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DONALD ROSS NEWS FEED
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"Founded in 1903, Inverness has hosted four U.S. Opens (1920, 1931, 1957, 1979), as well as two U.S. Senior Opens, one U.S. Amateur and most recently, the 2019 U.S. Junior Amateur. Ted Ray won the 1920 U.S. Open at Inverness by one stroke over four players, including Harry Vardon. The championship also marked the U.S. Open debut of four-time champion Bob Jones, who finished tied for eighth."
Tags: Tags: Andrew Green, Donald Ross, Ohio, Private Golf, Restoration, USGA, U.S. Open
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"For years, Inverness Club — a six-time major championship venue and Donald Ross design in Toledo, Ohio — seemed an unlikely candidate to rejoin the modern U.S. Open rota. As the national championship increasingly gravitated toward a small circle of anchor sites and the modern game rendered many older courses obsolete for the best male players, Inverness came to be seen as a relic of an earlier era: a great design but not a national championship stage."
Tags: Andrew Green, Donald Ross, Ohio, Private Golf, Restoration, USGA, U.S. Open
"The Donald Ross-designed course has undergone several modifications over its history, the most recent being Andrew Green’s acclaimed efforts to restore the layout to its early 20th century feel. The par-71 layout can play to more than 7,700 yards, with 90 bunkers and small, undulating bentgrass greens acting as its defense. John Zimmers is Inverness Club’s current superintendent."
"In 2024, golf architect Andrew Green completed a renovation of Interlachen Country Club outside Minneapolis, Minnesota. Sitting on one of golf's premier sites, the course was redesigned in 1921 by Donald Ross who helped to maximize the spectacularly rolling terrain, routing holes onto and off of a series of majestic high points -- a fitting backdrop for the third leg of Bobby Jones's 1930 Grand Slam."
Tags: Andrew Green, Fried Egg Golf, Minnesota, Private Golf, Renovation
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"The golf course will remain in operation during construction, though it will go from 18 holes to nine holes for an estimated two seasons during the initial construction stages. It will be reconfigured with the addition of two to four new holes to return it to an 18-hole course."
Tags: Development, Donald Ross, Massachusetts, Public Golf
"I’m a sucker for a municipal course, but I rarely played Dunedin Golf Club when I lived just a few miles away in the early 2000s. The layout carried the name of famous architect Donald Ross as the original designer, but there just wasn’t much Ross left in the ground. Other than accessibility, there was little to draw fans of golf architecture to the course that sits less than half a mile from the Intracoastal Waterway north of St. Petersburg."
Tags: Donald Ross; Florida; Kris Spence; Public Golf; Restoration
"Officially opened in July 1909 at a cost of $2,190, the clubhouse replaced an earlier wooden Golf House with three rooms and a corrugated iron roof. It, in turn, has now been replaced by a new $19 million facility."
Tags: Donald Ross; History; Scotland
"Sure, there were award-winning renovations of Donald Ross’ Mid Pines, Pine Needles and Southern Pines designs in the North Carolina Sandhills. Those placed Franz in many new development conversations, but that elusive solo project lingered like the “Best Golfer to Never Win a Major” label."
Tags: Donald Ross, Golf Course Architecture, Kyle Franz, North Carolina
"Golfweek's Jason Lusk shows you the $6 million restoration of municipal Dunedin Golf Club in Florida, just northwest of Tampa."
Tags: Donald Ross, Florida, Kris Spence, Public Golf, Renovation
WATCH VIDEO HERE
"The article traces the unlikely arc of Dunedin Golf Club, a Donald Ross design on Florida’s Gulf Coast, just north of Tampa, born in the boom years of the 1920s, humbled by the Depression and reborn as a municipal course long before “muni” became a bootstrapping badge of honor. Along the way, it served as the PGA of America’s headquarters, hosted 18 straight Senior PGA Championships and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, even as it drifted from its Golden Age roots."
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