Old Course at St Andrews
The Old Course at St Andrews is the world's oldest surviving golf course, located on public links land in the town of St Andrews, Fife, Scotland, and recognized as the "Home of Golf" due to its pivotal role in the sport's development.[1] This par-72 links layout stretches 7,305 yards from the championship tees, with plans announced in October 2025 to extend it to 7,445 yards for the 2027 Open Championship, featuring an out-and-back routing with shared double greens for several holes, strategic pot bunkers including the notorious Hell Bunker on the 14th, and the infamous Road Hole on the 17th.[2][3] Managed by the St Andrews Links Trust under an act of Parliament, it remains a public course accessible via a daily ballot system for tee times, preserving its historical integrity while hosting elite competitions.[4] Golf has been documented on these dunes since at least the early 15th century, with the earliest reference appearing in 1457 when King James II banned the game to prioritize archery practice, although the ban was largely ignored.[5] Originally comprising 12 holes, played as a 22-hole round by going out on ten holes, playing two additional short holes near the town, and returning on ten holes, the course was reconfigured to 18 holes in 1764 by members of the Society of St Andrews Golfers (now The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews, founded in 1754), establishing the modern standard for the sport.[6] The Open Championship, golf's oldest major, was first held there in 1873, and the Old Course has hosted it a record 30 times as of 2025, including the 150th edition in 2022 won by Cameron Smith.[7] Its timeless design emphasizes natural contours, wind influence, and recovery shots, influencing countless courses worldwide and drawing pilgrims from global golf enthusiasts.[8]History
Origins and Early Development
The linksland upon which the Old Course at St Andrews is situated formed naturally over millennia through coastal erosion and deposition along the Fife coastline, with the area designated as common ground for the burgh of St Andrews by a charter from King David I in 1123, allowing its use for grazing livestock and recreation by townspeople. While the land's prehistoric geological origins predate human settlement in the region by thousands of years, evidence of golf being played there emerges in the 15th century, marking it as the sport's earliest documented venue in Scotland. The first specific reference to golf at St Andrews appears in a 1552 charter issued by Archbishop John Hamilton, which affirmed the rights of the local citizens—known as cives—to access the links for "golff" and other lawful sports, effectively lifting prior restrictions on the game.[9] This document followed broader Scottish parliamentary acts in 1457 and 1491 that banned golf nationwide to prioritize military archery training amid ongoing conflicts with England, though enforcement was inconsistent and play persisted informally among St Andrews residents. Early golf involved local burghers, students from the nearby university, and members of trade guilds such as the merchant and craft incorporations, who utilized the shared public space for casual rounds using rudimentary feathery balls and wooden clubs, often as a communal pastime intertwined with the town's daily life.[9] By the 16th and 17th centuries, as golf's popularity grew despite intermittent royal prohibitions, the links transitioned from predominantly common grazing pasture—supporting sheep and rabbits that naturally shaped the terrain—to a more recognized venue for organized play, with paths and putting greens emerging organically through repeated use by the community. The initial layout consisted of 12 holes, ten of which were played twice—once out and once back—resulting in a round of 22 holes that traversed the shared landscape without formal boundaries. A pivotal development occurred in 1764, when the Society of St Andrews Golfers—established in 1754 by 22 gentlemen as the town's first golfing organization and later renamed the Royal and Ancient Golf Club in 1834—decided to reduce the course to 18 holes by merging the first four shorter holes into two longer ones, thereby creating the standardized round length that influenced golf worldwide.[10] This change, documented in the society's minutes, reflected a desire for more equitable competition and efficiency, solidifying the Old Course's role as the sport's foundational template while transitioning toward formalized governance.[11]Governance and the Royal and Ancient Golf Club
The Society of St Andrews Golfers was established on 14 May 1754 by twenty-two noblemen and gentlemen who contributed to a silver club trophy contested annually over the St Andrews Links.[10] This marked the formal organization of golfing activities at the site, evolving from earlier informal play on the common land. In 1834, King William IV granted the society royal patronage, conferring the title of the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews and elevating its status as a premier golfing institution.[12] Tensions arose in the late 19th century over public access to the Links, leading the Royal and Ancient Golf Club (R&A) to secure a 99-year lease from the St Andrews Town Council in 1892. Public opposition prompted parliamentary intervention, resulting in the St Andrews Links Act of 1894, which allowed the town to repurchase the land for public use while granting the R&A a perpetual lease for the maintenance and management of the Old Course and the newly constructed New Course.[13] Today, governance of the Old Course falls under the St Andrews Links Trust, a charitable body established by the St Andrews Links Act 1974 to manage all seven public golf courses at St Andrews, including the Old Course. The Trust's eight-member board comprises three trustees nominated by Fife Council, three by the R&A, one by the University of St Andrews, and the R&A Captain serving ex officio, ensuring balanced oversight between local interests, the golfing authority, and academia. The R&A maintains its headquarters in the iconic clubhouse, constructed in 1854 and positioned overlooking the 18th green of the Old Course, from which it continues to support course operations. Funding for maintenance and development derives primarily from green fees paid by visitors and local ticket holders, with the R&A providing advisory and financial assistance to preserve the Links' integrity.[10]Influence on Modern Golf Rules and Design
The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews (R&A), founded in 1754, played a pivotal role in standardizing the Rules of Golf by adopting and adapting the original 13 Articles drafted a decade earlier by the Gentlemen Golfers of Leith for their 1744 competition. These rules, which emphasized fair play, equipment limits, and basic procedures like teeing off and handling lost balls, were modified slightly—such as adjusting the penalty for balls in water hazards—and became the foundation for competitions at St Andrews, reflecting the natural, unmanicured conditions of the Old Course's linksland. By the late 18th century, the R&A's governance extended these principles globally, introducing innovations like the unplayable lie rule in 1759 and formalizing stroke play, which shifted emphasis from match play to cumulative scoring and influenced modern tournament formats.[14][15] The Old Course's architectural features profoundly shaped course design principles, particularly through its natural bunkers, undulating terrain, and innovative use of shared spaces. Pioneering greenskeeper Old Tom Morris, who served at St Andrews from 1864 to 1903, drew directly from the Old Course's layout—such as its pot bunkers like the Road Hole and Hell Bunker—to create strategic depth in his designs for over 70 courses worldwide, promoting hazards that reward thoughtful shot selection over brute force. The course's seven double greens, shared between incoming and outgoing holes (e.g., the 5th/13th and 9th/18th), exemplified efficient land use on constrained coastal sites and inspired similar configurations in links-style architecture, encouraging dual-angle approaches that add layers of complexity and replayability.[16][8] Central to the Old Course's legacy is its embodiment of links-style golf, which prioritizes adaptation to wind, firm and fast turf, and minimal artificial intervention, in stark contrast to the tree-lined, watered parkland courses that emerged later in inland settings. This philosophy, honed on St Andrews' gorse-dotted dunes and exposed seaside routing, influenced the strategic ethos of modern design by favoring wide fairways with penal edges over narrow, forgiving corridors, as seen in the works of architects who studied the Old Course to replicate its demand for creativity and recovery shots. In 1764, the R&A reconfigured the Old Course from 22 holes to 18 by merging short holes, establishing the 18-hole round as the global standard and enabling consistent pacing for professional tours and amateur events alike.[17][18]Notable Associations, Including Bobby Jones
Bobby Jones, the legendary American amateur golfer, forged a profound connection with the Old Course at St Andrews, particularly during his triumphant 1930 season when he completed golf's first Grand Slam by winning the British Amateur Championship there in late May, defeating Roger H. Wethered 7 and 6 in the 36-hole final. This victory, held on the hallowed links, marked the initial leg of Jones' unprecedented sweep of the British Amateur, British Open, U.S. Open, and U.S. Amateur, a feat that cemented his status as one of the game's immortals and earned him the rare honor of being made a Freeman of the Burgh of St Andrews—the only other American recipient prior to him was Benjamin Franklin. Jones' affinity for the course deepened over time; after a infamous 1921 incident where the 19-year-old tore up his scorecard in frustration during the Amateur, he returned repeatedly, competing for the U.S. Walker Cup team to victory at St Andrews in 1926 and expressing in later years that the Old Course had become his spiritual home, a sentiment echoed in his 1958 visit as non-playing captain for the U.S. team at the World Amateur Team Championship.[19][20] The Walker Cup, the premier men's amateur team competition between the United States and Great Britain & Ireland, holds special ties to Jones through his exemplary participation and leadership; he competed in five matches from 1922 to 1930, winning nine of ten encounters and contributing to U.S. triumphs each time, while later serving as playing captain in 1928 and 1930. Although not formally established in his honor—the event was named for George Herbert Walker, grandfather of President George H.W. Bush—the cup's legacy intersects with Jones' at St Andrews, notably during the 1955 edition hosted on the Old Course, where the U.S. team, led by captain William C. Campbell, dominated with a 10-2 victory over the home side, including a clean sweep in the foursomes on the first day. This match, the first Walker Cup televised by the BBC, highlighted the course's strategic demands and drew international attention, with American players like Harvie Ward and Billy Joe Patton excelling on the links that Jones had revered.[21][22] Among the course's most enduring figures are the Morris family, whose stewardship shaped its modern identity. Old Tom Morris served as Keeper of the Greens at St Andrews from 1864 until his death in 1908—though records confirm his active tenure through 1903—during which he revolutionized greenkeeping practices by introducing contoured greens, strategic bunkering, and hole reshaping that emphasized natural terrain, including the reconfiguration of several holes to enhance playability and challenge. Credited with modifying or designing over 75 courses across the British Isles, Old Tom's work at the Old Course, such as deepening pot bunkers and promoting slower, truer putting surfaces, transformed it from a rudimentary layout into a benchmark for strategic golf architecture. His son, Young Tom Morris, born in St Andrews in 1851, became a prodigy whose championships elevated the course's prestige; at just 17 years and five months, he won his first Open Championship in 1868 at Prestwick, succeeding his father as titleholder, and claimed three more consecutively through 1872, setting records for the youngest winner and the only player to secure four straight Opens, often honing his skills on the St Andrews links under his father's guidance.[23][24][25] James Braid, the renowned Scottish professional and five-time Open Champion, contributed to the Old Course's evolution in the early 20th century through consultative renovations, including bunker adjustments and tee relocations around 1910-1920 that refined its strategic elements without altering its core routing, drawing on his expertise from designing over 400 courses worldwide. Braid's subtle enhancements, such as fortifying the Road Hole bunker to heighten its notoriety, helped preserve the course's timeless test while adapting to evolving equipment. The "Road Hole" at the 17th has sparked notable disputes throughout history, including a 1879 conflict between the St Andrews Town Council and local residents over property boundaries encroaching on the fairway, which nearly disrupted play until resolved by reaffirming the links' common land status under parliamentary trust. Such anecdotes underscore the course's contentious yet cherished role in golf lore. The Old Course's personal histories have permeated culture, most vividly in the 2004 biographical film Bobby Jones: Stroke of Genius, which features pivotal scenes of Jones at St Andrews, including his 1930 Amateur triumph and 1936 visit, filmed on location to capture the links' atmospheric essence and Jones' emotional redemption arc. Literary references abound in golf memoirs, such as Jones' own writings in Golf Is My Game (1960), where he reflects on the course's forgiving yet humbling nature, influencing generations of players and writers who portray St Andrews as golf's soul.[26][27][28][29][11]Course Layout and Features
Overall Design and Routing
The Old Course at St Andrews exemplifies a traditional out-and-back routing, beginning and concluding at the historic Swilcan Bridge on the eastern edge of the linksland, with a total length of 7,305 yards from the men's championship tees. This layout directs players outward along the coastline for the first several holes before looping back inland, creating a symmetrical yet strategically varied path that maximizes the use of the available terrain. The design efficiently utilizes shared fairways and greens between outbound and inbound holes, such as the double fairway for the 1st and 18th holes and the shared green for the 2nd and 17th, allowing multiple groups to play simultaneously on the public land.[30][31] The foundational 18-hole configuration emerged in the 1760s when the Society of St Andrews Golfers combined portions of the original 22-hole circuit—consisting of 11 holes out and 11 back—into the modern loop, a development that helped standardize the 18-hole round in golf. Initially played in a clockwise direction using reversible corridors, the routing shifted to the current counter-clockwise orientation in the late 19th century under the guidance of greenskeeper Old Tom Morris, who sought to manage increasing traffic and enhance flow. This evolution maintained the course's communal character while adapting to growing popularity. As of 2025, recent enhancements include enlarged teeing areas on the 11th and 16th holes and shifted championship tees on the 12th and 14th.[30][8][32][33] The course's architecture is intrinsically tied to the natural topography of the St Andrews linksland, a coastal stretch of firm, fescue-dominated turf interspersed with undulating dunes and hollows formed by centuries of wind and tide. Deep pot bunkers, often hand-dug and strategically placed within these natural depressions, along with thick gorse rough, define the boundaries and penalize errant shots, while relentless North Sea winds—typically from the southwest or east—add an unpredictable strategic layer, forcing players to adapt club selection and lines constantly. These elements create a minimalist yet profoundly tactical design that rewards course knowledge over power.[8][34] Significant refinements to the layout occurred under the Morris family of greenskeepers, with Old Tom Morris, appointed in 1865, introducing varied tee positions to alter angles and lengths, and expanding several greens to incorporate more contours and pin locations for diverse play options. His son, Young Tom Morris, contributed to maintenance during his era, but Old Tom's tenure particularly shaped the course's enduring form, balancing preservation of natural features with subtle enhancements for competitive integrity. These changes, implemented without radical alterations, have sustained the Old Course's reputation as a benchmark for links golf architecture.[16][35]Key Hazards and Strategic Challenges
The Old Course at St Andrews features over 100 bunkers, many of which are deep pot-style hazards with revetted faces that demand precise shot-making and punish mishits severely.[7] Among the most iconic is the Hell Bunker on the 14th hole, a vast depression covering approximately 300 square yards and dropping up to 10 feet deep, positioned about 100 yards short of the green in a way that catches long approach shots and complicates recovery due to its steep walls and sandy expanse.[2] Similarly, the Road Hole Bunker on the 17th hole guards the front-left of the green as a steeply revetted pot that funnels balls toward its depths, often requiring multiple strokes to escape and forcing players to weigh aggressive lines against safer, longer approaches.[36] These bunkers exemplify the course's strategic depth, where avoiding them entirely may necessitate conservative play, while entering them tests short-game creativity under pressure.[37] Natural vegetation and water elements add layers of peril, with dense gorse bushes lining fairways and swallowing errant balls into their thorny, impenetrable thickets, far more punitive than typical rough.[38] The Swilcan Burn, a meandering stream crossing the front of the first and 18th greens, serves as the course's primary water hazard, influencing approach angles and requiring careful club selection to carry or pitch over its winding path without finding the hazard.[39] Out-of-bounds areas, particularly along the right side from the 13th hole through the 18th and adjacent to the Royal and Ancient Clubhouse, impose strict penalties for wayward drives, compelling players to favor safer leftward trajectories despite the risks of opposing bunkers.[40] Environmental factors amplify these obstacles, as prevailing winds from the nearby Eden Estuary swirl unpredictably across the exposed layout, dictating club choices, shot shapes, and even tee alignments to counteract gusts that can push balls toward trouble.[41] The firm, fast-running turf characteristic of this links course promotes bounce-and-roll strategies, where low, running shots are often preferable to high aerial ones, but this speed exacerbates errors by allowing balls to scamper into distant hazards if not controlled precisely.[42] The course's seven double greens introduce psychological and tactical complexities, as shared putting surfaces for outward and returning holes demand exacting precision to land on the correct section and avoid rolling into the wrong half, which can lead to awkward stances or unintended interference with other players.[7] This design forces constant awareness of pin positions and green contours, turning approach shots into high-stakes decisions where a minor miscalculation can result in three-putts or worse.[43] Overall, the routing integrates these elements to create a relentless test of judgment, where the interplay of hazards rewards adaptable, ground-game-oriented play over power alone.[44]Hole-by-Hole Overview and Scorecard
The Old Course at St Andrews measures 7,305 yards from the men's championship tees with a par of 72, featuring a front nine of 3,584 yards and a back nine of 3,721 yards. For women's championship play (as in the 2024 AIG Women's Open), it measures 6,784 yards with a par of 72. The layout incorporates shared greens for seven pairs of holes, adding to its strategic depth, and the scorecard varies slightly by tee and gender. Below is a hole-by-hole overview from the men's championship tees, highlighting key features and strategic considerations, followed by the official scorecard.[31][45] 1st Hole: Burnwise, Par 4, 376 yards. This opening par 4 demands a tee shot to the left side of the fairway to avoid the notorious Swilcan Burn, which crosses just short of the green; a precise approach is essential to carry the burn and hold the large, sloping green.[46] 2nd Hole: Dyke, Par 4, 453 yards. A long par 4 with a narrow fairway flanked by the Hotel Golf Course on the right and deep rough on the left; the green is protected by the Shell bunker on the left, requiring a controlled second shot to avoid three-putts on the undulating surface.[31] 3rd Hole: Cartgate (Cottage), Par 4, 397 yards. Players must navigate the out-of-bounds wall on the left and gorse on the right from the tee, with the approach to a green guarded by the Sutherland bunker; favoring the right side of the fairway opens up the best angle.[40] 4th Hole: Ginger Beer, Par 4, 480 yards. The longest par 4 on the front nine features a dogleg left, where a drive over the corner can shorten the hole, but the green is heavily bunkered on both sides, emphasizing accuracy over distance.[31] 5th Hole: Hole O'Cross (Braidies), Par 5, 568 yards. This reachable par 5 rewards a tee shot between the Braidies bunkers, allowing a layup or go-for-it second shot; the green sits atop a hillock, protected by the Principal's Nose bunker complex.[46] 6th Hole: Heathery (Corner of the Dyke), Par 4, 412 yards. A mid-length par 4 over deep heather, with the green tilted from back right to front left; club selection is critical to avoid the surrounding rough and bunkers.[40] 7th Hole: High (Hole O' the Dyke), Par 4, 371 yards. The fairway narrows with the dyke on the right, and the approach must carry the same hazard to reach a green open at the front but bunkered at the rear.[47] 8th Hole: Short, Par 3, 175 yards. Known for its severe false front, this par 3 requires a tee shot to the center-back of the green to avoid rolling back into the Valley of Sin depression short; winds can amplify the challenge.[46] 9th Hole: End, Par 4, 352 yards. A short par 4 where the drive must avoid the deep Road Hole bunker on the left; the green, shared with the 10th, slopes dramatically and demands a precise iron approach.[40] 10th Hole: Bobby Jones, Par 4, 386 yards. Honoring the legendary amateur, this par 4 features a wide fairway but a blind second shot over a hill to a green guarded by the five-tiered Road Hole bunker; right-side drives provide the best line.[47] 11th Hole: High Innie, Par 3, 174 yards. A blind approach over the 12th fairway defines this par 3, with the tee shot needing to hug the left side to avoid the right-side bunkers; the green is shallow and falls off sharply at the back.[46] 12th Hole: Heathery, Par 4, 348 yards. This par 4 plays over the Valley of Sin to a green bunkered by the infamous Heathery complex; prevailing winds often require a club more than the yardage suggests.[40] 13th Hole: Hole O' the Dyke II, Par 4, 465 yards. Mirroring the 7th, this par 4 runs alongside the dyke on the right, with gorse left; the approach must thread between bunkers to a green that slopes left-to-right.[47] 14th Hole: Long, Par 5, 618 yards. A brute par 5 with fairway bunkers at 280 yards, the second shot typically lays up short of Hell Bunker—a massive hazard approximately 100 yards short of the green—before a precise wedge to the elevated putting surface.[46] 15th Hole: Cartgate (Bogie), Par 4, 455 yards. The tee shot must carry the Swilcan Burn and avoid the out-of-bounds on the left; the green, shared with the 2nd, is flanked by the Ginger Beer bunkers, favoring a fade.[40] 16th Hole: Corner of the Dyke, Par 4, 424 yards. Played over the 18th fairway, this par 4 to a narrow green demands a high tee shot to carry the bunkers and hold the surface, which runs away from the player.[31] 17th Hole: Road Hole, Par 4, 495 yards. Iconic for its blind tee shot and the deep Road Hole bunker guarding the left of the green, this par 4 requires a drive up the right side; the approach often flirts with the out-of-bounds railway wall behind.[46] 18th Hole: Tom Morris, Par 4, 357 yards. The closing hole crosses the Swilcan Burn twice, once from the fairway and again short of the Valley of Sin; a par here is a triumph, with the shared green offering birdie chances but bogey traps.[40]| Hole | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | Out | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | In | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Par (Men) | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 36 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 36 | 72 |
| Yards (Men's Championship Tees) | 376 | 453 | 397 | 480 | 568 | 412 | 371 | 175 | 352 | 3,584 | 386 | 174 | 348 | 465 | 618 | 455 | 424 | 495 | 357 | 3,722 | 7,305 |
| Handicap (Men) | 10 | 4 | 14 | 2 | 18 | 12 | 6 | 16 | 8 | - | 14 | 8 | 6 | 12 | 2 | 4 | 18 | 10 | 16 | - | - |
| Par (Women's Championship) | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 36 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 36 | 72 |
| Yards (Women's Championship Tees, 2024) | 370 | 408 | 388 | 426 | 502 | 360 | 348 | 157 | 330 | 3,289 | 360 | 157 | 320 | 426 | 540 | 426 | 360 | 426 | 348 | 3,363 | 6,652 |