The professional touring, Simon Owen, was born in Wanganui and was taught to play golf at Belmont Links. Belmont Links. Owen was the winner of in 1976 the New Zealand Open, which was played in Wellington Golf Club (now Royal Wellington Golf Club after it was granted the status of a royal after 2004).
The late Bryan Silk, regarded as the country’s most outstanding amateur. At the club’s 125th anniversary celebrations, Silk was inducted into the NZ Golf Hall of Fame.
The Honours Board in the club house lists notable names that have gone on to achieve great golfing achievements worldwide.
Praise for the course has come from some notables in the game, such as international course designers. Tom Doak said course highlights for him were 2nd green from its elevated tee shot dropping onto a green with a steep fall at the left front. “So too the tumbling par-4 5th, and the short 9th wedged into a little corner of ground with cows grazing on the hill behind the green.”
Clyde Johnson said the Belmont links must rate as the North Island’s best provincial course “by a relative margin”. Johnson also talked up the second hole: “At the toe of a spur it’s bettered only by the up and over two-shot 10th.
Belmont is ranked one of the top two courses in the Whanganui-Manawatu region. Apart from the holes Doak and Johnson mentioned, the course boasts five holes which offer blind tee shots. One of those is the 11th, a par 5 which starts with a blind tee shot from above a steep bluff. And then there’s the 18th - arguably one of the toughest finishing holes in the country, with the distance, a fairway ridge at the halfway point and the prevailing westerly winds. The course was rated among the top 25 courses by NZ Golf Digest.