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Two hundred yards or so behind the 18th green of the Old Course, on a broad street called the Scores, sits a sturdy stone townhouse with a brass plaque at its entrance

Two hundred yards or so behind the 18th green of the Old Course, on a broad street called the Scores, sits a sturdy stone townhouse with a brass plaque at its entrance. Inscribed on the plaque are the words “The Old Course Experience.”

“Could this possibly be what it suggests?” I wondered on the day I first strolled past it. Behind this unassuming gray facade, could there possibly be a Disney-caliber exhibit, equipped with surround sound and virtual reality, the purpose of which is to show exactly what it feels like to be 200 acres of  windblown, divot-riddled dirt?  

Brimming with ignorance, I pressed the doorbell. Surely, I thought, that buzzer would trip off something special—perhaps a choir of falsetto-voiced, computer-animated greenkeepers chortling a chorus of “It’s a Sod, Sod World.”

What a letdown. The establishment turned out to be nothing more than a golf tour operator that guarantees its customers an Old Course tee time on the day they select. No strobe lights, no streaming video, no pixilated pyrotechnics, just a little eight-page brochure.

Ah, but one of those pages caught my eye, the one that trumpeted “The St. Andrews Father-Son Tournament.” As it happened, my younger son and favorite golf partner, Scott, was about to head over, and the dates of his visit coincided exactly with the week of the tournament.

The timing was perfect, and so was the venue. It was here in St. Andrews, after all, that father-son golf made its big-time debut, with Old and Young Tom Morris combining for a total of eight Open Championship wins. Following them were the Parks (Willie Sr. and Jr., good for six Opens ’twixt them) not to mention the Dunns, McEwans and Forgans, who knew not only how to wield clubs, but how to craft them as well. A century later, St. Andrews is still brimming with dads and lads who play together regularly (not to mention a few father-son-grandson three-balls).

Indeed, sometimes the whole town seems to be divided into two distinct generations. When the university is in session, nearly half the residents are under 25 while the other half—the year-round population—appears to be alarmingly over 60. Hereabouts, you’re either long in the tooth or in the bloom of youth.

And so it’s totally appropriate that once each spring several dozen additional fathers and sons descend on St. Andrews for the mother of all tournaments. Nine different countries were represented in the field that Scott and I joined, and we spent our four days playing side by side with duos from Germany, England, Scotland and the U.S. The winners were a pair from Taiwan.

In some cases the fathers had brought college-age sons as I had, and there were even a few high-schoolers in the field, but most of the teams were comprised of young-adult sons and their senior-citizen dads, on a last fling together à la James Dodson’s

“Final Rounds” (which, incidentally, is about to be made into a movie, to be filmed here next spring, with James Garner scheduled to play the father).





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