Visit Melbourne: 8 bucket list things to do — including golf — Down Under

Here are 8 must-do activities when visiting Melbourne.

If Australia wasn’t a bucket list destination for you, you may change your mind after hearing about kangaroos hopping down rolling fairways and the plethora of activities to do.

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Many people dread the thought of long plane rides, but the views, excursions and wildlife make it more than worth it. The plane ride is a good opportunity to catch up on sleep in preparation for a hefty time change.

Golfweek took a trip to Melbourne to play extravagant golf and explore the city. While the Aussie accent didn’t stick, the memories and experiences will last a lifetime.


Melbourne and Victoria tick all the boxes for perfect golf, from Royal Melbourne down to the Mornington Peninsula


Here are 8 must-do activities when visiting Melbourne.

Why Royal Melbourne Golf Club is one of the world’s greatest golf destinations

In this video, Golfweek takes on members of the Royal Melbourne over 9 holes at the East Course.

Averee Dovsek, Jason Lusk and Gary Lisbon had a match planned against an Aussie side led by Royal Melbourne members Darcy Brereton, a professional who competes on the Handa PGA Tour of Australasia and Henry Peters, Owner of Under The Card. We won’t go into the details – the lopsided match turned out as anyone might expect when a tour pro is involved. But those results didn’t matter, because this was Royal Melbourne.

We played the East Course this day, the somewhat underappreciated sister course of the world-famous West Course. The East checks in at No. 11 on the Golfweek’s Best list of top courses in Australia and New Zealand, and six of its holes are used alongside 12 from the West to create Royal Melbourne’s Composite Course that is played in many top-tier competitions, including 16 Australian Opens and three Presidents Cups.

It was a blast, even as our American team was blasted in the nine-hole match. The course doesn’t return to the clubhouse at the turn, so we kept swinging, unwilling to miss any of this layout. As is often the case, the top-ranked course at any facility receives almost all the adulation in the press and on TV. But the East at Royal Melbourne is not to be missed, not a single shot of it.

Click here to read Jason’s full article of their experience!

Geoff Ogilvy’s new Sandbelt Invitational in Australia to be held at group of world-class courses

Ogilvy has big plans for his new event in Australia.

Geoff Ogilvy has his eyes on both the men’s and women’s Australian Opens. Not to play, but to surpass.

The 2006 U.S. Open champion, alongside tournament director and golf course architect Mike Clayton, has created a new professional golf tournament in Melbourne with a unique format that is set to be held at four world-class golf courses. The news was first reported by 10 News First in Melbourne.

The Sandbelt Invitational, Dec. 20-23, 2021, will be played at 2019 Presidents Cup host Royal Melbourne, Kingston Heath, Yarra Yarra and Peninsula Kingwood and will include both men and women, as well as a mix of professionals and amateurs.

“We called a few courses and they were almost unanimously instantaneously, ‘yes, were in.’” said Ogilvy to 10 News.

“These kids need something to play in,” added Clayton. “They’re still playing football and cricket but there’s a whole bunch of really good players that have had nothing to play for almost two years.”

Ogilvy and Clayton have big plans for the future of the Sandbelt. The eight-time winner on the PGA Tour said that he plans for the event to be televised in the future and that he wants the tournament to rival the men’s and women’s Australian Opens on the calendar.

“The men and women thing, I think golf has always been a bit too segregated. I think we need to get everyone back into the same sort of pile,” said Ogilvy, who was disappointed in the cancellation of the national opens once again in 2021. He even thinks the separate opens should be a mixed event similar to the Victorian Open.

“For an event that everybody can come to, if it inspires the kids to play golf and gets people out there walking to come see their friends and be social, just like the races or footy or something,” said Ogilvy. “It’s more than just the game.”

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19th hole: Revealing a wish list of courses yet unplayed

The list numbers several clubs that are difficult to get to from the northern coast of Tasmania to an Old Course in western Ireland.

The flipping of the calendar is when Tour professionals seem least like the rest of us. Their goal-setting for the coming year is invariably focused on lofty objectives, like winning, making teams, retaining privileges, improving rankings. The closest I get to performance-based ambitions is a desire to reduce both balls lost and F-bombs dropped, a fruitless effort of several seasons now.

The dawn of 2020 offered a fresh reminder of how few of those who play for a living also play for pleasure, or for education. Zac Blair stood alone among his peers simply by mirroring what so many of us mortals do at this time of the season: compiling a wish list of courses yet unplayed. Blair’s brief included several courses featured in my own version, but the only thing any of our lists really share in common is their essential subjectivity. The lineup aspired to by a casual enthusiast may differ greatly from that of an architecture aficionado, but neither is inherently superior.

As a callow youth I spent a decade and a half sullying the world’s finest golf courses, each round completed helping move others higher up the target list. In recent years I’ve played less — apathy and inaccuracy are a debilitating combination — but the list still exists. Most of my roughly 15 rounds in 2019 came at courses I’d played before. I erased just one entry on the wish list, Garden City Golf Club, the Devereux Emmet-Walter Travis masterpiece just 25 miles east of Manhattan.

On January 1, I tweeted my top five wish list for U.S. golf courses (the final spot on any such docket should always feature a tie, hence my top five totals 11 courses):

1. Fishers Island
2. Chicago Golf Club
3. The Country Club
4. Somerset Hills
5. Eastward Ho, Myopia Hunt, The Creek Club, Mountain Lake, Crystal Downs, Maidstone, Yeamans Hall

The Country Club hosted the 2013 U.S. Amateur. (AP Photo/Gretchen Ertl)

A few Tweeters wondered how such a list could not include places like Pine Valley or Cypress Point, but such correspondents would also likely ask Pope Francis why he didn’t list the Vatican among places he’d most like to visit. More surprising was the number of strangers who kindly reached out with invitations to join them at these clubs, a delightful change from the usual social media offers inviting me to go forth and multiply.

An offer to play Seth Raynor’s Yeamans Hall near Charleston, South Carolina, came from Brian Schneider. He works with the eminent designer Tom Doak and has produced fine work, like a renovation at Hollywood G.C. in New Jersey. I first met Schneider over fish and chips in the tiny village of Bridport on the northern coast of Tasmania, Australia, in 2003. He was working on Barnbougle Dunes, the celebrated creation of Doak and Mike Clayton. We have seen each other just once in the ensuing years, but such is the circle of golf.

A desire to see the finished product is why Barnbougle Dunes is among the 11 courses that make my top five international targets.

1. Royal Melbourne
2. Royal St. George’s
3. Kingston Heath
4. Swinley Forest
5. Barnbougle Dunes, Lahinch, Morfontaine, Cape Wickham, Cruden Bay, Machrihanish, Royal Cinque Ports.

Rory McIlroy hits out of the bunker on the 18th hole during the second day of the British Open Golf Championship at Royal St George’s golf course Sandwich, England, on July 15, 2011. (AP Photo/Jon Super)

This list numbers several clubs that are difficult to get to and at least one that is difficult to get into, though I have yet to issue that s’il vous plaît request. Each earns a spot for distinct reasons.

I walked the beguilingly beautiful Royal Melbourne with Doak during that ’03 trip but we didn’t have time to play it — akin to ushering a ravenous man from a banquet having served only a feast for his eyes. It has been top of my wish list ever since.

Jack Nicklaus once famously remarked that Open Championship venues get worse the farther south one goes. Royal St. George’s sits on England’s southern coast, but my interest is less noble than comparative architectural merit. It will host golf’s oldest major for the 15th time in July and is the only course on the rota I’ve never played.

Swinley Forest is a club renowned for its eccentricities and a course celebrated for its brilliance, though barely 6,000 yards in length. Lahinch is the only top-tier Irish course I’ve not played. I’ve stood on the breathtaking first tee at Machrihanish, but that was at night. Reasons enough for all to feature on my list.

It’s both a blessing and a curse for golfers that our wish lists are never completed, that like an Irish enemies inventory it is perpetually replenished from a seemingly bottomless reservoir. For every Fishers Island or Royal Melbourne that is eliminated, an Ohoopee Match Club or Hirono stands ready to take its place. And that is an indispensable element of these dreams in draft form — that pleasure exists not only in striking through the names consummated but in the addition of those to be courted next.

Most all of us have more great courses remaining to be played than years in which to do it. All we can hope is that the wish list we draft a year from now measures progress against today’s.

A view from the 9th tee over the par 5, 12th hole (left to bridge) with the 10th and 13th greens in the foreground on the The Old Course at Lahinch Golf Club, on September 28, 2005 in Lahinch, Co. Clare, Ireland (Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images)

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Ranking the world’s top 10 composite golf courses

Here are 10 of the best composite courses – and a couple honorable mentions – to host some of golf’s biggest events through the years.

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Forget Tiger Woods, Justin Thomas or local favorite Adam Scott – the star of the Presidents Cup was the course.

Royal Melbourne Golf Club proved to be every bit the test that it had been in previous matches held there in 1998 and 2011. It is a course that has stood the test of time.

As Tiger Woods so eloquently put it, Royal Melbourne is a British Open layout with Augusta National greens. But did you know that it is actually two courses? Twelve holes from the West Course and six from the East Course were combined to make the routing for the Presidents Cup. It’s arguably the world’s most famous composite course, but it is in good company for that honor.

Here are 10 of the best composite courses – and a couple honorable mentions – to host some of golf’s biggest events through the years.

Presidents Cup TV viewership soars for Golf Channel’s drama-filled singles broadcast

Golf Channel reports that the final day of singles became the most-watched cable telecast in Presidents Cup history.

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If it seemed like all of Twitter was glued to late-night Presidents Cup broadcasts this past week – living, dying and Tweeting with every putt – it’s because it was. Stellar play, a close score, plenty of drama and a spectacular venue all contributed to a Golf Channel broadcast that culminated with a peak viewership of 2.15 million viewers per minute during the high point (11:15-11:30 p.m. ET) in Saturday night’s singles matches.

In fact, Golf Channel reports that the final day of singles – played Sunday in Australia but broadcast Saturday night in North America – became the most-watched cable telecast in Presidents Cup history, according to Nielsen Fast Nationals.

PRESIDENTS CUP: Special podcast | Sunday results | Photos
GRADES: Captains, Royal Melbourne earn high marks
MORE: When Captain America is hurting the USA

The time difference certainly helped the popularity of the broadcast. Singles coverage aired live on Golf Channel from 6 p.m. to 12:05 a.m. ET.

According to Golf Channel, that final day posted a Total Audience Delivery (TAD) of 1.742 million viewers per minute (up 141 percent compared to the final day coverage of the 2015 Presidents Cup, played at the Jack Nicklaus Golf Club Korea in Incheon, South Korea), including 1.705 million viewers per minute tuning in to the linear telecast.

Saturday also became the most-streamed final day in Presidents Cup history.

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U.S. Team wins 2019 Presidents Cup

Golfweek’s Adam Woodard reports on the U.S. Team winning the 2019 Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne Golf Club.

Golfweek’s Adam Woodard reports on the U.S. Team winning the 2019 Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne Golf Club.

Presidents Cup: Day 4 singles matchups, tee times

The final-day singles matches await at the 2019 Presidents Cup. And things are set up for a heck of a conclusion.

It all comes down to this.

The final-day singles matches await at the 2019 Presidents Cup. And things are setting up for a heck of a conclusion.

The score heading into the final day is International 10, U.S. 8.

There will be 12 singles matches, as all members of each team get to compete. The golf starts at 10:02 a.m. in Melbourne on Sunday, 6:02 p.m. ET Saturday.

PRESIDENTS CUP: Photos | Scores | TV info

Here’s the lineup, as announced by U.S. Captain Tiger Woods and International Captain Ernie Els:

Tee time (local) Tee time (ET) Match
10:02 a.m. 6:02 p.m. Tiger Woods (U.S.) vs. Abraham Ancer (International)
10:13 a.m. 6:13 p.m. Tony Finau (U.S.) vs. Hideki Matsuyama (International)
10:24 a.m. 6:24 p.m. Patrick Reed (U.S.) vs. C.T. Pan (International)
10:35 a.m. 6:35 p.m. Dustin Johnson (U.S.) vs. Haotong Li (International)
11:46 a.m. 6:46 p.m. Bryson DeChambeau (U.S.) vs. Adam Hadwin (International)
11:57 a.m. 6:57 p.m. Gary Woodland (U.S.) vs. Sungjae Im (International)
12:08 p.m. 7:08 p.m. Patrick Cantlay (U.S.) vs. Joaquin Niemann (International)
12:19 p.m. 7:19 p.m. Xander Schauffele (U.S.) vs. Adam Scott (International)
12:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Webb Simpson (U.S.) vs. Byeong-Hun An (International)
12:41 p.m. 7:41 p.m. Justin Thomas (U.S.) vs. Cameron Smith (International)
12:52 p.m. 7:52 p.m. Matt Kuchar (U.S.) vs. Louis Oosthuizen (International)
1:03 p.m. 8:03 p.m. Rickie Fowler (U.S.) vs. Marc Leishman (International)

TV info

10 a.m. local time Sunday/6 p.m. ET Saturday: Final round, singles matches.

TV: 6 p.m. – midnight ET Saturday, Golf Channel; 1 – 6 p.m. ET Sunday, NBC (replay).

Immediately following play: Closing ceremony celebration.

Fast facts

Venue: Royal Melbourne Golf Club.
Length: 7,055 yards. Par: 71.
Points needed to win: 15½.
Defending champion: United States.
Series: United States leads, 10-1-1.

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