the.red.baron wrote: » There is gouging in irish golf look at their operating profits gouging, overcharging, simple enough really, not dependent on alternatives the cost doesn't reflect the price its not a treat, you pay for it, its just a piece of land with some golf holes on it
mike12 wrote: » It was 2 and 3 years ago I played the Island. Pretty sure it was 30 we saw it on their website In the USA they are used to paying €250 plus green fees for average enough courses. There are 100s of courses you can't even play. Paying that for a course here doesn't bother them they see it as decent value.
ShivasIrons wrote: » Gouging is charging an excessive fee when the consumer has no other choice. For example a bottle of water in the cinema. There is no price gouging in Irish golf. There is choice and any one can choose to pay the price. The marquee clubs which are amongst the best courses in the world, charge a fee that reflects this. What price should they charge? The price to produce a round of golf at a 'standard' golf course in Ireland is going to be between €15-€20, membership will be a multiple of this, and visitors should be paying at least twice that, a standard green fee should be €30-€40 or more. Clubs are underselling themselves. Now if a standard green fee is €40, how many rounds at a standard course is equivalent to one round at a marquee course? Is it 2,3,4, 5 rounds or more? Is Portmarnock worth 5 rounds at Ballynormal GC? The answer depends on the player. I would say yes. Ballynormal is 40 so Portmarnock is 200. Playing another club's course is a treat, not a right. You play on their terms, not yours. They all have reduced rates available, but they have restrictions, it might be a members guest, it might be a winter rate, it might be a competition. What the golfers shouting from the pulpits are saying about the high prices are we want to be able to play any course at any time at a price we choose. What happens when they get a reduced rate, it becomes, it was in the winter so the condition wasn't good enough, we couldn't play off the tees we wanted too, the prizes weren't good enough in the competition etc. Why should a course drop their price to cater for golfers who don't value it properly in the first place?
FixdePitchmark wrote: » A dog relieving himself on the fairway The continuous stunning sound of a rough sea Kids playing on the beach in the wind A child crying A man looking for balls A man practicing with 4 balls A lost summer in a Caravan for a family An empty course Stunning greens A view of The Island Terrible fairways A Martello Tower A 4 iron into a 3 club wind Views of Howth Head you rarely see A white bird struggling, near death Golfers too Things were not going well in work (out of my control) - the time sheet was full at home - there is a global pandemic (you may have heard about it) . But I needed a fix. Hit the Port Tunnel and arrived in Corballis a little over 20 minutes later.
mike12 wrote: » Are people a bit deluded thinking because we are members in a club it entitles us to cheap golf else where. Would u expect me to be able ring your pro shop and say I'm a member of X club I want to play there next week I'm a GUI member so take 75% off the green fee. All the clubs have a guest fee. I have played twice in the island for 30 quid in one of their charity days, we also got a winter green fee fo 80 quid. I have played most of the big links and 100 for RCD is the most I have paid. I have never played with a member either.
Benicetomonty wrote: » Probably shouldve made the first list longer/clearer. For the record, Donegal, Sligo, Dingle, Dooks, Strandhill, Rosapenna, Ballyliffin, Nairn and Portnoo, Dunfaghny, Castlegregory, Carne , Enniscrone and several others that I expect Im leaving out all offer exceptional value and stunning golf that is accessible for anyone and everyone. I just I didnt live on the east coast sometimes! Although Portmarnock Links and, to a lesser extent, the European Club, do try and offer just about palatable quality and regular open comps.
PARlance wrote: » Would agree with the rest of your post on the whole but I think this bit frames it incorrectly. Most of our prestigious links are fairly open to locals imo, with the expectation of less than a handful. I would only class Portmarnock, Doonbeg and Hogs as being unaccommaditing but maybe I'm wrong there and there are others? I didn't include Royal County Dublin as I think it holds weekly or regular senior opens afaik. In any case, I think the unaccommaditing list is a much, much smaller one.
Benicetomonty wrote: » Outside of Co. Louth, Ballybunion, Tralee and County Down (allbeit via Mourne golf club), our more prestigeous links have been incredibly un accomodating of Irish golfers.
ShivasIrons wrote: » Please explain how it is gouging? Please explain in detail what prices should be charged?
frink wrote: » I would guess that they have relatively low membership numbers coupled with lower annual subs. I think Ballybunion is in the region of €500 per year so the high revenue received from Green Fees off sets these lower membership numbers. I could be completely wrong so happy if someone can correct me on this.
blue note wrote: » How are their costs so high that they're in this much trouble? Their revenue must be off the charts compared to normal clubs. Are their costs really that high too? Seriously, where is all that money spent?
carq wrote: » Exactly Hard to feel sorry for clubs that have been price gouging for years. will be interesting to see what members will make of a 5k levy . Bad business model if you are reliant on busload of Americans dropping 300 euro to keep the lights on.
the.red.baron wrote: » good enough for them gougers no doubt they will get a few grants thrown their way
blue note wrote: » I wouldn't go along with the gouging sentiment. They have a product and can charge what they like for it. And I wouldn't agree that it was a bad business model. Essentially they were in he tourism sector rather than a local sports club. I don't see a problem with this either, no-one expected a global pandemic. I am surprised that they don't all have reserves to cope with this, unless they've recently had big renovations. With such huge income, I'd have thought that they'd have amassed it. But they must have huge costs to go with it. I just wonder what they are? I'm guessing there's extra on course upkeep. I suspect thinking about it now that there's probably far more spent on course improvements too. And there must be far more staff per golfer in the club as well. Thinking about it I can see lots of places where the costs would be a lot higher. But still, I just can't see how they all wouldn't have sizeable reserves.
Benicetomonty wrote: » https://www.irishgolfdesk.com/news-files/2020/7/30/blue-chip-links-courses-bracing-for-multi-million-euro-losses