Wentworth Club

Wentworth Club is classy and prestigious. It's also notoriously expensive... if you can get through the gate.

Wentworth Club

Surrey, GU25 4LS, England

Overview

The West Course is one of Britain's most famous golf courses.

The Wentworth Club is also the HQ for the European Tour or DP World Tour.

Course Review
(Click to reveal)

Golf Course Review

Wentworth was a private residence for the Duke of Wellington's extended family before it became the Wentworth Club in 1922.

Found in the heart of the Surrey sandbelt, Wentworth Club sits ably amongst some of the best golf in the world. There are 54 holes on offer: The West, The East, and The Edinburgh.

Wentworth Club's neighbours include The Berkshire Red and Blue, Swinley Forest, Sunningdale Old and New, and Queenwood all within a few kilometers. This could well be the best stretch of inland golf anywhere in the world.

Wentworth Club West Course

The Wentworth Club's West Course is the best-known golf course at the prestigious Virginia Water, Surrey, England private members club and one of Britain's most famous golf courses.

Design by Harry Colt in 1926, it earned the nickname 'Burma Road' due to its difficulty following WW2. Frank Pennink called it 'the longest, most unrelenting test in the British Isles.' Bernard Darwin called The West the Tiger Course. Explaining further, he wrote: "The course is intended to test that rampacious animal to the full." The course was designed with teeth, not for the scratch man, but to test the metal of the world's best on the biggest stages. This it did in 1953 when it hosted the Ryder Cup and for the annual PGA Championship.

In 2009, Wentworth Club replaced all the greens, rebuilt and added 30 bunkers, and introduced a 100-yard long stream on the closing hole. Wentworth Club member and resident Ernie Els was responsible for the changes.

Wentworth Club again redeveloped the course in 2016 with further green and bunker renovations, this time led by Ernie Els and EGD. This time around, 29 bunkers were removed but sub air, irrigation, and drainage were added.

Wentworth Club's West Course is routed as one continuous loop clockwise from the clubhouse. Famously, the course closes with back-to-back Par 5's - the second of which has caused the most amount of consternation. It's prestigious and notoriously expensive from the conservative British standpoint...

Wentworth Club East Course

The Wentworth Club's East Course is a Harry Colt-designed heathland and the oldest of the three on offer. It opened for play in 1924, two years before The West. It is perhaps the most enjoyable for the average player.

For some informed reviewers, the East is equal to the West. Whereas The West is more parkland than heathland, the East Course could be said to be more heathland than parkland.

As opposed to The West, The East is routed in a continuous loop anti-clockwise from the clubhouse. A single Par 5 is found on the 9th. Twelve Par 4's are found on the card, five of which play over 400 yards. Despite being just over 6000 yards in length, Wentworth Club's East Course is still a challenge, if not a fair fight, compared to The West - for the mortal man.

Wentworth Club's East course played host to the first Curtis Cup in 1932. Perhaps it suffers from being compared with The West? As the bold course next door has slid down the rankings, has The East been unfairly dragged down with it simply because it couldn't possibly be better than the headliner next door? For many, it still ranks as one of the best heathland cum parklands in England.

Wentworth East Course Architectural Highlights

The East Course at Wentworth Club was laid out before the highly acclaimed West Course. The routing was slightly altered when Harry Colt added the West Course which leads one to ask: did Harry Colt use the best land for his original routing? It's tough to say. One thing is for sure, there is a lot to like here and bags of potential.

Prior to the new ownership, world-class golf course architects were asked for their insights and opinions. Since the acquisition, it appears the project has been put on ice... Whatever the case may be, there is evidence still a lot to like here.

  • Topography & Elevation - The opening hole is not a taste of what's to come. Essentially flat, the dogleg left is strategically bunkered with a bunker on the inside of the dogleg. If an opening hole is meant to get the golfers away, this accomplishes the aim. The second hole introduces one to the elevated tee shot - used to good effect throughout the round... You will be presented with such on holes 2, 3, 5, 6, 14, 16, 17, 18. The elevated tee shots are dramatic and there feels as not much climbing!
  • Green Complexes - There are a few standout examples that are world-beaters... the 5th is one such example. It sits perched atop a hill and laid out perpendicular to the line of play. It is theorized the green was approached from a different angle before the routing was changed with the introduction of the West. The right side of the green is the lower tier and a dramatic punchbowl. The left side is the top tier which runs away from the line of play. If that's not enough, the green has a pronounced false front. The opportunity to see the 5th green on the East is worth coming for... Not quite as spectacular as the reveal of the 3rd at Deal but it leaves me with the same feeling as you crest the hill...
  • Par 3's - Harry Colt is known for his one-shot holes and Wentworth Club East Course sports five. Four measure over 191 yards and the 12th is a downhill affair. With a scorecard that tallies just over 6,200 yards, the 'short' holes are demanding and do nothing to help the illusion of a walkover that is anything but...
  • Diagonal Hazards - Found on holes 3, 7, 11, 17, and 18. Harry Colt used bunkers on diagonal landforms - especially ridges. On holes 7 and 17 it is heather on mounds rather than bunkers in ridges.
  • Heather - There is a distinct difference in feel between the opening 6 holes and the 12 that follow. This is especially true with the closing stretch of holes from 13 home. In this neighbourhood you'd be expecting heather in abundance... it feels as though there should be and in some places there is!
  • Tree Management - The playing corridors are still wide but one can only wonder how good some of the holes would be if the character was more heathland than parkland. The foremost example would be the 11th followed by the 17th.
  • Cart Paths - Asphalt cart paths wind their way around the course. Wentworth is a golfers club and it would seem the cart paths are superfluous. The course isn't overly busy and golf is played quick... of note, there is no indication of foursomes paths either.

Don't be fooled by the scorecard. The one-shot holes are long and with one par 5, there isn't much opportunity to make up ground. For big hitters, there are four par 4's which are about 325 yards in length but of the remaining ones six are substantially over 400 yards. In short, don't be fooled by the scorecard, the East has teeth... they are just hidden at first glance.

East Course Holes of Architectural Merit

3, Green on 5, 10, 11, 13, 15

Wentworth Edinburgh Course (South Course)

The Wentworth Club's Edinburgh Course is the third golf course designed by John Jacobs, Bernard Gallacher, Gary Player and opened for play in 1990.

The Wentworth Golf Club Edinburgh Course is the latest edition of the three courses and some suggest it has emerged as the preferred course amongst the membership.

What do you call the course which is further east than The East course? Easy - The Edinburgh!

Wentworth Club Synopsis

Wentworth Club is a British institution. It looms large in the British consciousness due to the events it's held and its constant appearance on television. In fact, the first televised golf tournament was broadcast from Wentworth in 1952 with Henry Longhurst commentating. When you arrive on site it feels as though you've been before even it's your first time.

The Club itself is world-class in every way and on every level. From the iconic 1920s, castellated clubhouse clad with Virginia creeper to the elegant dining options, tennis, health club, and indulgent spa - Wentworth Club claims 'unrivaled excellence' and then surpasses expectations.

Rankings, however, are a curious beast - some would say as impossible to predict as any 'rampacious animal.' Whatever the case may be, Wentworth Club claims two Harry Colt golf courses, one of which may be the heartiest challenge he ever laid out. (Perhaps two Harry Colt routings is more apt to say due to the extensive changes to the West.)

Only time will tell whether The West can climb back into the upper echelons of world golf... if there is one club that has everything you'd need to make it happen, it is Wentworth Club.

Wentworth Club Photography

Purchase Kevin Murray's photography of Wentworth Club.

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Wentworth Club - Videos


Featured Architect: MacKenzie, Alister

As taken from his book, Golf Architecture, Alister MacKenzie felt the following were essential: The course, where possible, should be arranged in two loops of nine holes. There should be a large proportion of good two-shot holes and at least four one-shot holes. There should be little walking between...

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At A Glance

Architects

Facilities

Moderate
Dog Friendly
Buggies
Trolleys
Resort
Fine
Driving Range
Short Game

Collections

Harry Colt Collection
Best English Golf Collection

Contact Details

Surrey, GU25 4LS, England
Visit Club Website

Location

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