Sir Nick Faldo at Laguna Lang Co.
Danang, Vietnam: Six-time Major winner Sir
Nick Faldo has joined a growing chorus of current and former players and industry icons who have called for a new approach to golf course design and alternative formats for amateur golf.
Speaking during the Laguna Golf Classic, an amateur tournament he hosted at Laguna Lang Co Golf Club in Vietnam, Faldo – who owns and operates Faldo Design from its London base – said new resort courses should embrace 12-hole layouts and other variations of the traditional 18-hole layout.
He said: “We have to break down the mentality and design courses, especially around hotels, that enable people to get out for two or three hours. Obviously, full courses with length are necessary for tournament golf, but there has to be a change of thinking for people who want to go and have some fun.”
Faldo also said it had become essential for golf course designers to embrace environmentally-friendly, sustainable concepts in their plans.
He said he and his Faldo Design team were ‘looking at all these things’ in their future planning. So far, Faldo Design has 24 courses in play and 10 under construction worldwide, including the Laguna Lang Co layout that he opened in Central Vietnam in 2013.
Among the courses he has designed is Bad Saarow at the Sporting Club Berlin, which is a candidate to host the 2022 Ryder Cup and, possibly, the 2024 Olympic Games golf tournament if Berlin is named host city.
One of Faldo’s greatest on-course rivals, Australian
Greg Norman also has a global golf design business, Greg Norman Golf Course Design, a Full Business Member of the Asian Golf Industry Federation.
Speaking in Vietnam last year at the opening of The Bluffs Ho Tram course he designed southeast of Ho Chi Minh City, Norman said golf had failed to attract young people and that six and 12-hole formats of the game were needed. Golf had to ‘get out of its box and develop different concepts’, he said.
Like Faldo, Norman believes tournament golf should continue to be played on full-length courses over 72 holes, but proclaimed that, to grow the game, ‘we have to make adjustments’.
He said golf was seen as being boring and stuffy by many young people because authorities hadn’t recognised what would attract them to – and keep them in – the sport.
-Paul Myers