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Welcome to Faldo Golf
With many delightful courses, pure coastal breeze from the Atlantic ocean, great fresh gastronomy and fantastic weather conditions, Portugal is a Golf Bliss for most golfers.

Portugal Golf - Algarve - Faldo Course Tips
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Faldo Golf Tips in Alcantarilha, Algarve - Portugal
OCE�NICO FALDO COMPLETE DETAILS
NEARBY GOLF COURSES
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ALAMOS �
ALTO GOLF �
GRAMACHO �
MORGADO �
O'CONNOR
PALMARES �
PENINA �
PINTA �
SILVES �
VALE DE MILHO
1st Hole - Par 4
After a drive from elevated tees,
keeping right side of the fairway is a
better line into a green fringed left by
five olive trees. A bunker front right,
and bunkers set into the foreground
ridge protect against an under clubbed
approach, while two gnarled carob trees
frame the rear. The intent then is to
avoid these varied hazards with either a
bump and run from off the right edge of
the green or a shot carried full to the
receptively sloped putting surface.
2nd Hole - Par 3
This short hole, the first of the
course�s four Par 3�s, is played
downhill to a shallow green which poses
the player some serious questions,
falling steeply off to the right, backed
by a rock outcrop and surrounded
threateningly on the left by a large
desert bunker studded with clumps of
flowering cacti.
3rd Hole - Par 4
Here the golfer is presented with a
commanding tee shot, filled with
strategic options. The most dynamic
route is to cut the dogleg to reach the
green 300 metres away in one glorious
shot, the other options require varying
combinations of precision and length
before hitting the approach shot up to a
two-tiered green which sits poised over
360 degree views of Amendoeira. An
extraordinary row of five intertwined holm oaks guards the right side of the
carry.
4th Hole - Par 5
This very long hole presents the golfer
with another demanding tee shot, which
has to be played downhill and downwind
to a turn point a full 330 yards away, a
draw is the right shape for your opening
shot. The dilemma for the second shot is
whether to carry the bunkers and a dry
ditch, gully or ravine filled with
rocks) in going for the green in two, or
whether to play a �safer� route to a
fairway that is threatened only by that
ditch.
5th Hole - Par 4
The golfer is presented with a tricky
choice of tee shot: a heroic carry
across the largest lake on the golf
course, or, alternatively, opting for
strategic fairway positioning. The
rationale and reward for pursuing either
route will vary depending entirely on
the pin location of the day. The carry
is over water and a scrub bunker, the
safer line is all about precision and
position, placing the ball precisely to
the right side of the dogleg left
fairway.
6th Hole - Par 5
Options abound for each shot from tee to
green; various sections of fairway are
protected or defined by changes in
levels and the arrangements of traps.
The result presents innumerable
strategic subtleties. Similar in length
to the 4th hole, it plays in the
opposite direction, quartering into an
unhelpful prevailing breeze. With the
wind up it is a full three shots to a
green that slopes to favour an approach
from the more evasive left side of the
fairway.
7th Hole - Par 3
A variation on the North Berwick�s Redan
hole, the green can be reached by either
a fully flighted ball or a bump and run
shot feeding down onto the putting
surface from the high right side of the
approach ground.
8th Hole - Par 4
Again the tee shot offers options: an
arrow straight drive down a narrow
channel between the ditch and a central
fairway bunker leads to a shorter second
shot into a long, shallow, oblique
green. A tee shot to the right leaves a
longer approach which carries defending
bunkers and asks the ball to be stopped
quickly on a surface that slopes away
from this direction of approach.
9th Hole - Par 4
A sweeping, rolling fairway rewards a
long tee shot which climbs the step to a
plateau from which the green is spied on
a natural platform beyond a narrow
valley.
10th Hole - Par 4
The hole stretches away from the high
tees to the plain below, and appears to
encourage two long draws to attack the
green which is bunkered all along the
left approach. The wind helps the draw
on the tee shot to set up the best angle
into the green. But drawing of the
approach shot must not be overdone for
the green, 45 metres long, is narrow and
slopes down to the left. When any cross
breeze is blowing a controlled fade is a
better option to hold the second shot up
on the green.
11th Hole - Par 3
Back into the hills this, the shortest
hole on the course, plays up to an
angled green. The hole may be short but
the green is stretched long - so long
that three clubs� distances cover the
front to back pin placements. A waste
bunker sprawls down from the right,
while a cascading stream runs along the
left side.
12th Hole - Par 4
Another spectacular tee shot, which must
fly over a wooded valley to a ridge of
fairway still showing the ancient
terraces formed by walls of large
boulders and hewn rock. The green is
perched higher still, guarded by a
magnificent cork oak tree.
13th Hole - Par 5
This is the highest point on the golf
course, at 50 metres above the plain,
the view over the entire property is
commanding - and the view to the fairway
is daunting! Although, as ever, safer
and easier alternative routes are
available, the temptation is to carry as
far across the tree tops in the valley
below as possible to a distant section
of fairway buttressed by cliff walls.
The fairway sweeps down and down with
cliffs high to the left and a rock wall
low to the right. The second shot
carries a large area of scrub and the
players must decide whether to be short
of, carry, or thread through a pair of
offset fairway bunkers in the approach
area. The need for precision is
heightened by the location of the green
which juts out on a thin promontory
which falls away on all sides.
14th Hole - Par 4
Traversing uphill, the fairway slopes
across from the high right. Waiting
below its left edge is a cavernous
desert scrub area from where sand was
once extracted. The tee shot should be
faded into the fairway�s slope to set up
a second shot to a green nestled on a
terrace beyond the quarry.
15th Hole - Par 4
The ball to the centre or left of the
fairway is gathered in benignly, a ball
�lost� on the breeze to the right side
is deflected down and away from the
green. Given that the green is ledged
precariously into the hillside with a
steep bunker below it is vital that the
tee shot has been accurate. There is
precious little margin for error for
this second shot and every advantage of
stance, elevation and lie from the
fairway will be repaid in full.
16th Hole - Par 3
This is a lovely par five. There is no
big mounding, a lake runs along the
right hand side guarding the hole
because it is quite a wide fairway.
Anybody playing up the left hand side is
going to have a free run at this golf
hole. Just watch out for the lake, it
runs all the way along the right hand
side and up to the right hand side of
the green. So anybody hitting the ball
safely must keep it up the left-hand
side, and you won�t get into trouble
that way.
17th Hole - Par 4
The split-level fairway is divided by a
central bunker 265 metres from the back
tee. This bunker blocks the left channel
if hit too long, while a very full drive
along the right side climbs to a plateau
which then drops down to usher the ball
still further up the fairway. Due to the
shape and orientation of the green the
shorter left side of the fairway can be
a preferable position and angle from
which to make the second shot, though
more often a shorter and easier approach
shot is accomplished by staying long and
to the right.
18th Hole - Par 5
To stand a chance of getting up in two
the drive must thread the pinch point of
bunkers left and right at 265 metres and
have enough fade to hold the right edge
of the fairway against the contradictory
slope. Letting it go left leaves a very
awkward angle home. The green sets up in
an amphitheatre in the hillside 235
metres beyond and requires a superb
strike to rise up to and settle on the
green. Opting only to reach the green in
a regulation three strokes brings the
ditch into play. Decision time! Lay up
short to leave a mid iron in or carry
the hazard for a short pitch up to the
green. Under clubbing either shot, or
over spinning the pitch risks the
humiliation of the ball trickling
backwards fifty metres, all the way,
down to the lower fairway level. The
clubhouse balcony gives a fabulous view
of play from tee to green - no pressure
then! |



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