The K Club: The pro's view
John McHenry, The K Club director of golf, takes Paul Trow on a tour of the Ryder Cup battleground
Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.The players can expect a rigorous challenge at a course which was upgraded late last year by its designer, Arnold Palmer. "The K Club has become an even better, more testing course," he said. "I don't think it is extremely long by today's standards, but there are some really great holes that will make the matches very interesting."
The order of the holes has also been changed. The nines have been switched with the exception of the finishing holes on each side, meaning that holes 10-17 are now 1-8 followed by the original ninth, and holes 1-8 are now 10-17, followed by the original 18th.
This sets up a finish of a difficult par-four between two par-fives. "It's a very strong finish," Palmer said. "You will have to take risks to really use the par-fives."
Set on the banks of the River Liffey, the Palmer Course is a glorious parkland creation with an abundance of mature trees and many spectacular views.
Hole No 1 (normally 10th)
Bohereen Road
Par 4, 418 yards
Ideal line is down rightover big pines. Should leave short-iron over jutting water hazard and mound to generous, exposed green. Bunker right gathers most pushed approach shots.
Arnold Palmer alteration: Fairway bunkers added on left.
Hole No 2 (11th)
The Tunnel
Par 4, 413 yards
Line is just inside cluster of trees on right to uphill fairway. Anything left will catch bunker. Due to elevation, you need to take enough club for second shot. There is also a ridge in green which falls away to left.
AP alteration: Lengthened, fairway bunker added on left, greenside bunker enlarged.
Hole No 3 (12th)
The Island Beach
Par 3, 170 yards
Wind is generally against, which makes club selection tricky. Green has a pronounced ridge, is only 15 yards from front to back, and is protected by water and sand at front and a particularly deep back bunker.
Hole No 4 (13th)
Arnold's Pick
Par 5, 568 yards
Ideal line is left as ground slopes to right. With tall trees protecting right of green, best chance to attack is from left. Raised green is surrounded by bunkers.
AP alteration: Added a few yards.
Hole No 5 (14th)
Square Meadow
Par 4, 440 yards
Start of stretch of three difficult holes. Uphill, it plays long into wind. Ideal drive is blind over mound on left. All but back right-hand corner of green is obscured by big mound.
AP alteration: Lengthened slightly.
Hole No 6 (15th)
The Liffey Stream
Par 4, 478 yards
Line from elevated tee is left offairway, which slopes to right. Then hit long-iron from hanging lie to green protected by stream running diagonally from back left to front right.
AP alteration: Lengthened slightly, trees added on right of fairway.
Hole No 7 (16th)
Michael's Favourite
Par 4, 430 yards
New tee has made this much tougher, especially on second shot, which now requires mid-iron instead of wedge. In some respects the most intimidating hole, with water both right and left of fairway and virtually surrounding green.
AP alteration: Added 37 yards.
Hole No 8 (17th)
Mayfly Corner
Par 3, 173 yards
Exquisite short hole by Liffey with backdrop of trees. Contour of green is left to right, while prevailing wind is right to left. Players favour left because there is only watery grave to right.
Hole No 9 (9th)
The Eye Of The Needle
Par 4, 461 yards
Long tee-shot required to avoid chestnut tree in middle of fairway. Ideal angle for approach is from left to have full view of green, which slopes away. Anything right puts bunkers and mounds in play.
Hole No 10 (1st)
Mick Holly
Par 5, 584 yards
Best line is down left, though this flirts with out of bounds. Drive down right means obscured view for second shot, which goes downhill to narrow gap between two large bunkers at front of green.
Hole No 11 (2nd)
Lily Pond
Par 4, 415 yards
Water on left is no issue and ideal line is over trees beyond it. Big mistake is to go into bunker on right. Fairway doglegs right to left and runs downhill towards small green sloping to water on left.
AP alteration: Added 15 yards.
Hole No 12 (3rd)
The Domain
Par 3, 182 yards
Club selection is important as back half of green slopes away and left to water and deep back bunker. Local knowledge helps due to swirling wind. Huge trap on right.
AP alteration: Lowered green, moved it closer to pond on left, added a tier in the middle of it.
Hole No 13 (4th)
Laurel Heaven
Par 4, 428 yards
A bite-off-as-much-as-you-dare hole. Best line is left, over copse of high trees, though most favour right side for clear view of green, which is guarded by sand left and water right and slopes left to right.
AP alteration: Added 30 yards, renovated bunker beside green.
Hole No 14 (5th)
Church Fields
Par 3, 213 yards
Best line is from left as contour feeds ball right and back. Ditch parallel to left of green not in play. Waterfall and church ruins in background make an attractive hole.
AP alteration: Deepened and enlarged bunker at the green.
Hole No 15 (6th)
Pheasant Run
Par 4, 446 yards
Trees down left of fairway, so ideal drive is left with slight fade towards water up right side. Second shot is uphill to green behind collection of grassy hummocks. Green is big but slopes sharply front to back.
Hole No 17 (8th)
Half Moon
Par 4, 424 yards
Where Thomas Bjorn pull-hooked three tee-shots into Liffey on his way to an 11 in final round of 2005 European Open. Tall trees on right mean tee points towards Liffey, so an ideal drive is down that line with fade.
AP alteration: Lengthened, trees added on right, green flattened to soften slope towards water.
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments