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HISTORY
The
Old Course
From 22 to 18
The Old Course originally consisted of twenty-two holes, eleven
out and eleven back. On completing a hole, the player teed up his
ball within two club lengths of the previous hole, using a handful
of sand scooped out from the hole to form a tee. In 1764, the Society
of St Andrews Golfers, which later became the Royal and Ancient
Golf Club, decided that some holes were too short and combined them.
This reduced the course to eighteen holes and created what became
the standard round of golf throughout the world.
Double Greens
The track through the whin bushes on which the Old Course evolved
was so narrow that golfers played to the same holes going out and
coming in. As the game became increasingly popular in the nineteenth
century, golfers in different matches would find themselves playing
to the same hole, but from opposite directions. To relieve the congestion,
two holes were cut on each green, those for the first nine were
equipped with a white flag and those for the second nine with a
red flag.
Direction
of Play
When Old Tom Morris (pictured left on the first tee of the Old Course
in 1896) created a separate green for the first hole, it became
possible to play the course in an anti-clockwise direction, rather
than clockwise which had previously been the norm. For many years,
the course was played clockwise an anti-clockwise on alternate weeks,
but now the anti-clockwise, or right-hand circuit has become the
accepted direction. Many of the course's 112 bunkers, however, are
clearly designed to catch the wayward shots of golfers playing the
course on the left-hand circuit.
A Championship Course
The Open Championship was first played on the Old Course at St Andrews
in 1873. With the 27th staging of the world's premier golf event
taking place again on the Old Course in 2005, St Andrews has held
the event more often than anywhere else. In modern times, the Dunhill
Cup and the subsequent Dunhill Links Championship have been played
at St Andrews since 1985, while the Walker Cup, the Amateur Championship
and a host of other professional and amateur competitions for men
and women have been held over the fabled links at the Home of Golf.
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