Golf Image courtesy of
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“I think my proudest moment was when I was awarded Master Greenkeeper status, becoming only the thirty-seventh in the world at the time”
Stuart Hogg MG, Course Manager at St Annes Old Links
surrounding most of the perimeter. Every hole has its own individual characteristics, with the 171-yard par three, 9th hole, which offers a narrow green, well guarded by bunkers, is probably best known. Bobby Jones, in fact, when playing here in 1926, was so impressed with this hole that he reportedly took detailed measurements so that he could reproduce a hole of similar character in the United States. Yet, whilst the 9th is probably the most talked about hole, with its immense 46- yard long green, others certainly provide a stiffer challenge.
Whilst there are countless majestic holes at St. Annes Old Links, the purists often rate the 454-yard 7th hole as the most difficult on the course, particularly when played into the teeth of the prevailing westerly wind. Each hole on the homeward journey, beginning with the short but testing par four 323yards 10th, presents varying challenges, whilst the long finish of two par fives, with the railway lurking as out-of-bounds for over eleven hundred yards on the right hand side, demands the utmost in concentration and tact.
Looking after this historic course is
Course Manager, Stuart Hogg, who came into the industry when his father organised an apprenticeship for him at West Kilbride Golf Club. “He was in contact with a local YTS coordinator and, between the three of us, we felt that it would fit in around my ‘hopeful’ football career - sadly, that never happened - and I wouldn’t change a thing now.” “Starting off my career at a Championship Course on the West of Scotland, whilst also attending college, was a great experience, and I was fortunate to receive the runner-up ‘Greenkeeper of the Year’ in my second JUNE/JULY 2013 PC 25
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