

Around this course there are luxurious villas on large plots, so they do not come into play at all or get in the way. In 2004, the resort’s second golf course opened. Designed by Perry Dye and Severiano Ballesteros, the New Course is characterized by its high technical quality, precise layout and impeccable finish and landscaping. 
The San Roque Old is already 20 years old and has a rich sporting curriculum: it hosted the finals of the European Tour Qualifying School from 1993 to 2007, as well as the Spanish Open in 2005. The New Course also hosted the Spanish Open in 2006 and the European Tour School from 2004 to 2007. Before playing the San Roque Old I had a small lunch on the terrace of the bar/restaurant overlooking the putting green and the golf course. I ate a club sandwich and ordered a bottle of water and a coffee, all for a reasonable price. The shiny buggy contained two bottles of water, the course card and a pencil, and every day the flag position is printed on the card. Another customer service feature is that they supply you with fresh fruit from the field (small details make a difference).
Cork oaks and bunkers
Already from the first tee, it was difficult not to be impressed by the stripes left by the mowers on the fairway that meanders for 357 meters to the green. The first half of the course is characterized by cork oaks and bunkers, and during the course of the game one must be careful not to send the ball into one of these dangerous places.

The par-4 6th is index 1 on the course, and it is here that the player will encounter a serious water hazard for the first time. A large lake, with a striking waterfall, occupies a considerable amount of the ball drop area, so care must be taken with club selection. The seventh is a par 3 that plays uphill, while the 8th runs in the opposite direction. With out-of-bounds to the right and left, the tee shot must be straight, although the undulating fairway is quite wide. The green is very well protected by cork oaks, and then we head back towards the clubhouse to play the par 5 9th. A large bunker in the fairway some 260 meters from the tee is the first problem, and if we avoid it, there are seven more bunkers surrounding the large green that closes the first half of the course.

The 14th is a par 3 that ends on an elevated green and features the silhouettes of trees and sky as a backdrop. The 15th can only be described as a tricky slope that turns left, with bunkers in the fairway, and then finally back to the main golf course, where the last three holes will revitalize your great feelings about San Roque Club. The par 3 16th plays to an elevated green with a bunker on the right and eight magnificent cork oaks protecting it on the left. These trees really do their job of guarding the green well and wreak havoc on more than one card. The 17th is the last par 5 of the San Roque Old and a good long straight hole. The main problem is a large lake on the right in front of the green, which will swallow an approach even if the ball is only slightly deflected. The 18th may be considered the best hole on the course. It has a steep dog-leg left, at the angle of which there is a lake with a small island. In order to prevent players from trying to cut that angle, the island is completed with a huge tree with large branches whose base is festooned with flowers of different and surprising colors. From that lake, a stream flows diagonally down the fairway, about 50 meters from the front of the green, where it is fed by another lake to the right of the green. It is a spectacular hole that has brought both moments of great delight and enormous despair to the competitors of the European Tour Qualifying School during the years it was played on this course. This 18th appears in the book “The 1001 Best Golf Holes in the World”, written by Jeff Barr, which is evidence of its great intrinsic quality. As I said at the beginning, since the last time I played here, this course has undergone fantastic changes. The course is a pearl in sweet and has all the quality markers of a club whose management acts in a very positive way. There is no doubt that this great Dave Thomas design is one of the great courses in Spain.
Leave a Reply