Royal Portrush confirmed as 2019 British
Open host
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[October 20, 2015]
By Amanda Ferguson
PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland (Reuters) - The
British Open will be held outside England and Scotland for the first
time in more than 60 years when it returns to Northern Ireland's Royal
Portrush in 2019, tournament organisers the Royal & Ancient (R&A) said
on Tuesday.
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The British Open championship was last held at the Northern Irish
links course in 1951, the only other time the major championship was
held anywhere but England and Scotland, and will be held there twice
again over the following two decades.
The British Open will be latest in a series of high profile events
to visit Northern Ireland, which was beset by three decades of
violence that claimed 3,600 lives before a peace deal largely ended
the bloodshed 17 years ago.
"One of the world's biggest sporting events is coming to our little
country," Europe's Ryder Cup captain Darren Clarke told Reuters at
the announcement.
"Through our good times and bad times it is huge we've got the
biggest golf tournament in the world. These pictures are going to go
all over the world and showcasing Northern Ireland. The global and
financial benefits are immeasurable."
Once blacklisted next to Baghdad and Beirut as a tourism no-go zone,
the British province successfully hosted the opening stages of the
Giro d'Italia last year as thousands long starved of major sporting
events packed the streets.
Sporadic sectarian violence still persists in parts of Northern
Ireland though and often breaks out when marches held by rival
communities reach their peak in mid-July each year, potentially on
the eve of the Open's return on July 18-21, 2019.
The return to Royal Portrush, the hometown of major champion Graeme
McDowell and which also counts 2011 British Open champion Clarke as
a member, was announced last year but the date was subject to course
improvements being made.
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Two new holes are being added while the course length will increase
by a little under 200 yards to 7,337 yards and the number of bunkers
by three to 62, still the fewest of any of the courses which host
the 155-year-old event, the R&A said.
"Royal Portrush is one of my favourite golf courses in the world. I
think it will be a fantastic Open venue," Northern Ireland's Rory
McIlroy, who lifted the Open winner's Claret Jug in 2014, said in a
statement.
(Editing by Padraic Halpin/John O'Brien)
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