O2O2
  • Latest
  • Basketball
  • Football
  • Baseball
  • Soccer
  • Golf
  • Hockey
  • Tennis

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from O2 about Sports.

What's Hot

Bronny James, Son of LeBron James, Is Stable After Cardiac Arrest

25 July 2023

The president of Norway’s federation, a rare woman of influence in soccer, is speaking up.

25 July 2023

A Continental Competition, All in One Neighborhood

25 July 2023
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Our Shop
O2O2
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Latest

    Bronny James, Son of LeBron James, Is Stable After Cardiac Arrest

    25 July 2023

    A Continental Competition, All in One Neighborhood

    25 July 2023

    Women’s World Cup: New Zealand Takes Aim at Another First

    25 July 2023

    Kylian Mbappé Is Target of Record Offer From Saudi Arabia’s Al Hilal

    24 July 2023

    Women’s World Cup Scores and Schedule

    24 July 2023
  • Basketball

    Review: ‘Flex’ Hits the Right Rhythms on the Court and Off

    22 July 2023

    Why Basketball Is So Popular Off Broadway

    18 July 2023

    Aliyah Boston of the Indiana Fever Has Officially Arrived

    17 July 2023

    Inside the NBA’s Version of Comic-Con

    15 July 2023

    Nikki McCray-Penson, Basketball Star and Coach, Dies at 51

    9 July 2023
  • Football

    Aaron Rodgers Is Now a Jet (and Becoming a New Yorker, Too)

    24 July 2023

    With Aaron Rodgers, Jets Enter Era of Expectation

    21 July 2023

    N.F.L. Fines Snyder $60 Million for Sexual Harassment and Withholding Revenue

    21 July 2023

    Saquon Barkley and Giants Cannot Agree to Long-Term Deal

    18 July 2023

    C.R. Roberts, Scoring Sensation in Milestone Game, Dies at 87

    17 July 2023
  • Baseball

    Fred McGriff and Scott Rolen Are Inducted Into Baseball Hall of Fame

    24 July 2023

    Hall of Fame: Fred McGriff and Scott Rolen Are Connected in Their Contrast

    21 July 2023

    Corbin Carroll and Elly De La Cruz to Face off in Cincinnati-Arizona Series

    20 July 2023

    Randy Bass and Alex Ramirez are Inducted Into Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame

    20 July 2023

    Carl Erskine Shares Insights on Musial, Aaron and Mays

    17 July 2023
  • Soccer

    The president of Norway’s federation, a rare woman of influence in soccer, is speaking up.

    25 July 2023

    New Zealand wants to build on ‘Fern Fever.’ Norway needs a comeback.

    25 July 2023

    Norway’s Lise Klaveness Is Calling Out FIFA From the Inside

    24 July 2023

    England has been strong but shaky going into this tournament.

    23 July 2023

    Women’s World Cup: Sweden, the Netherlands and France Make Their Entrances

    23 July 2023
  • Golf

    Brian Harman Romps to British Open Victory at Royal Liverpool

    24 July 2023

    Why Hasn’t The British Open Ever Been Played in Wales?

    23 July 2023

    Jon Rahm Roars Up The British Open Leaderboard To Contend On Sunday

    22 July 2023

    Harman Charges to British Open Lead as McIlroy Seeks Elusive Magic

    21 July 2023

    Names Old and New Top British Open Leaderboard

    20 July 2023
  • Hockey

    The Mind is Willing, So the Body Doesn’t Have Much Choice

    24 July 2023

    Vegas Golden Knights Beat Florida Panthers To Win Stanley Cup

    14 June 2023

    South Florida’s Heat and Panthers Chase N.B.A. And N.H.L. Titles

    9 June 2023

    The Hockey Championship the U.S. Men Just Can’t Seem to Win

    29 May 2023

    The Miami Heat Might Blow a 3-0 Series Lead

    29 May 2023
  • Tennis

    ‘Break Point’ Just Might Be the Best Way to Watch Tennis

    19 July 2023

    At Wimbledon, Is It Time for Hawk-Eye Live to Replace the Line Judges?

    18 July 2023

    Jessica Pegula Draws Inspiration From Her Mother’s Healing. It’s Mutual.

    17 July 2023

    Elina Svitolina Of Ukraine One Match Away From Wimbledon Final

    17 July 2023

    Elina Svitolina Aims for a Wimbledon Singles Final Against Jabeur or Sabalenka

    17 July 2023
O2O2
Home»Golf»Why Hasn’t The British Open Ever Been Played in Wales?

Why Hasn’t The British Open Ever Been Played in Wales?

o2@inaim.comBy o2@inaim.com23 July 2023No Comments6 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
23british-wales-01-fbcj-facebookJumbo.jpg
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

One afternoon last week, around the 17th green at the Royal Liverpool Golf Club, the rain was pattering on the parasols and the air was cold enough for an English summer. A veil of fog clouded the landscape. Yet a few long tee shots across the estuary were close enough to peek at the Welsh coast.

The British Open, due to end on Sunday, may never come close to Wales.

First held while Queen Victoria was on the throne, the Open is a national ceremony that has been held only in limited parts of the country, and unlike England, Scotland and Northern Ireland, it is not held in Wales. With venues through 2026 already selected, Wales is still left out and the drought will last at least as long as the first 154 openings. By then, Northern Ireland, which hadn’t hosted a Modern Open until 2019, will have a new Open.

The R&A, organizers of the Open Championship, said Wales were left out because of infrastructure and capacity issues. It’s no small matter, as the Games require the temporary launch of a heavily guarded, hospitality-filled, championship-level coastal enclave that draws tens of thousands of people a day. But the R&A’s stance has long raised questions about whether one of the country’s flagship sporting events is a good reflection of Britain.

“Not all parts of the UK are covered by the Open and excluding all citizens from the Open is not true to the idea that golf is open to everyone,” said Welsh MP Ken Skate, who lobbied the R&A to host the Open in Wales when he was Minister of Economy.

“It’s a little frustrating,” he politely admitted, standing behind the first green at Royal Liverpool on Friday.

Jockeying for hosting rights is nothing new to the sport, and men’s golf is a particularly valuable target for the few venues with courses challenging enough to test the world’s best. Three of the four major tournaments are held at different venues each year. (With the exception of Masters tournaments, which are always held at Augusta National Golf Club in Georgia.)

The R&A’s list of open eligible courses is effectively just nine, from the Scottish facilities on the North Sea to Royal St George’s in the South East of England. After this weekend at Royal Liverpool in the North West of England, next year will return to Royal Troon in Scotland, followed by Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland and Royal Birkdale in England.

For all intents and purposes, the R&A has always faced a predicament as to how far they can fit the Open to conventional standards. Several past venues are no longer participating, including the original open course, Prestwick, which was ultimately judged too small for a packed crowd. More recently, the relationship between former President Donald J. Trump and Mr. Turnberry has put the R&A at a distance.

But Wales had no turn at all. In fact, one of the biggest problems for Wales is that the R&A has canceled openings at more courses than domestic candidates. Only Royal Porcourt is considered a possibility, and cheerleaders acknowledge its shortcomings.

Still, exclusion hurts.

“We have an inferiority complex,” said golf writer John Hopkins, who has been a member of the Royal Portcall since the late 1990s, adding with a smile that Welsh are primarily known for their “ability to play rugby and sing”.

But hosting the British Open “will prove that we outweigh ourselves in golf,” he said.

Perhaps due to historical inertia or the innate tendency of the St Andrews-based R&A to favor England and Scotland, some believe that forces beyond the running of the tournament are working to keep the Open Championship elsewhere. In 2019, The Telegraph urged The R&A says it “eliminates politics” and “disregards concerns about ‘infrastructure’ and the strength of ties as they are mere smokescreens.”

There is little doubt that the R&A is doing the Royal Portcall a favor for other important events, and some see this approach as a consolation prize. The Senior Open will be decided there next weekend, while the Women’s Open is set to debut at Royal Portcall in 2025. There are concerns about whether the Royal Porcourt is long enough for today’s strong men’s players, but the course itself is generally seen as suitable for the Open, in part because it is particularly vulnerable to the stormy weather that characterizes the tournament, as we saw during the two Senior Opens that Bernhard Langer won there.

“One was completely dry. The ball was flying 100 yards down the fairway,” Langer, a two-time Masters tournament winner, said in an interview. “And one of them was wet and windy and could not have been more miserable. That’s links golf.”

The R&A’s chief executive, Martin Slumbers, said Wednesday that the course is “genuinely world-class”.

“But we need a lot of land,” he quickly added. “We need a lot of infrastructure. A championship of this size needs a lot of equipment.

Established in 1891, the Royal Porthcall has a small footprint with relatively limited space for the gates, spectator stands, premium seating, scoring tents and all other temporary facilities required for a major. This year’s British Open is expected to draw 260,000 spectators, second only to the 290,000 fans who filled the Old Course at St Andrews last year. The last time attendance at the British Open fell below 150,000 was at Muirfield 10 years ago.

In 2017, when Langer last competed in the Senior Open at Royal Portcall, the event drew about 32,000 people despite bad weather.

The course is about a 45-minute drive from the Welsh capital Cardiff, but there are few restaurants, hotels or transport around the club, making the Open one of the smoothest events in international sport. Hoylake’s many restaurants and rentals welcomed large crowds during the tournament at Royal Liverpool. Even more people often use rail services that run every 10 minutes to travel the short distance to Liverpool, a city of about half a million people.

Mr Langer had no doubts that Royal Portcaul could prove to be a suitable host for the Open Championship from a golfing point of view, but seemed much more reluctant to say that Royal Portcaul could handle the other challenges of the 31-played tournament.

“Building new roads, highways, 100 hotels, tent villages and space for 50,000 spectators is difficult,” he said.

Welsh leaders have indicated their intention to pursue public investment in exchange for an open event at Royal Portcall, with some Royal Portcall members looking to purchase nearby farmland that could be much more likely to be held open if vacated. But their years of effort have yet to yield breakthroughs that could overcome the R&A’s concerns.

But the rise of Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland, whether ultimately misplaced or not, gave Welsh officials something of a strategy, or at least some confidence.

Skates predicted that the R&A could bend within a decade.

Then he wandered off to find his brother Welsh towering in the distance.

British Hasnt Open Played Wales
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
o2@inaim.com
  • Website

Related Posts

Brian Harman Romps to British Open Victory at Royal Liverpool

24 July 2023

Jon Rahm Roars Up The British Open Leaderboard To Contend On Sunday

22 July 2023

At the British Open, a Mom’s Influence Looms Large for Many Golfers

22 July 2023

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

Bronny James, Son of LeBron James, Is Stable After Cardiac Arrest

Latest 25 July 2023

NBA star LeBron James’ son, LeBron James Jr., was rushed to the hospital for intensive…

The president of Norway’s federation, a rare woman of influence in soccer, is speaking up.

25 July 2023

A Continental Competition, All in One Neighborhood

25 July 2023

New Zealand wants to build on ‘Fern Fever.’ Norway needs a comeback.

25 July 2023
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Our Picks

Yogi Berra on the Field: The Case for Baseball Greatness

8 May 2023

Yoga Keeps Kevon Looney of the Golden State Warriors Grounded

10 May 2023

Yankees Wait for Aaron Judge Injury News After Dodgers Series Win

5 June 2023

Yankees Game Postponed Because of Smoke From Wildfires

7 June 2023

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from O2 about Sports.

About Us
About Us

Welcome to o2.cc, your ultimate destination for the latest world sports news and updates! We are dedicated to bringing you the most up-to-date information on all your favorite sports, including football, basketball, tennis, cricket, and more.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks

Bronny James, Son of LeBron James, Is Stable After Cardiac Arrest

25 July 2023

The president of Norway’s federation, a rare woman of influence in soccer, is speaking up.

25 July 2023

A Continental Competition, All in One Neighborhood

25 July 2023
New Comments
    © 2023 O2. All Rights Reserved
    • About us
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Disclaimer

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    We are using cookies to give you the best experience on our website.

    You can find out more about which cookies we are using or switch them off in .

    O2
    Powered by  GDPR Cookie Compliance
    Privacy Overview

    This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

    Strictly Necessary Cookies

    Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.

    If you disable this cookie, we will not be able to save your preferences. This means that every time you visit this website you will need to enable or disable cookies again.