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Grange Golf Club (West)

South Australia, Australia

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The West course at The Grange Golf Club measures 6,840 yards from the back markers and it plays to every inch of its length.

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Grange Golf Club (West)

The Grange Golf Club lies to the south of West Lakes, an area that was once an enormous sandy swamp prior to its reclamation and development as an Adelaide suburb. Golf is recorded as being played here as far back as 1910 when the McCoy family owned the “Pinery” estate and their house formed part of the original clubhouse.

The Grange Golf Club was founded in 1926 and a Cargie Rymill-designed course was brought into play the following year. After World War II, a number of changes were made to the layout before Vern Morcom was called in to carry out modifications but it took a further nine years until the revised course was ready for play in 1965. It became known as the East course when the Morcom-designed West course debuted in 1967.

Both are championship golf courses that have held a number of professional tournaments over the years, thanks in no small measure to the man responsible for most of the early conditioning of the courses at Grange – head greenkeeper Frank Neighbour, who was in the post for over twenty years.

Mike Clayton was brought in to remodel the layout before the Gents and Ladies World Amateur Team Championships – won by Scotland and Sweden, respectively – in 2008, and he replaced all the greens, removed a large number of trees and reshaped several fairways.

The West course measures 6,840 yards from the back markers and it plays to every inch of its length. It begins with a relatively easy par five and concludes with a closing stretch of four testing par four holes. In between, there are some delightful, tree-lined holes to be played over what is a lovely, traditional parkland track.

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