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TRAVEL


The wonders of down under If any further evidence was needed to prove the influence Great Britain had in golf ’s global growth, you have to look no further than two of her former colonies, Australia and New Zealand, two countries that have produced some of the game’s greatest champions and are home to some of the world’s finest and most-esteemed courses. One of those courses, Australia’s Royal Melbourne Golf Club, will take center stage when The Presidents Cup returns there November 14-20. It was the site of the International team’s only victory (in 1998) in the biennial team competition. Dr. Alister Mackenzie’s masterpiece is widely regarded as one of the world’s premier tests of golf. It is one of some 400 courses in Victoria, a location that has attracted designers like Nicklaus, five-time British Open champion and Melbourne native Peter Thomson, Nick Faldo, Robert Trent Jones, Jr., and another Aussie legend, Greg Norman.


Melbourne’s Sandbelt courses are built on ideal sandy parkland terrain similar to the Pinehurst region of North Carolina and the Heathlands outside London. The area’s courses have firm turf that drains extremely well, making it ideal for golf. South of the city lies the Mornington Peninsula, a region of coastal sand dunes and linksland terrain similar to some of the finest Scottish or Irish courses.


The beauties of the Caribbean In March, the PGA TOUR heads to Puerto Rico and the Puerto Rico Open presented by seepuertorico.com, which is played at the Trump International Golf Club-Puerto Rico in Rio Grande, located on 1,200 acres of waterfront with views of the Atlantic Ocean and the El Yunque National Forest. World Golf Hall of Fame member Tom Kite, in collaboration


with Bruce A. Besse, Jr. designed four distinct nines at the Trump International—The Lakes, The Ocean, The Mountain and The Palms—and holes from each nine make up the tournament course. Of course, if you travel to Puerto


Rico, you should definitely plan to visit Hyatt Dorado Beach Resort & Country Club, which is considered one of Robert Trent Jones’ finest resort designs. In all, there are 18 high-quality courses on the island. Nicklaus also took full advantage


The 13th green at Trump International Golf Club in Rio Grande, Puerto Rico.


of a stunning setting when designing Cap Cana in the Dominican Republic, the site of the Champion’s Tour’s Cap Cana Championship. Eight holes play along the water, with the most spectacular the course’s


signature hole, No. 13, a 249-yard, par 3. It is frequently compared to the par-3 16th at Cypress Point, both in the challenge it presents and the beauty it offers. Bring your camera. Another favorite destination in the


The second fairway on the Jack


Nicklaus Course at Punta Espada Golf Club in Cap Cana, Dominican Republic.


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Dominican Republic is the Casa de Campo Resort, with its four world- class courses, the most famous being the “Teeth of the Dog,” a Pete Dye- design that is considered another of his finest. With seven holes on the water, it is stunningly beautiful as


PGA TOUR OFFICIAL ANNUAL 2011 257


© MICHAEL COHEN/GETTY IMAGES; STAN BADZ/US PGA TOUR


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