: Mike Ehrmann/Getty Such a fate will surely befall some poor soul at some stage during the week ahead, when the fourth and final Major of the season returns to the Co Antrim links for a third staging, and its reputation as a 'card wrecker,' as Royal Portrush's club professional Gary McNeill describes it, is one that will prey on the minds of some more than others. When the 148th Open returned to Royal Portrush in 2019, only 41 per cent of the field – through the four rounds of the championship – managed to find the green with their tee shots on 16. That statistic ranked as the lowest of any green found in regulation. The 16thranked as the third-toughest hole on the course, behind the 11th and 14th holes. In the run-up to the championship, former champion Henrik Stenson, on first playing the hole in practice, later quipped: 'Sixteen is that short, drivable par-4, isn't it?' For sure, it is not one that anyone forgets. 'It's a hole where if you get it wrong you can easily run up a double-bogey or worse, particularly if the player pushes it out to the right and doesn't make the carry across. The ball has a tendency to bounce and make its way right down to the base of that chasm and then you're at the mercy of what lie you get down there and you're trying to play a shot up a very steep bank to a blind target,' explained McNeill of the challenge. The bottom of the chasm is close to 30m (100ft) below the green, which says all that needs to be said about players ensuring that such an escape act is not required. 'Mountain goat territory': The 16th on the Dunluce course. Photograph: David Cannon/Getty In 1951, on The Open's first visit to the links, the great South African player Bobby Locke made sure such a feat did not fall to him by aiming left of the green in all four rounds. Locke identified a small bowl-shaped hollow to the left, short of the green, and found it, making pars in all four rounds. That small plot is, to this day, known as 'Locke's Hollow'. Back then, Calamity was actually the 14th and only became the 16th after Martin Ebert of Mackenzie & Ebert golf course architects – who work closely with the R&A on links which form the Open rota – was brought in ahead of the 2019 championship to make course changes which saw the old 17th and 18th holes removed and two new holes, what became the seventh and eighth, created in the dunes of the Valley course, in such a way that it would seem they were always part of Dunluce itself. 'The general feeling was that the course changes led to an improvement of the Dunluce Links. Subsequently, the members and visitors seem to have accepted the changes as having had a positive impact. The immediate sight of the seventh, stretching away in the distance when you turn the corner of the road leading to Portrush, is one of the most exciting views in golf and one that leads to a huge sense of anticipation of what is to come if you are playing the Dunluce,' remarked Ebert of the additions. Calamity, though, was untouched because it didn't need to be. It remains as it was when Harry Colt created his masterpiece, his vision for the par 3 for the tee shot to be played across the chasm with all the peril involved. Calamity Corner – at 236 yards – is not the longest par 3 on the Open rota. The 16th at Carnoustie comes in at 248 yards. The 17th at Royal Troon at 242 yards. Unlike those two, however, it is that chasm – which Colt used so tellingly all those years ago – that, visually, makes it so different. And, for all its difficulty, and the notoriety that the 16th hole has gained, the examination will be a tough one but a fair one with, as ever, the wind a factor too. As Darren Clarke, who knows the Dunluce Links as well as any other man, put it, 'the thing about Royal Portrush, it's a fair golf course. If you play well around Portrush you should have the opportunity to score well. If you're missing too many shots you're not going to get around Portrush, and that's the way it is. That's why it's a Harry Colt masterpiece.'

Leona Maguire falls back but remains in contention at Amundi Evian Championship
Leona Maguire falls back but remains in contention at Amundi Evian Championship

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