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.

Golfweek’s Best: Rating the British Open rota courses

How do Muirfield, the Old Course at St. Andrews, Royal Troon, Royal St. George’s and the rest of the rota stack up in the course rankings?

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All eyes will be on Royal St. George’s Golf Club in Sandwich, England, for this week’s British Open. But how does the links layout southeast of London stack up in a ranking of all 10 of the courses on the modern rota for the British Open?

Golfweek’s Best utilizes a national group of some 800 raters who judge courses around the world, rating each on a points basis of 1 to 10. Any course with an average rating over 7 is a great course, and anything over 8 is in truly rarefied air. Half the courses on the rota, which now includes Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland, rate above an 8.

The following list of the 10 British Open rota courses is ordered based on those ratings. Also included is where each course ranks in Golfweek’s Best Modern Courses list for Great Britain and Ireland.

Opinion: Why Muirfield matters so much to the women’s game

The R&A’s lineup for the women in the next five years speaks volumes about the organization’s commitment to elevating the women’s game.

The first four times Karen Stupples played the Old Course at St. Andrews, she used the clubhouse at St. Rule, situated on the right side of the 18th green. The club was established in 1896 primarily as a place for ladies to enjoy a cup of tea and share newspapers near the links.

It wasn’t until the Old Course first hosted a women’s major in 2007 that Britain’s Stupples, and every other player in the historic field, was allowed into the iconic R&A clubhouse behind the first tee. That’s the week that St. Andrews transformed for Stupples from just another links course to a cornerstone of golf history.

Because now, the best female players in the world were a part of that history, and that inclusion changed everything.

“It really kind of struck home that as women pros, the respect we were being given,” said Stupples, “having our Open on that great golf course where history has been made for centuries. It was really special. You turned a corner.”

The feeling returned this week when the best female players in the game gathered for the first time at Royal Troon, a staple of the men’s British Open rota. But before the first iron was struck at the famed Postage Stamp on Thursday, the R&A announced another first: Muirfield will host the AIG Women’s British Open in 2022.

It was only last year that Muirfield invited its first women members in 275 years. Now the club’s membership will complete the 180-degree change of heart by crowning a female major champion in two short years. She will join a list of 16 men who have won an Open at Muirfield, including the likes of Harry Vardon, Walter Hagen, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino, Tom Watson, Nick Faldo, Ernie Els and Phil Mickelson.

“Muirfield is possibly one of the purest tests of golf in the world,” said Catriona Matthew, a former Women’s British Open winner who lives four miles down the road at North Berwick.

The R&A’s lineup for the women in the next five years speaks volumes about the organization’s commitment to elevating the women’s game: Carnoustie (2021), Muirfield (2022), Walton Heath (2023), St. Andrews (2024) and Royal Porthcawl (2025).

“This is what we need,” said veteran pro Angela Stanford. “People turn on the TV to watch the course. Now we are on them!”

Last year the R&A announced a near 40 percent increase in the Women’s British Open purse, from $1.25 million to $4.5 million. The 2019 edition was AIG’s first year as title sponsor.

It’s still miles away from the parity R&A chief executive Martin Slumbers spoke of – last year’s purse at the men’s British Open was $10.75 million – but a significant improvement. The R&A merged with the Ladies Golf Union in 2017, taking over all championships.

The men’s British Open wasn’t held this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, yet the R&A and AIG remained committed to staging the women’s championship one month later. Slumbers said he personally felt a “deep responsibility” to make it happen.

“There’s a rolling snowball developing,” said Slumbers, “and I would look to all corporates to help get this behind women’s sport and grow that prize money. We’re committed, absolutely committed to doing that, but in a sustainable way.”

There aren’t any household names in women’s golf in America right now, not with Michelle Wie out on maternity leave. No Serena Williams or Nancy Lopez.

That’s why these storied venues are so important to the game. Let the courses bring in new fans.

To increase the interest among young girls, Slumbers said they’ve committed to staging the AIG around London at least once every five years. The Women’s British won’t be solely held on links courses like the men’s championship.

“We want to use this championship, not just for the players to show us, as I said many times, to show us how good they are,” said Slumbers, “but to get more and more interest in women and girls to play.”

When a young girl can watch the men compete at St. Andrews in 2022 and look on the calendar to see that the women will be there two years later, it lights a spark.

That goes for 50-year-old pros, too.

“Will be very special to have a major five minutes from my home,” said Matthew of Muirfield. “With that and St. Andrews now on the schedule, I may need to hang around a bit longer.”

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