Sean Zak: Hello, Dylan. It’s been 10 months since you and I were traipsing the wavy turf at Royal Liverpool Golf Club, basking in the sun and battling killer winds along the Irish Sea. I miss it dearly. But, for readers who know next to nothing of Royal Liverpool, can you bring us there? Locate it on a map. What should we know about where the golf world is headed in July?
Dylan Dethier: Sure thing, Sean. The name nearly gives it away: Royal Liverpool is close to Liverpool, England, the fifth-largest city in the UK, known as the home of the Beatles, soccer powerhouse Liverpool FC and also your adopted club, Everton. But the course is actually in Hoylake, a charming town of about 10,000 that sits on the Irish Sea in Merseyside County. So, even though we’re not far from the bustle of big-city commerce, we’re removed enough that this Open will once again have something of a small-town feel, the way the tournament likes it. What were your impressions of Hoylake, the town?
SZ: First thought? It’s a beach town, with a major sandy enclave on either side of the course. That feels just like Portrush. There’s a Hoylake train stop, which, a century ago, is where all the golfers used to get off when they’d visit. That feels just like Troon. It has old pubs built from wood and stone, and, in the heat of the summer, locals grab their pints and head out to the stoop. Air-conditioning isn’t a priority in this part of the world. All of which is to say, Hoylake feels like an Open town. It has everything all the other Open hosts have, with one Bond-geek bonus: 007 Daniel Craig was a school kid here!
DD: What were your first impressions of Royal Liverpool?
This story is from the July - August 2023 edition of Golf US.
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This story is from the July - August 2023 edition of Golf US.
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