The Irish Mail on Sunday

WELL OVER PAR IN PARIS

Minty Clinch visits the home of the next Ryder Cup – and finds the stars are in for a serious test

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We roll off the ferry for the drive east to the Hotel de Versailles, a tee shot from the Hall of Mirrors in Louis XIV’s glitzy palace on the outskirts of Paris.

Not my tee shot, nor necessaril­y yours, but close enough for the world’s longest hitters when they line up here for the Ryder Cup in September – the first time the sport’s showpiece event has been held on French soil.

Versailles will be seen in all its pomp for the biennial competitio­n, with the opening and closing ceremonies taking place in the palace and the Grand Trianon, the pink marble baroque love-nest that Louis shared with his mistresses.

The action between the European team and their rivals from the United States will take place at the Paris National course, which is just a tenminute drive from Versailles.

The two teams will face a daunting challenge. There are a seemingly endless number of lakes around the course, ready to punish any wayward shots.

For amateurs like me, the sight of so much water is enough to shred your nerves.

The course throws everything at the players – streams, marshland, impenetrab­le rough and domed greens. You may well be feeling battered and bruised as your round progresses, but there is no respite thanks to a closing stretch of holes which features narrow fairways among more great lakes. The layout should ensure a riveting competitio­n this year. After our round we headed to the on-site hotel – the rather bleak Soviet-style Novotel St Quentin – for dinner and a stiff drink.

The bedrooms are named after previous winners of the French Open, which is also played at Paris National, including Co. Antrim’s Graeme McDowell.

Ryder Cup officials will stay here during the tournament, while the players will return to the more luxurious surroundin­gs of the Waldorf Astoria Trianon Palace in Versailles. Early risers might want to take a tour of the palace, with its magnificen­tly ornate rooms and manicured formal gardens.

During our trip, we also had the chance to play at two other courses. Faux classical statues guard the Chateau de Rochefort-en-Yvelines, a grandiose 19th Century edifice overlookin­g the Golf de Rochefort course in the Chevreuse Valley. The holes wind through the former royal hunting ground, the fairways shaded by ancient oaks and sweet chestnuts.

The second course, Golf Parc Robert Hersant, was formerly the private domain of the press magnate whose portfolio included Le Figaro and France Soir. In autumn, Hersant’s personal arboretum – sequoia, Douglas fir and ginkgo – burns scarlet and gold. It’s a little slice of New England in remotest Normandy.

For more informatio­n, see visitparis­region.com and en.normandie-tourisme.fr.

 ??  ?? RORY’S ROAR: Rory McIlroy at the last Ryder Cup. Above: The Paris National course, where this year’s event will take place
RORY’S ROAR: Rory McIlroy at the last Ryder Cup. Above: The Paris National course, where this year’s event will take place

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