Recognised the world over as the 'Home of Golf', St
Andrews Links has borne witness to over 600 years of
golfing history. That the game evolved and developed
into its final form here has never been in question: St
Andrews is the home of the game's most influential
ruling body, the Royal and Ancient Golf Club, and it was
here in 1764, when the 22-hole Old Course was reduced,
that today's standard 18-hole round was established. One
golf course has now become seven, and many of golf's
most dramatic moments, affecting the world's greatest
players, have occurred here. The Links has played host
to the game's greats, among them Allan Robertson and the
Morrises in the nineteenth century, Bobby Jones and Jack
Nicklaus in the twentieth, and Tiger Woods in the
twenty-first, as well as those enthusiastic amateurs for
whom the chance to play St Andrews' hallowed turf is a
dream come true. As Jack Nicklaus remarked: 'If a golfer
is to be remembered, he must win the title at St
Andrews.'The worldwide fame of St Andrews is the result
of a unique 120-year-old golf partnership between the
town's local government and the R&A, who between
them have assured the Links' status, by Act of
Parliament, as public courses. This celebratory volume,
the official history of golf's most important location,
was written by Tom Jarrett, a caddie, journalist, golfer
and author who lived all his life in this historic town,
and has been updated by Peter Mason, who was involved in
managing the Links throughout its most intensive - and
controversial - phase of development. |
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