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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
Waterville
After playing Tralee, my next stop was Waterville. From
Tralee, I took the southern leg of the Ring of Kerry out of Killarney for the 45-mile
drive to the course. The drive starts in the valley in Killarney and takes you up through
Maine-like forests over a twisting road with frequent hairpin turns. Periodically, through
the trees I could see the valley and the lower lake receding below and the
MacGilluycuddys Reeks looming overhead. Above the tree-line some 1000 feet up the
terrain resembled the chaparral country of our West. At the halfway point, the Ring begins
to descend to the coast over a very narrow road that runs through a series of small towns,
including Sneem, one of the most picturesque villages youll encounter in Ireland.
From there, its another half hour to Waterville on the far western end of the
Iveragh Peninsula.
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Aerial view of the Waterville
course |
The town and the golf club of Waterville lie on Ballinskelligs
Bay, a wide semi-circular bay enfolded on the north by a sizable jut of the peninsula at
the end of which is Bolus Head. At the bays southern rim is a much smaller jut where
Derrynane National park is located. To the east stretching as far as the eye can see are
the Skelligs, coastal mountains that offer a fabulously scenic backdrop. Protected by the
headlands as it is on the north and south, Waterville doesnt get the full brunt of
the seas violence. As a result, the dunes here are not as high as in, say,
Ballybunion.
The origins of golf in Waterville date back to the 1880s when hundreds of
technicians descended on the area to build cable stations for the first trans-Atlantic
cable between the U.S. and Great Britain. A crude course was laid out and used primarily
in winter when the grasses died down. By 1900, the Waterville Athletic Club was formed,
becoming one of the first affiliates of the Golfing Union Of Ireland. In 1927, the sale of
the local cable company to International Telephone & Telegraph was initiated and
Charles Lindbergh, on his inaugural trans-Atlantic solo flight, flew low over the village
and waved to the cheering crowd before going on to Paris.
For four decades following World War II, the golf club was dormant until Irish-born New
Yorker John Mulcahy had a vision in the late 80s to build a world-class links in
Waterville. He hired Irelands own Eddie Hackett and past Masters champion and pro at
Winged Foot Claude Harmon to produce a routing plan. Lying just one mile north from the
town center immediately in back of a wide, white beach and offering spectacular sea and
mountainous scenery, the layout, which incorporated the original 9 hole course on the
front side, is a par 72, 7200-yard (6600 from the middle tees) links-style course that
drew the highest accolades from the worlds best golfers.
The front side is flat veering toward the mountains at a distance to the East. The
first two opening holes are straight and narrow and not distinguished except for their
length. The dogleg right 3rd is a gem of a hole, stretching 417 yards from the back over a
tight fairway pinched on both sides by bunkers and on the right by an inlet of the bay.
The bend of the dogleg is some 50 yards in front of the green which sits smack on the
inlet and guarded left by another bunker. Against prevailing winds, this is probably the
hardest hole on the course, and a great one.
It is followed by an equally imposing 179-yarder also along the inlet to a slightly
elevated green wrapped on all sides by dunes smothered in thick
seagrasses. The brutally
long 595-yard 5th is followed by "Heavens Highway," appropriately named
because it rises from the low-lying tee box straight uphill to a green that seems perched
on a cloud. The short par 3 7th over a lake, the 435-yard dogleg left 8th and the
excellent 9th of 445 yards finish a fine front side.
But the fun really begins on Watervilles back side, beginning with the 450-yard
straight-away 10th that is slightly uphill all the way to a green with surrounding dunes.
The 506-yard 11th is one of the narrowest holes you will ever play, as the tee shot must
traverse an impossibly tight chute between tall dunes on both sides stretching hundreds of
yards along each side of the fairway. After a successful drive, players face a long second
to an elevated, sloped green. Gary Player, who never met a hole he didnt rave about,
really raved about this one.
If it has one, Watervilles signature hole is the 200-yard 12th called the
"Mass Hole." The history of the hole is that when the hole was first designed,
the green was to be located in a large hollow, but the local religionists protested
because that piece of ground was considered sacred and a place of worship. The green was
then relocated above the hollow where it now stands, defying golfers to traverse the
hollow and hit the green while avoiding the grassy dunes in the back. It is a fine hole
offering a Kodak moment.
The course's other Kodak moment is Mulcahys Peak, the highest point on the golf
course. It is the back tee box on the par-three 17th which runs along the coast high above
the beautiful beach. Mulcahys Peak looks like a miniature Tutunkamens Tomb
with a box-like shape that rises to a point where golfers can see virtually the entire
course. It seems that every player wants to experience what inspired Mulcahy himself must
have felt when he put the tee box there. Players, some toting cameras, make their
pilgrimage up to the top and gaze around before heading to the forward tee to play this
treacherous but short hole.
For all of its many virtues, Waterville Golf Links doesnt overwhelm you because
it doesnt have the towering dunes of Tralees back 9 or of Ballybunions
Cashen Course. Yet, it is a terrific layout, definitely worth visiting. And during my
visit Waterville had some of the best greens I have
ever putted on. It will certainly grow on you.
The club and town definitely grew on Payne Stewart, who came here with Tiger Woods and
other PGA Tour players before the British Open in both 1998 and '99. Stewart spoke of
establishing a home here, for it was the type of place where his outgoing nature was right
at home.
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Waterville House |
Like the other Tour players, Stewart stayed at Waterville House, a four-star
refurbished 18th century residence house that features a salmon and sea trout fishery.
When not relaxing on the course, Stewart could be found strolling the town streets with
his family or staying up to the wee hours of the morning playing his harmonica and
hoisting brews with the locals. His spontaneity and humility had a strong effect on them,
for when he died in October '99 the whole town went into mourning.
The townspeople had vigils and lit candles in his honor, and it is said that when the
bagpiper at the Houston ceremony before the '99 Tour Championship stopped playing, the
candle in the local church at Waterville went out. "There was no wind; it just went
out spontaneously," explained club manager Noel Cronin. "It signified that his
soul had move on."
Stewarts memory in Waterville certainly will not move on. He has been honored
with a life-size bronze statue next to the putting green. Cards and letters of sympathy
are on display throughout the clubhouse and include a letter to Cronin from Stacey,
Stewarts wife, thanking him and the club for their support. Stewarts statue
joins a similar creation of Mulcahy, who in all his bronze glory can be seen behind the
9th green. He is in a putting crouch finishing a stroke that looks true for time
immemorial.
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