Return
to Ireland Intro
Royal
Co. Down, Royal Portrush | Portmarnock
| Royal Dublin | Druids
Glen
The K Club | Rosses
Point, Enniscrone, Carne | Connemara
| Ballybunion
Lahinch | Galway
Bay G&CC | Dooks,
Dingle | Ring
of Kerry | Waterville
Tralee | Killarney
| Old Head | Fota
Island | Mt.
Juliet | Adare Manor
& GC
Tralee
From my base at the upscale Aghadoe Heights Hotel
overlooking the lower lake in Killarney, I next paid calls to two links-style courses
directly on the Atlantic and the Killarney Golf & Fishing Club located only minutes
from my hotel smack on the lake. The hotel is a modern glass and steel structure that was
finished in the summer of 2000. It features a modest number of rooms, excellent cuisine
and a health and fitness area with indoor pool, saunas and a weight room.
I was particularly looking forward to playing
Tralee. I
had heard much about it and Tralee was Arnold Palmers first architectural venture in
the British Isles. I also was intrigued that it has some unusual ruins on the course. The
drive from the hotel was a bit over an hour only because next to Dublin the town of Tralee
was easily the busiest I had encountered in Ireland. The course is not directly in the
town but out on Barrow Point, some 8 miles west of Tralee.
Palmers design is the fourth incarnation of Tralee Golf Club,
which was founded in 1896. The three ancestral layouts were in the town proper. As the
story in the courses Strokesaver explains, Tralee was plagued by heavy rainfall,
making the courses unplayable in winter. Though it is close to
Tralee, Barrow has a remote
feel to it, and the sandy porous soil allowed Palmer the chance to build a links-style
course that could be enjoyed year round.
Barrow Point, the strip of land in Barrow on which the course was laid
out, is a mixed geographical bag. It has some very high dunes, wide white beaches, inlets
and some of the most eye-popping scenery of mountains and ocean you will see in all of
Ireland. Scenes from the Oscar-winning Ryans Daughter were shot on the beach
alongside the 2nd hole.
At the same time, portions of the site are more suitable for sheep
grazing than golf and the result is the course has an uneven character. When Palmer said
in 1980 at the time the course was built, "I have never come across a piece of land
so ideally suited for the building of a golf course", Im sure he was prompted
by public relations considerations.
To be sure, a couple of holes on the back 9 are marvelous with their
elevation changes and riveting views of the dunes, but the front side is spectacularly
undistinguished, despite the presence of a Norman tower in back of the 3rd green and a
view of a castle ruins across an ocean inlet. Palmer hit the bulls eye when he also
said, "I designed the first nine, but surely God designed the back nine." If the
entire site had the back 9 features, Palmer would have had a course of distinction. As it
is, Tralee gets a qualified endorsement.
With four sets of tees stretching from 5550 to 7187 yards, Tralee plays
to a par of 72. After a very long and straight par 4 opener, players encounter the
beach-hugging dogleg right 2nd of 594 yards to a green right beside where Robert Mitchum
makes his score on the beach with Sarah Miles. If Cecil B. DeMille ever had designed a
golf hole, this is it. Majestic and sweeping, views from this hole seem to take in the
entire southwest coast and the coastal mountains. On the left perimeter of the fairway at
the landing area is a 3-foot stone wall and all along the right from the tee box out for
several hundred yards is gnarly seagrass on terrain that pitches and rolls on waves of
sand. A successful tee shot leaves a long second that must thread a narrow passageway
toward the green. A routine pitch for a third is the reward of the accurate player.
The regular 3rd hole of 194 yards (in May 2000, the hole was closed and
we played a temporary hole) hugs the same beach and from what I could tell a splendid
hole. The rest of the 9 lacked character and had an artificial feel, though I dont
fault Palmer because this part of the course didnt offer great creative
opportunities.
The downhill 452-yard slight dogleg left 10th starts a string of holes
marking the best part of the course. On the 533-yard 11th a precise drive to the base of a
sharp rise leaves a blind second that must avoid a low stone wall that juts diagonally in
toward the fairway from the right. Here you are at the crest of the hill where you have a
short pitch to subtly slopping green. It is here also where the full range of views are
apparent. To the left is Dingle Peninsula and the towering peak of Mt. Brandon.
 |
Tralee's signature 12th
hole |
The hardest hole is the signature 457-yard 12th that goes back
the other way. The tee shot is downhill to a narrow landing area flanked by bracken on
both sides. A steep fall-away swallows shots too far left. Next to the tee shot, the long
second over a valley to an elevated plateaued green with a nasty back to front slope is
the hardest shot on the course. If there is a signature hole, it is the 161-yard 13th from
an elevated tee to a wide but very narrow plateaued green backed by a steep hill with
thick bracken. The tee shot must carry Brocks Hollow, a steep hollow whose floor
must be four stories below the green.
One of the best short par 4s anywhere is the dogleg left 363-yard
14th, requiring an iron or 4-wood off the tee to a left bending level fairway. From there,
a short iron must thread a narrow chute through dunes to the elevated green surrounded by
heather and bracken and more dunes. It is a terrific hole.
Tralee is a clear favorite of Stateside golfers who swarmed the place
on the day of my visit. In fact, I scarcely saw any other nationalities. The greens at
first glance appear benign but the slopes are subtle and severe in spots. It is not a
super difficult course and on many holes it is possible to spray the ball and still score
well. Some holes are punitive but the tonic for a high number is the scenery.
Return
to Ireland Intro
Royal
Co. Down, Royal Portrush | Portmarnock
| Royal Dublin
| Druids Glen
The K Club | Rosses
Point, Enniscrone, Carne | Connemara
| Ballybunion
Lahinch | Galway
Bay G&CC | Dooks,
Dingle | Ring
of Kerry | Waterville
Tralee | Killarney
| Old Head | Fota
Island | Mt.
Juliet | Adare
Manor & GC