The Legends Tour returns this week for the third event of its 2025 season, the OFX Irish Legends at Mount Juliet Estate & Golf Club in Ireland.

The Kilkenny-based course was the venue for Tiger Woods’ WGC victory back in 2002 – a win that will still be fresh in the minds of some of the players who teed it up alongside the former world No.1 that September, 23 years ago.

Gary Evans finished T15 at the 2002 WGC event at Mount Juliet - Getty Images

Gary Evans finished T15 at the 2002 WGC event at Mount Juliet – Getty Images

Now a Legends Tour player, Gary Evans recalls arriving at Mount Juliet and immediately sensing a good week was in the offing.

“It’s a week I have very fond memories of,” says Evans as he prepares for a sixth season on the Legends Tour. “I remember dropping a ball on the putting green and the ball made this sound and I just knew that the greens would be superb.

“They were hard and fast, and I thought straight away I’m going to putt really well this week.”

And while Woods – having won both the Masters and US Open already that year – was imperious in opening up with two bogey-free 65s, Evans was doing his level best to keep pace over the first 36 holes.

“Tiger was playing a different game to the rest of us at that time but I got off to a really good start, shooting 67-68. I’d been playing really well and was in a good place mentally.

“The next day I wasn’t quite the same. I was doing ok at two-under through 10 but then I plugged it in the bunker at 11 and then bogeyed two more coming in to shoot 73. And that was a real shame because I was in prime position. If I’d finished the day with 70 I would have felt like I had a chance of finishing top three the next day, but 73 pushed me back. It was just a shame. I was right there.

“The crowds were amazing and it was just such a buzz. It was my first and only World Golf Championships that I ever got to play and it felt a bit like home turf with lots of Irish friends and my mother having been Irish. So I had a lot of support, which was lovely. It was just a thoroughly enjoyable experience.”

Having watched Woods dismantle Jack Nicklaus’ Mount Juliet masterpiece, Evans insists that the same skillsets will be required by any Legends Tour players looking to enter the winner’s circle this week.

“Strategy is a big thing around here, and it’s no surprise that Tiger won around here, because, you know, there’s no one strategically better than him in the world when he was world number one, and this is very much a strategic course

“At Mount Juliet, you’ve got to drive it well because the fairways narrow at around 300 yards – but you need to be as far up as possible to ensure you have a short iron in your hands going into these tricky greens, otherwise it’s a tough, tough challenge.

“There are some stunningly beautiful holes out there. The par-3s are all very strong, particularly the third. It’s only 182 yards, but with the water there that early on in the round, and a bunker right of the green, there’s no real bailout, so you’ve got to sort of trust yourself and try and hit the middle of the green.”

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Legends Tour (@eulegendstour)

With the tournament begining on Thursday, following Wednesday’s Luxe Scot Celebrity Pro-Am, with stars of sports, stage and screen ready to hit the fairways, with the likes of Daniel O’Donnell, Brian McFadden and Keith Duffy being joined by football stars including former Liverpool striker Robbie Fowler, and Irish legends Liam Brady, Niall Quinn, Ray Houghton, Shay Given and Steve Staunton. Hurling legends Henry Shefflin and Anthony Nash will also tee it up.

2005 US Open Champion Michael Campbell and 1999 Open Championship winner Paul Lawrie are joined in the tournament proper by leading Legends Tour players such as defending champion Adilson da Silva, who won the OFX Irish Legends in a play-off last year, Scott Hend – fresh from victory in Barbados last time round – and proven Tour winners such as Greg Owen, Simon Khan, James Kingston and Rob Coles.

Ryder Cup players Stephen Gallacher, Niclas Fasth, David Gilford and Philip Price, along with Swedish duo Jarmo Sandelin and Joakim Haeggman, are also in the field.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Legends Tour (@eulegendstour)

Ireland will also be well represented by David Higgins and local favourite Gary Murphy, who grew up in the area and has decades of experience playing at Mount Juliet.

“I’m blown away by the standard on Legends Tour,” says Evans. “People don’t realise how good the likes of Paul Lawrie, James Kingston, Adilson da Silva, Michael Campbell and so many others really are. They’re seriously good.

“It’s a lot more competitive and a higher quality of golf than I expected coming out into this Tour. Anyone coming to watch is going to enjoy some quality golf.”

MORE: Legends Tour announces 2025 schedule with €20 million prize pool

Follow Golf Digest Middle East on social media

X

Facebook

Instagram

YouTube

Main Image: Supplied