Watch: Rory McIlroy wasn’t too happy with this tee shot — then it almost found the green on a 400-yard par 4

Should 400-yard mishits be illegal?

Driving the golf ball like Rory McIlroy is the dream. Imagine being able to step to the tee box, stick the tee in the ground and bomb it 330 yards into every fairway.

Golf would be too easy.

Well, McIlroy showed off his ridiculous power yet again Thursday during the opening round of the Alfred Dunhill Links, this week’s DP World Tour event.

If you’re unfamiliar with this tournament, the field rotates between three courses for the first three rounds — the Old Course, Carnoustie and Kingsbarns —before Sunday’s final round is played at the Old Course.

McIlroy played Carnoustie for the first round and on the 409-yard par-4 seventh he seemed disappointed with his tee shot, even taking one hand off the club.

His ball finished just short of the green.

McIlroy is T-40 after day one, shooting a 4-under 68.

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Photos: Alfred Dunhill Links at the Old Course, Carnoustie and Kingsbarns

Doesn’t get better than this three-course lineup.

It’s time for one of the most fun events on the DP World Tour.

Several stars of the game of golf have made their return to the Old Course after July’s Open Championship for the Alfred Dunhill Links, although The Home of Golf isn’t the only course hosting play this week.

Carnoustie and Kingsbarns will also be featured and so will family members of the DP World Tour players.

Rory McIlroy will tee it up alongside his father, Gerry, while Matt Fitzpatrick will play with his mom, Susan.

Dunhill Links: Full pairings list

Here are some photos from the week in Scotland at some of golf’s most famous courses.

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Three-time major winner Anna Nordqvist still pinching herself that biggest childhood dream came true at Carnoustie in AIG Women’s British Open

“I’ve had a lot of special memories playing the British Open over the years starting in 2007.”

At the end of a 10-week stretch on the road last summer, Anna Nordqvist met Max, the family’s new English Cream Retriever. Fluffy Max got to drink out of the shiny hardware mom brought home from the AIG Women’s British Open at Carnoustie, her third major title.

This week, Nordqvist returned the trophy, which she jokingly called Max’s “water bowl,” on Instagram, at historic Muirfield, where the women will compete for a major title for the first time. There have been 16 British Opens staged at Muirfield, dating back to 1892.

“I’ve been looking forward to this week for a long time,” said Nordqvist. “It’s one of my favorite weeks out of the year. I’ve had a lot of special memories playing the British Open over the years starting in 2007 when I qualified, Monday-qualified as an amateur into St. Andrews.”

This was the championship the Swede grew up wanting most, and after marrying Kevin McAlpine, a Scot from Dundee, winning at nearby Carnoustie made it all the more special. Nordqvist says she’s still pinching herself that her biggest childhood dream came true.

Soon after this year’s British, Nordqvist will have a long-awaited wedding celebration that was postponed for two years due to COVID-19.

Nordqvist, 35, recently returned to Carnoustie to tee it up and played 15 holes.

“It was a two-ball wait on 16,” she said, “and it was already 9:30 at night and we kind of gave up.”

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Nordqvist is one of only two players who have won the British Girls’ (2005), British Amateur (2008) and British Open (2021), joining England’s Georgia Hall. Her Amateur victory came at nearby North Berwick, and earlier this week, she was reunited with all three trophies. Both Hall and Nordqvist also earned low-amateur honors at the Open.

A nine-time winner on the LPGA, Nordqvist has won three different majors dating back to her breakthrough title at the 2009 KPMG Women’s PGA as a rookie. She has four top-10 finishes at the British, including last year’s victory.

Last month, Nordqvist won the Big Green Egg Open on the Ladies European Tour.

“I don’t feel like I have any pressure on me this week,” she said. “I’m not trying to prove anything. I’m just trying to enjoy myself.”

Also among the favorites this week is Australia’s Minjee Lee, who hasn’t finished outside the top 11 in her last four appearances at the British Open. She said she loves links-style golf, particularly having grown up in windy Perth.

Earlier this year, Lee won the U.S. Women’s Open at Pine Needles for her second title in four major starts. She tied for second at the Women’s PGA and took a share of 43rd at the Evian.

“I just really love like the hard conditions that we get and just how much creativity we have to sort of think about around these types of courses,” said Lee. “It could be really cool, and it would be a great honor to be able to win the British.”

Top American Nelly Korda, who was distracted early on in her Tuesday news conference by an unwelcome spider, said she also appreciates the creativity links golf demands. She felt the par 3s at Muirfield seemed particularly tough.

“I think the greens are a bit more undulated for British-style golf courses I’ve played,” said Korda. “If it gets windy, the greens are going to be really tricky. The par 3s are long. There’s definitely a lot of fall-offs on the front of the greens.

“Overall, I think the entire golf course, you have to strike it well. The fairways are not really too wide, either. Sometimes you just have to be aggressive and just take the shot in the fescue to be closer to the green. But yeah, I think the golf course is going to be a great test depending on the weather, too.”

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British Open 2022: Golfweek’s Best ranking of the rota of host courses

How does St. Andrews, site of this week’s Open Championship, stack up against the rest of the course rota?

Each of the 10 layouts on the modern British Open course rota score highly in Golfweek’s Best ranking of top classic golf courses built before 1960 in Great Britain and Ireland, as would be expected. But that doesn’t mean they all are equals.

Check out the rankings of each course on the modern rota below. The hundreds of members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on 10 criteria on a points basis of 1 through 10. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings are averaged to produce these rankings, and they are included for each course below.

10 best golf courses in Scotland

St. Andrews is spectacular, but there’s more magic at the home of golf than just The Old Course.

The golf world returns home as the 150th Open Championship will be played at the Old Course at St. Andrews.

The fans are excited, the Tour pros are excited, even the LIV golfers are allowed in on the action.

We know that most golf fans will spend the next week and more dreaming of hitting the Scottish links, so we here at Golfweek are doing everything within our power to make that dream a bit more real.

Last week we gave you some of the best U.K. golf vacations out there, but this week our focus narrows to Scotland and the 10 best courses that the home of golf has to offer.

These rankings come directly from the hundreds of Golfweek’s Best Raters for 2021 who continually evaluated courses and rated them based on our 10 criteria. They also filed a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings on each course are averaged to produce a final rating for each course.

For more of Golfweek’s Best course lists, check out the most recent selection of course rankings:

We occasionally recommend interesting products, services, and gaming opportunities. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

Dreaming of the British Open? Check out five incredible U.K. golf vacations

Want to play St. Andrews, Carnoustie, and Royal Troon all on the same trip? Yeah…we thought so.

The 2022 British Open is just weeks away and the entire golf world is gearing up to go back home to The Old Course at St. Andrews.

We will all be glued to the coverage of the 150th Open Championship later this month, and most golf fans will daydream about playing St. Andrews and that fantasy golf vacation they’ve been putting off for years.

It’s time to turn those daydreams into reality. Along with our friends from Golfbreaks, Golfweek has compiled five spectacular U.K. golf vacations including trips to England, Northern Ireland and Scotland to play some of the oldest and most famous courses in the world.

We occasionally recommend interesting products, services, and gaming opportunities. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage

Accountant, car salesman, Lexi Thompson’s fill-in caddie and DP World looper — this Carnoustie native has a fascinating story.

“I have the car sales and the financial advising to fall back on if it goes pear-shaped. It can be a ruthless business.”

The life of a tour caddie is never dull. Paul Drummond will vouch for that.

His first event as an official bagman on the DP World circuit — formerly known as the European Tour — ended up with him spending 10 days in a quarantine hotel and forking out an additional $4,000 in expenses.

Instead of enjoying three events in South Africa with new boss Norwegian golfer Espen Kofstad, Drummond got 36 holes in at the ill-fated Joburg Open before the whole Omicron palaver kicked off and led to a frenzied scramble for flights that was as chaotic as the Keystone Cops trying to co-ordinate air traffic control.

“There were caddies who have been out on tour for 35 years and they said to me, ‘if you can handle this week, then you can handle anything,’ ” reflected the 31-year-old of a tumultuous introduction to the tour. “Some of them said it was the worst week they’d ever experienced. It’s not put me off, though.”

Drummond, a qualified accountant who is also a car salesman in the family business, was thrust into the limelight earlier this season when he was employed by American golden girl Lexi Thompson for the week of the AIG Women’s Open in his own backyard of Carnoustie.

He had caddied numerous times before over his hometown links but guiding someone with the global profile of Thompson through its abundant rigors was a whole new ball game. It whetted his appetite for more, though.

“I’d always wanted to do full-time caddying but it’s quite hard to get into,” he said. “A mate of mine, Matthew Southgate, who is a tour player, told Espen about me and that’s how it started.

“It was a good time for me to give it a go. I have the car sales and the financial advising to fall back on if it goes pear-shaped. It can be a ruthless business. If the player is not getting the results, then the first thing to change is the caddie or the coach. With caddying you never know when the next paycheck is coming but I want to go out and do well. I want to climb the ladder and I’d like to caddie for someone in the top 50 and do the majors. I’ve got a foot in the door so that’s a start.”

Telling a professional golfer that ‘you’ve got 212 yards to the front edge with the wind coming in from the left’ may be slightly different from championing the fuel efficiency of a tidy little hatchback in the forecourt but confidently talking the talk is standing Drummond in good stead.

“The main attribute of a caddie is how you deliver the message, the yardage or whatever,” he said. “I’ve had people caddie for me in the past and if they are a bit wishy-washy then it doesn’t give you much positivity when you’re standing over the shot. You need to deliver the message with authority.”

In the wide and varied world of this very individual game, the approach of the men’s world No. 318 Kofstad is in stark contrast to the methods employed by women’s world No. 12 Thompson.

“I did everything for Lexi,” said Drummond. “Yardages, lines, everything because she doesn’t carry a book. So if she hit it off the back of the green then, unfortunately, it might’ve have been me who was responsible. Espen is totally different. All I do with him is verify the number he gets from his own yardage book. He likes to take complete ownership of his game.”

While further work with Thompson in the U.S. was a possibility — “we got on great but the time of the year was wrong and I would’ve had terrible problems getting a Visa” — Drummond is relishing the prospect of getting out on the European circuit with Kofstad in the new year.

“It’s a shame those first three events got wiped out but I think Espen can do well and I’m hoping we can get in the mix and get the juices flowing,” he said.

As for the here, there and everywhere traveling that the DP World Tour demands? Well, Drummond won’t mind that. He’ll just have to get used to caddie class, though.

“I used to work as a financial controller with St Andrews University and regularly traveled to Hong Kong, Canada and the U.S. on business class,” he said. “As a caddie, I have to turn right on the plane now,” he added with a wry chuckle.

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Golfweek’s Best 2021: Top 50 Classic International Courses

From Royal County Down to Royal Melbourne, the top International Modern Courses built outside the U.S. before 1960.

Welcome to the initial Golfweek’s Best Classic International Courses list with the highest-rated courses outside the United States that were built before 1960. (Pictured atop this story: The Old Course at St. Andrews, with photo by Steve Flynn/USA TODAY Sports)

Each year we publish many lists, with the U.S.-based Top 200 Modern Courses and the accompanying Top 200 Classic Courses lists being the premium offerings. Also extremely popular and significant are the Best Courses You Can Play State by State and Best Private Courses State by State.

This is the first year for this International Classic list, and it is comprised of thousands of individual ratings of courses around the world. We also recently published the Modern Courses version, shining a spotlight on the best international courses built in or after 1960.

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The 800-plus members of our ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on 10 criteria. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings on each course are averaged to produce a final rating for each course, which is then ranked against other courses to produce the final lists.

Each course is listed with its average rating next to the name, the location, the year it opened and the designers. After the designers are several designations that note what type of facility it is.

Key

r: resort course
d: daily fee
p: private course
t: tour course
m: municipal
re: real estate
* Many international private courses allow limited outside play. Contact the courses indicated for more information on their guest policies.

Danny Willett leads Alfred Dunhill Links Championship; Tyrrell Hatton and Shane Lowry in striking distance

Can anyone catch the 2016 Masters champion?

The Alfred Dunhill Links Championship is always one of the most fun events on the European Tour schedule. Players and their partners rotate among three of the best golf courses in the world through the first three days of the event. The Old Course at St. Andrews, Carnoustie, and Kingsbarns are some of Scotland’s finest, with all hosting a round before the final day returns to the home of golf.

Danny Willett, leader after 54 holes, played St. Andrews Saturday without making a bogey, carding a 6-under 66. Through three rounds, Willett has only signed for two scores above par, which have been offset by a pair of eagles.

The 2016 Masters champ was feeling himself out on the links Saturday in some pretty miserable weather.

Tyyrell Hatton, who won this event in back-to-back years in 2016-17, enters the final round three shots behind Willett after a 1 under round at St. Andrews today. Luckily for him, the Old Course will be the host for the final round, so a few early birdies could put him right back in the mix. Hatton is playing with his dad, Jeff, this week.

Shane Lowry was an electrical spark for the European Ryder Cup team last week at Whistling Straits, and some of that energy has carried over this week in Scotland. The Irishman sits three shots back, and is tied with Hatton at 11 under. He, too, played the Old Course on Saturday, and paired six birdies with one bogey for a 5-under 67.

When playing golf in Scotland, you have to expect the worst when it comes to the weather. Billy Horschel has fully embraced that this week.

Click here for the full leaderboard.

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European Tour’s Alfred Dunhill Links Championship offers the best one-week rota of courses of any tour

The Old Course at St. Andrews, Carnoustie and Kingsbarns make this a special week for the European Tour and for links lovers.

The European Tour takes a few knocks from golf course aficionados about the layouts the tour frequently plays as it takes events to new coordinates – and sponsors – around the world. Some criticism is fair, some less so.

But it’s all moot this week. Just kick back, turn on the tube and enjoy some of the best golf courses in the world for the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship.

St. Andrews Old Course. Carnoustie. Kingsbarns. They make up an incredible Scottish links triumvirate around St. Andrews, the best one-week professional rota in golf.

The Old Course is, of course, the Old Course. This is golf. Old Tom. Young Tom. All the way to Tiger Woods. This is the home of golf, the marketing says – and it’s right. And always exciting to watch.

Carnoustie is no slouch, itself. Home to eight past British Opens – ahem, Open Championships – Carnoustie’s Championship Course presents one of the most challenging and thrilling conclusions in golf. Just ask Jean van de Velde about the dreaded Barry Burn, where his chance at the 1999 British Open title was ingloriously drowned.

Kingsbarns (Golfweek files)

And to people who don’t follow modern golf architecture closely, Kingsbarns might seem like a third wheel in this rota. Trust us, it’s not. The Kyle Phillips design that opened in 2000 has climbed all the various course rankings – including Golfweek’s Best – to become one of the most desirable tee times in Europe.

The only thing that comes close to this rota on the PGA Tour is the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, with Pebble Beach Golf Links, Spyglass Hill and Monterey Peninsula Country Club’s Shore Course hosting celebrities and pros alike each year. Pebble Beach ranks No. 9 on Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list for the U.S., and Spyglass is No. 31 among all Modern U.S. courses. Not bad at all. It’s hard to beat the vibe on this section of California coastline.

But when it comes to elite course rankings, no rota compares to the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship. And like the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, the Dunhill Links also serves up a celebrity field in a pro-am format to make things a bit more interesting. Each team will play the three courses over the first three days, with teams and individuals that make the cut playing the Old Course on Sunday.

Keep scrolling for more on each of the courses in this week’s rota.