Falling
in love with Mount Juliet is easy, you just have to catch your first
glimpse of Mount Juliet House, built by Somerset Hamilton the first
Earl of Carick on the banks of the Nore and you are captivated,
even before you hit a shot.
And really it should be no surprise, after all Jack Nicklaus laid
out the par 72 gem on l,500 acres of glorioius Irish countryside,
just nine miles from Kilkenny City.
Tim "Toyota" O'Mahoney dreamed his dream and the greatest
golfer the World has ever seen made it a reality, playing Christy
O'Connor in a special exhibition to mark the opening in July l99l,
two superstars leading a parade of the greats who were to have a
crack at the Murphy's Irish Open over its testing, water-splashed
7,l0l yards.
Bernhard Langer, Nick Faldo, Ernie Els, John Daly have all taken
on this Thomastown gem with varying degress of success. And Faldo,
three times Irish Champions liked it so much that he came back on
holiday.
"Mount Juliet is certainly among my favourites, it's a beautiful
complex and the course is perfectly presented, it's the best we
see on the European Tour," said Faldo.
"Other promoters and golf course managers should come here
to see just how good a course can be," he added. Praise indeed
from a perfectionst.
But you don't have to be a Champion to enjoy the easy elegance of
the course, owner Mahony, himself an eighteen handicapper saw to
that.
Off the back stakes it's a testing seven thousand plus yards but
from the medal tees it's 664l and the ladies course measures 5473
yards par 73.
Big John Daly failed to win here, but I4 he produced a brilliant
finishing 65 to take a share of second place.
"I felt so relaxed here and the course looked so good that
I just had to play well," he smiled. It's that sort of place,
a course where you can be pampered and tested at the same time.
And after the golf the accommodation and the food match the surroundings,
lavish without being over the top in the 32 bedroom Mount Juliet
House, the l6 bed Hunters Yard and twenty apartments.
"The greatest Tournament victory of my career on a super course,"
beamed Sam Torrance after he had won a spectacular three-way play-off
for the Murphy's Irish Open in 1995.
Faldo, Torrance and Langer won Irish Open titles at Mount Juliet
in l993, '94 and '95 and none was more emotional than that by Torrance
in a play off with Stuart Cage and Howard Clarke in the last Open
held there.
Hit a good drive down the 5l5 yards par 5 seventeenth and the nearest
yellow yardage marker reads - for mister average- "dream on."
But there was no stopping Slammin Sam.
He smashed a glorious three wood off a tight lie, around the obstructing
branches of a tree to within nine feet for a winning eagle. Torrance
left quality players like Craig Stadler, Colin Montgomerie and Greg
Norman behind him on that unforgettable afternoon.
And every golfer who takes on this Nicklaus delight will leave with
happy memories of some great holes, some delightful countryside
and perhaps even a glimpse of the wandering pheasants.
The 2nd, 3rd, 5th, 8th, l0th, llth, l3th, l4th and l8th have been
singled out as a perfect fantasy nine in the distinguished Following
the Fairways Annual. And it would be hard to argue with those choices,
particularly the par three third, a scary carry over the water and
the llth another par three of l68 yards again over water.
The l4th is another watery one shotter of about l97 yards where
you have to be brave and accurate. And of course there are few more
testing finishing holes than the daunting 474 yards l8th with water
all the way down the left.
But like so many more of the great new golf complexes, Mount Juliet
provides more than a fine course anestate which was once the home
of the McCalmont family and of the Ballylinch stud which produced
many a champion.
So it's not surprising that there is an equestrian centre, trout
and salmon fishing and facilities for tennis and shooting. What
more could a man ask for in such tranquil, yet understated elegance?
Mount Juliet, just 75 miles from Dublin on the N 7 /N 9 may become
the ultimate golf oasis, a monument to Jack Nicklaus and capable
of standing comparision with the very best. Good enough, some feel,
to host the Ryder Cup.
But you and I, dear reader, need not concern ourselves with the
Ryder Cup, ours will be simpler pleasures on a course designed by
a master to test, tease and please.
Bernhard Langer who won an Irish Open there in l994 said of the
course;"we always play good courses in the Irish Open and Mount
Juliet is no exception, it's the kind of place which could stage
the Ryder Cup, the course is spectacular and perfectly manicured."
Shakespeare may have created the greatest love story when he penned
Romeo and Juliet but Jack Nicklaus signed a masterpiece when he
finished Mount Juliet, a course so easy to love.
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©
Tom Keogh 2000
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