A LEADING golf course
architect is to petition the R and A in protest over proposed changes to
the Old Course at St Andrews ahead of the 2015 Open Championship.
American Tom Doak, pictured, who said he was “horrified” to
hear about the work planned for the historic venue over the next two
winters, has written to four
golf course and greenkeeping bodies around the world asking for them to support his bid
to overturn the changes.
He
described the Old Course as “an international treasure that should be
guarded” and is disappointed that the R and A, having already played its
part in stretching the course as much as possible in terms of adding
new tees, has now turned its attention to bunkering and contours.
“I
was horrified to read of the changes proposed to the Old Course at St
Andrews,” said Doak in a letter he has sent to the presidents of the
Australian, American and European societies of golf course architects as
well as the Scottish regional administrator of the British and
International Golf Greenkeepers Association.
Doak added:
“No longer content just to add back tees for championship
play, the club (R and A) and its consulting architect, Martin Hawtree,
have planned to move bunkers, add contouring around the greens, and
soften slopes in other places prior to the next Open Championship.
"I
have felt for many years that the Old Course was sacred ground to golf
architects, as it was to Old Tom Morris and C. B. Macdonald and Harry
Colt and Alister MacKenzie before us.
“It has been untouched
architecturally since 1920, and I believe that it should remain so. I
understood this to be the feeling of many other architects who attended
the World Forum on Golf
Architecture in St Andrews, three years ago. I don’t believe it should
be impossible to change the Old Course, or any other historic course.
"But I think it should be a lot harder than it currently is, where only
the management of the club and any consulting architect they hire have
to agree.
“I think that the default position should be that such
an international treasure should be guarded, and that there should be a
high burden of proof that changes need to be made, before they can be
made.”
Doak, who designed the course at The Renaissance Club in
East Lothian as well as several other courses around the world, added:
“I propose to make a
petition to the Royal and Ancient Golf Club
expressing that, as a golf course architect, I feel that the Old Course
is sacred ground and that architectural changes should not be made to it
unless necessary for the maintenance and health of the course.”
EDITOR'S NOTE: The R and A, contrary to popular belief, does not own the Old Course. It belongs to and is administered by St Andrews Links Trust.
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