Weeks after Royal Portrush did a fantastic job of solidifying its status among the limited number of courses on The Open rota, Welsh golfing legend Ian Woosnam has suggested an idea which would ensure the Northern Irish layout joined iconic places like Carnoustie and Royal St George’s in never hosting the world’s oldest Major again.
Concerned about historic locations such as St Andrews Old Course being overpowered by modern technology and athleticism, the 1991 Masters champion suggested a new purpose-built links course should be built in Scotland.
Said layout would then protect the history of St Andrews, according to Woosnam, and serve as the annual home of the world’s oldest Major championship – just like Augusta National serves The Masters.
Speaking to Top 100 Golf Courses, the 52-time pro winner said: “I’ve had a few arguments about this at The Open at St Andrews Old [Course]. You could get someone like DeChambeau drive nine greens. It can make it look stupid. It takes six-and-a-half hours to play a round there.”
Some of the criticism directed at St Andrews Old Course, specifically, is that it’s arguably too short for the most of the current tour professionals and leads to one of the lowest winning scores among its Open rota peers, which is a potential turn-off for fans.
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Since Seve Ballesteros’ 12-under winning total there in 1984, the Champion Golfer of the Year has triumphed with a score of between 14 and 20-under in six of the seven stagings – with the exception being John Daly’s six-under victory in 1995.
In contrast, there has only been six winning totals of 14-under or better at all other courses combined throughout Open Championship history. Two of those occurred at Royal Portrush in 2019 and 2025.
Woosnam continued: “Why don’t you keep St Andrews Old as a souvenir, as history, and build another golf course on the side of it – on the old and the new – and make a golf course specifically for The Open and play it there every year like The Masters?”
Opponents to Woosnam’s suggestion might argue that a lower winning score is a worthwhile trade-off to see modern players compete at one of the world’s most famous and historic golf courses.
Another variable factor which often dictates scoring is the weather. If there is a lack of…
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