The Scotsman

Great to see Hollandbus­h saved – but is club selling itself short?

◆ Sure, Scottish courses want to offer good value to customers but low rates might be doing more harm than good

- Martin Dempster on golf

I’ve got a Dutch friend who, for pretty obvious reasons, had his attention grabbed by Hollandbus­h Golf Club being in the news recently as it was handed a reprieve by South Lanarkshir­e Council.

“Hope the club will be able to make it profitable and have a long, financiall­y-healthy future,” he wrote in a post on social media in response to a welcome decision to spare the club from closure as a new model is worked on to try to secure its long-term future.

He then added something that I have to admit has been on my mind ever since by suggesting the following: “Let them start with the rates.” Having obviously gone on to the Hollandbus­h website to check it out, he’d come across something under the visitors and outings tab that jumped out at him and perhaps he’s got a point.

It seems, after all, that the club has an incredible offer for outings, with a game from Monday to Friday along with a breakfast roll and a twocourse dinner available at just £25 and that only going up to £35 at the weekend. Really? I know I am probably treading on dangerous ground here because, in the main, the value for money enjoyed by Scottish golfers on home soil is second to none and, of course, we should be extremely grateful for that, but are some clubs selling themselves short?

Having not played it myself, I can’t offer a personal opinion about Hollandbus­h in either a playing sense or in terms of what sort of welcome you get there, but I do know someone who paid a visit to the Lesmahagow venue recently and he gave it a big thumbs up. “This is one of the best municipal courses I have ever played,” said Colin Ramsay, author of A Golfer’s Bucket List of Scottish Golf Courses. “It is right up there with Ayr Belleisle and that is no mean feat. All in all, I enjoyed my round and the warm welcome I received from Margaret [Currie] in the starter’s box and Mags [Cathcart], the club secretary.”

Based on that glowing verdict, Hollandbus­h could well be selling itself short in terms of its pricing, but, at the same time, I understand that it’s a balancing act for lots of clubs around the country when it comes to trying to attract visitors and lots aren’t on bucket lists of those travelling here from all corners of the globe.

It would be a travesty, though, if somewhere like Hollandbus­h did end up closing one day because, as Ramsay’s comments indicate, it’s definitely not what some people might think of when municipal courses come to mind and here’s hoping that its future is now bright.

“There is still lot of work ahead,” the aforementi­oned Cathcart, who lives and breathes Hollandbus­h, told me a fortnight ago after South Lanarkshir­e Council’s correct call, “but we are all saying that this could possibly be the best thing that has happened to the club.”

Here’s hoping that will also be the case at Dalmuir on the back of the incredible support it has received – Scotland star John Mcginn threw his support behind it and has subsequent­ly been joined in doing so by Ryder Cup legends Lee Westwood and Sergio Garcia – since it emerged that West Dunbartons­hire Council had targeted it for either being reduced to 18 holes or closure. A decision about it is due to be made tomorrow and, if noises being made by both the majority Labour group and Scottish National Party are to be believed, the Clydebank course is set to stay open as well.

As, incidental­ly, are the two courses – one an 18-holer and the other a nine-holer – at Caird Park in Dundee after its city council indicated it would dip into reserves to keep those layouts open, for the time being at least, meaning it’s been a positive reaction all around the country to important breeding grounds for the game being under threat.

The important thing going forward is that all these venues are not taken for granted by golfers themselves, with the number of day visitors at Dalmuir, for example, having dropped, according to figures reported by West Dunbartons­hire Council, from just under 6,000 in 2021/22 to just over 4,000 in 2022/23 while the total of annual members had gone from 264 to 218 over the same period.

In my time covering the game, I’ve witnessed the closure of a few Scottish courses, including Whitekirk in East Lothian, Lothianbur­n and Torphin Hill on the outskirts of Edinburgh and Brunston Castle in Ayrshire. Eastwood in Renfrewshi­re, too, though it emerged recently that a plan has been launched to reopen it as a 12-hole course next year.

A few others might have fallen by the wayside as well if it hadn’t been for the unexpected boom in golf at a time when it was one of the few sports permitted during the Covid pandemic, and some courses might be back in a precarious situation once those membership numbers start to level off again.

Using Hollandbus­h as an example, though, it’s up to clubs to do everything they can to try to ensure that the actual product isn’t being offered too cheap and, as my Dutch friend discovered after his attention had been attracted to a current hot topic in the sport’s cradle, that certainly seems to be the case in some instances.

I enjoyed it. This is one of the best municipal courses I have ever played Colin Ramsay

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 ?? ?? Hollandbus­h has an offer of a breakfast roll, a round of golf and a two-course dinner for £25
Hollandbus­h has an offer of a breakfast roll, a round of golf and a two-course dinner for £25
 ?? ?? Footballer John Mcginn has helped efforts to save Dalmuir
Footballer John Mcginn has helped efforts to save Dalmuir

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