A Dreamer And A Doer – Pat Ruddy's European Club
takes its place among the Irish Golfing Giants.

By Ian Cruickshank

The Irish are masters of the word. Although the Emerald Isle is a relatively tiny place, it's long been home ground to the world's finest writers, singers and talkers. Just a partial list includes Yeats, Shaw, Wilde, Beckett, Joyce, Behan, even Bono from U2. The language here flows as creamily as the head of a pint of Guinness – and in fact after of couple of pints the locals will have you convinced that it was really an Irishman named Willy O'Shakespeare who wrote all of those English plays and sonnets.

One of the current masters of the word is Pat Ruddy. His mezmorizing lilt rises higher and higher as he gets wrapped further into the conversation until it finally bursts into a storm of laughter. The conversation is usually attached to his passion. A well known golf writer and publisher, for years Ruddy dreamt about building his own place, a links layout that would be mentioned in the same breathe as such Irish classics as Ballybunion and Lahinch. For most folks it would be nothing more than pub conversation, a fantastical idea that never gets farther than the end of the bar.

But Ruddy is both a dreamer and a doer. In 1987, he saw a small snippet in the Dublin papers about a piece of land that curled around the edges of Brittas Bay, an hour south of Dublin, that was coming up for sale. Ruddy being Ruddy, was able to borrow a helicopter and zipped above the desolate stretch of sand, marsh and farmland. When he saw that dunes that heaved higher than Sophia Loren's breasts, he fell instantly in love. After scrapping together enough financing to get started he and his family built the dream.

In 1992 The European Club made its debut and was an immediate success, even a place of pilgrimage. In 2002 in preparation for the British Open, Tiger Woods and his pals Mark O'Meara, David Duval and Scott McCarron played the course with Tiger throwing down a sweet 67, the new European Club record. (In the first ten years of the club's existence, the winners of 35 major titles had made the trek to the Club.)

A little while ago I had the chance to make my own trip to the European Club and met Mr. Ruddy. He was standing in the doorway of the pro shop, directing visitors to the adjacent restaurant and offering menu suggestions. "You can't go wrong with the stew and the apple tart. It has a nice bite to it," he promised in an accent that floated northward at the end of each sentence. Ruddy is never short on suggestions or stories and we talked about some of the other courses he's designed including Druids Glen, Ballyliffen and the 36 holes on the Isle de Montreal. "I love Montreal. The golfers are maniacs. As soon as the season starts, they're out there at 6 am. It's wonderful," says Ruddy.

 

His heart though is at the European Club and I can see why. The course has all the features of the very best seaside layouts. The uneven fairways dip and climb through the shaggy, links land and are threaded through big shouldered dunes that are whipped by the breeze slicing in off the water. It's an isolated spot. The only sounds you hear are the rumble of the waves that break on the beach running along the back nine and the high pitched bleats from the sheep sheltering in the field above the 17th tee.

What makes the place especially memorable though are the quirky bits. The bunkers are lined with railroad ties. "Bunkers are hazards," reasons Ruddy. "They are not meant to be pleasure beaches. They are places of penance. Why have them if not to punish?" The green on the 12th hole stretches an astounding 127 yards making it the longest green in golf. "When we decided to build a new green at 12, I didn't have the heart to tear up the original, so it kept growing," he says mischievously.

And instead of just 18 holes, the European Club has 20."We opened two extra holes – par 3's known as 7a and 12a – giving us a 20 hole round simply because we like the game enough to play a little extra." he says. My favourite Ruddyism though is on the scorecard. In bold red letters running along the top of the card are the words – Stay Awake – Get Around Without Delays – You Are An Athlete. At the bottom of the card is a small box where players are invited to write, What My Score Should Have Been.

There are a number of other top-notch courses in the Dublin area including the Montgomerie and O'Meara courses at Carton House, the 36 holes at Druids Glen, the K-Club which hosted the Ryder Cup , the Island Course, Royal Dublin and the two courses at Portmarnock.

For more information on golf in Ireland, contact www.tourismireland.com

06/09

 

 

 

 

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