Top Courses in Scotland
The best courses the Gurus have teed it up on in the home country of golf; Scotland.
Top 18 Courses
- Trump Turnberry (Ailsa) (Willie Fernie 1902 (Redesigns by MacKenzie Ross 1951 and MartHawtree 2016); Ayrshire, Scotland, Scotland)*
- Royal Dornoch (Championship) (Old Tom Morris 1886 (original holes 1877); Dornoch, Sutherland, Scotland, Scotland)*
- Cruden Bay Golf Club (Tom Simpson and Herbert Fowler 1926 (1899 Old Tom Morris); Aberdeenshire, Scotland, Scotland)*
- Kingsbarns Golf Links (Kyle Phillips 2000; St Andrews, Scotland, Scotland)*
- Castle Stuart Golf Links (Gil Hanse and Mark Parsinen 2009; Inverness, Scotland, Scotland)*
- St Andrews Links (Old) (Old Tom Morris 1865; St Andrews, Fife, Scotland)*
- North Berwick Golf Club (West Links) (Ben Sayers 1932 (1832 6 holes, David Strath shaped 1877); North Berwick, Scotland, Scotland)*
- Muirfield - The Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers (Old Tom Morris 1891; Gullane, East Lothian, Scotland, Scotland)*
- Trump International Golf Links Scotland (MartHawtree 2012; Aberdeenshire, Scotland, Scotland)*
- St Andrews Links (Castle) (David McLay Kidd 2008; St. Andrews, Fife, Scotland, Scotland)*
- Carnoustie Golf Links (Championship) (Old Tom Morris 1867 (10 holes 1839 Allan Robertson, 1926 James Braid); Carnousite, Scotland, Scotland)*
- Renaissance Club, The (Tom Doak 2008; North Berwick, Scotland)
- Prestwick Golf Club (Old Tom Morris 1851; Prestwick, Scotland, Scotland)*
- Dundonald Links (Kyle Phillips 2003; Troon, Scotland, Scotland)*
- Royal Aberdeen Golf Club (Archie and Robert Simpson 1888 and James Braid 1925; Aberdeen, Scotland, Scotland)*
- Royal Troon Golf Club (Old) (George Strath and Willie Fernie 1888 (original five holes 1878; James Braid redesign 1923); Ayrshire, Scotland, Scotland)*
- Trump Turnberry (King Robert the Bruce) (MartEbert 2017 (Originally designed as the Kintyre course by Donald Steel 2001); Ayrshire, Scotland, Scotland)*
- Nairn Golf Club (Archie Simpson 1887 (Later alterations by Old Tom Morris, James Braid, and Ben Sayers); Nairn, Scotland, Scotland)*