The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Open will return to Troon in 2023

R&A deals major blow to Muirfield and Turnberry

- STEVE SCOTT stscott@thecourier.co.uk

The Open Championsh­ip will return to Royal Troon in 2023 after only a sevenyear gap – placing doubt on a return of golf’s oldest major to distinguis­hed venues like Muirfield and specifical­ly Donald Trump’s Turnberry.

The Ayrshire coast course last hosted the championsh­ip as recently as 2016, when Henrik Stenson won an epic duel with Phil Mickelson.

The 2023 event will be the venue’s 10th Open, Arthur Havers besting Walter Hagen by a shot in the first in 1923. Past champions at Troon include Arnold Palmer, Bobby Locke, Tom Weiskopf and Tom Watson.

With this year’s championsh­ip at Royal St George’s Golf Club in Kent, the 150th Open set for the Old Course at St Andrews in 2021 and Royal Liverpool at Hoylake already confirmed for 2022, venues are now set for the next four years.

The 2024 venue will likely be outwith Scotland given that St Andrews is expected to return to its usual rotation of hosting the championsh­ip every five years in 2025, and the R&A chief executive Martin Slumbers has stated the policy not to be in Scotland two years in a row or more.

That rules out Turnberry – owned since 2014 by the current US president – which last hosted in 2009, and Muirfield, which held the 2013 championsh­ip, until 2026 at the earliest.

Slumbers, confirming the 2023 venue in his office at the R&A clubhouse yesterday, reiterated that both Muirfield and Turnberry remain in the “pool” of 10 championsh­ip venues but that there was no hard and fast rota.

“These are 10 of the best links courses that we have,” he said.

“The hundredth anniversar­y of the Open at Royal Troon in 2023 is an important piece and we do like to try and celebrate those things.

“The Open is growing, the size of crowds is growing. We’re heading into Royal St George’s in just five months now, the previous record of crowd attendance there was 183,000 and we are going to be north of 200,000 in sales.

“We’re fully sold out from the Saturday. Friday and Thursday are getting pretty full, as well.

“We are looking where we can get larger crowds. I am very, very conscious that this is the only (men’s major) this side of the pond.

“Ithinkit’sarguablyt­hemostimpo­rtant of the majors, it’s the first major and the one that sort of underpins the history of our game.

“We have this desire for the Open to be one of the world’s greatest sporting events and I have said a number of times that I think that a big-time sport needs a big-time crowd.”

That does tend to suggest that Muirfield

“I think The Open is arguably the most important of the majors. It’s the first major and the one that sort of underpins the history of our game. MARTIN SLUMBERS, R&A CHIEF EXECUTIVE

(at 142,000 the lowest attended Open of the 2010s) and Turnberry (which accommodat­ed just 130,000 in 2009) are out for now, if not for good.

Pressure of rising prize money to keep pace with the other majors and the R&A’s stated target of doubling the money it pumps back into the game in championsh­ip profits, meant that they would concentrat­e on venues which attracted 200,000 plus crowds, he said.

Slumbers said: “2017 was a record for that venue, 2018 was a record, 2019 was very special and came in as the No 2 (in historic attendance) and we will beat the Royal St George’s record.

“I think as you start to build out the scale of the Open and position it, infrastruc­ture becomes really important.

“We need to have much more detailed conversati­ons with the Scottish Government about infrastruc­ture for Turnberry because it’s difficult to get people there.

“There were only 130,000 there last time and it is one single carriagewa­y road to get everyone and everything down there.”

He said the R&A was now satisfied with inclusive policies at the Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers at Muirfield and at Royal Troon, which now both have a number of women members.

The Open crowds are likely to rise with the end of the historic “pay at the gate” policy and every championsh­ip from now on being all-ticket.

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