Club information | |
---|---|
Coordinates | 33°55′4″S 151°12′54″E / 33.91778°S 151.21500°ECoordinates: 33°55′4″S 151°12′54″E / 33.91778°S 151.21500°E |
Location | Sydney, Australia |
Established | 1882 |
Type | Private |
Total holes | 18 |
Tournaments hosted | Australian Open |
Website | www.australiangolfclub.com |
Designed by | Clark, Hutchison & Martin (1903) / Jack Nicklaus (1976) |
Par | 72 |
Length | 6610m |
Course rating | 76 |
Course record | 61 (Rod Pampling) |
The Australian Golf Club is a golf club located in Rosebery, a suburb of Sydney, Australia. Although it survived numerous course location changes, it is arguably the oldest golf club in Australia. To date the course has held 18 Australian Opens, most recently in 2014, when Jordan Spieth shot a bogey free 63 in the final round to win by 6 strokes over Rod Pampling.. The course has been rated the 9th best in the country.
The Australian Golf Club was founded in 1882, which makes it the oldest golf club in Australia followed by Royal Melbourne Golf Club (founded 1891). However, The Australian did not have a golf course between the years of 1888 and 1895, which has led to debate as to which golf club is the oldest.
The club's first golf course was situated in Moore Park, a suburb of Sydney, but due to a new road the course had to be abandoned six years later in 1888. In 1895 a second, eleven-hole course was built in Waverley, which was used until 1898, when the club's lease expired. The course then moved to Botany, Sydney. It was this course that hosted the 1901 Australian Amateur Championship, and the first Australian Open in 1904.
The present day location of the course was inspected in 1903, while a year later plans were put forward for the new course by Carnegie Clark, Jock Hutchison and Gilbert Martin. In 1926 Alister MacKenzie, designer of courses such as Royal Melbourne Golf Club and Augusta National Golf Club, was asked to update holes on the course. Due to the popularity of the course, members approved a new layout in 1949 which supplied the club with two starting holes. In 1967 the proposal of a new road threatened the land on which the course was laid out on. As a result, a redesign by Sloane Morpeth was needed, which was completed in 1973. Between 1977 and 1980 Jack Nicklaus made significant alterations to the course, which included adding length and water hazards, which transformed the course into what it is today.