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Originally laid out by Tom Simpson and later refined by Molly Gourlay, the course flows seamlessly through dunes and low-lying links terrain. Nothing feels forced. Fairways ripple naturally, bunkers sit exactly where they need to, and greens are beautifully judged – subtle in contour yet exacting in their demands.
Baltray is a strategist’s course. It rarely overwhelms visually, but it steadily applies pressure. Angles into greens matter, and the best players quickly realise that placement off the tee dictates scoring chances. When the wind freshens, the course gains real championship teeth.
It is a purist’s links – understated, authentic and deeply rewarding.
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Tiger’s best round
Rory’s best round
Mens course record
Ladies course record
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Caddy guide
Buggies
A tactical delight. Work the ball to angles and control trajectory into greens. Birdies come from precision, not power.
Prioritise fairway position and play to safe sections of greens. Avoid short-siding yourself – recovery can be delicate.
Playable and fair. Keep the ball in play and focus on solid contact. Conservative targets will keep scores manageable.
9.5-10 – firm and true links surfaces
A steady factor, especially on exposed inward holes
Generally smooth and well spaced
A calm but meaningful opener that sets the tone
Classic and welcoming with a strong traditional feel
The par-5 6th is a highlight – a true three-shot hole where positioning is vital. The par-4 14th, played across rumpled fairway to a subtly contoured green, is a standout strategic test.
Typical east coast Irish conditions – drier than the west but still breezy.
Best months May–September.
Firm summer turf rewards running approaches.