The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Golfing fans entertaine­d by epic adventure film

Town’s theatre screened The Longest Hole about player’s charity effort to complete 20,000-shot journey

- JIM MILLAR jimillar@thecourier.co.uk

Carnoustie may well have seen some strokes of genius during the Open tournament, but the course pales in comparison to the 82 day, 1,250 mile hole played across Mongolia earlier this year by a young golfer.

The epic event, dubbed by some as “undoubtedl­y the greatest golf adventure of all time”, has been turned into a 90 minute film called The Longest Hole: Golfing Across Mongolia, and was being shown throughout the week in Carnoustie’s Dibble Tree Theatre.

Adam Rolston, 28, a former rugby player from Northern Ireland, played across deserts, glaciers and treacherou­s rocky ground to complete the journey in just over 20,000 shots, having teed off high in the Altain mountains, and ended at the 18th hole of the Mount Bogd golf club in Ulaanbaata­r.

Rolston, accompanie­d by his friend and caddy Ron Rutland, took to one of the most rugged parts of the world with the aim of promoting the game – and setting a world record.

The pair were joined half-way through the journey by a stray dog which they named UB, after their destinatio­n of Ulaanbaata­r, who accompanie­d them on the rest of the journey, an outstandin­g canine feat in itself.

The pair played the hole completely within the spirit and laws of the game of golf, and tracked every shot and kept score using a purpose-built app.

Instead of the tens of thousands of fans lining the course at Carnoustie to catch a glimpse of the world’s best, Rolston and Rutland worked in splendid isloation.

Their target of covering around 25 kilometres per day proved ambitious in the first week, when they were slowed down by inclement weather, with later days averaging just 10 kilometres.

The lack of modern roads was another challenge as the pair carried all their food and equipment on a specially constructe­d cart which was pulled along the journey by Ron.

Apart from the spirit of adventure that set the pair on their journey, there was also a charitable element, with money raised going to Lauraeus Sport for Good, which uses the power of sport to end violence, discrimina­tion and disadvanta­ge by supporting over 100 projects across 40 countries, and the South African Golf Developmen­t board which has a focus on golf developmen­t.

The project was sanctioned by the European Tour and Guinness World Records even created a new category for the endeavour for the longest golf hole ever played.

There were several showings of the film each day at the Carnoustie theatre.

 ??  ?? Adam Rolston and Ron Rutland during an epic pan Mongolian golf journey which put them in the Guinness book of records.
Adam Rolston and Ron Rutland during an epic pan Mongolian golf journey which put them in the Guinness book of records.

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