
The Open could make shock return to Turnberry as golf chiefs make major U-turn on famous Donald Trump venue
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
THE R&A appears to have performed a major U-turn on whether the Open could return to Trump Turnberry.
Despite being consistently rated as one of the best courses not only in the UK but in the world, the Ayrshire resort hasn't held an Open Championship since 2009.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
5
Trump Turnberry could end up back on the Open rota
Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
5
It lasted hosted the event back in 2009
Credit: AFP
5
Since being bought by Donald Trump, the R&A has distanced itself from Turnberry
Credit: AFP
5
But new R&A chief Mark Darbon has suggested their position has changed
Credit: Getty
Previously, the reason for that was attributed to Donald Trump's ownership of the property.
But that stance appears to have softened, if comments by the R&A's new chief executive are anything to go by.
The Ailsa course at Turnberry has played host to four Open Championships, including the fabled Duel in the Sun in 1977 in which Tom Watson and Jack Nicklaus battled it out on the Ayrshire links.
Despite its popularity among golfers, the R&A removed it from the Open rota not long after it was bought by Trump in 2014 and his subsequent presidential run.
The reasoning was that the controversy and profile of President Trump would detract from the tournament itself.
As recently as 2021, former R&A chief Martin Slumbers said: 'We will not return until we are convinced the focus will be on the championship, the players and the course itself, and we do not believe that is achievable in the current circumstances."
Since being bought by Trump in 2014, £200m has been spent on upgrades across the property.
Architect Martin Ebert redesigned several of the holes, which in turn gave the Ailsa a new signature hole, the par-3 ninth.
Further changes to the seventh and eighth holes were made this year but the grand reopening was delayed after the venue was targeted by vandals.
New R&A chief Mark Darbon has proclaimed that the course is now "better than ever" and he revealed that golf's governing body IS looking into a potential return to Trump Turnberry.
Trump's iconic £1k-a-round golf course is wrecked by pro-Palestine protesters
But, there's a catch.
While Trump's potential influence appears to be less of a worry, whether Turnberry as a location can host an Open is in doubt.
The village of Turnberry has a population of just a few hundred and transport options are minimal, with no train station and just two main roads linking it to the bigger towns of Ayr and Girvan.
Portrush, the host of the Open this year, is of similar size to Girvan but Royal Portrush sits on the edge of the town rather than five miles away as Girvan is to Turnberry. Ayr is over 15 miles away to the north. This means accommodation could be an issue.
The hotel at Trump Turnberry is just as famous and spectacular as the golf itself but the last time the Open was held here, attendance figures were around 100,000. Around 280,000 are expected at Royal Portrush.
Darbon was quizzed about the prospect of Turnberry being put back on the Open rota at a media day to promote this summer's tournament.
He told reporters that a feasibility study is underway to determine if it would be possible.
Darbon said: 'The golf course is magnificent. If anything, it's better now than it ever has been, given some of the improvements that have been made to the course.
'But there are some challenges around the road and rail network, some of the accommodation provision in the surrounding area.
'So we're doing some feasibility work around what it would look like to return to that venue and the investment that it would require.
'What we know for sure is the golf course is brilliant, so at some point we'd love to be back there.
'We consistently work with our venues and their owners and operators to talk about what an Open Championship demands and how we work with them to bring that to life."
But Darbon added: 'Of course, when it comes to a Championship like this, we want the focus to be on the golf and that is a factor too."
It's been reported by the BBC that UK government officials have recently asked the R&A about its position on Trump Turnberry, particularly in the wake of the US president's new policy on tariffs.
This coming summer, prices for rounds on the Ailsa will skyrocket, making it one of the most expensive courses in the UK to play.
Trump's other facility in Scotland, Trump International Golf Links, could be welcoming a DP World Tour event in the near future.
5
The famous lighthouse adjacent to the new par-3 ninth hole on the Ailsa
Credit: Alamy
Keep up to date with ALL the latest news and transfers at the Scottish Sun football page
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
32 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Ex-Trump comm director's claim about Newsom's political future
Former White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci made a wild claim about California Gov. Gavin Newsom 's political future amid his clash with President Donald Trump over this weekend's riots in Los Angeles . Newsom continued to taunt Trump Monday afternoon after the president returned to the White House and threatened to arrest the Democratic California governor. Scaramucci has supported Democrats, including President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, since his brief tenure in the first Trump White House. 'Gavin has the guts to stand up to these wannabe authoritarians. I will give him that,' Scaramucci posted Sunday night. Scaramucci highlighted a post from Newsom saying that Trump sending 2,000 National Guard troops into Los Angeles County was 'not to meet an unmet need, but to manufacture a crisis.' 'He's hoping for chaos so he can justify more crackdowns, more fear, more control. Stay calm. Never use violence. Stay peaceful,' Newsom said. On Monday Scaramucci reposted Newsom's demand to have the California National Guard returned to the governor's authority. 'I have formally requested the Trump Administration rescind their unlawful deployment of troops in Los Angeles county and return them to my command. We didn't have a problem until Trump got involved,' the Democrat said. 'The President of the United States just called for the arrest of a sitting Governor. This is a day I hoped I would never see in America. I don't care if you're a Democrat or a Republican this is a line we cannot cross as a nation - this is an unmistakable step toward authoritarianism,' Newsom wrote after Trump made his threat on the South Lawn. Newsom was the one Democratic candidate Trump feared when running against Biden - and later Harris - in the 2024 race, according to Alex Isenstadt's book Revenge: The Inside Story of Trump's Return to Power . The ex-president worried that Biden could drop out of the race cuing a Democratic primary. Instead Biden dropped out of the race so late that the party quickly got behind Harris. 'One person he had been worried about was California Governor Gavin Newsom. Always fixated on visuals, Trump thought the handsome, hair-gelled governor was "slick" and the future of the Democratic Party,' Isenstadt wrote. Trump was also annoyed that Fox News Channel's Sean Hannity woud keep having Newsom on his primetime show, Isenstadt said. But in November of 2023, Newsom debated Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who was running against Trump in the Republican primary.


Scotsman
an hour ago
- Scotsman
Major UK fashion chain plans mass restructure with 230 stores and 5,500 jobs at risk
A major high street shake-up looms as one of the UK's biggest fashion names fights for survival 💥 Sign up to the weekly Cost Of Living newsletter. Saving tips, deals and money hacks. Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... River Island is preparing a major restructuring plan amid falling sales and rising losses PwC has been hired to oversee the rescue effort, replacing earlier cost-cutting advisers The chain reported a £33.2m pre-tax loss in 2023, with turnover down over 19% Around 230 stores and 5,500 jobs could be at risk, though no final decisions have been made Stores in Telford, Gloucester, Cheltenham, and up to 20 in Scotland have been flagged as vulnerable Thousands of jobs and more than 200 UK stores could hang in the balance as one of Britain's most recognisable high street fashion chains prepares for a sweeping restructuring. Sky News has reported that the founding family behind River Island has called in PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) to craft a radical turnaround plan, aimed at averting financial collapse. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad While no final decisions have been made, sources say a formal proposal could emerge within weeks, with significant implications for staff and landlords. The business - founded in 1948 as Lewis and later known as Chelsea Girl - has suffered a sharp drop in revenue. In the year to 30 December 2023, River Island reported a £33.2m pre-tax loss, with turnover plunging more than 19% to £578.1m. (Photo: DANIEL LEAL/AFP via Getty Images) | AFP via Getty Images The proposed rescue deal is expected to utilise a court-sanctioned restructuring mechanism, allowing the chain to renegotiate with creditors such as landlords - an increasingly common strategy among troubled UK retailers. PwC's appointment marks a shift in strategy, replacing earlier work on cost-cutting and profit improvement led by consultancy AlixPartners. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Which River Island stores could close? River Island currently operates around 230 stores nationwide and employs approximately 5,500 people, though insiders say it is too early to confirm how many roles or locations might be affected under any formal plan. Retailers have also been rattled by recent government tax reforms, with the likes of Lakeland and The Original Factory Shop already pursuing new ownership, while Poundland is currently in the final stages of an auction process. It's been reported locally that the Telford Shopping Centre branch of River Island is 'among those at risk' as part of the radical rescue. Stores in Gloucester and Cheltenham have also been flagged as locations that could be affected. Sources note around that 20 River Island outlets across Scotland could also be on the chopping block — though which exact stores remain unspecified. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad We'll update this article as and when more details are confirmed and made available. Are you struggling to make ends meet as costs continue to rise? You can now send your stories to us online via YourWorld at It's free to use and, once checked, your story will appear on our website and, space allowing, in our newspapers.

The National
an hour ago
- The National
It's not enough for SNP to occasionally say ‘independence'
Moving from local to national, there was a call for a constitutional convention from Councillor Murray in The National on Saturday. On the same day in the same paper, Gordon Macintyre-Kemp (Believe in Scotland) called for a new national conversation through a citizens convention. Independence Forum Scotland's Summer Convention on Scotland's Future will take place in Perth this Saturday. It will be their second this year. The grassroots took root, sheltered immediately after 2014, and the movement well continued. And thank (supply your own deity or whatever) for that. It's still the same message from across that movement: independence. It's sad, then, that political parties such as the SNP haven't moved on in tandem with us. The independence message has been diluted, and looking at the most recent rejection last week, it's more a case that the message was missing, again. John Swinney is quoted after the latest failure as saying: 'I thought the SNP was best placed to see off Reform because of the scale of collapse in the Labour vote.' Is it too much to believe (as I have done til now) that the SNP would see off Reform and the other pro-Unionist parties not by asking for a vote just to keep someone else out, but with their laid-out vision for independence? It is their raison d'etre after all. Not heart before head, but by taking the abstract notion of independence and translating that into the positive. It's not enough for the SNP to occasionally say 'independence' like some now tired mantra. Or expect me to click my heels and wish, Dorothy-like. Where is the plan, the strategy, the tactics? Where, when are we reminded of the changes to date that have had a positive impact? The likes of additional child payments, free bus passes, achieved through our government, our parliament, albeit hamstrung via the clever trap that is devolution. Where, when is the current highway robbery situation explained, as energy flows out of Scotland only to be returned at an increased cost to households? Westminster seems to have imposed a tariff on Scotland, having robbed us first! I think even Trump would be impressed with that one! There's no room to say that as this was a local election, indy shouldn't feature. These are all 'local' issues across the 'nation'; indy should always feature. Then to all politicians who say they believe in independence: you need to be connected with the grassroots movement, you have to heed what we say, see what we're doing, realise the strength, the numbers. You need to be prepared to tell folks if it's change you want, then change you'll get with independence, and here's how, here's the plan. The clock is ticking down to 2026. Selma Rahman Edinburgh WHY oh why can't we have simple literature telling the general public that with INDEPENDENCE we will be THIS, THIS, THIS, THIS, THIS, THIS, THIS and THIS better off and rid of THIS, THIS, THIS, THIS and THIS from Westminster that is making us worse off? Ken McCartney Hawick