The Seventh at St. Andrews: How Scotsman David McLay Kidd and His Ragtag Band Built theFirst New Course onGo lf's Holy Soil in Nearly a Century

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Penguin, Oct 4, 2007 - Sports & Recreation - 288 pages
An acclaimed Scottish golf course architect who had to go to America to make his name lands the most coveted commission in all of golf: to design the first new course in almost a century for the town of St. Andrews, the game’s ancestral home.

David McLay Kidd became a wunderkind golf course architect before he was thirty years old, thanks to his universally lauded design at Bandon Dunes on the Oregon coast. When the town of St. Andrews announced in 2001 that a new championship course was in the works—the town’s first since 1914—Kidd fought off all comers and earned the right to make golf history. Author Scott Gummer was there to chronicle the days in the dirt and the nights in the pubs, the politics and histrionics, all with exclusive access to David Kidd, his team, and the St. Andrews Links Trust.

Unfolding in arresting you-are-there scenes, The Seventh at St. Andrews follows the young master at work as Kidd, with his sharp tongue, leads his accomplices in transforming a plot of flat, uninspiring farmland—smack in the middle of which sits the town’s sewage plant—into a rollicking golfing adventure and the most anticipated golf course opening in a generation.

Murphy’s Law seems to govern the process, however, as everything that can go wrong seemingly does: from epic wooly weather, to cattle grazing on the site, to vociferous opposition among the townsfolk, to bureaucrats so stuck in their ways they cannot be budged even with one of Kidd’s bulldozers.

The story chronicles the decade-long journey from the first notion of a seventh course to its official opening. Kidd & Co. exceed everyone’s expectations by building a magnificent throwback course that looks to have been shaped by the wind and rain and nature rather than modern machinery. The Seventh at St. Andrews brings the underappreciated art of golf course design to life, and along the way profiles an unforgettable cast of characters that includes Kidd’s jovial father, a golf legend in his own right; Kidd’s taciturn right-hand man; and the roustabout Scottish shaper, the Da Vinci in a ’dozer who is the heart of Kidd’s crew.
 

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Contents

Title Page Copyright Page Dedication Foreword
Preface
Rumors
The White Elephant
Why You?
Thank You for Coming
The Links MisTrust
Gobsmacked
Open Week
Buried Treasure
Icarus
Batten Down the Hatches
An Unexpected Loss
Believe in Yourself Buddy
Back at the Rockpile
Interlopers

Red Tape
Kimber
Premature Evaluation
McShane Walsh
In Reality
LoveHate
Beautiful Music
Postscript Acknowledgements Cast
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

Scott Gummer's debut novel, PARENTS BEHAVING BADLY, is a suburban satire about overzealous adults and youth sports. The author of two previous books and contributor to over 40 magazines, including Vanity Fair, Sports Illustrated, Golf, Travel + Leisure and more, his first assignment was for LIFE magazine about an Alabama woman who had been a bridesmaid twelve times. His most memorable assignment was bush skills ranger training in Africa for Fortune. He lives with his wife and four children in the California wine country. www.ScottGummer.com

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