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Sunningdale Golf Club

Sunningdale Golf Club
Sunningdale GC clubhouse as photographed during the 2008 Ricoh Women's British Open.jpg
Sunningdale GC clubhouse in 2008
Club information
Location Sunningdale, Berkshire, England
Established 1900, 117 years ago
Type Private
Total holes 36
Tournaments hosted Senior Open Championship
Women's British Open
British Masters
Walker Cup
Sunningdale Foursomes;
International Final Qualifying (Europe) for The Open Championship
Website sunningdale-golfclub.co.uk
Old Course
Designed by Willie Park, Jr.
(opened 1901)
Par 70
Length 6,627 yards (6,060 m)
Course rating 72
Course record 62, Nick Faldo
New Course
Designed by Harry Colt
(opened 1923)
Par 70
Length 6,729 yards (6,153 m)
Course rating 73
Course record 62, Graeme Storm

Coordinates: 51°23′17″N 0°37′52″W / 51.388°N 0.631°W / 51.388; -0.631

Sunningdale Golf Club is a golf club in Sunningdale, Berkshire, England, located approximately 30 miles (50 km) west-southwest of London.

Sunningdale Golf Club was founded in 1900 and has two eighteen hole golf courses: the Old Course, designed by Willie Park, Jr., and the New Course, designed by Harry Colt, which opened in 1923.

Sunningdale has hosted many prestigious events in golf, including the British Masters, Walker Cup, Women's British Open, and The Senior Open Championship. From 2004 to 2013, Europe's International Final Qualifying tournament for The Open Championship was held over both the Old and New courses at Sunningdale. It will host the Seniors Amateur Championship in 2017.

Sunningdale Golf Club was founded in 1900 on Chobham Common, on land owned by St. John's College, Cambridge. Its first Secretary was Harry Colt, who went on to design golf courses of international renown, such as the New Course at Sunningdale, and Swinley Forest. Colt was highly influential in the creation of the Pine Valley Golf Club in New Jersey, wildly acknowledged as one of the best golf courses in the world. The original 18-hole course, set in a heathland area, with sandy subsoil amid mixed treed foliage, was designed by Willie Park, Jr., and was ready for play in 1901. It was also among the first successful courses located away from the seaside, as many people had thought at the time that turf would not grow well in such regions.


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