Carnoustie

Carnoustie, Scotland · Links

8 major championships hosted since 1931

The Open ×8

Established

1842

Designer

Allan Robertson; Old Tom Morris; James Braid

Par

71

Championship Yardage

7,402 yds

About the Course

Carnoustie on Scotland's Angus coast is widely regarded as the toughest links in championship golf, earning the nickname “Car-nasty.” Its closing stretch — with the Barry Burn snaking across the 17th and 18th — has decided Opens in dramatic fashion.

Ben Hogan won his only Open here in 1953, and the venue is forever linked to Jean van de Velde's collapse on the 72nd hole in 1999, as well as Pádraig Harrington's and Francesco Molinari's triumphs.

Course Records

Lowest scoring marks recorded in major championship competition at Carnoustie.

Course Record (round)

64

Open rounds

Lowest 72-Hole Total

269 (−15)

Open era

First Major Hosted

1931

Total Majors Hosted

8

Major Hosting History

Every major championship staged at Carnoustie, by championship and year.

Championship Times Years
The Open 8 1931, 1937, 1953, 1968, 1975, 1999, 2007, 2018

Notable Moments

Defining rounds and championship moments in the history of Carnoustie.

1953

Hogan's only Open

Ben Hogan won the Claret Jug in his sole Open appearance, completing a three-major season.

1968

Player prevails

Gary Player won The Open at Carnoustie, holding off Jack Nicklaus.

1999

Van de Velde's 18th

Needing only a double bogey to win, Jean van de Velde made triple and lost a playoff to Paul Lawrie, who had begun the day 10 shots back.

2007

Harrington over the burn

Pádraig Harrington twice found the Barry Burn on 18 but won a playoff over Sergio García for his first major.

2018

Molinari's poise

Francesco Molinari played the weekend bogey-free to become the first Italian major champion.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is Carnoustie called the toughest links?

Its length, wind, deep bunkers and the Barry Burn guarding the closing holes make it the most demanding course on the Open rota — hence the nickname “Car-nasty.”

What happened to Jean van de Velde in 1999?

Leading by three on the 72nd tee, he made triple-bogey 7 — including a shot into the Barry Burn — and lost a playoff to Paul Lawrie.

Who won The Open at Carnoustie in 2018?

Francesco Molinari, the first Italian to win a major championship.

Explore More

All Courses

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Major Championships

Complete history of all four majors from 1860 to today.

Records & Firsts

Youngest, oldest, largest margins, and every major record.