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Course
type : |
Links |
Founded
: |
1894 |
Par
: |
71 |
Yards
: |
6609 |
SSS
: |
72 |
Designer : |
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Robert
Trent Jones Snr |
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County
Sligo Golf Club, also known as Rosses Point, is once again a truly
great championship links. The home and resting place of W.B. Yeats,
Sligo is in his words “the land of hearts desire”.
Peter
Alliss states “From the 5th tee, you look down the side
of a cliff to a breathtaking panorama of holes spreading into
the distance below. Mountains on one side, sea on the other,
all add to the wild grandeur of the majestic rolling surroundings.
I have heard a lot about Ballybunion, Tralee, Connemara and
Lahinch, but Rosses Point stands right at the very top of the
list of Irish golf courses and it is one that more people should
discover”.
It
is home to the West of Ireland championship since 1923 and has
such notable past champions as Joe Carr, Des Smyth and Padraig
Harrington. Rosses Point has also been host to the Home Internationals
in 1991 and the Irish Amateur Close Championship in 2001. The
club’s most famous member is Cecil Ewing who stated “when
the winds blow the only hiding place is in the clubhouse”.
Cecil was an Irish team player and Walker Cupper born and bred
in Rosses Point, a major force in Irish Amateur golf.
Established
in 1894 it was originally laid out as 9 holes by George Combe
and extended to 18 holes by Captain Cambell in 1904 with the
Championship Links designed in 1927 by Harry S. Colt. Over years
legendary players such as Walter Hagen, Bobby locke, Henry Cotton,
Tom Watson, Nick Faldo and Darren Clarke have all been tested
on this old fashioned, out and back lay out. Bernard Langer
put it best by action rather than words when he went to visit
and play a round there. He ended up staying for two weeks
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The
history of Donegal can be traced back 9,000 years.
Still to be seen throughout the countryside are pre-Christian
tomb monuments, some form of Viking settlements, and early Christian
monuments. Some of the best weavers in the world are located in
Donegal, with this craft being passed down for generations.
In Donegal tradition runs deeper, rhythm is stronger, and the
water is wilder than any other part in Ireland. With so many magnificent
attractions and activities to experience, it is exhilarating and
thrilling to take a holiday in this unspoiled environment.
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