Ireland
has recently been honoured with
the ultimate golfing accolade in being awarded
the staging of the 2006 Ryder Cup. This
will be played at the majestic K Club,
in County Kildare. The majority of Irish
Golf Clubs organise Open Competitions,
where members of other clubs compete with
local members. These open competitions
represent great value for money, as typically
reduced green fees are available, plus the
incentive of playing for prizes.
Ryder
Cup Tickets
Applications
for tickets for the 2006 Ryder Cup matches are no
longer being accepted.
The Ryder Cup will be played at the K Club,
Straffan, Co. Kildare in the East Coast and
Midlands Region in September 2006. Surprisingly,
this will be the first time Ireland has hosted
this bi-annual transatlantic duel.
Ireland, through the selection of the great
Fred Daly, has been part of the Ryder Cup since
1947 when it was played at the Portland Gold Club,
Oregon. 16 Irish professionals have been selected
for Ryder Cup teams since then, Harry Bradshaw,
Christy O' Connor Snr, Norman Drew, Hugh Boyle,
Jimmy Martin, Eddie Polland, Eamonn Darcy, John
O' Leary, Des Smyth, Christy O' Connor Jnr,
Ronan Rafferty, David Feherty, Philip Walton,
Darren Clarke, Paul McGinley and Padraig
Harrington. Christy O' Connor Snr. has the
distinction of playing on 10 consecutive teams
covering a time span from 1955 to 1973.
In the period of 1927 to 1977, the Britain and
Ireland team suffered defeat on 18 occasions, was
victorious on 3 occasions, with a drawn match in
1969. In the 1979 Continental European Tour,
players were included for the first time in what
had by now become a European team selection.
This produced a series of encounters in which
the balance of golfing superiority has been finely
drawn. The European team turned tables and won at
the Belfry, near Birmingham, in 1985. This was
followed by a first time ever win in the US at
Muirfield Village, Ohio, in 1987. Honours were
evenly split at the Belfry in 1989. The United
States won the "War on the Shore" on the ocean
course, Kiawah Island, South Carolina in 1991, and
again in the Belfry in 1993, 1995 saw the
Europeans once again dominant following a
transatlantic raid at Oak Hill, Rochester, New
York. In 1997, the Ryder Cup took place for the
first time at a European venue outside Britain in
Valderrama, Spain. Once again victory was
registered by the European Team. In 1999 the
pendulum swung in America's favour at the
tempestuous and now well-documented excursion at
Brookline, Massachusetts.
With European team selections it was inevitable
that its European staging would reflect the wider
reaches of European golf interest. In 2006 the
event will arrive to Ireland's East Coast region
when it is played at the K Club, County Kildare.
It is perhaps a fitting tribute to past and
present Irish players who have contributed to a
Ryder Cup history extending over 50 years.
Designed by the Arnold Palmer team, the K Club
in Co. Kildare has hosted the European open each
year since 1995. Opened in 1991, the K Club was
quickly established as one of Europe's finest
tournament parklands. Running to 7159 yards, all
but one of the par fours are in excess of 400
yards and the feature par 5, the 7th over 600
yards!
The only similarity between the front nine and
the back is that on both, water comes into play on
seven holes. The front nine tends top be more
inviting in that there is a string of double-digit
index holes from 2 to 5. This generosity however
is aggressively counter balanced by the indices
five, three and one tests from 14 to 16. 14 an up
hill haul of 416 yards from the blues to a plateau
green, 15, offers the golfer's favourite, the
downhill drive which then presents a water
threaten pitch to the green 16, another knee
wobbler, trees and water everywhere. This is the
index one, and amazingly is the shortest par four
on the course.
In 2006 the routing of the course will be
altered to facilitate spectator viewing and access
to the various matches being played. In the new
routing arrangement, the back eight and the 9th
(from the old front nine) will be played first,
followed by the first eight (of the old front
nine) finishing with the original 18th. With the
threat of disaster hanging on all sides of the
finishing four holes, the promise of steel nerved
duels to bring out the very best in match play
performance is certain to add to supporter's
frenzied delight and passion which has always been
part of this magnificent event.
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