Golf Courses Rockland County
Enjoy kayaking at Popolopen Creek

Golf Courses

Rockland County

 All New Hempstead Listings

 New Hempstead Golf Courses

10977 Rockland County ScoreCard Golf-Outings Golf-Course Attractions Putting Chipping Greens 19th Hole, 30 tees driving range 18-hole Semi-Private Golf Course - New York Country Club

845-362-5800 
  New York Country Club is a 'Golf Only Facility', located at 103 Brick Church Road, New Hempstead, NY 10977. New York Country Club offers a 30 tees driving range, and 18 regulation holes.

In 1774, Dutch settlers made New Hempstead their home and history was made. Even then, a place called New Amsterdam, now known as New York City, was not too far to travel. History was written again in 1996 as New York Country Club opened its gates in these historic hills. Now in its 10th year, New York Country Club has become a hidden jewel in the tree-lined hills of Rockland County, a place that many golfers have tried to keep secret for many years. Press blue button for Interactive scorecard, golf outings, and more about New York Country Club.

Golf Course Attractions
Fully stocked Pro-shop
All Bentgrass Practice Range
Putting & Chipping Greens with practice sand traps
GPS Modules on every Golf Cart
Beverage Cart Service
Full Locker Rooms with Showers
Steam Room, and Sauna
Golf Bag Storage
19th Hole Bar & Grill

  Also in Category: Outdoor Activities & Places to Go
 All Pearl River Listings

 Pearl River Golf Courses

10965, Golf Course, Pearl River,  27 hole, municipal, golf facility, golfer, playing golf, Golf Course, Attractions, Golf only facility, championship layout Municipal Golf Course - Blue Hill

845-735-2094 
  Blue Hill Golf Course is located at 285 Blue Hill Road, Pearl River, NY 10965. Blue Hill is a 27 hole municipal golf facility located on the shores of scenic Lake Tappan, and offers rolling topography and challenges for all levels of golfer. The course includes a full service pro shop and restaurant facilities. The course is open to the public, with preferential rates and availability of tee times for Town of Orangetown residents. Press blue button for course photos and more information about playing golf at Blue Hill.

Golf Course Attractions
Golf only facility
27-hole championship layout
Blue Hill is made of three, par 36, nine hole layouts: Pines, Lakeside, and Woodlands
Blue tees = 6500 / par 72
Course rating / slope = 70.8 / 128
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Dress code
Lessons
Pro shop
Pull cart rental
Practice and putting green
Restaurant
Riding cart rental

  Also in Category: Outdoor Activities & Places to Go

10962 newest golf-facility challenging 9 hole Semi-Private Golf Course - Broadacres Golf Club

845-359-8218 
  Broadacres Golf Course is located at 140 Old Orangeburg Road, Orangeburg, NY 10962. Broadacres is the Town's newest golf facility. This challenging 9 hole course is available to the public, with preferential tee times and rates for Town of Orangetown residents and Broadacres grandfathered members. Press blue button for additional information.

Golf Course Attractions
Golf only facility
9-hole regulation length course
Back tees = 3138 yards / par 35
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Club rental
Dress code
Gas carts
Pro shop
Walking the course allowed

  Also in Category: Outdoor Activities & Places to Go
 All Pomona Listings

 Pomona Golf Courses

10970 Pomona New York Rockland County Membership clubhouse Private Golf Course - Minisceongo Golf Club

845-362-8200 
  Minisceongo Golf Club is located in Pomona, New York 10970. Amid the tranquil beauty of Minisceongo Golf Club it's easy to forget that the club is conveniently located in the heart of Rockland County. At just 25 miles from the George Washington Bridge, Minisceongo offers exceptional accessibility for a quick nine before work or a leisurely eighteen on a warm summer evening.

"Spectacular golf steeped rich in history" is one of the best descriptions of our magnificent golf club. We also pride ourselves on our warm and friendly family atmosphere, our culturally diverse Membership, excellent dining, and additional recreational options.

This very special place is marked by old stone water towers, a cemetery dating back to the 1700's, and a multitude of Indian artifacts found during construction. In fact, when you visit our clubhouse, you'll see why we take our heritage so seriously. The history of this spectacular golf course was so important, that almost all of the archaeological finds made during construction were preserved. Press blue button for additional information about Minisceongo Golf Club.

  Also in Category: Outdoor Activities & Places to Go
 All Rockland County Listingshudson river counties tourist tourism tour touring guide visit visiting travel traveler vacation holiday attractions sights sightsee places interest day tripper explore exploring

 Rockland County Golf Courses

Rockland Lake, Championship Golf Course, New York City, Hudson Valley, 18-hole golf courses, executive course, course information, 18-hole championship course, 18-hole executive course, Golf Course, Attractions Municipal Golf Course - Rockland Lake Championship Golf Course

845-268-6250 
  Rockland Lake Championship Golf Course, located just 25 miles north of New York City in the Hudson Valley, features two 18-hole golf courses. One is a championship course; the other is an executive course. The championship course is a true test of golfing skills. The tight, tree-lined fairways and rolling terrain lead to elevated greens. There are only 37 bunkers on the course, but all are well-placed. The par 3s are long and difficult. Press blue button for course information about both the 18-hole championship course and the 18-hole executive course.

Golf Course Attractions
Golf only facility
18-hole Championship length course
Blue tees = 6864 yards / par 72
Course rating / slope = 74.2 / 133
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Carts - hand cart rental
Carts - riding cart rental
Club House
Driving range
Lessons
Practice putting greens
Pro shop
Putting green
Restaurant

  Also in Category: Outdoor Activities & Places to Go

Rockland Lake, Golf Course, Golf Courses, Hudson Valley, 18-hole golf courses, championship course, executive course, golfing, Driving range, 18-hole regulation length course, 18-hole executive course Municipal Golf Course - Rockland Lake Executive Golf Course

845-268-7930 
  Rockland Lake Executive Golf Course, located just 25 miles north of New York City in the Hudson Valley, features two 18-hole golf courses. One is a championship course, the other is an executive course. The championship course is a true test of golfing skills. The tight, tree-lined fairways and rolling terrain lead to elevated greens. There are only 37 bunkers on the course, but all are well-placed. The par 3s are long and difficult.

All the holes on the executive course are par 3s and vary in length from 110 yards to 213 yards. Driving range mats are used for teeing surfaces. This course provides a good test of skill to brush up on your short game.

Golf Course Attractions
18-hole executive course
Regulation tees = 2780 yards / par 54
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Clinics
Club Housel
Driving cart rental
Driving range
Lessons
Lockers
Practice putting greens
Pro shop
Putting green
Showers
Snack bar

  Also in Category: Outdoor Activities & Places to Go

10989, Hook Mountain, Things To Do, Biking, Boat Launch, Boat Rentals, Fishing, Golf, Hiking Trails, Picnic Tables, Playground, Swimming, kiddies pool, Tennis, Winter Activities, Cross-Country Skiing, Ice Fishing, Sledding Rockland Lake State Park

845-268-3020 
  Rockland Lake State Park is located at 299 Rockland Lake Road, Valley Cottage NY 10989, Rockland County. The lake is located on a ridge of Hook Mountain above the west bank of the Hudson River.

The park offers two Olympic-sized swimming pools and two kiddies pools for swimming on the hot days of summer. After a swim, enjoy a picnic at the picnic tables and grills. The park also offers a car-top boat launch and boat rentals, hiking trails with breathtaking views of the Hudson Valley, six tennis courts and two golf courses. Anglers can fish Rockland Lake for bass, perch and norlunge; walkers and joggers can use the fitness trail around the lake. Winter visitors enjoy designated cross-country ski trails and sledding slopes.

Things To Do
Biking
Boat Launch Sites
Boat Rentals
Fishing
Food
Golf
Hiking Trails / Walking
Nature Trail
Picnic Tables
Playground
Swimming (2 Olympic sized pools and kiddies pool)
Tennis

    Winter Activities
    Cross-Country Skiing
    Ice Fishing
    Sledding

  Also in Categories:
Attractions in the Hudson Valley
Biking Trails / Bike Paths
Boat Launch
Boating, Canoeing, Kayaking
Children & Kids - Things To Do
Childrens Activities & Attractions
Cross-Country Skiing
Fishing
Hiking Trails & Walking
Ice Skating / Indoor & Outdoor Ice Skating Rinks
Outdoor Activities & Places to Go
Parks in the Hudson River Valley
Parks in the Hudson Valley
Picnicking / Picnic
Playgrounds
Sledding, Snowboarding, Snowshoeing, Winter Sports
Swimming
Things to Do in the Hudson Valley
 All Stony Point Listings

 Stony Point Golf Courses

10980, Golf Club, 18-hole, golf, Stony Point, New York State, Revolutionary War, Stony Point Battlefield, Hudson River, golfing, Attractions, Driving range Municipal Golf Course - Patriot Hills Golf Club

845-947-7085 
  Patriot Hills Golf Club is a 195-acre, 18-hole golf course located at 19 Clubhouse Lane, Stony Point, NY 10980. The township, enacted by the New York State Legislature on March 2O, 1865, is named for the Revolutionary War fort led by General Anthony Wayne and his patriot troops that was captured during a battle in July 1779. The Stony Point Battlefield later became home to the first lighthouse erected along the Hudson River in 1826. Press blue button for tee times, fees, scorecard, and more about golfing at Patriot Golf Club.

Golf Course Attractions
Golf Club
18-hole regulation length course
Back tees = 6502 yards / par 71
Course rating / slope = 70.7 / 137
Greens = Bent grass
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Club rental
Carts - riding cart rental
Dress code
Driving range (lit at night)
Lessons
Locker rooms
Pro shop
Practice green
Restaurant

  Also in Categories:
Hudson River Towns
Outdoor Activities & Places to Go
 All Suffern Listings

 Suffern Golf Courses

10901, Spook Rock, Golf, Suffern , NY, Rockland County, golfers, Golf Course, Golf Course Attractions, Golf only facility, historical Ramapo Mountains Municipal Golf Course - Spook Rock Golf Course

845-357-6466 
  Spook Rock Golf Course is located at 199 Spook Rock Road, Suffern , NY 10901 in Rockland County. This 18 hole layout features gently rolling hills set in the historical Ramapo Mountains. With seven holes featuring water hazards over 55 sand bunkers, perimeter out of bounds, streams and gently sloping greens, this 150 acre layout with four separate sets of teeing areas, offers a challenge to golfers of all ability.

The initial construction in 1969 featured the architectural design of Frank Duane, with re-design features provided by Steven Kay. Press blue button for additional course features at Spook Rock Golf Course.

Golf Course Attractions
Golf only facility
18-hole regulation length course
Blue tees = 6806 yards / par 72Course rating / slope = 72.9 / 136
Bent grass
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Carts - hand cart rental
Carts - riding cart rental
Club rental
Chipping and putting green
Driving range
Lessons
Pro shop
Restaurant
Riding cart rental

  Also in Category: Outdoor Activities & Places to Go
 All Thiells Listings

 Thiells Golf Courses

10894, Rotella Memorial Golf Course, Golf Course, Thiells, Rockland County, Golf Course Attractions, 18-hole course Public Golf Course - Philip J. Rotella Memorial Golf Course

845-354-1616 
  The Philip J. Rotella Memorial Golf Course is located at 100 Thiells Mt. Ivy, Thiells, NY 10894 in Rockland County. The par-72 course at the Philip J. Rotella Memorial Golf Course measures over 6500 yards from the back tees. It was designed by Hal C. Purdy and opened for play in 1987. The diversity of challenges one will experience on our golf course have something in store for golfers at any skill level. Rotella is known for having the best greens in Rockland County. The signature hole at P.J. Rotella Memorial is #9, a mean par 5. Let's hope you're secure in your approach shots. Press blue button for course details, the Golf Shop, and more about Philip J. Rotella Memorial.

Golf Course Attractions
Golf only facility
18-hole regulation length course
Back tees = 6502 yards / par 72
Course rating / slope = 71.4 / 128
Blue grass
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20 tees driving range
Club repair
Golf shop
Lessons
Practice areas
Restaurant

  Also in Category: Outdoor Activities & Places to Go

Golf Courses

Rockland County


Find a Golf Course on the List of Golf Courses in Rockland County . Select a private or public golf course on the List of Private and Public Golf Courses . Plan your next golf vacation in New York and enjoy one of the many championship Golf Courses in Rockland County and the beautiful Hudson River Valley.

Terminology

    Private Equity Golf Course
    A "Private-equity-club" is a club where your membership fee makes you an owner of the golf club. This is similar to a "partnership". If you leave the club you can sell your ownership to someone else - subject to the rules of the club. You are also responsible for assessments that might arise if the club has financial problems.

    Private Non-Equity Golf Course
    In a "Non-equity club", your membership fee is generally an up-front initiation charge. If you leave the club, you cannot recover your membership fee.

History of Golf

Pre 1400: The Origins of the Game
Throughout recorded history, every civilization has played a game with a club and a ball. Pangea for example, as described by Roman scribes, would appear to be the father both of modern hockey and the Celtic games of Shinty and Hurling. In one form or another, the variant games of present day golf were clearly enjoyed throughout Europe in the Middle Ages. The game persisted over the centuries and the form that it took and rules that were applied varied as widely as the terrain the game was played over. In short, the game consisted of knocking a ball from one pre-designated place to another where the ball was to be struck off a predetermined object in the least number of blows. Games often extended from village to village.

    That this game was ousted from the towns and onto the commons land beyond is one possible solution to the question of how it all began. Whatever the exact origins, it is known that by the 15th century, kolf as it was known in the Netherlands and golf as it was referred to in England, was a pastime enjoyed by Kings and Commoners alike. It's kinship to the Great Game however, remains entirely questionable. So widespread was the game of Gowf , as it was known in Scotland, that an Act of Parliament was passed to prevent the playing of the game on Sundays and thus preserve the skills of Archery. The citizens of Aberdeen, St. Andrews and Leith on Scotland's East Coast were the principal gowfing miscreants and it was no coincidence that rolling sandy links land was commonplace here. On this very terrain, a game that started with a cleek and a ball took on a form that started an evolutionary process that continues to this day.

    The question of how it all began may be of pressing concern to some but to the Scot, it is sufficient to know that the game was born on the links land of eastern Scotland. Here, the game has been nurtured for over five hundred years and from here, it has been raised to the great game played and loved by millions throughout the world.

1750 - 1850: The Robertons of St. Andrews
This was the period when golf as we know it today came to be. It was in this time that many of today's great golf clubs were founded and the leading players of the era started to gain renown. The great club-makers and ball-makers of the era began to emerge and the clubs produced by these skilled craftsmen were coveted to the extent that forgeries became commonplace.

    Top players began to regularly gather for 'meetings' when medal and match-play rounds were organized, with distinctions made for the first time between amateur and professional players. Allan Robertson, of the famous ball-making family in St Andrews, is widely credited as being the first golf professional. But before Allan, his Grandfather Peter was described as a professional golfer and although history knows little of this man, his reputation survived him and his prowess was widely acknowledged. One epic contest in 1843 was between Allan Robertson and Willie Dunn, two of the best players of that time. The challenge was held over 20 rounds (2 rounds per day over 10 days) and it was Robertson who triumphed - two rounds up with one to play.

1850 - 1890: The Morris and Park Era
If golf as we know it had its birth in the dim and distant past of the 17th century and its upbringing under the Robertson family on the links of St Andrews, then its adolescence occurred abruptly between 1848 and 1852. Three highly significant events occurred in St Andrews that were to turn the game from the parochial into the global. The first of these events was the discovery of the "gutta percha" based ball, known as the "gutty" by James Patterson in 1848. More importantly, the durability of this new ball in turn encouraged the development of iron-faced clubs and so continued the process of evolution.

    Then in 1852 the railway came to St Andrews and with it the progenitors of the millions who have made the pilgrimage since. Now the links was played by all and sundry throughout the year and not simply restricted to the busy spring and autumn meetings. The R & A erected it's now famous clubhouse in consequence of the railway, scores of ex-pat colonialists retired to the town and families took up residence so that their sons could attend the University, which was gradually assuming a stature comparable with Oxford and Cambridge. If the 'gutty' transformed the game, the railway certainly transformed the town of St Andrews.

    The third event of this period, which comes in two parts, is surely one of the most important events in the long history of the game. Every individual who has made a living out of hitting a golf ball should hold April 20th 1851 as the nativity for that was the birth date of Young Tom Morris, one of the game's greatest early exponents. Similarly, every green-keeper, designer or administrator should express some word of gratitude on the 1st of July for it was on that day in 1851 that Old Tom Morris left for Prestwick to create the first purpose built golf course on the links of Monkton parish.

    It was in 1860 that the first Open Championship was held at Prestwick and was contested by eight leading professionals. The first winner was Willie Park for which he received a red Morocco leather belt with silver clasps as the first prize. The Open continued to be held at Prestwick for 11 years and the Morris's dominated the early events. Old Tom had won the event four times by 1867 and Young Tom subsequently completed a quartet of wins, after which he was allowed to keep the Belt.

    Young Tom Morris was raised on the links of Prestwick Golf Club and it was there that he honed a game that was as revolutionary as the new iron clubs that he had purpose made by Stewart in St Andrews. Irons that were previously resorted to for a bad lie were now used for driving, lofting, jiggering and putting.

    Young Tom Morris also knew his worth and he demanded and obtained a good living from the flair that he brought to the game. In this sense he was the first true modern professional golfer. The Morris's accrued an incredible record, with Old Tom winning the Open in 1861, '62, '64 and '67, while Young Tom won in 1868, '69, '70 and 72. Across the Firth of Forth in Musselburgh another family came close to matching them when Willie Park Sr. and Jr. won the Open six times between them. Old Tom and Willie Sr. won all but one Open (1865) prior to the emergence of Young Tom. Both were much-loved figures and were responsible for the standards of sportsmanship with which the game is synonymous today.

1890 - 1914: The Great Triumvirate
This era will always be remembered for the mark left on the game of golf by John Henry Taylor, Harry Vardon and James Braid. Known as the great triumvirate, they collected sixteen Open Championships between them and have left an indelible impression on the game of golf.

    Harry Vardon hailed from the Channel Island of Jersey and Henry Taylor from Devon in England. The emergence of Vardon and Taylor before the end of the 19th century attests to the rapid spread and widespread play of the game. Both had already established themselves as Open Champions before they were joined by James Braid. The three between them collected 16 Open titles and 13 second-place finishes and almost completely excluded a host of great Scots players from the records of the game during that particular period of time.

    While Vardon won the US Open of 1900 during a tour of America where he played in approximately 80 matches and winning 70 of them, Braid's decision to remain at home was well rewarded as an exhibition match player. Braid also established himself in course design, building Gleneagles and Nairn to name but two of his many jewels.

    What started as a trickle of Scots golfers to the US, became commonplace by the turn of the century when anyone who could swing a club on a Scots links was able to find a lucrative niche as a professional in the US. The early US Open Champions were all Scots born players who, as teachers and mentors produced players that would come to further transform the game.

1920 - 1939: Between the Great Wars
The First World War decimated Scottish golf. Every village war memorial attests to the numbers who fell in France and few clubs are without a memorial to some rising star, who played out his last match on the fields of Flanders. Some great players survived but the consequence of terror gutted their game. Those that came through unscathed were few in number, determined never to see the like again and often took the decision to play in America - golf's promised land.

    There was one notable exception in the mercurial George Duncan. He won the first post-war Open at Deal in 1920 when Sandy Herd at the age of 51 was runner-up. Duncan also played in the Ryder Cups of '27 and '29, captaining the side in 1931. Scottish golfers were sorely tried by the wave of first generation Americans that returned to assault the Championships after the War.

    Jock Hutchison was the last St Andrews born player to win the Open, while Paul Lawrie was the last native Scot when he won at Carnoustie in 1999. After Jock's win, the Open was dominated by the American, Walter Hagen who won the first of his four Open titles in 1922 at St George's and followed up with victories in '24, '28 and '29. Together with his compatriots Jim Barnes (1925), Gene Sarazen (1932) and the incomparable Bobby Jones who won in 1926 and '27, this was an unprecedented period of Open Championship domination by US players.

    The year 1922 saw 20 years old Gene Sarazen burst onto the scene in dramatic fashion, landing both the US Open and US PGA Championship, retaining the latter the following year after a play off with Walter Hagen. Hagen bounced right back after this setback and won the next four PGA Championships from 1924 to 1927. The Ryder Cup was held for the first time in 1927, when the United States, captained by Walter Hagen, took on and comprehensively defeated their counterparts from Great Britain & Ireland.

1946 - 1960: The Emergence of the World Game
If the First World War decimated Scottish golf, the second came close to gutting it completely. The First War took the players - the Second War took the golf courses.

    The Scottish links lands border long sandy beaches, usually in remote places of low population density. As a result, it did not take a brilliant military mind to reason that the links beaches would make for ideal disembarkation sites and the courses equally perfect places for airborne landings. Few courses remained unscathed - golf was not only suspended for the duration of the War, it was very nearly extinguished.

    US golf became pre-eminent and though the Americans may not have been entirely responsible for winning the war, they did win the battle of post-war golf. One could argue that not having experienced the social and economic upheaval of Europe or the long interruption of play, they were infinitely better prepared for the resumption of golfing hostilities.

    The US domination of the Open Championship itself however, did not occur after the war as it had in the pre-war era of Hagan and Jones. Sceptics argue that the Americans did not play because doing so would have resulted in loss of earnings at home but history tells a different story. Though Sam Snead won the first post-war Open at St Andrews in 1946 and Ben Hogan was victorious in his only visit to Carnoustie in 1953; every other major figure in US golf had come and gone with notably less success. English players were dominant in the immediate post-war years, with Cotton, Burton, Faulkner and Daly (Irish) all winning.

    It was the Colonials however, who were to do the real damage as far as the Open was concerned. Bobby Locke from the Transvaal, a first generation South African Irishman and Peter Thomson, an Australian of solid Scots stock were about to take the golfing world by storm. These two overwhelmed golf in a period of a few years when Locke won in 1947 and '51 and Thomson in '54, '55, '56, '58 and again in '65. Indeed, Thomson never finished worse than second from 1952 to 1958.

1961: Today - The Global Game of Golf
The record books do not lie and Scottish Golf, though healthy at home, was faring ill abroad. The game had become truly global with players from Taiwan and Japan threatening for major honours. The Swedes were gathering amateur honours throughout Europe and there seemed no end to the talent emerging from Spain.

    American Golf had come into maturity with a vengeance in the form of Arnold Palmer. Palmer played the game as it should be played - with verve and a swashbuckling style.

    In Palmers absence in 1964, Tip Anderson carried the bag of Tony Lema through the most testing gales on the Old Course. It was Lema's win more than any other event that put paid to the excuse that the game had changed and that the new form of golf required only an accurate lofted shot to a soft pulpy green - a shot at which the Americans were clearly adept. The leader board of the '64 Open showed that Jack Nicklaus and plenty more US stars could play the chip-and-run under the wind as well as any that had gone before and as well as any of the home bred players.

    There is no doubt that the game itself had changed with the new courses that were being built throughout the world. American architects led by Robert Trent Jones were building courses that were both long and difficult. Greens were soft and holding in contrast to the hard running greens of the links. The grassy fairways presented another type of problem as the ball sat up on the lush grasses and required club contact quite different to that on the tight lies of the links. Possibly of greater significance was the early adoption in the US of the 'big ball' - the 1.66-inch ball that required a different strike and made for greater control.

    Great exponents of the game poured out of the US and the US Tour was becoming a multi-million dollar industry with even mediocre golfers, grossing millions of dollars not only through tournament play but also through commercial endorsements.

    Following the foundation of the European Tour and the opening of the Ryder Cup to European players, sponsorship grew and European golf blossomed into a money market comparable to that of the US tour. One final ingredient was required however - a star with the charisma of a Palmer and the appeal of a Nicklaus. And so as they say, a star was born. 1979 saw a smiling young genius becoming the first Spaniard to win the Open, with Jack Nicklaus coming second in the race for the Claret Jug for a record seventh time - Seve had arrived on the world scene.

    Lee Trevino won his second US PGA Championship in 1984, made all the more special by the fact that only eight years previously, he was seriously injured having been struck by a lightning bolt. Germany's Bernhard Langer turned the tables on Ballesteros in 1985, beating him in the Masters and gaining revenge for his two-shot defeat in the Open the previous year. 1985 also witnessed the first European success in the Ryder Cup and two years later the US team tasted defeat again but this time on home soil. The Masters of 1986 was perhaps the most thrilling of all. A fantastic late surge from the Golden Bear saw him win his sixth Masters title at the age of 46 - his 21st major victory in an as of yet unparalleled career.

    Not until 1994, did a player with the potential to match the greatness of past legends, come along. Speculation started when Tiger Woods won the US Amateur Championship, continued when he retained it the following year, grew when he became the youngest ever champion at the Masters and climaxed as he stormed to six wins out of six starts in the 1999/2000 season.

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