Changing Its Spots
Golf Digest South Africa|December 2018

Leopard Creek Has Undergone A Variety Of Attractive Changes In Terms Of Turf, Bunkering And Design.

Stuart Mclean
Changing Its Spots

A “new-look” Leopard Creek awaits tour professionals and a worldwide TV audience when the Alfred Dunhill Championship returns to the European/Sunshine Tour from December 13 to 16.

The biggest change to Leopard Creek since the Dunhill was last played there in 2016 is the wall-to-wall eradication of all kikuyu grass on the course and surrounds by the maintenance team under course maintenance director Derek Muggeridge. It has been replaced by a more sustainable indigenous cynodon which not only requires less water and chemicals but thrives in the heat of summer.

Kikuyu works well as a playing surface on fairways in the dry summer heat of Gauteng and Sun City, but it never enjoyed the same compatibility in the humid conditions of the Mpumalanga Lowveld.

Leopard Creek owner Johann Rupert decided a few years ago that the future turf for his acclaimed course lay with an endemic local warm-season grass for fairways and rough, and after testing several varietals at his adjoining National Junior Development Centre, selected a fine textured hybrid known as Barbados.

Tour players will also find a very different looking 18 holes from the ones they had become familiar with since the Alfred Dunhill first moved to Leopard Creek in 2004. They should react favourably to the beautifully shaped modern bunkering which frames each hole, part of the extensive remodelling work by course construction specialists Golf Data, proven experts in this area.

Visiting the course in November, standing on the new back tee at No 1, the bunkering with its white sand immediately makes a splendid visual statement on this gentle opening hole. Two bunkers sprawl diagonally across the middle of the fairway, asking golfers to come up with a strategy on how to play the tee shot and avoid the sand.

This story is from the December 2018 edition of Golf Digest South Africa.

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This story is from the December 2018 edition of Golf Digest South Africa.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.