Commonwealth’s origins can be traced to a redoubtable group of 11 golfing enthusiasts who in May 1915 formed the Murrumbeena Golf Club and later aspired to a home on the Melbourne Sandbelt.
About the Club |
Designed by club professional Sam Bennett, the first 12 holes opened early in 1921 and the full 18 were in play by 1924.In 1926, Charles Lane, the Club Captain, travelled abroad to study golf architecture and met British designer Harry Colt, a former partner of Alister MacKenzie. Photography by David Scaletti Lane brought what he learned home and put the finishing touches on Commonwealths greens and bunkers. He did much of the work himself, often being seen stripped to the waist and digging out bunkers. Among the big events played on the course are the 1967 Australian Open, which Peter Thomson won by seven shots, and the 2010 and 2011 Womens Australian Open, both won by Yani Tseng of Taiwan. The Club has also been included in Tom Doaks list of 31 courses among the first I would take a good friend to see. He said that… The genius of Commonwealth is its adherence to one simple rule that each green should be oriented or tilted in such a way that it cradles an approach from one side of the fairway and shoulders away shots from the incorrect line of approach - The Confidential Guide to Golf Courses, Tom Doak, Renaissance Golf Design, Traverse City, Mi. 1994. |
Design Features |
Commonwealth is revered for its challenging driving holes and subtle sloping greens which call for accurate shot making when playing from the fairway. The trees that line these fairways have long been considered amongst the finest stands in golf seen in Australia. Credit for their selection, planting and tender care in the Clubs formative years is due in a large part to long-term Captain and Life Member, Alec Brahe. In a three-year programme completed in 1938, all 18 greens were redesigned and returfed, a completely new system of greenside bunkering was implemented, many fairway bunkers were altered and new teeing grounds were constructed. This work resulted in the strategic character of the course for which Commonwealth became famous. It was planned and supervised by former New Zealand Open champion Sloan Morpeth who was Commonwealths manager for 33 years. Since the 1930s, additional purchases of land and minor changes to the course layout have been made. For example, in the mid-1960s the 10th and 11th holes were redesigned by Sloan Morpeth as Course Architect following the acquisition of additional land along Old Dandenong Road known as Millers Paddock. Then, in 1992, the Club commenced a programme to improve the drainage on all greens. The opportunity was also taken to modify the surrounds of several greens and to carry out bunkering, mounding, drainage and reticulation work. The final stage of this programme included alterations to the 6th and 12th holes and the construction of a new 7th hole. Kevin Hartley, the architect retained by the Club to assist with the greens drainage programme, designed these changes. |
Course Highlight |
16th, par 4, 364 metres Commonwealths four finishing holes make up one of the great closing stretches in Australian golf. The 16th is a mid-length par four turning around a lake that lines the left side of the fairway and protects the ideal line into the flag. The strategy is completed by a green tilted from right to left and protected by a deep and fearsome bunker from which four is rarely saved. A brave drive long and down the left makes for an easy approach, but a timid and short tee shot fired away safely to the right makes for one of the most difficult second shots at Commonwealth. |
Photography by David Scaletti | |
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