| Club de Golf
Valderrama is located in Andalucia, the largest and southern-most region
of Spain. A few miles north of Gibraltar, it is approximately two
hours'
drive from Cádiz and one and a half hours from Málaga.
The climate is ideal for year-round golf.

The Par 71 Championship
Course measures 6356 metres from the professional tees. The fairways
have been described by top pros and leading golf writers as the best
in Europe, if not the world. It is not an easy course - nor was
it intended to be. It is designed so as to call forth thought and
precision
for
every shot.
The course was designed in 1974 by Robert Trent
Jones, Sr, one of the great golf course architects, and was originally
known
as
Sotogrande New. In 1981 its name was changed to Las Aves.Its
incarnation in its present form began in 1984, when Jaime Ortiz-Patiño was
able to acquire it from the developers who a few years earlier had laid
out the very extensive Sotogrande area so imaginatively and tastefully.
Ortiz-Patiño had been one of the first to build a house, and
for some years he had nursed the secret ambition to bring Las Aves
to
a greater potential.
In 1984 he was able to acquire, along with the
golf course, certain additional parcels of land that would allow
this. Robert Trent Jones
willingly agreed to come back and redesign his original layout
of ten years earlier. Together the two men spent many hours walking
around
the course and discussing where and how improvements should be
made.
Ortiz-Patiño renamed the course Valderrama, after the ancient
estate on which the land is situated.The pair shared
a common aim: to create a course that would present a test of golf
to
the everyday golfer and the first-class player alike, and would bring
out the best golf that is in him.Valderrama has
since risen in the Golf World rankings to become the No.1 golf
course in mainland Europe, a position proudly held since 1989.
No
championship course in modern times has so swiftly achieved such
recognition. As
early as 1988, Valderrama began to host the newly-launched
Volvo Masters, the flagship tournament of the PGA European Tour,
and continued
to
do
so until 1996.In 1997 the Club
hosted the 32nd Ryder Cup, won by Europe in a most thrilling finish.
Valderrama remains today the only club ever to have hosted
golf's pinnacle event outside its traditional homelands, USA and
Britain.
Next,
in 1999
and 2000, Valderrama went on to host the first two editions
of the World
Golf Championships - American Express Championship, which were won
by
Tiger Woods and Mike Weir respectively.The tone for the
Ryder Cup event was set by Severiano Ballesteros, the Europe captain,
when he walked the course with John Paramor, the chief tournament
director. 'I found everything perfect,' he said. 'It's impossible
to imagine
a
golf course in better condition.Valderrama is
a
private Members' club, but a limited number of starting times are offered
for visitors most days of the year. The reservations page
provides further information.
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