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Courses and Travel
The course that has become a Prince among layouts

published: Jun 7, 2018

|

updated: Jul 11, 2023

The course that has become a Prince among layouts

Steve CarrollLink

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The redesigned Himalayas course at Prince’s has been labelled a triumph. Steve Carroll talked to the people who made it happen

Prince's Golf Club

Table of Contents

Jump to:

  • ‘anyone with pedigree has played at wentworth, from nicklaus to tiger – and now me’
  • why going west has paid dividends for saunton
  • the course that’s living on borrowed time

It was 7.01am when the first competitive shot was hit, a drive struck in a squall.

The gusts were hitting 45 miles-per-hour, flagsticks clung grimly to the holes, the rain menaced and the ball threatened to come backwards.

Yet there was a queue on the tee. And all the men were still going off the whites.

I suppose when you’ve waited so long to play Prince’s new Himalayas course, not even Mother Nature was going to stop the members in their tracks.

They’ve watched with curious eyes as architect Martin Ebert took their favourite nine and almost redrew it entirely over the better part of a year.

The Shore and the Dunes are the loops that always brought the Sandwich club acclaim, but it was the Himalayas that was closest to the hearts of those who played at Prince’s most frequently.

It takes courage to meddle with emotions, and history, with the course having stood as a monument to 1950s design principles.

But the McGuirk family, who have owned the club for two generations, pushed forward.

Not that they are saying this is a redesign, rather a re-imagination. Well, someone clearly had some big dreams.

If you are going to show ambition, then hiring the team that turned Turnberry’s 9th into one of the world’s most spectacular par 3s, or could envisage the two new holes at Royal Portrush that will stun spectators at next year’s Open, was a masterstroke.

“You have to describe Prince’s as perfect links terrain,” said Ebert of his first impressions of the stretch of turf that has been the club’s home for more than a century.

It’s land that has withstood not only the most severe examinations by the weather but the bombs and barbed wire of two world wars.

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Prince's Golf Club

“It’s beautiful sandy soil, with fantastic links undulations produced by the natural wind. A great tract of land, and plenty of room for it characterised by these parallel ridges to the ocean.”

Even if the members didn’t feel the same way, the Himalayas was the awkward child of the trio of layouts.

If visitors didn’t ignore it, it was reluctantly embraced. As far as the McGuirk family were concerned, it didn’t hit the championship standard of its other siblings.

You couldn’t argue that now.

“When we first talked to Martin about it, we’d had a number of the top 100 people come down and they said ‘it’s a really strong 27 holes but you haven’t got any signature holes’,” explained general manager Rob McGuirk.

“It was ‘every par 4 is a similar length, there’s no risk and reward and you don’t have any holes facing the sea’.

“When Martin came, we said ‘these are the observations we have had over the last 10 years’ can we integrate these things into the Himalayas? He filled the brief.”

As is his firm’s wont, Ebert delved into the archives with staff architect Mike Howard, unearthing old photos and scattered aerial shots – any scrap that could give them a hint of how the course developed.

But a simple restoration, however, was not in their minds. Only the first hole remains the same as the original design.

Feature continues on next page…

‘There was the opportunity to get tees up onto higher ground, up onto these ridges – to create different angles for the tee shots and also to give beautiful views of the sea,” added Ebert.

“There was a really big decision for Rob and his father to make – from two options. One was to keep the holes exactly as they were and the other was to introduce a par 3 at the far end of the course.”

Prince's Golf Club

That hole, the 5th, is the one that’s rightly attracting all the attention.

Ebert took a relatively flat expense of land and transformed it into an eye-catching par 3 – replete with wetlands and the view of the water the McGuirk’s craved.

“One of the big characteristics was to try and get this green to blend in with the others on the course. That was a real challenge,” said Ebert.

“The green was probably raised up by about a metre and a half from the lowest point and the tees were three or four metres.

“We really wanted to get that view of the ocean as a backdrop and give the golfers a special experience – standing on that tee and feeling as though they’ve got that bit of elevation.

“It’s a huge area for a relatively short par 3. Rob’s brief was to make a shorter hole, not go with a 180 or 200-yard hole. That was an interesting debate.

“The Postage Stamp was mentioned but what people don’t realise is that the Postage Stamp is only open during the summer.

“We really needed to produce a green big enough for all the golf that is played on a busy course.

‘What we ended up doing was creating a larger green but one with so many different flag positions on it, and if you miss in the bunker on the left or down the bank you will be in trouble.

“Because of the size of the green, if you don’t hit the right part then three putts are probably more likely than two.

“It’s a special hole ready for us to go out and enjoy.”

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Installing the 5th meant losing the 2nd as it was. So Ebert got creative, combining the second tee with the old third green and producing a 600-yard plus par 5 that sweeps around the wetlands to a large and gently sloping putting surface.

Prince's Golf Club

Of all the work that took place, this was the design that stood out most to McGuirk.

“Five was always going to be good, because it’s brand new,” he explained. “We said ‘you can do whatever you want here. We just want it to be special’. Someone like Martin is always going to make it really good.

“But with two, we couldn’t really see it throughout any of the growing in and were saying ‘are we really sure about this?’

“There were 200 trees down behind the green, which we took down, and then it started to take shape.

“Even three weeks before opening, we had no grass down on that middle bit of fairway and we overseeded with rye just to get it going.

“That hole played brilliantly downwind. I think into the wind it might be slightly different.”

Prince's Golf Club

McGuirk drew on some of the classic American courses – Streamsong, Whistling Straits and National Links of America – which all feature wetlands that frame the holes when outlining his intentions to Ebert.

But even he admitted he was a little surprised by the hugely positive reaction from visitors and members alike when the altered course finally came into play.

“It was better than I thought it would be. When you walk it, you don’t see it. To play it and see where the ball is landing, it visually stood out to me – particularly the second hole round the corner.

“I haven’t had one complaint from the members through the whole process. They’ve liked going down there because they have seen the changes.”

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Now they are seeing more, with Ebert already at work on aspects of the Shore and Dunes course and developing a new masterplan to integrate those more with the Himalayas.

Prince’s finest hour came in 1932, when Gene Sarazen won the Open there.

In the middle of a golden triangle of courses, with Royal St George’s and Royal Cinque Ports close neighbours, they’ll be hoping those old glories are about to become more than mere memories.

The re-imagined Himalayas is the perfect start.

So what’s changed? Find out on the next page…


Prince’s Himalayas – the major changes

1st – The wide fairway has been re-introduced but a very small central pot bunker was put in to give players something to think about off the tee.

2nd – The old hole is replaced by using the second tee and the third green to create a slight dogleg par 5. A sand area was restored.

3rd – What was the old fourth has been extended with new back tees, bunkers down the left and an extended wetland on the right. It shares a double green with the eighth.

5th – An entirely new hole – a short par 3 with a view of the ocean, a large contoured green with run off areas and extensive wetlands in front.

6th – The green was extended up to the left and the hole was re-bunkered.

8th – Now a much shorter hole, it poses a question for the longer hitter who needs to decide whether to try and blast at the green or play it as a two-shotter. Those who misjudge the drive can find water, bunkers or a large run off area. The wetlands have been brought in towards the fairway.

9th – The old Himalayas bunkers are reinstated, if not in play, and the old Sarazen bunker close to the green remains a feature of a great finishing hole that’s a challenge into the wind.

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Wentworth

‘Anyone with pedigree has played at Wentworth, from Nicklaus to Tiger – and now me’

Read full article - ‘Anyone with pedigree has played at Wentworth, from Nicklaus to Tiger – and now me’

Why going West has paid dividends for Saunton

Read full article - Why going West has paid dividends for Saunton
The course that's living on borrowed time

The course that’s living on borrowed time

Read full article - The course that’s living on borrowed time

 

About the author

Steve Carroll
Steve Carroll

A journalist for more than 25 years, Steve has been immersed in club golf for almost as long.

A former club captain, he has passed the Level 3 Rules of Golf exam with distinction having attended the R&A’s prestigious Tournament Administrators and Referees Seminar.

Steve has officiated at a host of high-profile tournaments, including Open Regional Qualifying, PGA Fourball Championship, English Men’s Senior Amateur, and the North of England Amateur Championship. In 2023, he made his international debut as part of the team that refereed England vs Switzerland U16 girls.

A part of NCG’s Top 100s panel, Steve has a particular love of links golf and is frantically trying to restore his single-figure handicap. He’d like to tell you he floats around 10. The reality is more like 13.

Steve plays at Sandburn Hall, in York, and is a country member at Close House in Newcastle. He has served on various club committees during his time in the game, and is the current Rules Secretary at Sandburn.

Having studied history at Newcastle University, he became a journalist having passed his NCTJ exams at Darlington College of Technology. He began his career working on weekly papers in Newcastle, before joining the York Press in 2001. After five years as a news reporter, he joined the sports desk – specialising in horse racing and snooker – and was Digital Sports Editor when he joined National Club Golfer in 2016.

What’s in Steve’s bag: TaylorMade Stealth 2 driver, 3-wood, and hybrids; Caley 01T irons 4-PW; TaylorMade Hi-Toe wedges, Odyssey 2Ball Microhinge putter.

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