 Statue of Payne Stewart
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In fact, glorious Waterville, originally created as a modest nine-holer around 1900, lay neglected in the 1960s until Irish-born American John Mulcahy his friend Claude Harmon - ex-US Masters champion and father of coach Butch Harmon - and Ireland’s best known links architect, Eddie Hackett, joined forces to work their magic.
In 1973 the course opened and has been revered by golfers around the world ever since - among them Sam Snead, Nick Faldo, Tiger Woods and the late Payne Stewart, who had accepted the honorary captaincy shortly before his death.
A life-sized bronze statue at the course stands as tribute to Stewart's relationship with Waterville, to which he brought a string of fellow professionals to savour the unique experience of links golf in its rarest form.
It reminded me that I'd enjoyed friendly banter with the great man at Brookline in 1999 when I rebuffed his claim that Murphy's was a better pint than Guinness! He loved it that I wasn’t agreeing with him and revealed that his visits to Waterville were among the most enjoyable of his life, which was cut short so tragically.
In 1987 Waterville was sold to a small group of Irish Americans who loved the game of golf and embarked on a new chapter of its fabled history.
They invited golf architect Tom Fazio to update the Hackett masterpiece and the man who had left his indellible touch on Winged Foot, Pine Valley and Augusta National jumped at the chance.
“Everything about Waterville is truly spectacular. The setting is one of the best I have seen for golf,” he said, completing the project only three years ago. He even designed a unique practice facilitiy.