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The field of dreams
 
 
The nine tribute holes will be designed to repstelicate the following British Open links holes.<br>1: Turnberry 2nd<br>2: Muirfield 4th<br>3: Royal Lytham & St Annes 4th<br>4: Carnoustie 16th<br>5: Royal St George's 4th<br>6: Muirfield 13th<br>7: St Andrews 11th<br>8: St Andrews 17th<br>9: Royal Lytham & St Annes 9th.<br>Meanwhile Andy Murray's run at this year's Wimbledon contest is sure to encourage more youngsters to get on to the tennis court at the centre
The nine tribute holes will be designed to repstelicate the following British Open links holes.
1: Turnberry 2nd
2: Muirfield 4th
3: Royal Lytham & St Annes 4th
4: Carnoustie 16th
5: Royal St George's 4th
6: Muirfield 13th
7: St Andrews 11th
8: St Andrews 17th
9: Royal Lytham & St Annes 9th.
Meanwhile Andy Murray's run at this year's Wimbledon contest is sure to encourage more youngsters to get on to the tennis court at the centre
 
The eight-court indoor tennis centre is being built and hopes to open in March of next year
The eight-court indoor tennis centre is being built and hopes to open in March of next year
 

by Jonathan Paisley

FUTURE tennis and golf stars will soon be able to develop their skills at the UK's most advanced public sports complex.

Budding Andy Murrays and Colin Montgomeries will be able to access a new £20million multi-sports centre on the outskirts of Glasgow near East Kilbride from early next year.

Playsport Scotland will be spread over 100 acres and aims to give more Scots the chance to play golf, football and tennis in top class facilities.

It will boast the country's first tribute' golf course, featuring a collection of famous holes from British Open venues such as St Andrews, Carnoustie, Turnberry and Muirfield.

The centre will also house eight indoor tennis courts - the largest training facility of its type in Britain - along with a 60-bay, two-tier driving range, 10 football pitches and a 250,000 sq ft indoor sports centre.

The sprawling complex is taking shape on land beside the Kingsgate Retail Park and is scheduled to open to the public in March 2009.

Backers hope the venue will attract tens of thousands of people who are not members of private clubs.

Jimmy Wallace, Playgolf's commercial director, said: "This groundbreaking project is at the forefront of the development of public sports destinations in the UK.

"The dearth of good quality public sports facilities is now an acute national problem and the appetite to change this, particularly within government and local authorities, is growing.

"A key part of our offering is about bringing down the barriers that exist in golf and tennis or any of the sports we feature by increasing access and encouraging participation."

The company behind the multi-million pound project also owns the award-winning Northwick Park Majors Course in London which recreates some of the most famous holes in world golf, including the 12th and 16th at Augusta.

Although prices have still to be confirmed, backers insist the green fees will be set at around the same level for municipal courses in Scotland.

The nine-hole course will follow the Powerplay Golf format - billed as golf's answer to Twenty20 cricket, a shorter, more accessible form of the sport.

Each green will house two flags, one in a relatively easy position and one in a much trickier place. Players score points depending on what pin position they play.

The venture is the result of a partnership between Playgolf Holdings plc, South Lanarkshire Council and Kilmartin Property Group.

Playsport Scotland will also cater for badminton, baseball, and rock climbing, and will include shops, restaurants and an aerial assault course.

The Lawn Tennis Association and Tennis Scotland are backing the new indoor courts.

It's hoped the centre's eight courts will attract major national events and act as a training academy for the country's best young talent.


St Andrews

Muirfield

Carnoustie

East Kilbride

Andy Murray was forced to quit Scotland and move to Barcelona at the age of 15 to attend the prestigious Sánchez-Casal Academy because of the dearth of facilities in Scotland.

His mum Judy, the LTA's Talent and Performance Manager for Scotland, said: "There is a big drive by the LTA to identify talent across Britain but in order to develop that talent we need more indoor courts.

"There has never been a better time to attract kids into tennis in Scotland and the scale of the Playsport facility will provide a huge opportunity not just for training but for major competitions too."

Publication date 03/07/08

Posted by: Pete, Glasgow on 11:09am Thu 3 Jul 08
Is this the one being built on green belt land? Marvellous.
Posted by: Polly Bag, Glasgow on 11:40am Thu 3 Jul 08
woopee doo haud me back etc! I want to play with ma balls
Posted by: Eric Flack, Drumchapel on 11:41am Thu 3 Jul 08
The Evening Times does not cover league tennis matches in the west of scotland.Its tennis coverage in the sports section is non existant apart from around Wimbledon time. In the good old days weekly golf club returns used to feature in the sports pages. I remember various Evening Times trophies and competitions for sports other than football. What happened to these competitions?
Posted by: Sydney Meriwether, Glasgow on 11:54am Thu 3 Jul 08
Front page news my arse!!!
Posted by: martin, Glasgow on 12:10pm Thu 3 Jul 08
I wonder how much this publicity for a commercial provider would cost at commercial rates?
Posted by: Dennis, Paisley on 12:13pm Thu 3 Jul 08
Och get a grip. At least someone's trying to get folk into some sort of outdoor activities - rather than the usual sitting up a hill and getting jaked! Try to realise this is a good thing instead of whining about nothing.

While I'm at it - good to see something like this being built in an area where it's got a better chance of not being torched. I hope the folk of EK enjoy it. They deserve it more than certain other areas of Glasgow who would sooner destroy something than be proud of it.
Posted by: Zach, Glasgow on 1:07pm Thu 3 Jul 08
a raft of anti-social problems are aimed at the lack of facilities for children (particularly teenagers) and yet the usual suspects on these comments look for an opportunity to pass of snide comments as inteligence. this means you particularly sydney.
Posted by: Pete, Glasgow on 2:02pm Thu 3 Jul 08
Not a snide comment, and building a new sports facility is a great thing to do. My concern though is that the land to the west/north of the Stewartfield road should be preserved as green belt. EK and Glasgow are in danger of joining up at this rate.

I was brought up just down the road - right on the edge of the city - and the land between EK and Glasgow (including the Cathkin Braes park) are a great resource for walking, cycling, even horse riding - as well as being a very necessary natural resource.

I guess that - on vbalance, and with the benefits it will bring - the option for a sports development is the least bad option.
Posted by: Richard Davis, Vienna, Austria on 2:26pm Thu 3 Jul 08
If Tesco's don't beat them to it.
Posted by: Sydney Meriwether, Glasgow on 2:43pm Thu 3 Jul 08
Aside from my last comment, I would just like to add that I am amazed there is a 'sport-related' story in the ET which doesn't mention the 2014 Diddy Games... wee Purcell must be storming around his big office like bee in a jam-jar!
Posted by: Eric Flack, Drumchapel on 2:45pm Thu 3 Jul 08
East Kilbride has a fine local tennis club. These new super facilities are expensive. Many people simply cant afford them. The small local tennis clubs bowling clubs etc then wither and die and the land is sold of for housing. A few lucky memmbers gain a few thousand but the community is left without another facility.
Posted by: sydneys resident stalker, home on 3:37pm Thu 3 Jul 08
hello I hate sport and am fat,and smell of jobbies, but where was I, oh yeah, the space would be better used for junkies to play kickaboot or batter folk wi baseball bats, build a new barras there and give everyone in the eastend a job.
Posted by: Don Quixote, Glasgow on 4:01pm Thu 3 Jul 08
Sydney Meriwether wrote:
Front page news my arse!!!
It would have to be a particularly seedy publication that would consider your posterior newsworthy.
Posted by: sydneys resident stalker, home on 6:44pm Thu 3 Jul 08
donkey oaty is right we need more bums and nakedness!
Posted by: trench, possilpark on 9:35pm Thu 3 Jul 08
excercise is essential for building healthy bodies ...now we know the reason for needing to cut back on the science centre, its called rob peter to pay paul( its the way things go around scotland)...bet these premises will have enough lavvys...and toilet paper....for the first 3 months any way,bet they will hire security guards, could give the jobs to the ones who ONCE were school patrol officers? hope there will be enough money in the kitty for such an expensive sports centre, d'ya think?
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