“Cathedral is very young, we are only eight years old, so it’s starting to get international notoriety now. I think the tournament will start to get on people’s radars. I’m hoping that’s the case.
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“We’d like it to be something that international players, as well as some of Australia’s best players, want to come and play.
“Now, that’s difficult given it’s on the other side of the world and it’s such a crowded calendar already, but if we can make the product really good where the players really want to play it and it’s quintessentially Australian, we are obviously going to have to have a very big prize pool, but I think we have started well.”
Evans, a golf lover who plays off a low single-figure handicap, has travelled to Augusta several times to watch the US Masters.
He’s built Cathedral with that course and the clubhouse in the back of his mind.
Now he wants to build an internationally renowned event.
“The Masters were originally called the Augusta Invitational, so it’s an extension of that I guess,” he said.
“I don’t think our event will ever be as big as that. But at the same time, it’s in a remote part of Victoria. The topography is extraordinary, the golf course is very unique. There are differences to what Augusta have done. Ours is a family club, but the uniqueness of Augusta is something that I’ve studied very closely.
“Lots of what I have done with Cathedral, Augusta has been a part of.”
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Several thousand people are expected to make their way to the course in Thornton, a two-hour drive north-east of Melbourne through the Black Spur Drive.
That’s a big crowd for a club that is so private its membership figures are kept secret.
“It’s not something we publicise. But it’s less than 200,” Evans said.
For players such as Scott, Leishman and Lucas Herbert, the event is a chance to promote local golf away from the prestigious Melbourne sand belt.
But none of those players is expected to travel to the course by car. That’s where the club’s own helicopter and private helipad will come into use.
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