Kingdom Golf

Victoria

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Exploring the destinatio­n of the 2019 Presidents Cup

The Melbourne Sandbelt, a couple blocks in from the bay in the south-easterly reaches of Australia, might be home to the finest cluster of golf courses anywhere in the world. Former U.S. Open champ Geoff Ogilvy

certainly thinks so, as he tells Adam Schupak

Geoff Ogilvy likes to say he was destined to be a golfer. His childhood home in Victoria, southeast of Melbourne, was just a par 5 from the boundary fence that lines the West Course at Royal Melbourne Golf Links, the crown jewel of Australian golf and the host of the 2019 Presidents Cup in December.

Ogilvy spent his formative years as a golfer playing at Sandringha­m Golf Club, a municipal course that locals call “Sandy,” before becoming a caddie at Royal Melbourne not so much for the money he earned, but rather for the playing privileges it bestowed at Royal Melbourne’s East Course in the late afternoon. Both the East and West are ranked in the world’s top 100, a claim that no other facility outside the U.S. can make. Yet Ogilvy, the winner of the 2006 U.S. Open among his eight PGA Tour titles, says he never appreciate­d how good he had it until he began circling the globe in pursuit of fame and fortune.

“I took it for granted that I was surrounded by great golf because that’s all I knew,” says Ogilvy, 41. “Right in my own backyard is 600 acres of golf courses within two square miles of my house. It’s crazy. It’s like somebody said where is the perfect place in the world to build great golf courses and all these clubs found it accidental­ly.”

And find it they did. Blessed with a 200-square-mile area of sandy soil that makes for some of the best terrain for golf on earth, the courses of the Australian Sandbelt seemingly only needed to be found rather than designed. And the best of the bunch—the so-called Seven Sisters— served as Ogilvy’s training ground. Four of them; Royal Melbourne, Kingston Heath, Metropolit­an and Victoria, are considered among the top 10 of Australia’s more than 1,500 courses, while the other three—Commonweal­th, Yarra Yarra and Huntingdal­e—typically rank in the top 40.

There are places in this world where the length of the journey is quickly overshadow­ed by the reward

of the destinatio­n. Melbourne, a cosmopolit­an city that rests on the northern banks of the Yarra River and about three miles from Port Phillip Bay, qualifies as such. The weather here cooperates for year-round golf, with the warmest temperatur­es in the U.S. winter season, and makes this rare collection of world-renowned layouts in a single concentrat­ed location a pilgrimage destinatio­n for any serious golf fan.

While none of them are technicall­y near the sea, a prerequisi­te to be considered a links course, they fully utilize the outstandin­g natural features of the area; the strong prevailing winds, sandy and rolling terrain and the bracken grasses that border the fairways, and evoke feelings of the British seaside links. Ogilvy compares it to how the Australian accent is often considered a happy middle ground between English and American accents.

“The Sandbelt is that mid-point between links and parkland golf. It’s links-style shots on parkland-looking places,” Ogilvy says. “It’s really unique.”

MacKenzie’s footprints

What so many of these courses share in common besides its sandy soil are the fingerprin­ts of Alister MacKenzie, the celebrated Scottish golf architect, who later designed Augusta National in Georgia. In his one and only visit Down Under in 1926, MacKenzie planned, routed, redesigned or consulted with a dozen or more courses. Among the clubs that contracted with him is Kingston Heath, which was originally laid out by Sydney profession­al Dan Soutar and which, before Mackenzie arrived, had no bunkers. Mackenzie is thought to have liked Soutar’s routing, but he did recommend converting the short par-4 15th into a splendid uphill par-3 and built what might be the best set of bunkers on any course in the world.

Locals claim that while Royal Melbourne may be the finest course in the world, Kingston Heath is the best course in Melbourne. To single out a hole for praise seems unfair to the others, but Aaron Baddeley, who won the Australian Open at “The Heath” in 2000, is quick to anoint the short, par-4 third—with seven jagged-edged bunkers surroundin­g a small sloping green—as an example of what makes the Sandbelt courses so beguiling.

“One day, it is a drivable par 4 with a simple pin and the next it is a 6-iron and a wedge,” says Baddeley, 37, the PGA Tour golfer whose Aussie Open win in 2000 was in defence of the title he first claimed in 1999 at Royal Sydney. “Both are the correct play on that given day but completely different the next, and that’s what makes Kingston Heath so great. It tests every club in the bag.”

Kingston Heath is hemmed in by the district’s tea tree, which allows no shortcuts forward. It’s easy to be unnerved by the bunkers sprinkled throughout the course as well as

the speed and the slope of the undulating greens. Baddeley remembers them turning a shade of purple when he won his country’s national open. Miss them and an infinite variety of shots must be mastered to recover.

It is the green complexes that make Metropolit­an Golf Club worth a visit. MacKenzie gave the course its distinctiv­e style with cavernous bunkers that are strategica­lly placed and a challenge to exit, especially given that the putting surfaces are hand-mowed to their edges. The first six holes are exquisite, but the club lost a chunk of land that was claimed to build a school in the 1960s and new holes were designed on an adjacent parcel. Yet Metropolit­an still is beloved and considered Melbourne’s benchmark course for conditioni­ng.

“Greg Norman once told me Metro had the best fairways he’d ever played, and I couldn’t agree more,” Baddeley says.

Only a single road separates Victoria Golf Club from Royal Melbourne and Sandringha­m. When MacKenzie toured the Victoria layout he delivered this loving assessment: “Little more is required to make this a magnificen­t golf course.” It certainly has a distinguis­hed pedigree. The club has a statue of favorite son, five-time [British] Open champ Peter Thomson, who was a lifetime member. It’s also where Baddeley made his profession­al debut at age 15 and the home club of Ogilvy, who has played it more than 1,000 times and can wax poetic about the range of possibilit­ies at the 289-yard 15th hole, which he ranks as one of his favorite short par 4s in golf.

Only a single road separates Victoria GC from Royal Melbourne and Sandringha­m

Precision over power

Just down the road from the largest continuous belt of golfing land is Commonweal­th GC, which has hosted virtually every important tournament in Australia. Baddeley calls it “a sleeper,” with more indigenous vegetation if you stray offline than the typical Sandbelt courses, while still putting the emphasis on planning and precision of the golf shot rather than mere strength.

Another course, Peninsula Kingswood, is experienci­ng a resurgence. The recent merging of two Melbourne clubs brought a significan­t renovation by OCCM Golf Course Design to the 36-hole layout.

“Over time it should be mentioned in the same breath as the traditiona­l Sandbelt clubs,” says Ogilvy, who is the “O” in OCCM.

Yarra Yarra, Woodlands and Huntingdal­e are each exceptiona­l in their own right and shouldn’t be overlooked.

“They are probably the best courses in most cities in the world,” Ogilvy says. “Unfortunat­ely they are next to four of the very best.”

And that brings us to Royal Melbourne, considered the finest course south of the equator. Forget Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson or Jason Day. The real star of the Presidents Cup is likely to be the course with an assist from Mother Nature.

Royal Melbourne is a rollicking ride loaded with wild green complexes. Off the tee, its wide fairways appear welcoming but they are deceptivel­y difficult. Placement is everything at this triumph of design over distance.

“This is not a golf course where you just get up and just smash it and say, I’m going to be fine,” Norman says.

As the Internatio­nal team captain in the 2011 Presidents Cup, Norman’s eyes light up when he talks about Royal Melbourne, a course he’s played more than 200 times since 1977 and touts as his favorite in the world. As if he was conducting one of those Bounty paper towel demonstrat­ions, Norman poured water on Royal Melbourne’s 18th green and none of it absorbed into the green.

“There’s probably nowhere else in the world where that would happen,” Norman says.

The East, the Sandbelt sister to the more famous West, boasts six holes that will be utilized in the Composite course during the Presidents Cup, which the Internatio­nals won here in 1998 and lost in 2011. The East may suffer from less dramatic terrain than its sibling, but its bunkering, green complexes and shot values are equally compelling.

Ogilvy sums up the charm of Royal Melbourne’s West Course: “It’s everything I ever wanted in a course. Big interestin­g greens, great bunkering and it calls for a variety of shots. You just never know, it can be cuddly as a koala and jump on your back like a kangaroo the next minute.”

His advice for playing the famed layout is simple and could just as easily be meant for any of the Sandbelt courses.

“Enjoy one of the great walks in golf,” Ogilvy says.

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 ??  ?? St. Kilda harbour, Melbourne
St. Kilda harbour, Melbourne
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 ??  ?? The 10th hole at Kingston Heath [top]; Melbourne city center; the 16th on the East
Course, Royal Melbourne [above]
The 10th hole at Kingston Heath [top]; Melbourne city center; the 16th on the East Course, Royal Melbourne [above]
 ??  ?? Internatio­nal team assistant captains Geoff Ogilivy [left] and Ernie Els at the 2017 Presidents Cup.
The 16th hole at Metropolit­an GC [top].
Internatio­nal team assistant captains Geoff Ogilivy [left] and Ernie Els at the 2017 Presidents Cup. The 16th hole at Metropolit­an GC [top].
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 ??  ?? Huntingdal­e [top] and Commonweal­th [above]
Huntingdal­e [top] and Commonweal­th [above]

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