Short Breaks in Algarve

Vila Gale Ampalius. Short Breaks in Algarve.

Short Breaks in Algarve

Short Breaks in Algarve: Just a few hours away from major European cities, the Algarve continues to provide great experiences for golf enthusiasts, whether on long weekends or short stays the choice is vast and for all budgets.

Hospitality, gastronomic culture, mild climate, and a preserved nature are the attributes that have always made the Algarve the favorite tourist destination for thousands of golfers.

More than 30 golf courses designed by world-renowned architects and famous players such as Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Nick Faldo, Oconnor Junior, Robert Trent Jones, are the guarantee of an enriching experience and put several Algarve golf courses in the Top 10 or Top 50 ranking of European golf courses.

As a result the Algarve as a golf destination have received numerous awards and accolades which are a justifiable source of motivation and pride to all those involved in the various aspects of its operation, whether the promotion bureau the maintenance department the reservation service, or the caddy masters.

From the cosmopolitan central Algarve and its famous Golden Triangle: Vilamoura, Quinta do Lago, Vale do Lobo, 3 resorts of High quality standards in their conception and in their infrastructures, management and services, passing through other important regions such as Tavira, Castro Marim, Lagos, Portimão / Alvor which also offer excellent options for an ideal golfing holiday.

Tee Times Golf Agency is privileged to provide a reservation service to thousands of golfers since 1993 and with a satisfaction rate above 90%.

Vila Gale Ampalius

Vila Gale Ampaliusstarstarstarstar
3 Nights & 3 Rounds – From € 266 / £ 238

Just a few hours away from major European cities, the Algarve continues to provide great experiences for golf enthusiasts, whether on long weekends or short stays the choice is vast and for all budgets.
Hospitality, gastronomic culture, mild climate, and a preserved nature are the attributes that have always made the Algarve the favorite tourist destination for thousands of golfers.

Vilamoura Victoria Golf Course

Victoria – From € 102 / £ 93

Dom Pedro Marina

Dom Pedro Marinastarstarstarstar
3 Nights & 3 Rounds – From € 251 / £ 225

Vilamoura Old Course

Old Course – From € 94 / £ 86

Vilamoura Millennium Golf Course

Millennium – From € 63 / £ 58

Dona Filipa Hotel

Dona Filipa Hotelstarstarstarstarstar
3 Nights & 3 Rounds – From € 229 / £ 205

Vilamoura Pinhal Golf Course

Pinhal – From € 59 / £ 54

Vilamoura Laguna Golf Course

Laguna – From € 56 / £ 51

Pestana Carvoeiro

Pestana Carvoeirostarstarstarstar
3 Nights & Unltd Rounds – From € 148 / £ 133

Quinta do Lago North

Quinta do Lago North – From € 122 / £ 111

Quinta do Lago South

Quinta do Lago South – From € 108 / £ 99

Vila Gale Marina

Vila Gale Marinastarstarstarstar
3 Nights & 3 Rounds – From € 266 / £ 238

Laranjal Golf Course

Laranjal
– From € 108 / £ 99

Pinheiros Altos Golf Course

Pinheiros Altos
– From € 77 / £ 70

The Magnolia Hotel

The Magnolia Hotelstarstarstarstar
3 Nights & 2 Rounds – From € 289 / £ 259

Vale do Lobo Royal Golf Course

Vale do Lobo Royal – From € 60 / £ 55

Vale do Lobo Ocean Golf Course

Vale do Lobo Ocean – From € 60 / £ 55

NAU Salgados Palace

NAU Salgados Palacestarstarstarstarstar
3 Nights & 2 Rounds – From € 249 / £ 223

Monte Rei North Golf Course

Monte Rei North – From € 165 / £ 150

Palmares Golf Course

Palmares
– From € 72 / £ 66

NAU Morgado Golf Hotel

NAU Morgado Golf Hotelstarstarstarstar
3 Nights & 2 Rounds – From € 198 / £ 177

Oceânico Faldo Golf Course

Faldo – From € 80 / £ 73

Oceânico O'Connor Golf Course

O’Connor – From € 76 / £ 70

Penina Hotel Golf & Resort

Penina Hotel Golf & Resortstarstarstarstarstar
3 Nights & Unltd Rounds – From € 244 / £ 200

Salgados Golf Course

Salgados – From € 50 / £ 46

Morgado Golf Course

Morgado – From € 44 / £ 40

Tivoli Marina Portimão

Tivoli Marina Portimãostarstarstarstar
3 Nights & 2 Rounds – From € 216 / £ 193

Espiche Golf Course

Espiche – From € 35 / £ 32

Vale da Pinta Golf Course

Vale da Pinta – From € 52 / £ 48

Castro Marim Golf & Country Club

Castro Marim Golf & Country Clubstarstarstarstar
3 Nights & 2 Rounds – From € 151 / £ 135

Gramacho Golf Course

Gramacho – From € 52 / £ 48

Vila Sol Golf Course

Vila Sol – From € 72 / £ 66

The Residences at Victoria Vilamoura

The Residences at Victoria Vilamourastarstarstarstarstar
3 Nights & 3 Rounds – From € 221 / £ 198

Pine Cliffs Golf Course

Pine Cliffs – From € 30 / £ 28

Alamos Golf Course

Alamos – From € 42 / £ 39

Hotel Apartamento do Golfe

Hotel Apartamento do Golfestarstarstar
3 Nights & 2 Rounds – From € 161 / £ 144

San Lorenzo Golf Course

San Lorenzo – From € 120 / £ 110

Balaia Golf Course

Balaia – From € 28 / £ 26

Pestana Alvor Atlantico Residences

Pestana Alvor Atlantico Residencesstarstarstarstar
3 Nights & Unltd Rounds – From € 134 / £ 120

Boavista Golf Course

Boavista – From € 49 / £ 45

Alto Golf Course

Alto – From € 46 / £ 42

Vilamoura Garden

Vilamoura Gardenstarstarstarstar
2 Nights & 1 Rounds – From € 165 / £ 148

Miguel Gaspar runner-up In an Olazábal golf course

Miguel Gaspar runner-up  In an Olazábal golf course, photo by Tristan Jones

Miguel Gaspar runner-up In an Olazábal golf course

Miguel Gaspar runner-up In an Olazábal golf course: At the La Monacilla golf course in Spain, Miguel Gaspar, reached the best result of his professional career in international golf tournaments, becoming runner-up of Alps de Andalucia, €48,000 prize-money tournament, held in the region of Huelva, in Spain, the win came a week after his friend Pedro Figueiredo, won a Challenge Tour tournament.

It was an Alps Tour Golf event, one of the third divisions of the European professional golf and the top-5 of the Order of Merit at the end of the season climbs to the Challenge Tour, the European second division.

The professional of Belas golf club, who now trains at Quinta da Ria Golf Club, Algarve, led the leaderboard after a first round of 66 strokes, 6 under the Par of La Monacilla Golf, and on the following days, with rounds of 72 and 70 he remained in the hunt of a possible first title that escaped him by 2 shots.

“I’m a little sad because I felt I had a good opportunity, but golf is just like that. I feel very good about my game in general. I played very well in the first day, without a single mistake. I did not play very well on the second and on the third day. I did not hit the ball very well, “the 26-year-old Portuguese told the Challenge Tour Press Office.

La Monacilla Golf Club

La Monacilla Golf Club

“We played in a big golf course with a great design, where it’s important to have good shots from the tee to score well, “he added.

The La Monacilla Golf Course is a design of José María Olazábal, the twice Masters champion and former Ryder Cup star, and opened in 2010. It is one of the best golf courses of the 2018 Alps Tour Golf.

It features fairways with subtle shapes and slopes, as well as large, well protected greens.

The golf course design fits perfectly with the natural shape of the land and this, allied to the quality of the golf holes, means that La Monacilla is a great golfing challenge for players of all handicaps.

There are six tees on each hole, allowing each golfer to choose the layout that best fits to their level of play. Of course the ‘pros’ played from the back tees.

The Alps de Andalucia was won by French Alexandre Daydou (68 + 72 + 66), from Reunion Island.

Daydou had already lost two play-offs on this Tour and finally grabed the title, collecting a prize of €6,960, to jump from 19th to 4th in the Order of Merit, behind the Spanish David Bordá (the champion of the Obidos International Open), Louis Boyer and Marcus Mohr.

Miguel Gaspar, secured 2nd place, on a golf course amoungst 131 players and pocketed €4,728, he should have jumped to the 12th place, but he is not a Tour member. He played only to get more professional experience.

La Monacilla Golf Club

La Monacilla Golf Club

“As I only had this sporadic invitation (for the Alps Tour Golf), since I’m playing on the Challenge Tour, also by invitation, I did not become a member”, he explained to Tee Times Golf.

Professional since 2013, Miguel Gaspar was one of those players who felt more acutely the difficult transition from amateur to professional.

A contemporary of Ricardo Melo Gouveia and Pedro Figueiredo, with who he played in the the World Amateur Championship (The Eisenhower Trophy), in the Portuguese national team, he was always one of the best amateurs of his generation, having even won the FPG Cup, one of the national amateur Majors.

But as a professional, even stopping his studies to devote himself to golf, and despite having one of the most beautiful swings of national golf, his good scores took a long time to show up.

He started to feel something different in his game at the end of the last year and this season the results were gradually coming up.

In the Portugal Pro Golf Tour, the international satellite tour that we can roughly categorize as one of the (many) fourth European divisions, played between November and April, Miguel Gaspar finished below Par in 12 tournaments.

In the opening event of the PGA Portugal Tour of 2018, the Optilink PGA Open, he was 7 under the Par and one month later, in the second tournament of this Portuguese professional tour, the Axis PGA Open, in Ponte de Lima, he was 3rd at level Par.

The signs were all there. Sooner or later a great result would appear and it was meant to be in Spain. When almost nobody talked about him, Miguel Gaspar reminded us that he still has a beautiful and increasingly competitive game. But why did this metamorphosis occur now?

Quinta da Ria Golf Course

Quinta da Ria Golf Course

“The big difference is that since March 2017 I started to be coached by Sebastião Gil and to train at Quinta da Ria“, elucidated.

“In Belas Golf course I have the best conditions possible in Lisbon, but here in Quinta da Ria golf course (between Tavira and Vila Real de Santo António) I have the best in the Algarve and I can be more focused on my daily work,” he added.

The same decision was taken a year and a half ago by his pal, Pedro Figueiredo, when, at the peak of a crisis of confidence, he resided temporarily in the Algarve, because he felt that there was a more favorable environment for total concentration in his career.

Sebastião Gil, with his character, makes me a better player and a better person,” added Miguel Gaspar, who, in the last Open of Portugal @ Morgado Golf Resort, in statements to the Press Office of the PGA of Portugal, had already talked about it.

“I learned a lot with David Llewellyn (the Welsh coach who has been coaching several Portuguese, including his friends “Figgy” and “Melinho”), but I felt something was missing. I feel Gil is very sincere and straight forward. He leaves nothing to be said and feels the needs of the Portuguese players. He knows the results of all the Portuguese and wants very much that the Portuguese golf evolves. Of course, he knows a lot about golf, he does not need presentations, he’s been with Butch Harmon (former Tiger Woods coach) and he is the National Team Coach with the most victories in the Portuguese Federation National Team,” said the player.

Finally, there is another aspect no less important, which is related to a certain financial comfort. Miguel Gaspar appeared a few months ago with polo shirts marked by the “Chili Boy” logo: “It’s a new sponsor. They help me with the costs of signing up for tournaments and allow me to attend a gym in Tavira. Both have been very important to me.”

Belas Clube de Campo Golf Course

Belas Clube de Campo Golf Course

In the Challenge Tour, where the level is higher, things have not gone well in 2018 for him, but he has already showed to be worth more.

A few weeks ago, in the Swiss Challenge presented by Suisse Golf Association, he was knockin’ on a top-10 door at the end of a first round of 68. The 79 on the second day made him fail the cut with an aggregate of 5 over Par, but the motivation grew.

“The ambitions have been always the same. I never stop believing. I work to be where I want to be, which is on the European Tour,” he says without rashes or false modesty.

Hugo Ribeiro / Tee Times Golf for Record

Gary Player Course in India shows game improvement in Ricardo Melo Gouveia

Ricardo Melo Gouveia

Ricardo Melo Gouveia

Ricardo Melo Gouveia

What a difference a year makes in Ricardo Melo Gouveia. By the middle of March 2017 he had played seven tournaments and had only made two cuts, with a T-23rd at Abu Dhabi and a T-62nd at the Tschwane Open.

In 2018 everything changed for the better. Last week he was 4th after 36 holes at the Tshwane Open in South Africa, finishing T-29th, and last week he led the Hero Indian Open after 9 holes, closing in T-16th, equaling his best standings this season, in December at the Mauritius Open.

Perhaps the most important statistic of all is that in nine tournaments played he made the cut in six – and the last three in a row.

Ricardo Melo Gouveia had not yet gone through three consecutive European Tour tournaments this season playing the four days. He had not done so since the end of 2017 and the consistency of making a lot of cuts was one of his strengths in 2015, when he became the first Portuguese to become Challenge Tour #1, and in 2016, when he was the first Portuguese to qualify for the DP World Tour Championship.

Of course in the European Tour, the main Tour, it’s not enough to simply make the cut, and that is why, despite these positive results, the Team Portugal star is “only” the 114th in the Race to Dubai, knowing that only the top-100 at the end of the year retains the card to compete among the European elite.

But going through a lot of cuts builds the confidence that he will sooner or later break through, as Matt Wallace did in India.

Matt Wallace - Winner - by Getty Images

Matt Wallace – Winner – by Getty Images

Until last week, the Englishman had not achieved better than a T-19th in the 2018 European Tour (in Qatar), but he was the one to leave New Delhi with a second European Tour career title, to add to the one he got last May, at the Open de Portugal at Morgado Golf Resort.

Wallace (rounds of 69, 70, 60 and 68), 27, beated Andrew “Beef” Johnson (72+66+73 +66) in a play-off, after a tie for 277, 11 under Par of the DLF Golf & Country Club.

“Congratulations to Matt Wallace for finishing at the top,” Ricardo Melo Gouveia wrote on Twitter, adding that, for himself, “it was a positive week,” showing “good signs.”

The Quinta do Lago Pro scored 288 (Par), with rounds of 69, 73, 71 and 75, and collected his highest prize of the season – €18,016, out of the total of €1.4 million at stake. Wallace pocketed €235,495.

A roller coaster performance that took him briefly to the lead after 9 holes, to the top-10 after 18 and 54 holes, and to the final T-16th, in a “tricky course”, as he wrote in social media. A course that last year had been considered one of the toughest on the European Tour.

“I feel that my game is slowly getting back to the level I want,” the ACP Golf player told Tee Times Golf, after showing in India a more complete game, with na average 1.7 putts per green in regulation and 83% driving accuracy.

“I started working with a new putting coach at the end of last year, Paul Hurrion, who also works with Danny Willett (the 2016 Masters champion), we made some important changes and I feel a lot of improvements,” added the Portuguese #1.

Another progress in Ricardo Melo Gouveia was the way he dealt with the test of the course. Fortunately, the weather was nice – “four very similar days, with 30 degrees every day and relatively slow wind” – because the playing conditions were challenging enough.

“This course is quite penalizing and this year the owner wanted to change some things in the setup to make us suffer,” said the Portuguese golfer from Srixon.

Matt Wallace’s caddy, Dave, agreed. “He told me that it was setup sometimes like the U.S. Open. You can hit great shots, but it can run into the rough or slope.”, said the Portuguese Open champion.

The DLF Golf & Country Club, designed by the great Gary Player opened in 2015. It is a tremendous challenge, but Ricardo Melo Gouveia appreciated it: “It was in excellent conditions, with the greens fast and rolling very consistent. A very penalizing course, with plenty of water, shrubs and greens quite undulating.”

Under these circumstances, the players knew that there would be bad holes. The champion, Matt Wallace, had a double-bogey and 9 bogeys in four rounds.

Also Ricardo Melo Gouveia did not avoid 2 double-bogeys, adding them 12 bogeys, compensated by 16 birdies. It was a constant struggle and the Portuguese London resident showed the mental strength to reverse negative trends.

A good example was the last round: it started badly, with 3 bogeys in 6 holes, but then came 2 birdies. Another dark series of 4 bogeys in a row, but then finished the round with the last 5 holes played in 2 under Par in the final and most difficult strech of the course.

The Portuguese Olympic athlete may have progressed technically, but he also showed the guts that were his strenth in his first two seasons as a professional.

“I knew it would be a difficult week on a mental level and I would have to have a lot of patience and a good attitude. I feel like I’ve been good in that departement and that has certainly helped me to get back after tough times,” he said.

“At the end of last year I also started working more seriously on the mental side with David Lewellyn (his longtime coach) and Tiago Boto. I’m slowly getting the rewards of that work and I feel I’m on the right track,” he concluded.

Ricardo Melo Gouveia will only be competing again on the European Tour from April 12 at the Spanish Open and is likely to lose some places in the Race to Dubai, after climbing from 133rd to 114th, but with his confidence growing up, he knows that spring can bring him back to the European top-100.

Hugo Ribeiro / Tee Times Golf