COURSE TO BE UPDATED FOR FIRST TIME IN 40 YEARS
Moray Golf Club in Lossiemouth
For the first time in over 40 years, Moray Golf Club has engaged a golf course architect to help develop a blueprint for the future of its celebrated golf courses.
The decision to commission an audit of both 18-hole golf courses continues a precedent established at the renowned Lossiemouth club of working with golf’s finest designers.
Moray Golf Club's famous last hole which has an out of bounds wall hard up against the left of the fairway as one looks from the clubhouse
Swan Golf Designs will be the latest name to join a series of eminent golf course architects who have left their mark on the beautiful stretch of links that overlooks the Moray Firth. The club’s Old Course, for example with its revetted bunkers and undulating fairways, was laid out by Old Tom Morris in 1889. The tighter New Course was fashioned by three times Open Champion Henry Cotton whose preference for precision resulted in a shorter but equally testing route.
“Moray Golf Club has been associated with a number of legendary names in golf course architecture,” explained John Thomson, captain of Moray Golf Club which will host the qualifier for the 2016 Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open. “When the decision was made to create a masterplan that would enhance the already great holes we have at Moray, it was important to continue that precedent. That’s why we called on Swan Golf Designs.”
In a fortuitous family coincidence, Thomson’s father, Farquhar, assisted Henry Cotton during the initial design-and-build phase of the second 18-hole golf course at Moray. His central role was duly recognised when he was asked to hit the inaugural tee shot to open the New Course in 1979.
Swan Golf Designs was borne out of the successful collaboration between consultant golf course engineer Alex Swan and Henry Cotton. The duo worked with Thomson’s father on Moray’s New Course development during the 1970s. Today, the business thrives under the stewardship of Alex’s son Howard and grandson William. “I am delighted to be going back as a second generation Swan,” commented Howard Swan. “It is great to be going back to represent the old man and to continue the family tradition. I had the good fortune of working with my dad for 20 years before he died in 1984, so it is always nice to go back to a club where he has worked. It is quite emotional to think that the old boy was here before me.”
The family connections aren’t the only thing to excite the celebrated golf course architect about the Moray project. “As a golf destination, Moray Golf Club is immensely important,” Swan noted. “It was laid out originally by Old Tom Morris in 1889, who was then at St Andrews. It is traditional links land of great proportion which has hosted some serious championships over the years. It is a golf club of some calibre.”
“This is a hugely important step for Moray Golf Club and for the development of the New Course in particular as it approaches its 40th anniversary in 2019,” Thomson noted. “Moray is a special place, especially for lovers of traditional links golf. We want to make our courses relevant and challenging now and in the future.”
|