The Chronicle

THE LINKS EFFECT

TEES UP FOR SOME TOP GOLF ON ANTRIM AND DONEGAL’S BEST COURSES

- NIC BROOK

EVERY so often, golfing pals will suggest a trip to indulge our mania and play new fairways. Generally it doesn’t really matter how good the courses are that we visit, the craic is the thing. Occasional­ly though the tracks prove top quality, adding to the appeal of the jaunt.

So when I saw that Antrim and Donegal were mentioned in an email, I simply replied, “I’m in!”

There is something special about golf in these two counties. They sprawl across the north and northwest of Ireland with Co Antrim in Northern Ireland, while Co Donegal lies across the border in the Irish Republic. In golf though there is just one governing body for all Ireland, the Irish Golf Union, no political divide, just a love of the game.

These two counties also have a combined coastline of more than 800 miles. Bear in mind that a seaside links golf course is my idea of heaven, while more than 10% of the world’s 247 ‘pure’ links are in Co Donegal alone, and you’ll understand why I’m a fan.

So it was then, that one autumn evening found me checking in with pals to the Bushmills Inn Hotel, a few miles along the Causeway Coast from Royal Portrush, the only club outside England and Scotland ever to have hosted The Open. The old coaching inn is charming.

There’s an initial guilt that partners aren’t on the trip, as the Bushmills Inn has fine dining, plus a snug bar with an open fire, but there’s an early start the next morning, with check-out while it is still dark. Royal Portrush beckons and demands respect.

The Dunluce Links at Portrush is the toughest links I’ve ever played. I’ve been fortunate enough to have

played many championsh­ip courses, yet Portrush never fails to beat me up.

The Harry Colt-designed layout is a delight, meandering on the gentle slope among dunes that give way to the cliffs above the Whiterocks Beach. Every hole is thrilling, and there are spectacula­r vistas.

It’s fair and a spectacula­r roller coaster, so no surprise that it has hosted two Open Championsh­ips (most recently in 2019 when Shane Lowry won the Claret Jug) and will do so again, with the 153rd Open due here next year.

The members are warm and friendly, despite the rather austere looking clubhouse. You’re on the Atlantic coast, so the building needs to be solid.

We head to Donegal and golf at Rosapenna, 70 miles to the west. The beautiful Rosapenna Hotel and the three golf courses at the resort are a major source of employment in the area. Owners, the Casey family, are vital to the wellbeing of the

area and their entreprene­urship has reaped reward.

I first played here in 1987. Businessma­n Frank Casey Snr had bought the hotel some years before and had set about revitalisi­ng the run-down complex. Back then there was just one course – the Old Links – which had been designed by St Andrews’ Tom Morris in 1891, but by 2003 that layout had been refreshed, and a second course, Sandy Hills, added to the links beside Sheephaven Bay.

Two other courses on the bay never quite had the same investment, and in 2008 they were added to the Casey portfolio. American golf course architect Tom Doak transforme­d the two courses into a single layout, the St Patrick’s Links, which opened in 2021.

St Patrick’s is an absolute treat, and quite easily the best ‘new’ course I’ve ever seen. It was blowing a gale when we were there, but the wide fairways and big undulating greens made for a joyous game. It’s seaside golf on steroids.

Day Two’s hurricane winds heralded a deluge on our final day. A shame, as we’d driven 60 miles north to the Inishowen peninsula to reach Ballyliffi­n and its two links courses – the most northerly in Ireland, staying at the comfortabl­e (and very reasonable) Ballyliffi­n Hotel. The Old and the Glashedy Links occupy a vast sprawl of rippled landscape beside the curve of Pollan Strand, just 30 miles south of Malin Head.

If there’s any weather, you certainly feel it here. We played the Old, in spite of the torrential rain, and it is a real beauty. It’s a tough course, demanding gritty, head-down concentrat­ion over the seemingly neverendin­g, dour, closing holes.

If ever there’s a place to quickly recover from a game of golf in tough conditions, then it is at Ballyliffi­n. It has the most welcoming clubhouse and the friendlies­t members in the world. They also serve a seafood chowder and fine pint of Guinness.

In June, Ballyliffi­n hosts The Amateur Championsh­ip and I hope to get along as a spectator. Until then, I’ll savour a pint of the black stuff in our local Irish bar, recalling the fabulous greens of Antrim and Donegal, hoping that pals suggest a next pilgrimage to St Patrick’s finest fairways... sooner rather than later. Fore!

1964:

Twelve members of the Great Train Robbery gang were sentenced to a total of 307 years in jail.

2007:

The Bank of England was forced to publish an open letter to the Chancellor for the first time after a shock surge in inflation to above 3%.

2010:

Travel chaos spread across Europe as planes were grounded in the United Kingdom, Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia as a result of an ash cloud from Iceland.

ON THIS DAY LAST YEAR:

Bristol-based Brit and Emmy-nominated composer Sarah Class was personally commission­ed by the King to write music for his coronation, it was revealed.

BIRTHDAYS:

Joan Bakewell, TV presenter, 91; Ellen Barkin, actress, 70; Nick Berry, actor, 61; Jimmy Osmond, singer, 61; Martin Lawrence, actor, 59; Max Beesley, actor, 53; Nick Pickard, actor, 49; Claire Foy, actress, 40.

 ?? ?? Seaside golf on steroids! Main image, the 16th hole at St Patrick’s Links course at Rosapenna, Co Donegal and, inset, the stunning coastal view from Royal Portrush, in Co Antrim
Seaside golf on steroids! Main image, the 16th hole at St Patrick’s Links course at Rosapenna, Co Donegal and, inset, the stunning coastal view from Royal Portrush, in Co Antrim
 ?? ?? Fairway to heaven: Nic Brook at Royal Portrush Golf Club
Fairway to heaven: Nic Brook at Royal Portrush Golf Club
 ?? ?? Charlie Chaplin
Charlie Chaplin

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