2019 Open Championship for Royal Portrush
NEWS RELEASE FROM THE R and A
The R and A announced today that The 148TH Open
will be played at Royal Portrush in 2019, marking a historic return to
Northern Ireland for golf’s oldest and most international Championship
after nearly 70 years.
The Open, which was played at
Royal Portrush in 1951, when Max Faulkner lifted the famous
Claret Jug, is expected to be the biggest sporting event ever held in
Northern Ireland, generating more than £70 million in terms of economic
impact and destination marketing benefit.
Northern Ireland will be at the
centre of the global sporting spotlight from 18-21 July 2019 as The Open
is staged outside of Scotland and England for only the second time in
the Championship’s more than 150-year history with sports fans from
throughout Ireland and around the world expected to descend upon the
town of Portrush on Northern Ireland's northern coastline, about one hour's drive from Belfast..
Acting First Minister the Rt.
Hon. Arlene Foster MLA and deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness MLA
joined Darren Clarke, Champion Golfer of the Year at Royal St George’s
in 2011 and a member at Royal Portrush, Sir Richard McLaughlin, Captain
of Royal Portrush Golf Club, Peter Unsworth, Chairman of The R and A’s
Championship Committee, and Martin Slumbers, Chief Executive of The
R and A, in making the announcement at Royal Portrush today.
Peter Unsworth, the Chairman of
The R and A’s Championship Committee, said, “We are very much looking
forward to bringing The Open to Royal Portrush in 2019 and believe it
will be a tremendous venue for the Championship. We know there is great
anticipation throughout Ireland at the prospect of welcoming the world’s
top golfers and it promises to be a hugely memorable week.
"We are
delighted with the progress being made on the course preparations and
they will undoubtedly enhance the challenge presented by these historic
links.”
Acting First Minister Arlene
Foster said, “I welcome today’s announcement that The Open Championship
is to be held at Royal Portrush in 2019 and twice again in the future.
Securing The Open Championship at Royal Portrush is a magnificent
achievement. It is a key part of Tourism NI’s events strategy and is
crucial to consolidating our efforts to grow visitor numbers and visitor
spend.”
The Deputy First Minister Martin
McGuinness, said, "The potential economic return of £70 million makes
The Open coming to Portrush in 2019 a success story not just for golf
and golfing fans but our entire economy. I commend The R and A for their
confidence and commitment to Portrush. For our part we stand ready to
help ensure the necessary infrastructure is in place and ensure the
focus remains on the golf course. I have no doubt the 2019 Open at Royal
Portush which will be broadcast to half a billion people worldwide will
be a stunning sporting success.”
Darren Clarke, said, “This is
going to be absolutely huge for Northern Ireland and, indeed, Ireland as
a whole. To have the world’s biggest and best golf Championship played
at such a fantastic venue as Royal Portrush, with all the passion that
the Irish fans will bring to the event, is going to be amazing.”
Rory McIlroy, who lifted the
Claret Jug at Royal Liverpool in 2014, added, “Royal Portrush is one of
my favourite golf courses in the world. I think it will be a fantastic
Open venue. They are going to add a couple of new holes to the golf
course and I think that will be a great addition and will make the
course even stronger. I’m really looking forward to it.”
Course preparations and the work
to create the two new holes on the renowned Dunluce Links are well
underway.
The new 7th and 8th holes will utilise land from the adjacent
Valley Course to develop a new par 5 hole, playing down into the valley
encompassing that course’s 6th hole, and then a par four, playing back
over its 5th hole into some beautiful duneland. Both holes will have an
immediate air of maturity using some of the most stunning land at Royal
Portrush. The new holes will replace the current 17th and 18th holes on
the Dunluce Links, freeing up that land to be used to accommodate the
Spectator Village and Championship infrastructure.
Earlier this year the proposals
were approved by the Royal Portrush membership and the work is being
overseen by Martin Ebert of Mackenzie & Ebert the Club's golf course
architects. As well as creating two new holes, a series of other
changes are being made to the course to enhance the challenge that will
face the world’s top golfers while remaining true to the ethos of Harry
Colt’s original design.
The most significant changes
will be to move the 2nd green to lengthen the par five hole by around 40
yards and on the current 10th hole, which will be the 12th at The Open,
to alter the line of the hole and extend it by 50 yards. Elsewhere, the
existing 8th green (the 10th at The Open), which was not designed by
Colt, will be reshaped and several new back tees will be created.
The overall length of the course
will increase by just under 200 yards to 7,337 yards and the number of
bunkers will be increased by three to 62 in total, still leaving Royal
Portrush with the fewest bunkers of any of the courses which host The
Open.
The work on the Dunluce Links is
due to be complete by the middle of 2016 with the two new holes being
given time to grow-in ahead of the following season.
For more information visit TheOpen.com.
Labels: OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP
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