Golf News Magazine | Pro Tour News | Interviews & Golf Travel https://golfnews.co.uk/ The UKs no 1 most read Golf Magazine Fri, 05 Dec 2025 10:12:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://golfnews.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/cropped-GN0125_01_Cover_masthead_stack_noline-32x32.jpg Golf News Magazine | Pro Tour News | Interviews & Golf Travel https://golfnews.co.uk/ 32 32 216808453 Women in Golf Society (WIGS) Wins “Best Initiative” at Women in Golf Awards https://golfnews.co.uk/golf-news/women-in-golf-society-wigs-wins-best-initiative-at-women-in-golf-awards/ Fri, 05 Dec 2025 10:12:34 +0000 https://golfnews.co.uk/?p=31376 The Women in Golf Society (WIGS), founded by Ali McGuirk of Prince’s Golf Club and Dolores Brown of Golf Breaks, has been named Best Initiative at the Women in Golf Awards, held at Foxhills Golf Club, with the category sponsored by PING. The award recognises the Society’s growing impact in connecting and supporting women across the golf industry. Created for women working in golf – or aspiring to enter the sector – WIGS uses golf as a welcoming networking platform, […]

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The Women in Golf Society (WIGS), founded by Ali McGuirk of Prince’s Golf Club and Dolores Brown of Golf Breaks, has been named Best Initiative at the Women in Golf Awards, held at Foxhills Golf Club, with the category sponsored by PING.

The award recognises the Society’s growing impact in connecting and supporting women across the golf industry.

Created for women working in golf – or aspiring to enter the sector – WIGS uses golf as a welcoming networking platform, helping members start playing, return to the game, or simply find their place within the industry.

DRIVING THE WOMEN’S INDUSTRY

Through a range of events, meet-ups and online activity, the Society has built a community where women can share experiences, opportunities and stories, while developing confidence both on and off the course.

Since launch, the Society has hosted a series of successful networking golf meets, including activations at major events such as the AIG Women’s Open, as well as gatherings at venues like Prince’s Golf Club, Essendon Golf Club, The Grove, Frilford Heath and Foxhills Golf Club.

These sessions have brought together women from across the industry at different career stages, creating a welcoming space to connect through golf.

Many attendees have gone on to build relationships beyond the organised events, underlining the Society’s role in fostering lasting professional networks and mentorship opportunities.

The community has also helped introduce new players to the game in a comfortable environment, with several women picking up clubs for the first time through Society events.

REACHING OUT

The Women in Golf Society has extended its reach through appearances on podcasts and online presentations at universities, encouraging more women to explore careers in golf and offering support to those entering the industry.

One recent success story includes a placement at a prestige golf club in London, directly linked to connections made through Society activity.

The initiative’s influence is also growing internationally, with collaborative projects alongside LINKS Scotland and representation at the PGA Show in the United States, highlighting a commitment to global togetherness in women’s golf.

The Society plans to return to the PGA Show in January 2026.

“This award is a proud and meaningful milestone for everyone involved,” said Ali McGuirk, Founder of Women in Golf Society.

“We started the Society to create a space where women in the industry – and those looking to join it – could connect through golf, feel supported, and grow in confidence.

To be recognised with the Best Initiative award at Foxhills, supported by PING, is incredibly special. We’re excited to build on this momentum into 2026 and beyond.”

JOINING WIGS

Looking ahead, the Women in Golf Society will continue expanding its calendar in 2026, with plans to host more events across the UK, including new locations in the north to ensure broader regional access and participation.

Women interested in joining future events or learning more about the Society are encouraged to connect via the Women in Golf Society’s social media channels or LinkedIn,

Instagram: @womeningolfsociety

LinkedIn: WIGS – Women in Golf Society

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Chart Hills unveils on-site accommodation https://golfnews.co.uk/features/chart-hills-launch-stay-and-play-packages-following-opening-of-the-barn/ Fri, 22 Nov 2024 11:37:37 +0000 https://golfnews.co.uk/?p=27993 Chart Hills Golf Club in Kent has opened the doors to its new on-site accommodation offering, The Barn, which will provide golfers with the option of a relaxing stay in modern, luxury surroundings before and after a round. 

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Chart Hills Golf Club in Kent has opened the doors to its new on-site accommodation offering, The Barn, which will provide golfers with the option of a relaxing stay in modern, luxury surroundings before and after a round.

Located just a few minutes’ walk from the first tee of the club’s championship course, The Barn can accommodate up to eight guests in a range of four suites named Faldo, Lilypad, Oak, and Gold – reflecting core themes on the golf course, as well as paying homage to the designer of the course, Sir Nick Faldo.
The Barn offers a range of other amenities, including a communal lounge, a private garden with outdoor seating, an artificial putting green, and high-speed wi-fi.
Guests can also request custom-stocked fridges, beauty essentials in every room, and enjoy a complimentary breakfast at the clubhouse bar.
There are four en suite bedrooms
The rooms are stylishly furnished with all mod cons

“We’re thrilled to unveil The Barn at Chart Hills, as part of our ongoing commitment to offering the best possible experience for our members, guests, and visitors,” said the club’s general manager Anthony Tarchetti. “In recent years, we’ve made investments across multiple areas of the golf club, and The Barn is another exciting step forward. It expands our offerings with stay-and-play options, adding yet another dimension to the Chart Hills experience.”

Guests can enjoy Chart Hills’ Nick Faldo designed championship course which has been the subject of major investment in recent years

The club has introduced a range of winter stay-and-play packages that offer a chance to sample the new accommodation, as well as play the golf course.

Running through until March 2025, the winter rates are £199 per person midweek and £239 on weekends, and include the use of the facilities on-site for two days, including breakfast before your tee time.

Winter B&B packages will also include free access to ‘The Loop’ – the club’s new six-hole par-three course – and make full use of the driving range, putting green and other practice facilities.

For bookings, email fayeb@charthills.co.uk and for more more details visit www.charthills.co.uk

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QHotels launches ‘Get Ahead of the Game’ early bird offer for 2024 golf breaks https://golfnews.co.uk/golf-travel/travel-news/qhotels-launches-get-ahead-of-the-game-early-bird-offer-for-2024-golf-breaks/ Tue, 26 Sep 2023 12:12:23 +0000 https://golfnews.co.uk/?p=21382 The QHotels Collection has unveiled an exclusive offer for 2024 which is set to elevate golfing experiences at its seven golf resorts across the UK.

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The QHotels Collection has unveiled an exclusive offer for 2024 which is set to elevate golfing experiences at its seven golf resorts across the UK.

The ‘Get Ahead of the Game’ package, which is only available when booking direct, starts from £105 per person and includes overnight accommodation, a round of golf, a three-course evening meal, 10% off drinks, and a buffet breakfast the following morning.

Groups are also eligible to free places and exclusive giveaways, including a Cobra driver worth £400 for booking for groups of 24 or more golfers.

Keith Pickard, Golf, Health Club & Spa Director for The QHotels Collection, said: “Our ‘Get Ahead of the Game’ package signifies a commitment to providing our guests with memorable and holistic stays, while ensuring they are receiving great value.

“At the heart of this exclusive offering is a commitment to excellence, service and enriching guest experiences. Having designed this package with our guests in mind, we hope to attract a wider range of visitors, bolster our reputation and elevate the overall appeal of our golf hotel collection. We look forward to welcoming all our golf groups in 2024 and for them to take advantage of the ‘Get Ahead of the Game’ package.”

The golf resorts in The QHotels Collection are Belton Woods, Westerwood, Dunston Hall, Slaley Hall, The Telford, Oulton Hall and Forest Pines.

To take advantage of the ‘Get Ahead of the Game’ offer, bookings must be made directly with The QHotels Collection and be completed before midnight on October 31 for stays in 2024.

For bookings, visit www.qhotels.co.uk/offers/early-bird-2024-golf-breaks/ or call 0203 988 3662.

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THE MELBOURNE CLUB AT BROCKET HALL, HERTFORDSHIRE https://golfnews.co.uk/course-reviews/the-melbourne-club-at-brocket-hall-herftfordshire/ Wed, 08 Mar 2023 09:39:43 +0000 https://golfnews.co.uk/?p=18529 Home to two of England’s most picturesque parkland courses, and set against the backdrop of a grand stately home, the Brocket Hall Estate remains one of England’s finest golfing venues, whether you enjoy it as a member, a green fee visitor or a golf break guest

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Home to two of England’s most picturesque parkland courses, and set against the backdrop of a grand stately home, the Brocket Hall Estate remains one of England’s finest golfing venues, whether you enjoy it as a member, a green fee visitor or a golf break guest

Like many golf clubs in post-Covid UK, Brocket Hall has enjoyed something of a boom over the last three years. While for some venues the surge in golf participation has served to add the icing to the top of an already well-baked cake, for Brocket Hall the renewed interest in golf club membership has provided something of a lifeline following a period of uncertainty and instability. 

Since emerging from the pandemic, the last 18 months has seen The Melbourne Club – as Brocket Hall Estate’s golf club element has been known since 2019 – enjoy significant growth, with the membership ranks rising from 400 to a new high of 950, and that comes in the face of the introduction of a £6,200 joining fee. Bookings for society and corporate days have also improved dramatically, with many of the golf events that were hosted in 2022 having already rebooked for 2023. And with the golf breaks and wedding and events market having also rebounded in spectacular fashion, the future is looking busier and brighter than it has in a long time at the Welwyn-based venue, which is located on a stunning 500-acre estate some five miles from St Albans and 20 miles from the centre of London.

Having played Brocket’s two courses – The Melbourne and The Palmerston – several times each over a decade ago, I was interested to come back and see how they had matured in that time. The former, which was designed by Peter Alliss and Clive Clark, is the older of the two, having first opened in 1992, and enjoys frontal views of the magnificent hall and features a course which criss-crosses over the River Lea no less than four times. Measuring 6,616 yards from the back tees, the par-72 Melbourne represents an enjoyable but thoroughly challenging test.

The tricky par-4 opening hole on the Melbourne Course

The aforementioned river is in play right from the off, waiting to catch anything struck too far to the right at the short par-4 first, while the par-3 second requires a full 170-yard carry directly across the water to a green which is protected by two giant willows on both sides. The wet stuff is back in action at the par-4 fourth, which requires a long drive to open up sight of the green, this time the other side of the river. The view from here, with the old bridge and weir in full flow, is a sight to behold. 

The course then moves away from the water. A short par-5 and mid-length par-3 follow before a fine short par-4 with small raised green at the 7th, which features treacherous bunkering. The 8th is a 90-degree dogleg with a fabulous approach over a valley before the front nine ends with a short downhill par-3 that sits right by the hall. 

A view from behind the green on the 4th hole on the Melbourne course

After a quick stop at the halfway house, you get eased into the back nine with a gentle downhill par 5. But don’t get your hopes up as what follows is a brutal uphill par four, that, at 475 yards, only the biggest hitters will find in two. The course then heads back into the woods with a pair of cracking par fours followed by a 200-yard plus par-3. The 15th is another dogleg with the approach shot down the hill to the green on the waterside, while 16th, Waterfall, is another breathtaking holes, which is in effect a reverse of the fourth, requiring a 170-yard second shot over the water, again in sight of the bridge and weir. A short uphill par 4, the 17th, with its green surrounded by a sand-filled moat gives little warning as to what’s to follow for the final hole.

Standing on top of the hill you look straight down at the mighty Brocket Hall, the green in the distance on the far side of the imposing waterway. Follow the winding fairway or boom a drive over the scrub – if you find the short stuff the ball will run down leaving you to decide if to lay up or go for it in two. Most – including me – chicken out, but that still leaves a 140-yard carry over the water to a green that slopes from back to front. Find the putting surface and then enjoy the ride on the quirky, rope-drawn ferry that transports you effortlessly across the water to the safety of dry land on the other side. 

The 18th green on the Palmerston course

All in all, it’s a memorable round – indeed, better than I remembered ¬– with an intriguing mix of holes that demand your respect and attention at every turn. What was just as impressive was the conditioning, with the greens running as smoothly as the billiard table that no doubt adorns the hall’s games room, while the fairways were also in tremendous shape, without a puddle or damp patch in sight, despite a month’s worth of rain falling in the days leading up to my round. A bunker renovation programme is next on the agenda, and that will only serve to further elevate what is already an elevated experience. 

With another course still to play, it seemed only sensible to make a two-day trip of it and stay at Brocket Hall’s excellent Melbourne Lodge, a converted Georgian coach house which offers 16 luxury en-suite rooms within a pitching wedge of the first tee on both layouts. Generously proportioned and grandly decorated, the rooms are both comfortable and suitably over the top, with ornate furnishings and vast oil paintings adding to the feeling that you’re a guest at an Edwardian shooting party. 

Auberge du Lac, Brocket Hall’s fine dining restaurant, enjoys an idyllic location overlooking the River Lea

Guests can take their meals in the clubhouse’s excellent Watershyppes brasserie, while from the end of March next year they will also be able to indulge their tastebuds in the estate’s high-end restaurant, Auberge du Lac, which, as its name suggests, enjoys a stunning waterside location and is reopening to members and guests next Spring. Judging by the menu I was served at one of the pop-up nights in the run up to reopening, members and local diners are in for a treat, with a seven-course tasting menu curated by head chef John Barber easily up to Michelin standards, and certainly providing a suitably elevated dining experience that sits alongside Brocket’s other five-star facilities.

After a restful night’s sleep and a hearty breakfast I was ready to tackle Brocket’s second course, the par-73 Palmerston. Unlike the Melbourne, the River Lea doesn’t come into play on this fine course. Instead, there’s bold bunkering to contend with and avenues of trees. Course architects Donald Steel and Martin Ebert have created a strategic course where the golfer is presented with options. Central bunkers divide the third fairway, while the fourth tempts big hitters to drive left, over a small hollow and across the corner of the dogleg.

The short par-5 9th is also tempting to attack in two shots, but cleverly positioned greenside bunkers await anything but the best struck approach shot. Your approach shot on the par-4 12th must negotiate a chalk face which lies some 100 yards from the green. This really is a delightful hole, which requires pinpoint accuracy from the tee. The mid-part of the round is laid out on more open country, before returning to more tree-lined part for the closing stretch, where the 15th and 16th rival any on the course. All in all, the Palmerston offers a well-balanced design that provides a perfect foil to the drama of the Melbourne, and combined are certainly among the best 36 holes of parkland golf to be enjoyed anywhere the country.

A review of the golf facilities is incomplete without a mention of Brocket’s tour-standard practice facilities, which include a full-length driving range, chipping and bunker area, a practice putting green and a six-hole par-3 academy course. And with an indoor studio and a team of highly qualified PGA Professionals on hand, there really is no excuse not to up your game here.

So, whether you’re looking for a new golfing home from home, or simply somewhere to enjoy a slice of golfing heaven for a day or two in one of England’s most beautiful spots, Brocket Hall is ready and waiting.

The Melbourne Lodge offers luxurious on-site accommodation

STAY & PLAY AT BROCKET HALL
Golf break packages, including a round on the Melbourne and Palmerston course, overnight accommodation in the Melbourne Lodge and a full English breakfast, start from £282pp, with one-round packages available from £190pp.
For details of the latest golf breaks, membership enquiries and tee time bookings, please visit www.brocket-hall.co.uk, email membership@brocket-hall.co.uk, or call 01707 368700.

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