Compiled by PHILIP REID
1st 205 yards, par 3
The green is protected by nine bunkers and there is out-of-bounds – by the railway line – down the right.
Difficulty in 2001: 12th
2nd 481 yards, par 4
The view from the tee box on a hole playing 43 yards longer than when David Duval won in 2001 is one of bunkers dotted on either side of the fairway. A cluster of three traps lies to the right side of the fairway at the 240-265 yards mark, which provides the first test of driving for players. The green is protected by a bunker front left and another two to the right.
Difficulty in 2001: 6th
3rd 478 yards, par 4
This will probably be the toughest hole on the front nine. With an extended tee and repositioned fairway bunkers to the right along with the out-of-bounds fence and a new area of sandhills down the left, some players may opt to lay-up short of the trouble and leave a longer approach shot into a green surrounded by four pot bunkers.
Difficulty in 2001: Tied-3rd
4th 392 yards, par 4
Short in yardage, but with the capacity to bite. New bunkers to the right add to the challenge off the tee, whilst the dunes down the left, which separate the hole from the third, have tightened the fairway. The green is a small one, guarded by five bunkers. Pin placements will be critical.
Difficulty in 2001: 8th
5th 219 yards, par 3
The challenge is to find a small green which slopes off on all four sides. The challenge is accentuated by six bunkers, four on the left of the green. Frank Lickliter’s hole-in-one here in the second round in 2001 remains the longest ace recorded in the British Open.
Difficulty in 2001: 5th
6th 492 yards, par 4
The easiest hole in 2001 – when it played as a par five – it will be a different proposition as a reinvented par four. Fairway bunkers have been added on the elbow of the dogleg down the right. The approach shot is to a long green, protected by five bunkers.
Difficulty in 2001: 18th
7th 592 yards, par 5
The landing area for the tee shot has been tightened by a new system of fairway bunkers. The risk-and-reward element for those attempting to reach the new green in two is to find a narrow putting surface protected by strategically positioned greenside bunkers.
Difficulty in 2001: 15th
8th 416 yards, par 4
The railway line is back in play down the right and the hole has been further toughened by a new fairway bunker down the right close to the landing area. The approach shot is to a plateau green protected by a range of cross bunkers some 40 yards short of the putting surface.
Difficulty in 2001: Tied-9th
9th 165 yards, par 3
This unique hole is surrounded by red-brick buildings on three sides. The tee shot is to an undulating green protected by nine bunkers, with a heavy strip of rough in play over the back. Paul McGinley had a hole-in-one here in 1996.
Difficulty in 2001: 17th
10th 387 yards, par 4
An extra 52 yards has been added although the longer hitters will still be tempted to drive close to the green. A deep fairway has been located down the right – at 350 yards – to catch the bombers. The small green slopes from front to back and has five bunkers as protection.
Difficulty in 2001: 11th
11th 598 yards, par 5
Players will be faced with a carry of 285 yards off the elevated tee if they are to carry the cluster of fairway bunkers down the left. The difficulty is compounded by a narrow fairway. Those who lay-up short of the new bunkers will have to negotiate a bunker short of the green which has been brought more into the fairway.
Difficulty in 2001: 13th
12th 198 yards, par 3
Unquestionably the toughest of the short holes, with an out-of-bounds fence to the right of the raised green. There are six deep bunkers guarding a green which has subtle undulations and is notoriously difficult to read.
Difficulty in 2001: Tied-3rd
13th 355 yards, par 4
Something of a respite before a tough stretch back to the clubhouse, this shortish Par 4 will see players mainly use irons off the tee to set up a short approach into a long, narrow green that has three bunkers on either side.
Difficulty in 2001: 14th
14th 444 yards, par 4
The start of the “Murder Mile” stretch offers a serious challenge off the tee. There is a string of bunkers running down the right-hand side of the fairway and a new bunker in the landing area down the left has added to the difficulty. It doesn’t get easier on the approach to the green, as the out-of-bounds lies close to the green.
Difficulty in 2001: Tied-9th
15th 462 yards, par 4
This hole claimed a host of victims in 2001, with Jim Furyk among a large group who ran up triple-bogey sevens. The tee-shot must be threaded through a series of fairway bunkers running down the left and right. For the approach shot, players must negotiate cross bunkers positioned 50-60 yards short of a green where two further bunkers guard the front right.
Difficulty in 2001: 1st
16th 336 yards, par 4
A brief opportunity for players to catch their breath, this short Par 4 is still a challenge. The drive is a blind one over a sand dune to a landing area heavily populated by bunkers, including a new one to the left of the fairway. The small green is protected by a cluster of four pot bunkers on the right and two on the left.
Difficulty in 2001: 15th
17th 453 yards, par 4
The challenge off the tee is to avoid the many pot bunkers and he dense scrub close to the fairway. There are no fewer than 10 bunkers around the landing area – seven of them down the left – and the approach is to a green just 33 yards deep protected by a further seven bunkers.
Difficulty in 2001: 2nd
18th 413 yards, par 4
As if there weren’t enough sand traps to catch the eye of the golfer standing on the final tee, a further two have been added down the right to test the accuracy of longer hitters. There are no fewer than 17 bunkers on the hole, many of them located around the landing area where a series of cross bunkers add to the challenge.
Difficulty in 2001: 6th