Showing posts with label Turnberry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Turnberry. Show all posts

10/23/2014

Luttrellstown Golf Club


The 18 hole championship golf course is unique, not only because and the club is so close to the city, but because we had an amazing parkland palette from which to work - gentle rolling countryside with lakes and ancient trees that make this an incredible course. 


Designed by Tom MacKenzie and Donald Steel whose work includes Turnberry, St Andrews and Royal St Georges. Our unique and custom-built practise facilities include a driving range, short game area and a three-hole short course designed to sharpen the wedge game.


Tee times can now be booked on line from our home page. Alternatively, you can book through Reception or the Pro Shop by dialing (01) 8609600 or you can fill in the Request Form and submit it and we will confirm your request within 24 hours by email. 


All bookings require credit card details to confirm the booking. Our cancellation policy is 48hrs in advance without any charge, 24 hrs with a charge of 50% or within 24hrs the full amount will be charged to your card enquiry form

1/28/2014

Tale of Two Cup Captains

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Tom Watson may appear avuncular but he's still as sharp as a cut-throat razor, as he proved by getting within one stroke of the greatest Major championship victory of all time at the 2009 British Open in Turnberry.

European captain Paul McGinley has no hesitation in admitting that Watson, his opposite number at September's Ryder Cup at Gleneagles, has been his golfing hero since boyhood.

Given the opportunity to shake Watson's hand and look him squarely in the eye as an adversary, the Dubliner was delighted to note the hard glint of the warrior he always knew lay within this eight-time Major winner.

Asked to put what he perceived into words, McGinley said: "A competitor, the most ferocious competitor. There's an edge. He's got an edge. He won't give an inch and I know that. I don't have a problem with that; in fact, I'm kind of relishing it."

It's a special intensity. One which McGinley compares favourably to that of a renowned former Nottingham Forest, Manchester United and Republic of Ireland footballer.

"Tom Watson and Roy Keane would have a great conversation, wouldn't they?"

However, McGinley, already making an impression as a thorough, businesslike, clued-in yet still passionate Ryder Cup captain, no longer indulges in hero worship.

And he certainly has no desire to engage in deeper analysis of the American captain or his team.

"I know Tom Watson is perceived one way and I'm perceived another," he explained. "I'm not going to be able to change that.

"I'm not going to try and compete with Tom Watson and what he's achieved or his status in the game. I'm not going to go there.

"Put my playing record up against Tom Watson's and it pales into complete insignificance. Yet this is not Tom Watson playing golf against Paul McGinley. This is a battle of leadership and captaincy against Tom Watson. It is not played with golf clubs.

"Ultimately, it's not really about the captains. We make the decisions but he or I could play a blinder as a captain at Gleneagles and our team still could lose. It's all about the 24 that are playing.

"You talk about the American team," McGinley went on: "I promise you this, my sole concern is with what we do. I'll observe what the Americans do but I won't be obsessed by it."

As for the deeper nuances of America's decision to ask Watson to lead their team at Gleneagles, the Irishman insists: "I honestly do not consider it to be any of my business. I'll say no more than that."

Obscured by the excitement of McGinley's appointment as Ireland's long-awaited first Ryder Cup captain is the calculated gamble the PGA of America have taken with Watson, who led the US to their last win on European soil at The Belfry in 1993.

He is more general than captain, a figure of authority at a slightly further remove from the current generation of Ryder Cup players and less likely to engage in captaincy by consensus, a feature of recent regimes.

Davis Love, though universally acknowledged as capable but unlucky at Medinah in 2012, stirred a strong reaction in US corridors of power when he revealed that his singles line-up that fated Sunday "was a reflection of what I've been telling the players. It's their team. Basically, I let them pick it".

Even assuming Watson and Tiger Woods set aside the veteran's stinging criticism three years ago of the World No 1's on-course behaviour, the most intriguing question hanging over the Ryder Cup at Gleneagles is if a team of gifted individuals will rally to or rail against their captain's authoritative call.

Watson is a great man but his appointment certainly represents much more of a gamble than that of 'rookie' skipper McGinley


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7/31/2013

McGinley and Watson Play PGA

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Paul McGinley will feature among six Irish players in the field for next week's PGA Championship at Oak Hill.

McGinley and his US Captain Tom Watson both have been invited to play the final Major of the season by the PGA of America, who also promote the Ryder Cup.

Ironically, the last time McGinley appeared in the Major Championship arena was at the 2009 Open at Turnberry, when Watson, then 59, famously went all the way to a play-off.

The Dubliner's best finish at the Majors was a share of sixth place at the 2004 PGA Championship at Whistling Straits.

Defending champion Rory McIlroy,Graeme McDowell, Darren Clarke,Shane Lowry and 2008 PGA Champion Padraig Harrington will also tee it up next week at Oak Hill, venue for the 2003 PGA and scene of Europe's 1995 Ryder Cup success. An event in which Philip Walton, now on the European Seniors Tour,  played such a decisive part.



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7/21/2013

Two Time Smurfit Champ in Major Chase

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Lee Westwood, winner of Smurfit European Open in 1999 and 2000, believes he knows what it takes to win a maiden major title after claiming the lead heading into the final round of The Open.

Westwood, who carded an eagle and three birdies in a round of one-under 70 on Saturday, is two clear of American duo Tiger Woods and Hunter Mahan.

"I know what to expect tomorrow," said Westwood, who will partner Mahan in the final group. "I know what to do. I know what it takes. It's just a case of believing you are good enough to win.

"When you analyse it, you don't want to say it, but tomorrow is just another 18 holes. I'm playing well and putting well and there's no reason why I can't carry on.

"I have had lots of chances. I could have won four (majors) with the right things going my way. They are the things you feed off. You try to learn from the things you did wrong and put them into practice.

"I'll think about winning the Open Championship tonight at some stage, I'm sure. I don't see anything wrong with that - picture yourself holding the Claret Jug and seeing your name at the top of the leaderboard.

"But when it comes time to tee-off tomorrow I should be in the same frame of mind as I was today."

Westwood also held the 54-hole lead at the Masters in 2010 and shot a closing 71, only to be overhauled by Phil Mickelson's final round of 67.

"I thought I played nicely that day at Augusta, but Phil played great," he added. "Sometimes you play well and someone plays better."

Westwood has also come close to breaking his major duck in the Open, most agonisingly in 2009 when he three-putted the 72nd hole believing he needed a birdie, only to again fall short of a play-off - between Tom Watson and Stewart Cink - by a shot.

"I had a chance at Turnberry that I messed up a bit that I can fall back on, getting out of the zone and focusing too much on what other people are doing," Westwood added.


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