Club information | |
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Coordinates | 55°12′00″N 6°38′06″W / 55.200°N 6.635°WCoordinates: 55°12′00″N 6°38′06″W / 55.200°N 6.635°W |
Location |
Portrush, County Antrim, Northern Ireland, U.K. |
Established | 1888, 128 years ago |
Total holes | 36 |
Tournaments hosted |
The Open Championship (1951, 2019) The Amateur Championship (1960, 1993, 2014) Irish Open (1930, 1937, 1947, 2012) |
Website | www |
Dunluce Links | |
Designed by | Harry Colt |
Par | 72 |
Length | 7,143 yards (6,532 m) |
Course rating | 75 |
Valley Links | |
Designed by | Harry Colt |
Par | 70 |
Length | 6,304 yards (5,764 m) |
Royal Portrush Golf Club is a private golf club in County Antrim, Northern Ireland. The 36-hole club has two links courses, the Dunluce Links (the championship course) and the Valley Links. The former is one of the courses on the Open championship rota and will next host the tournament in 2019
In 1951, Royal Portrush hosted the Open Championship, the oldest of golf's major championships; the only Open not held on the island of Great Britain. The Open will return to Portrush in 2019; it hosted the Irish Open in 2012, the first in Northern Ireland since 1953.
The Dunluce Links course is considered to be one of the best courses in the world. It was ranked fourth by Golf World in their list of "The 100 greatest courses in the British Isles" in November 1996. Golf Magazine ranked it twelfth in their list of the Top 100 Courses in the World, and Golf Digest ranked it as the fourth best course outside the United States in 2007.
Situated on the North Antrim Causeway Coast, Royal Portrush occupies a triangle of giant sand hills with views of the hills of Inishowen in County Donegal in the west, the Isle of Islay and Southern Hebrides in the north, with the Giant's Causeway and the Skerries in the east. The course is overlooked by the ruins of the 13th century Dunluce Castle, which gives its name to Dunluce course.
The Royal Portrush Golf Club was founded 128 years ago in 1888 as "The County Club." It became "The Royal County Club" in 1892 under the patronage of the Duke of York and assumed its present name in 1895 under the patronage of the Prince of Wales. In 1947, Rathmore Golf Club member Fred Daly became the first Irishman to win The Open Championship, and four years later the club hosted the championship itself, the only time the event has been held in Northern Ireland. The club has also hosted the Senior British Open Championship between 1995 and 1999 and again in 2004. The club was also host to the 2010 Palmer Cup. Daly's feat was repeated by club member Darren Clarke in 2011. Clarke also named Royal Portrush his favourite golf course in the world.