Golf! - Pacific Northwest Golf Association
Transcription
Golf! - Pacific Northwest Golf Association
Regional News – BC, ID, OR & WA Holiday Gift Box PACIFIC NORTHWEST www.pacificnorthwestgolfer.com 110 years as Guardians of the Game december 2009 King of the Amateurs Kent Myers is your man Monster Munis Risks and rewards for city-owned courses Winter Travel To Mesquite and Thailand and everywhere in between Work in Progress The ongoing process of forging a national championship-ready layout at Chambers Bay www.thepnga.org | JULY 2009 | 1 Visit legendary Pebble Beach. A premier invitation for PNGA members. P EBBLE B EACH G OLF ER’S PACKAGE • Stay two nights at The Inn at Spanish Bay • Play one round on Pebble Beach Golf Links, host site of the 2010 U.S. Open ® • Play one round on The Links at Spanish Bay Call for package details Valid 11/22/09 through 3/31/10 Call (866) 993 -6931 NOW IS THE TIME TO EXPERIENCE PEBBLE BEACH — Ask for the PNGA member special — www.pebblebeach.com Pebble Beach Resorts invites golfers to play in a variety of tournaments held throughout the year. For more tournament information, call (831) 625-8575 or visit www.pebblebeach.com. P E B B L E B E AC H R E S O RT S Host of the 2010 U.S. Open ® ® To receive package rates, all golf must be secured at time of booking. Please mention promo code PNGA2. Offer is subject to availability. Some blackout dates and restrictions apply. Valid for new bookings only and parties of 8 or fewer rooms. Pebble Beach , Pebble Beach Golf Links , Pebble Beach Resorts , The Lone Cypress , The Heritage Logo, and their respective underlying distinctive images are trademarks, service marks, and trade dress of Pebble Beach Company. All rights reserved. 2010 U.S. Open is a trademark of the United States Golf Association. Used by permission. Photos ©Joann Dost. ® ® ™ ® 2 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER ® Vol. 15 No. 5 • December 2009 W H A T ’ S INSI D E An official magazine of the Pacific Northwest Golf Association, British Columbia Golf Association, Idaho Golf Association, Oregon Golf Association, Washington State Golf Association and the Pacific Northwest Section PGA EDITORIAL AND PRODUCTION STAFF PUBLISHER John M. Bodenhamer ASSISTANT PUBLISHER Troy Andrew EDITOR Tom Cade ART DIRECTORMarilyn Esguerra 22 32 29 | Dawn of the Uber Muni Municipal courses have come a long way 6 | PUBLISHER’S ESSAY 32 | Rules of the Game Nick Taylor belongs in a special group Winter of our discontent 8 | Chip Shots Highlights from around the Northwest 16 | Long and Winding Road Chambers Bay prepares for spotlight 18 | WINTER GETAWAY IN FULL SWING 35 | GOLF OREGON Regional news 40 | GOLF British Columbia Regional news 44 | GOLF IDAHO Regional news 50 | GOLF washington Regional news Las Vegas, Mesquite and Thailand 26 | Reign of the Amateur Nobody was better than Kent Myers ON THE COVER The now-iconic par-3 15th hole at Chambers Bay University Place, Washington Photo by Aidan Bradley ADVERTISING SALES SENIOR ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE Lisa Lee 206.452.2976 lisa.lee@tigeroak.com OREGON & NEVADA Stein Swenson 541.318.5155 CALIFORNIA Tom Black 562.590.5143 BRITISH COLUMBIA Ray Bone 250.883.2772 PNGA COMMUNICATIONS COMMITTEE Troy Andrew, PNGA/WSGA Assistant Executive Director, Federal Way, Wash.; Spike Beeber, PNGA Director, Portland, Ore.; John Bodenhamer, PNGA/WSGA CEO/Executive Director, Federal Way.; Jim Durkin, IGA Executive Director, Boise, Idaho; Peter Fibiger, Chairman, Victoria, BC; Kris Jonasson, BCGA Executive Director, Richmond, BC; Amanda Malone, BCGA Director of Communications, Richmond, BC; Margaret Maves, PNGA Club Representative, Portland, Ore.; Paul Ramsdell, PNGA/WSGA Representative-at-Large, Gig Harbor, Wash.; Cliff Shahbaz, PNGA President, Portland, Ore.; Marge Thorgrimson, PNGA Women’s Division, Seattle, Wash.; Barbara Tracy, WSGA Director, Woodinville, Wash.; Barbara Trammell, OGA CEO/ Executive Director, Woodburn, Ore.; Eric Yaillen, OGA Director of Communications, Woodburn, Ore.; Tom Cade, PNGA/WSGA Manager of Communications, Federal Way, Wash. FUTURE PUBLISHING DATES February 2010, May 2010, August 2010, November 2010 SUBSCRIPTIONS Members in Oregon and Washington pay a $1 subscription fee. All rights reserved, including reproduction in whole or in part in any form. Material in this publication may not be reproduced in any form without the expressed permission of the editor. Advertising contained herein does not constitute endorsement by the Pacific Northwest, British Columbia, Idaho, Oregon, Washington State golf associations or PNWPGA.All editorial submissions are to be directed to the editor. Editor assumes no responsibility for unsolicited queries, manuscripts, photographs, graphics or other materials. Editor reserves the right to edit letters to the editor and publish only excerpts from letters received. Printed letters are not necessarily the opinion of the PNGA, BCGA, IGA, OGA, WSGA or PNWPGA. The publisher has made every effort to ensure the accuracy of the material contained in this publication. However, as unpredictable changes and errors do occur, the publisher can assume no liability for errors, changes or omissions. Printed in U.S. Pacific Northwest Golf Association 1010 S. 336th Street, Suite 310, Federal Way, WA 98003 (206) 526-1238; fax (206) 522-0281 e-mail: mailbox@pacificnorthwestgolfer.com Pacific Northwest Golfer (USPS 014-029), (ISSN: #10877045) is published quarterly by Pacific Northwest Golf Association at 1010 S. 336th Street, Suite 310, Federal Way, WA 98003. 4 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER C HI P SHOTS Great player...good person Over the years, I have had the good fortune to have played golf and become acquainted with many fine players. A few especially stand out as fine human beings whom I have followed JOHN BODENHAMER PUBLISHER and admired as they have enjoyed professional success. Some from the Northwest that come to mind are everybody’s favorites Fred Couples and Peter Jacobsen. Don Bies is also one of the classiest golfers I have ever known. From my BYU golf team days, I have always placed Rick Fehr and Dick Zokol in my “great player . . . good person” club as well. More recently, Brian Henninger, Jeff Gove and Ryan Moore are each in the same category in my book. Not only are these guys outstanding players, but are also genuinely quality individuals who give back to the game of golf and their communities. On Saturday, November 28 I attended a ceremony that saw University of Washington golfer Nick Taylor, of Abbotsford, B.C., presented with the McCormack Medal. It is presented by the venerable Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews, Scotland to the world’s No. 1 ranked amateur golfer at the conclusion of the amateur season. Nick could have chosen a number of locations around the globe to receive his sterling silver medal, but it is telling that he chose the University of Washington campus so he could receive it in front of his Husky teammates and head coach Matt Thurmond. Long-time R&A member, Steve Sander, who is also a member of Broadmoor Golf Club in Seattle, was on hand to make the presentation in front of dozens of Husky golf fans at the new Husky Golf Center in the Bank of America Arena (formerly Hec Edmundson Pavilion). During the ceremony, Steve explained the medal was made possible through an endowment to the R&A from the Mark H. McCormack family (former Seattle Seahawks executive) to honor the world’s No. 1 ranked amateur each year. The medal presentation was a momentous occasion for a young man who spent 21 consecutive weeks atop the world rankings after contending in this year’s U.S. Open after a second round 65 on the Bethpage Black Course, winning the Sahalee Players Championship, finishing as runner-up in the U.S. Amateur Public Links, capturing a school record four collegiate victories, culminating with the PNGA Player of the Year Award and 6 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER Photo copyright USGA Nick could have chosen a number of locations around the globe to receive his sterling silver medal, but it is telling that he chose the University of Washington campus so he could receive it in front of his Husky teammates and head coach Matt Thurmond. NCAA First Team All-American honors. Nick was quite humble in accepting this prestigious honor and warmly and sincerely expressed his gratitude to all around him. After a few photos and politely spending some time with fans and well-wishers who wanted a glimpse of his medal, Nick dashed away. As I was leaving myself, I briefly visited with him again. By now, he had changed into a pair of jeans and tennis shoes and was with a handful of his teammates rushing off to the Apple Cup Game (UW Huskies vs. WSU Cougars). He turned to me with exuberance and said, “I hope they (Huskies) win” and thanked me again for attending his ceremony. As Nick disappeared into a sea of purple under gray, blustery skies and into Husky Stadium to do what college kids are supposed to do, I could not help but think that here was another “great player and good person” for the club. Regardless of what success he enjoys in a professional career, I for one will be there pulling for Nick Taylor every step of the way. Nick Taylor made it to the final match of the 2009 U.S. Amateur Public Links championship. He finished runner-up. At the medal ceremony are (left to right) UW men’s golf coach Matt Thurmond, Nick Taylor, and R&A member Steve Sander. Former PNGA Senior Women’s champ passes On November 27, 2009, former PNGA Senior Women’s Amateur champion, Carole Holland of Seattle, Wash., passed away after a long illness. She was 72. Carole captured the 1992 PNGA Senior Women’s Amateur Championship at Astoria G&CC. She was a long-time member of Meridian Valley CC in Kent (Wash.) and Rainier G&CC in Seattle and a frequent competitor in state and city amateur championships. A memorial service will be held at Rainier G&CC in January of 2010, with the specific date to be determined. The PNGA extends its heartfelt condolences to the entire Holland family. Memorial contributions may be made to the Evans Scholarship Program and sent to the PNGA office at 1010 South 336th St., Suite 310, Federal Way, WA 98003. C HI P SHOTS Nicklaus stoops to conquer for American Lake Jack Nicklaus tees up a ball for Jim Martinson at a fundraising clinic for American Lake Veterans GC. From the “We couldn’t pass this up” department An anonymous (huh?) inventor from Aurora, Colo. has designed an accessory that would enable the user to tee up a golf ball quickly and easily. The “Tee It Up Caddy” was developed to reduce the physical strain involved in teeing up a golf ball by saving the user from having to stretch and strain. The inventor believes that this could reduce the risk of injury involved in golfing. We are speechless. There’s nothing quite like having the greatest golfer of the 20th century tee your ball up for you. Jack Nicklaus did just that for double-amputee Jim Martinson – and by doing so he had the gathered crowd in the palm of his hands at a clinic he conducted in November at Bighorn Golf Club in Palm Desert, Calif. The clinic was a fundraiser for the American Lake Veterans Golf Course in Lakewood, Wash. Nicklaus has donated the services of his golf course design firm, Nicklaus Design, in laying out a second nine holes at American Lake. The golf course is managed completely by volunteers, and is a rehabilitation haven for wounded veterans. Martinson was one of three veterans from the Puget Sound region who attended the clinic, along with Pepper Roberts, president of Friends of American Lake Veterans GC, and Ken Still, the Tacoma native who played on the 1969 Ryder Cup team with Nicklaus. It was Still who made the call to Nicklaus, asking him to conduct the clinic. The clinic was filmed by a crew from the Golf Channel, with the piece airing on Thanksgiving Day. Visit www.veterangolf.org for more information. Northwest openings garner national attention Three of the top six courses listed on Golfweek’s 2009 “Best New Courses” are located in the Pacific Northwest – four, if you count Tom Doak’s No. 1 ranked Rock Creek Cattle Company course, located in Deer Lodge, Mont. Coming in at No. 2 is the John Harbottle-designed Palouse Ridge GC, in Pullman, Wash., the new home course of the Washington State University men’s and women’s golf teams. At No. 5 is Wine Valley GC in Walla Walla, Wash., designed by Portland-based Dan Hixson. And at No. 6 is Tetherow, the David McLay Kidd links design located in Bend, Ore. Others in the top-40 are The Wilderness Club of Montana, in Eureka, Mont., ranked No. 14; at No. 22 is The Idaho Club in Sandpoint, Idaho, the Jack Nicklaus design that’s become a destination unto itself; and at No. 40 is Black Bull GC, the Tom Weiskopf design located in Bozeman, Mont. Above the 3rd hole at The Idaho Club in Sandpoint, Idaho. Photo by Joann Dost The par-3 6th hole at Palouse Ridge GC. Photo by Rob Perry 8 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER C HI P SHOTS Ryan Benzel (left) and Brian Whitcomb hold the PGA Cup trophy above Loch Lomond in Scotland. Photo courtesy PGA of America Whitcomb and Benzel lead PGA Cup victory At the 24th annual PGA Cup, held this fall at Loch Lomond in Scotland, Ryan Benzel of Battle Creek GC in Tulalip, Wash. led a team of PGA golf professionals to victory in the biennial Ryder Cup-style matches against a team of club professionals from Great Britain & Ireland. This is the second appearance for Benzel on a PGA Cup team. In 2007, he scored the decisive half point in leading the U.S. team to victory. Captaining the U.S. team was Brian Whitcomb of Lost Tracks GC in Bend, Ore. Whitcomb is the Honorary President of The PGA of America (and the immediate Past President). Visit www.pgacup.com for more information. Three NW’ers earn Tour cards via Nationwide Tour By finishing the 2009 season within the top-25 on the Nationwide Tour’s money list, three Northwest players earned their PGA Tour card for 2010. Service Alex Prugh, of Spokane, Wash., won the Michael Hill New Zealand Open and had nine top-25 finishes during the ’09 season. He played for the University of Washington from 2004-07. He’ll be a Prugh rookie on the PGA Tour in 2010. Jeff Gove, of Bothell, Wash., had six top-10 finishes during 2009, and set two course records during the Nationwide Tour season. Gove previously played on the PGA Tour in 2006 and 2007. The biggest, and best, surprise is Chris Baryla of Vernon, BC. A back injury had kept Baryla off the golf course for most of 2008, and he didn’t play his first tournament of 2009 until May, when he Monday-qualified his way into the Nationwide Tour’s Rex Hospital Open, where he promptly tied for fourth in the tournament, which exempted him into the next week’s tournament, and he never looked back. He won the Chattanooga Classic and had a top-10 at the RBC Canadian Open (PGA Tour). Tolbert Receives PGA Section’s highest honor Gordon Tolbert of Oregon City, Ore. has been named the 2009 Pacific Northwest Section Golf Professional of the Year. Tolbert is a 13-year member of the PGA and is the owner of Total Golf Management Services. Tolbert is currently one of ten directors that make up the Board of Directors for the Pacific Northwest Section PGA. He is also the Oregon Chapter PGA President. This is Tolbert’s first time receiving the award, which is the highest honor paid to a PGA Professional. Other Pacific Northwest Section PGA awards handed out were: Teacher of the Year, Bruce Furman, Pumpkin Ridge GC, North Plains, Ore.; Junior Golf Leader, Todd O’Neal, Orchard Hills CC, Washougal, Wash.; Bill Strausbaugh Award, Bryan Tunstill, Columbia Edgewater CC, Portland, Ore.; Horton Smith Award, Scott Smith, Olympia C&GC, Olympia, Wash; Sterling Cut Glass Player of the Year, Ryan Benzel, Battle Creek GC, Tulalip, Wash. Baryla Gove Rosholt enters PNWPGA Hall of Fame The Pacific Northwest Section of the PGA of America announced the selection of William “Bill” Rosholt, PGA of La Grande, Ore. as the 47th member of the Pacific Northwest Section PGA Hall of Fame. Rosholt was instrumental in chapter, section and national affairs, serving as the Pacific Northwest Section President from 1994-1998 and as a National Director of the PGA of America from 2001-2004. Bill began his service to the Pacific Northwest Section PGA as a member of the Tournament Rules Committee and was the Chairman of the committee from 1988-1994. He was also President of the Central Washington Chapter of the Pacific Northwest Section from 1990-1994. Rosholt published several articles called “Rules by Rosholt” in the Pacific Northwest Section PGA ForeWord Press and chronicled a short story about Lewiston (Idaho) High School’s first state golf championship that is published in “A Spirit of Golf” by JMC Publishing. Rosholt was born and raised in Lewiston, Idaho. Along with his wife Sondra, he has called La Grande home since 1981. Bill is currently Union County’s (Ore.) Director of Golf Promotions and Economic Development. Smith honored with NWGMA award Craig Smith (right) receives his Distinguished Service Award from NWGMA President Guy Generaux. 10 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER Known to readers of the Seattle Times as “Sideline Smitty,” Craig Smith received the Northwest Golf Media Association’s Distinguished Service Award during the organization’s end of season banquet at Seattle’s Sand Point Country Club. Given each year to an individual in the media who has promoted the game in the Pacific Northwest, the award is voted on by the NWGMA’s more than 100 members. Smith was born in Seattle and attended Bothell High School and the University of Washington. Before retiring last December, he penned a popular high school sports column, as well as reported on golf. The 64-year-old’s career began as editor of the UW Daily. After graduating in 1967, he worked for the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner in Alaska before moving on to the Associated Press, Seattle P-I, Charleston Gazette in West Virginia and Northshore Citizen in Bothell. A former caddie at Inglewood CC in Kenmore, Wash., Smith remembers shooting 142 the first time he played. He now shoots in the high 80s. Previous recipients of the award are Doug McArthur (2000), Dale Johnson (2001), Margaret Maves (2002), Bruce King (2003), Bob Robinson (2004), Blaine Newnham (2005), Bill Yeend (2006), Jeff Shelley (2007), and Paul Ramsdell (2008). The Pacific Northwest Golf Association recently announced their 2009 Player of the Year recipients. The 2009 winners include Nick Taylor of Abbottsford, B.C. who received the Men’s award; Sue Kim of Langley, B.C. received the Women’s award; Patrick O’Donnell of Clackamas, Ore. received the Senior Men’s award; Jackie Little of Port Alberni, B.C. received the Senior Women’s award; Zach Wanderscheid of Goldendale, Wash. received the Junior Boys’ award; and Erynne Lee of Silverdale, Wash. received the Junior Girls’ award. Nick Taylor, who was also named Player of the Year in 2008, picked up right where he left off and continued to impress in 2009, marking one of the most extraordinary men’s amateur seasons by a Northwest player in recent memory. Taylor won five NCAA tournaments, finished runner-up in both the NCAA West Regional and Pac-10 Championship, finished 9th overall in the NCAA Championship, and received both NCAA First Team All-American and Pac-10 co-Player of the Year honors while playing for the Taylor University of Washington. The season was just getting started when his college season ended. Taylor would go on to win the prestigious Sahalee Players Championship, finish runner-up at the U.S. Amateur Public Links Championship, finish 3rd in the Canadian Men’s Amateur, and place 36th at the U.S. Open at Bethpage State Park in Farmingdale, NY, receiving the medal for Low Amateur. Taylor spent 21 weeks as the Royal and Ancient’s No. 1 ranked amateur golfer in the world. Sue Kim has been awarded the Women’s Player of the Year honor for her remarkable success this year. Kim’s accomplishments include winning the gold medal at the Canada Summer Games, finishing runner-up at both the Royale Cup Canadian Women’s Amateur and Canadian National Women’s Tour Quebec, a 3rd place finish at the B.C. Women’s Amateur, a 4th place finish at the Canadian National Future Links Pacific Championship, and a very impressive round of 64 finish at the Ladies British Amateur Championship. Kim Patrick O’Donnell solidified his Senior Player of the Year honor with a most impressive 2009 season. His accomplishments include winning the Oregon Senior Stroke Play Championship, a runner-up finish at the Oregon Senior Open, and reaching the quarterfinals of the Oregon Senior Amateur. O’Donnell’s most remarkable finish this year was advancing all the way to the round of 16 at the U.S. Senior Amateur Championship at Beverly Country Club in Chicago, Ill. O’Donnell Jackie Little, also a 2008 Player of the Year recipient, made another strong statement in the senior ranks during her incredible 2009 season in which she won five championships – the Royale Cup National Women’s Senior Amateur, PNGA Senior Women’s Amateur, Alberta Senior Women’s Amateur, and the B.C. Zone 6 Women’s and Senior Women’s Amateur.. Little also finished runner-up at the B.C. Women’s Mid-Amateur, 4th at the B.C. Senior Women’s Amateur, and had an impressive finish at the U.S. Senior Little Women’s Amateur making it to the round of 32. Zach Wanderscheid had a remarkable summer, starting his season with medalist honors at the U.S. Open Local qualifier held at The Home Course in DuPont, Wash. He would go on to have impressive showings at the PNGA Men’s Amateur, making the round of 32, and finishing runner-up at the Washington Junior Golf State Championship. Wanderscheid finished the season by winning the PNGA Junior Boys’ Amateur Championship at the University of Idaho Golf Course in Moscow, Idaho. Wanderscheid Now a 16-year-old, Erynne Lee had another fantastic season and is very deserving of her second consecutive PNGA Junior Girls’ Player of the Year award. Lee made the Round of 16 at the 2009 U.S. Women’s Amateur and the Round of 32 at the U.S. Junior Girls’ Championship. Her AJGA finishes were equally impressive, winning the Kathy Whitworth Invite, finishing runner-up at the Junior at the Traditions, 3rd at the Stockton Junior Classic, and 8th at the PING Invitational. Lee also had a 7th place finish at the Junior PGA Championship and Lee was recently named a second team Rolex Junior All-American. The PNGA Player of the Year candidates are nominated by the various state and provincial golf associations that comprise the PNGA (Alaska, Alberta, British Columbia, Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington), and are selected by a vote of the PNGA Championship Committee and members of the Northwest Golf Media Association. Photo by Eric Yaillen/OGA PNGA 2009 Players of the Year OGA Player of the Year Jim Dunlap on the bag for Christina Kim during the LPGA’s Safeway Classic at Pumpkin Ridge GC. Dunlap loops for Kim At the LPGA’s Safeway Classic, being held for the first time at Pumpkin Ridge GC in North Plains, Ore. (after moving from its longtime home at Columbia-Edgewater), Christina Kim was in search of a caddie at the start of the week and inquired in the pro shop to see if they knew of a qualified person. They called Jim Dunlap, the current OGA Player of the Year, and asked if he’d be interested. When told it was Kim he said he’d call back in five minutes after checking to see if he could clear his business calendar. He called back in four minutes, saying yes. Dunlap showed up wearing fluorescent-green tennis shoes – was he in danger of upstaging the colorful Kim? The club had tried to get him to change into something “more appropriate”, but Kim interjected. “Don’t listen to them….the more colorful the better.” Quintessential Kim. Kim doesn’t ask much of her caddies. She doesn’t want yardages or club selections. She doesn’t want help reading greens. But they do talk a lot. “I want to know what he had for dinner,” said Kim, who also liked that “he’s pleasant on the eyes.” She wants to talk about anything but golf to keep her calm and loose. As a player, Dunlap describes himself as someone who analyzes everything. So he was intrigued by Kim’s loose approach. “In the practice round I wasn’t sure what to expect come tournament time,” he said. “But she was just as loose in the tournament as she was then. But when it’s her turn to hit, she’s all business.” He also mentioned that he has learned a lot from watching the women, from their tempo to their ability to hit pretty much every club in their bag for any shot. “I never knew what club to pull until she told me.” For a complete transcript of this blog written by OGA Director of Communications Eric Yaillen, visit www.oga.org. www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 11 C HI P PEOPLE IN THE NEWS SHOTS Four players enter Golf Hall of Fame of BC There is only one category of entry into the Golf Hall of Fame of BC – that of a player. And these four new members are definitely players. Richard (Dick) Zokol Zokol won the Morocco International Amateur in 1980 and the Canadian Amateur in 1981. He was a member of the Canadian World Amateur and BC Willingdon Cup Teams in 1980 and in 1981 was the captain of the NCAA Championship team from Brigham Young University. In 1982 Dick also won the BC Open and in 1984 won the Utah State Open. On the PGA Tour, Zokol won the Milwaukee Open and the Deposit Guaranty Open in 1992, along with winning the Canadian PGA Championship in 2001. Zokol has long been associated with the Marine Drive Golf Club in Vancouver, BC, as well as the new Sagebrush Golf and Sporting Club just outside Merritt, BC, which he designed and built. Left to right are Steve Berry, Alison Murdoch, Jackie Little and Dick Zokol. Johnson gets Big Break Photo courtesy Golf Channel/Mark Ashman Early last summer, Portland’s Vincent Johnson received a message on his cell phone – it was the Golf Channel calling, asking him to compete in the upcoming Big Break Disney Golf, the network’s next edition of its popular series. “That was kind of a surreal moment, getting that message,” said Johnson. “I had to listen to it a few times.” Three weeks later he was in Orlando, taping the first episode. No audition, no waiting, no nothing. Just boom, you’re in. “They knew that I had competed in the PGA Tour’s Northern Trust Open at Riviera (in Los Angeles) earlier in the year,” he said. “I guess I fit the mold of what they were looking for.” To play in the Northern Trust Open, Johnson had received the first Charlie Sifford Exemption, which will be awarded annually to any player who advances diversity and demonstrates both high Vincent Johnson on character and ability. In 1961, Charlie the set of Big Break Disney Golf. Sifford was the first African-American to join the PGA Tour. Johnson grew up on Portland’s Glendoveer Golf Course, where his father works as a mechanic. He graduated in three years from Oregon State University, where he was captain and MVP of the golf team. Johnson spent two weeks in July in Orlando taping the series, which has been airing this fall. He made it through several eliminations before falling short of the final competition. “It’s cool to watch it now on TV, though, to see how they edit it all together.” Johnson works with swing coach Brian Henninger, Oregon’s own mentor and former PGA Tour player who is well known for his contributions to the game. Coming up short in the first stage of this fall’s PGA Q-School, Johnson will head south to play on the Gateway Tour. He has a blog on his experiences playing on the Big Break: www.oga.org. 12 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER Alison Murdoch Murdoch won the Canadian Senior Championship in 2002, ’04, ’05 and in ’07. Three times she won the Irish Senior Championship (2004, ’05, ’07) and added a British Senior Championship in 2007. She is believed to be the only woman from British Columbia to win on the international stage. In 2005 Alison won the PNGA Women’s Senior Amateur and followed that in 2006 by winning the PNGA Women’s Mid-Amateur, which she also won in 2008. She won the BC Women’s Senior in 2005 and again in 2009. She has been a BCGA Team member in the PNGA Cup matches all four years the competition has existed (2006-2009) Murdoch was the 2007 PNGA Women’s Player of the Year. She plays out of the Victoria Golf Club on Vancouver Island. Jackie Little A recent runaway victory in the 2009 Canadian Senior Women’s Championship demonstrated clearly that Jackie is not finished winning. Jackie won the BC Women’s Amateur in 1992 after finishing second in 1989. She won it again in 1993 and followed that with wins in 2000, ’01 and ’03. She won the BC Women’s Mid-Amateur in three successive years (2006-08) and then finished second in 2009. In 2007 she won the Canadian Women’s Mid-Amateur. In 2008, her first year of senior eligibility, she won the BC Senior Women’s Championship, the PNGA Women’s Senior Amateur and the Canadian Senior Championship as well, and then successfully defended her Canadian Championship in 2009. On Vancouver Island, Jackie plays out of The Hollies Golf Course in Port Alberni (which she and husband Pat own) as well as the Alberni Golf Club and the Vernon Golf & Country Club. Little has won the PNGA Senior Women’s Player of the Year the past two years. Steve Berry In 1972 Berry was crowned the BC Junior Champion and finished second in the BCGA Junior Invitational in 1979. He then won the BC Amateur Championship in 1981, and was runner up in 1987 and 1991. In 1985 and 1986 he won the BCGA Invitational and finished second in 1979. Steve also won the BC Mid-Amateur in 1994 and again in 1997. In 1979 he won the Vancouver City Match Play and in 1983 he won the prestigious Vancouver City and District Championship. Berry is a member of the Glen Meadows Golf and Country Club in Sidney, BC. For a complete list of player accomplishments, call 604.222.4653 or visit www.bcgolfmuseum.org. Bill wright has his day In 1959, Bill Wright won the U.S. Amateur Public Links championship, becoming the first African-American to win a national USGA title. Wright, who at the time played out of Seattle’s Jefferson Park GC and now gives lessons at a course in Los Angeles, came back to Jefferson this fall and October 10, 2009 was officially declared “Bill Wright Day.” Wright gave a clinic for the kids from The First Tee of Greater Seattle and the Fir State Junior Golf Foundation, among the other 250 attendees. Bill Wright gives a clinic during the “Bill Wright Day” ceremonies. Palm Springs Amateur AMATEUR 2010 Open to everyone, the first annual Palm Springs Amateur has it figured out – hold the event in the desert on premier courses during the prime time of January, when the weather is perfect (and when it’s not-so-perfect in the Northwest). Being held January 7-10, 2010 at the world famous PGA WEST and La Quinta Resort & Club courses, the event will attract golfers from throughout the western U.S. and Canada, with each golfer playing three days of stroke play on three different courses and flight winners advancing to a championship round. In addition to flight-winner prizes, the overall winner will receive a grand prize and their name will be placed on the event’s trophy to be kept in the PGA WEST clubhouse. The field for this first year will be limited to the first 330 players. Registration is available online at www.palmspringsam. com, or call 206.818.4653 for information. www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 13 C HI P SHOTS Holiday Gift Box Other than a lump of coal, a few of these items might work well as a gift this season… Lepp steps into shoe market James Lepp, the Abbotsford, BC native and former All-American at the University of Washington who won the individual title at the 2005 NCAA Championship, has stepped away from competitive golf and is now president of Kikkor Golf. He founded the company in September 2008 in his native British Columbia, and his products – shoes, shirts and hats – will be available in Spring 2010. Lepp says he left tournament golf because he just wasn’t playing well. In an interview with Golfweek magazine, he said, after having his golf game diminish despite the constant practicing, “I started practicing less and my passion for the game nosedived. So, it’s not like I’m leaving my passion, per se, to start this business venture. My passion is just in different places.” Lepp plans to expand the line to pants, shorts, sweaters and belts, as well as add a women’s line. Around the World in 80 Rounds Get a personalized, autographed copy of “Around the World in 80 Rounds” by David Wood for you or the golfer (or golfers!) in your life! PNGA MEMBER SPECIAL: two autographed copies for $40 (shipping/handling included). Single copies are $25. Read about David’s humorous, insightful, inspiring, and laughout-loud funny around-the-world adventure. David ventures from the southernmost tip of South America to the very top of Norway, and everywhere in between. Along the way he plays the world’s most extreme golf courses: the northernmost, the southernmost, the highest, the driest, the hottest, and every strange locale he can find. But this isn’t a book just about golf. It’s about travel, and risks, and leaving your comfort zone to pursue your dreams. “Around the World in 80 Rounds” is published in hardback by St. Martin’s Press. To order your books, email David@DavidWoodspeaking. com or call 206-938-7786. Better Recreational Golf (Owings-Lemoine Publishers - $14.95) As a retired policy analyst for the Oregon Educational system, Bob Jones has a life-long habit of needing to know how things work. In golf, that can be a bad thing – or, it can be a good thing. “I’m an analytical guy,” says Jones. “If something isn’t working, I want to know why. Or, if it is working, how can I improve it.” Jones, who grew up in Portland, entered the Navy and saw a bit of the world before returning to Salem, Ore. to settle down. “I got busy with life – work, marriage, family. I didn’t have time to work on my golf game.” So when he retired, he wrote an instructional book for those with the same problem. The book’s subtitle is, “Improve your game in the time you have.” “They are very simple tips that you can do in your backyard, or the office. Things that don’t take too much time or space,” said Jones. He’s had the instruction vetted by several PGA golf professionals. Chapters of the book can be viewed at www.bettergolfbook.com. Winter shoes for the winter blues Little did Rod Boast know that when he decided to give his feet a treat for winter golf in the Pacific Northwest it would be the start of something big. Boast had been living in Montana where he owned the Grizzly Boot Company for 20 years. When he moved to Oregon in 1989 to work for the Danner Boot Company, he enjoyed the mild winters because he could play golf nearly year round, but he also preferred keeping his feet dry. So he started tinkering. “I’ve been in the shoe business all my life,” he says. “I figured there had to be a way to do this.” There was. He created a 14-inch tall rubber boot with a fleece lining for himself. And soon found out others were interested in what he was wearing. 14 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER Fifteen years ago he started Oregon Mudders, a shoe company devoted completely to keeping your feet dry on the Northwest’s winter fairways. Along with the taller boot, he also created a lightweight hiking-style boot. The first boots created weighed six pounds, while the current models weigh less than three pounds and are as warm and waterproof as ever. The shoes and boots are sold throughout the Pacific Northwest, Northern California and Canada. Almost half the region’s golf shops now carry Boast’s mudders. “We’re also popular in England,” said Boast with a smile. “I guess they have the same problem we do.” Boast and his business partner Steve Hopkins market the boots starting at $84.95 and sell them at golf shops around the Northwest as well as online at www.oregonmudders.com. Holiday Pack on Sale Now! Tickets to the U.S. Senior Open make a great gift for the sports fan on your shopping list. The Holiday Pack includes 4 tickets to the Championship, a commemorative program, and free parking. Package value: $185, Your Price: $135. Buy now at www.2010ussenioropen.com. ENTER TO WIN A foursome of golf including carts and one-night stay at the renowned Marcus Whitman CLICK HERE It’s best to unwind before wine. Wine Valley Golf Club, in the heart of Walla Walla Wine Country. Wine Valley has been ranked 5th best new course by Golfweek. Set in the shadow of the Blue Mountains on the rolling plains of southeastern Washington, the course at Wine Valley plays as an inland links, with dramatic bunkering and multiple lines of play. Wine Valley Golf Club is located in historic Walla Walla, Washington. Enjoy more than 100 wineries, restaurants and boutiques. Reserve a tee-time today and discover the unique Wine Valley Golf Club. Visit winevalleygolfclub.com or call (877)333-9842. WineValleyGolfClub.com www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 15 ON THE C OVER Photo courtesy Chambers Bay Grass is now growing on the remodeled 4th green at Chambers Bay. A worthwhile journey of a thousand miles by Blaine Newnham They are now into the dirty work at Chambers Bay, removing scotch broom, defining the edges of hazards, seeding the dunes with a new batch of wispy fescue. Preparation is not only for the U.S. Amateur – our country’s oldest golf championship – next August, but for the U.S. Open five years after that. It is difficult, but not as difficult as a lot of folks imagined, especially those spreading word that the Open would be moved elsewhere because there would be no clubhouse. Or because the greens were so slow and so coarse that the USGA couldn’t possibly permit their prized championships to be held there. Or because Pierce County was losing so much money on the $20 million project in University Place near Tacoma that they couldn’t afford the necessary preparation. The final word here is the United States Golf Association. Mike Davis, who 16 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER These are not your Daddy’s tee boxes With the number of options in the way each hole can be set up on different days, the “teeing grounds” at Chambers Bay are a major reason the U.S. Amateur and U.S. Open will be played like no other championships before them. sets up both championships for the USGA, said this year that he had never been more excited about the creative possibilities of a championship course. “For me,” he said, “it is like being a kid in a candy store.” Davis has options, especially after the construction this year of eight new tee boxes, a new green on the fourth hole, a deeper fairway bunker in the middle of the 14th hole and a wider one hamstringing the tee shot on the 18th. He can set up No. 1 as a par-5 or a par-4, and the same with the adjoining 18th. The 5th can use a drivable green amid the waste left of the fairway, or the all-youcan-hit conventional green. The post-card 15th can play as a cute little 170-yard downhill par-3 that sits in front of Puget Sound and the course’s one tree, or a 240yard monster from the new tee built on the others side of the 12th fairway. The question about Chambers Bay, especially for the paying customers, has Photo by Aidan Bradley With every small step, the sleeves have been rolled up as Chambers Bay gets to work in preparing to host a couple of national championships been about its rolling greens which debuted on the thin, slow side, as fescue greens do. “I have no concerns about the course being ready for the Amateur, absolutely none,” said Larry Gilhuly, the director of the USGA’s Northwest Green section. “The greens are fabulous.” They weren’t fabulous when the course opened. Fescue greens never are. They might have registered seven on the Stimpmeter, and in any event were a poor comparison to other high-priced traditional courses. “They’ve done a great job with them,” said Gilhuly. “They will roll near 11 (on the Stimpmeter), and with the contours out there that will be more than enough.’’ Davis agreed. “Bandon Dunes proved you can have quality, championship greens with fescue grasses,” he said. “Chambers Bay will be fine.” Gilhuly has pored over the course. His inspection has been meticulous, even assuring the USGA that the areas surrounding the massive greens match the firmness of the greens themselves. That, in essence, is what links golf is all about, which will make the Open at Chambers Bay different than any other Open ever held. As they say, it is not where the ball lands (as it is at other U.S. Open courses) but where it ends up. Craftsmanship can replace power. Hard surfaces were one reason Tom Watson could compete so well in last year’s British Open. Fescue thrives only in temperate marine climates – the British Isles being one, the Pacific Northwest another. While providing a smooth, firm surface, fescue doesn’t handle heat and cold particularly well, nor does it handle lots of traffic. Chambers Bay walks a delicate line of not having enough play to pay its bills, or having too much and damaging its surfaces. The concern for the Amateur is to make the course a different but quality examination of golf. Surely, at something over 7,600 yards, it will be the longest in Amateur history, if not playing the longest. For its part, the USGA is spending $5 million to make necessary preparations for its two championships. Serious money was spent rebuilding the 4th green, as well as the development of a new practice area. Despite the poor economy, Chambers Bay, while doing fewer rounds than it had planned, is still operating in the black. Photo by Aidan Bradley As they say, it is not where the ball lands (as it is at other U.S. Open courses) but where it ends up. Craftsmanship can replace power. Hard surfaces were one reason Tom Watson could compete so well in last year’s British Open. “We’ve made money,” said Matt Allen, the general manager, “just not enough to pay 100 percent of the debt service ($1.4 million annually).” The money from the USGA has helped make payments. Pierce County officials hope that a improvement in the economy and publicity that comes from hosting the Am and the Open will get the course back on track. “Chambers Bay has been caught up in the same economic conditions as the rest of the entertainment and hospitality industry,” said Tony Tipton, the project manager for the county. “Rounds and revenue are down in 2009 by about 17% when compared to 2008.” Tipton tried to put the events in some perspective. He said officials from KemperSports, which manages not only Chambers Bay but Bandon Dunes in Oregon, said results here are comparable to their other premium courses. “We’re up this fall over the play we had in 2007,” said Allen, “and that’s encouraging.” In fact, Chambers Bay by the end of the fall was only five percent off projections and 15 percent ahead of 2007. The county is trying to attract private development of a new clubhouse at Chambers Bay. The process is a slow one. “The contract with the USGA does not require that we have a permanent clubhouse,” said Allen. “In most cases, the clubhouse for an Open is too small to be of much value. Temporary buildings are used.” The USGA veered from its norm in picking Chambers Bay. It wanted to be in the Northwest for the first time and it wanted to play a championship on hard, firm fescue grasses. The 2010 U.S. Amateur will be the first test of many. Blaine Newnham is the former sports editor for the Seattle Times. He’s covered golf ’s major championships, and has been following the progress of Chambers Bay since the first shovel of dirt was turned. www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 17 W INTER GET A W A Y S The 9th hole at Angel Park’s Mountain Course sits next to the Suncoast Hotel & Casino. Viva Vegas Golf Values! Suncoast Hotel & Casino, Angel Park Golf Club and Badlands Golf Club team up for great Vegas Golf Trifecta THE DETAILS Suncoast Hotel and Casino 866.636.7111 www.suncoastcasino.com Golf Getaway Package Starts at just $69* double occupancy and includes: • Overnight accommodations (double occupancy) at the Suncoast Hotel & Casino • Choice of one round of golf on either Angel Park Golf Club (the Arnold Palmer-designed Mountain or Palm Course) or the Johnny Miller-designed Badlands Golf Club. • Scheduled shuttle service to and from the Las Vegas McCarran International Airport and the Las Vegas Strip, a complimentary service that is not commonly found amongst Las Vegas hotels. Angel Park Golf Club 888-4-GOLF-LV (888.446.5358) www.angelpark.com • 18-hole Arnold Palmer-designed Palm Course • 18-hole Arnold Palmer-designed Mountain Course • Cloud Nine Short Course & World’s Original Putting Course • “Best of Las Vegas” – Las Vegas Review Journal Badlands Golf Club 702.355.7878 www.badlandsgc.com • 18 holes designed by Johnny Miller “Best Desert Course in Las Vegas” (2006) – Vegas Golfer magazine *$69 package price is based on double occupancy and is available during non-peak periods. Package prices start at just $96 during prime seasons and is based on a space available basis. For details of a custom package, call 866.636.7111 or visit www. suncoastcasino.com. 18 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER Photo courtesy Angel Park For those who have been sitting on the sidelines waiting for the right time to take that Vegas Golf Vacation you’ve always dreamed of – well, now is the time. Suncoast Hotel and Casino, Angel Park Golf Club and Badlands Golf Club have teamed up to offer one of the best Vegas Golf Vacation values to come along in some time. Both courses are just steps away from the hotel, offering two golf options in a convenient location. Destination Suncoast Your base camp for this great Vegas golf vacation is the Suncoast Hotel & Casino. Located in the swanky Vegas suburb of Summerlin, the Suncoast is conveniently located right between Angel Park and The Badlands. This Vegas favorite has 388 deluxe guest rooms, and 39 lavish guest suites ranging from 1,100 to 2,300 square feet. The entire 10th floor of the hotel tower contains only guest suites. All rooms have full-length windows that offer breathtaking views of the surrounding vistas and even the golf courses. But before you get to golf you’ll need to check out the great amenities at the Suncoast which include an amazing freestyle heated swimming pool and hot tub area, a 24/7 fitness center, Jen’s Salon De Beauté, and even a 64-lane Brunswick equipped Bowling Center that is also open 24 hours a day. After golf, be sure to take in some Vegas gaming action. The Suncoast has over 80,000 square feet of casino space featuring the best games a Las Vegas casino can offer, including 37 table games featuring Blackjack, Roulette, Baccarat, Craps and Pai Gow Poker. So, casino action by night and Vegas golf by day combines two of your favorites and this stunning package gives you the choice of playing two spectacular golf facilities (or both for twonight stays and beyond)! Angel Park – Las Vegas’ most complete golf experience Golfers in this package can choose to tee it up on either of Angel Park’s award winning courses, both of which were designed by the legendary Arnold Palmer – Palm Course and Mountain Course. Both have garnered accolades over the years, including “Best Public Golf Course in Las Vegas” in the Las Vegas Review Journal’s Reader’s Poll 14 out of the past 15 years. The Angel Park golf experience is rounded out by the 12-hole Cloud Nine Short Course (featuring holes with similar shot values to some of the world’s famous holes, including the Island Green at Sawgrass, Riviera hole, Valley of Sin and more), a 9-hole natural grass putting course and a fully equipped practice facility, all of which are lighted for evening play. Battle the Badlands Tee it up at the Johnny Miller gem, The Badlands Golf Club, which features 27 holes of desert beauty set against majestic Red Rock canyons, and featuring deep-flowing arroyos, canyons and natural washes surrounding this desert treasure. Known for dramatic desert vistas and scenic views of the Las Vegas valley, the Badlands has been honored as the “Best Desert Course in Las Vegas” (2006) by Vegas Golfer magazine and has been ranked in the “Top 10 Best Courses in Nevada” by Golf Digest in 1997 and 1999. The Badlands has three distinct nines that combine to create a unique and memorable golf experiences that defines Las Vegas golf. Enjoy the best Las Vegas has to offer at the Suncoast Hotel & Casino with our “Stay & Play” golf packages. Rates start at $69 per person based on double occupancy and include: • Overnight accommodations for two at the award winning Suncoast Hotel & Casino • One round of golf per person at Badlands Golf Club or Angel Park Golf Club, Arnold Palmer designed • Scheduled shuttle service to and from Las Vegas McCarran International Airport and the Las Vegas Strip • Transportation provided to and from Golf Courses (Golf Courses are within walking distance). * Rates from $99 January 1–March 31, 2010; October 1 – November 25, 2010; December 20 – December 31, 2010. Rates from $69 June 1 – September 30, 2010 and November 26 – December 19, 2010. SUNCOAST Customized golf packages available, book online at: SuncoastCasino.com or call 1-866-636-7111 Las Vegas • SuncoastCasino.com www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 19 W INTER GET A W A Y S 20 | The Championship Course at Sand Hollow Resort offers some of the most stunning views in the Golf Mesquite Nevada area as well as tour-quality conditions and service. Photos courtesy Golf Mesquite Nevada Winter Golf in mesquite, Nevada Don’t put those clubs away yet! Golf Mesquite Nevada has a full menu of championship courses and comfortable resorts waiting to help satisfy your winter urge to golf! The Jack Nicklaus-designed Chase course at PGA Golf Club Coyote Springs has found favor with national golf publications and players alike. Being knee deep in snow doesn’t mean you have to store the clubs in the closet. When the winter winds are blowing in the Pacific Northwest, they are still mowing greens in Mesquite, Nevada. Located 80 miles north of Las Vegas, Mesquite is one of the most popular golf destinations in the West. Winter temperatures in Mesquite provide an opportune time for great golf, good food, live entertainment and even rejuvenating spa treatments to help you forget shoveling snow and scraping ice from your windshield. Golf Mesquite Nevada has pre-packaged nine great courses, some of which have been created by legendary designers Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer and John Fought, with four resort hotels that are an ideal hub for your winter retreat. Golf isn’t the only leisure activity available for your great escape. Golf Mesquite Nevada’s four luxurious resorts offer all of the amenities that make an escape from the cold winter months a mustdo! Your choice of resort hotels includes the CasaBlanca, Eureka and Virgin River Resort Casinos or Falcon Ridge Hotel. With a variety of rooms and suites you will be able to select your level of comfort and budget. With your stay in Mesquite, you will find all the amenities that make a winter golf retreat a memorable event. Live entertainment from headline performers and comedians, thrilling casino action and fine dining are just the beginning. Mesquite also offers a worldclass gun club, bowling, hiking in nearby national parks or, for the perfect escape, soothing spa treatments. Golf Mesquite Nevada’s course menu includes some the areas top golf courses as ranked by national golf publications. The new Sand Hollow Resort Championship Course and The Chase at PGA Golf Club Coyote Springs have received top honors and rave reviews. But that’s not all. Throw in the Palmer and Canyons courses at the Oasis Golf Club, the Palms, Falcon Ridge, CasaBlanca, Ledges and Coral Canyon courses and you’ll have plenty of challenging holes to choose from. Golf Mesquite Nevada also plays host to some great golf events throughout the year such as the Re/Max World Long Drive Championship, the Nevada Open and the Golf Channel’s “Duel in the Desert.” You can find all the event information at www. golfmesquiteevents.com. If you are ready for some fun in the sun, challenging golf and relaxing accommodations, visit www.golfmesquitenevadapn.com to book your next winter golf getaway. All we are missing is you! DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER Special PNGA offer The 110th U.S. Amateur Championship August 23 - 29, 2010 © Aidan Bradley 09 As a PNGA member, you understand the significance of USGA championships better than most. You know that the best amateur golfers in the world are coming to the 110th U.S. Amateur at Chambers Bay and The Home Course. SPECIAL OFFER Weekly pass* Limited Edition 2010 U.S. Amateur PNGA Member hat** Complimentary parking Championship Program Daily pairing sheet $55 (retail value over $90) * Good for all 7 days of the championship, plus the two practice days ** Only for the first 500 passes sold; not available for purchase at the event Great holiday gift! All orders must be received by Dec. 31, 2009. Order by Dec. 10, 2009 to ensure holiday delivery. Hat(s) will begin to be shipped the week of Dec. 8, 2009. Tickets will be mailed in July 2010. Order now: www.2010usamateur.com www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 21 W INTER GET A W A Y S The 1st hole at Banyan Golf Club in Hua Hin, Thailand. TheThai that binds Discovering plenty of reasons to go to Thailand – including great golf courses By jim moore Thailand’s terrific. I’m not blowing smoke when I say that. I admit to being skeptical before I flew 20 hours to get there in early November. I’d visited web sites and seen the golf courses that we were going to play, and was only moderately impressed. But after playing them? Highly impressed. Cyberspace does not compare to actually experiencing Thai golf. I went to Thailand on a trip that featured great golf and hotels, but more than that are the cultural differences and the universally kind people that you rarely find anywhere else. You’ve no doubt played golf courses this good, but have you had a female caddie for every single round when you’re playing in 22 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER Arizona or Hawaii? I did, and they were all highly attentive and beautiful too. Thailand calls itself “The Land of Smiles” for a reason. The natives seem to be perpetually happy and so are the tourists. There are so many bargains to be had. I spent time in three cities – Pattaya, Bangkok and Hua Hin – and played six rounds of golf and rode one very large elephant. Here are some of the highlights and oddities. The Caddies At every course in Thailand, it’s mandatory for each golfer to have a caddie. And in Thailand, the caddies are all females, clothed from head to toe, wearing widebrimmed hats and gloves in muggy 90-degree weather. I originally thought, “Geez, that’s too bad that they’re stuck in those uniforms in this kind of heat,” but they’re worn for a curious reason. Thais with pale complexions are generally held in higher regard, a point that’s pounded home by the fact that lightening ointments are sold at local drug stores. No one wants a tan in Thailand. All six of my caddies were great. Some spoke a little English; others didn’t. They gave me yardages, marked my ball on the greens and read my putts. At Thai Country Club near Bangkok, Ki held my beer while I hit tee shots. She also cleaned up an absolute mess in my bag that was created by suntan lotion exploding all over the place. My first two caddies were young widows – Duan, 35, lost her 69-year-old husband two months ago to heart problems, and I’m not quite sure what happened to Da’s - she just told me that he went “bye-bye.” After that, I quit asking if my caddies were married. “Probably the finest land made available for a golf course in America since Alistair Mackenzie was shown the site for the Cypress Point Club on the Monterey Peninsula...” Golf Magazine In Golf Magazine’s newest listing of Top 100 US Courses You Can Play, Pacific Dunes ranks #1, Bandon Dunes #6 and Bandon Trails #15. To have one course on this list is a great honor; to have all three is nearly unprecedented. Now Bandon Dunes Golf Resort is pleased to announce the addition of a fourth course, Old Macdonald, opening June 1, 2010. Come experience golf Photo: Wood Sabold as it was meant to be. Old Macdonald #7 ~ 377 yards ~ par 4 G O L F A S I T W A S M E A N T T O B E Call 1-888-345-6008 to reserve your spot to play Old Macdonald. bandondunesgolf.com 09BAN011A PNGA December, 2009 issue 7.25” x 4.812” full color DVA Advertising, Bend, OR Dan O’Neil dan@dvaadv.com 541-389-2411 09CHA005F.indd 1 www.thepnga.org 6/4/09 11:52 AM | 23 | DECEMBER 2009 TOP: The author with a couple of Thailand’s finest caddies. ABOVE: The par-3 3rd hole at the Plantation Course at Siam Country Club. Just off the fairway, the author (in the front, or the “driver’s seat”) takes a ride on some local transportation. Sitting behind him is fellow Northwest golf writer, Steve Turcotte. Keeping a close Thai golf packages • www.golfasian.com or email Mark Siegel at mark@golfasian.com. • www.golfinakingdom.com for the Thai Golf Experience packages. • www.tourismthailand.org for the Tourism Authority of Thailand. ACCOMMODATIONS • Woodlands Suites (www.woodland-resort.com) in Pattaya, which has easy access to Siam Country Club’s Old and Plantation courses. • Westin Grande Sukhumvit (www.starwoodhotels.com) and Bangkok Marriott Resort and Spa (www.bangkok.com/marriott.) in Bangkok. Both have easy access to Thai Country Club and Muang Kaew Country Club •The Marriott Resort and Spa (www.marriott.com/hotels) and Anantara Resort (www.huahin.anantara.com) in Hua Hin. Both have easy access to Banyan Golf Resort and Black Mountain Golf Club. COURSES TO PLAY •Siam Country Club - www.siamcountryclub.com •Thai Country Club - www.thaicountryclub.com •Muang Kaew Country Club - www.muangkaewgolf.com • Banyan Golf Resort - www.banyangolfresort.com • Black Mountain Golf Club - www.bmghuahin.com 24 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER Duan said the caddies make 260 Bhat a round, or $8.50 U.S., a little more than $2 an hour. For everything they do, the wages are ridiculously low, but the average person in Thailand makes $8,000 a year. At least the caddies were allowed to accept well-deserved tips. The People Hands down, the No. 1 reason why you should visit Thailand. They’re cordial and kind and just downright nice. In a show of respect, Thais put their hands together and nod when they greet you or thank you. The custom is called the “wai.” You’re supposed to return the “wai,” so I did, though I’m sure I butchered it most of the time. I must have said “Kopkhun krup” a million times – Thai for “thank you.” The wai is a very cool ritual and one of the things I’ll miss most about Thailand. Generally speaking, Thais also seem happier and more laid-back than we are. They’re big on having fun. They love to eat, but I never saw a fat Thai guy or woman. Following their Buddhist beliefs, they think if they’re good people now, they’ll have a better life the next time around. If that’s the case, I best get busy. The Food Thai food in the homeland was just as you’d expect – spicy and fresh – and most dishes ran in the range of $6 to $8. We had Thai most nights for dinner, and you could get it at the hotel breakfast buffets too, so I did. It was delicious, but if you’re like me, you came home more than ready for a cheeseburger. The Golf Courses They were top-notch. The ones we played are as nice or nicer than your favorite high-end course in the Northwest. Old Siam’s Plantation Course would remind you of Kapalua’s Plantation Course. Banyan Golf Club, near Hua Hin, is even better. It opened a year and a half ago and was voted best new course in Asia. Banyan has also entered my top-10 of courses that I’ve ever played. Here’s what really sets Thai courses apart – the caddies, the service and the access to clubhouse locker rooms that rival those at the finest country clubs in the states. It’s all included in greens fees ranging from $50 to $80. Day after day, we grabbed our locker keys, walked in, shook our heads, looked at each other and said, “Wow.” I never imagined facilities like these in Thailand, but I should have known better – several of the courses have either held LPGA or Asian Tour events. Oh, and the Elephant Ride Before heading to the Bangkok airport for the first leg of our journey home, four of us took an hour-long elephant ride at Hua Hin Safari and Adventure Park. It was a little rocky – for a while there, I thought I might be the first person to heave from motion sickness on an elephant ride. What was it like to ride an elephant? Unforgettable. Kidding, it was all right I guess. There were times when I thought: “I paid 800 Baht ($25 U.S.) for this?” But when I straddled the elephant’s neck while he was lumbering along, that was interesting. Our elephant’s name was Bawktwup, which means “really big SOB” in Thai. No, I don’t know what it means, if anything. He had a heck of a trunk, I do know that, and he used it to rip a couple of decent-sized branches out of trees to gnaw on while he moseyed down the dirt path. Looking Back As I gaze out the window at Seattle drizzle on a late-November afternoon, I wish I were in Thailand, where the temperatures were in the low 90s. High humidity turned me into a drenched rat every single day, but I just drank plenty of water to go with the beers and was fine walking four of the courses. But you don’t go to Thailand just for warm weather and golf – there’s the cultural coolness of seeing Buddhist temples and the spectacular Grand Palace on a dinner cruise that we took on the Chao Praya River through Bangkok. I’m not worldly at all, so I got a kick out of waiting for oxen to cross the road as we left Black Mountain Golf Club and seeing helmet-less Thais on motor scooters driving like madmen, weaving in and out of traffic-snarled Bangkok, their girlfriends sitting side-saddle behind them. But it was tough to see the poverty, to pass by shanties on dirt roads and suddenly enter a posh golf course. If you need a dose of perspective, there is plenty to be found in Thailand. When I first told my wife about a potential trip to Thailand, she said, “Why would you want to go there?” Feeling even stronger about it now, I’ll give you the same answer I gave her: “Why not?” Long time sportswriter Jim Moore also writes columns for seattlepi.com, cougfan.com and cybergolf.com. Not too shabby of a golfer, he also played baseball pretty well. Picture your environment... warm desert breezes... starlit winter skies... all this and more at... The Ultimate in Desert Country Club Living Palm Desert, California Visit us at ironwoodcountryclub.com Call 760-766-1095 for Membership Information and Ford Properties at 760-773-5225 for Real Estate information. www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 25 NORTH W EST P ROFILE Kent Myers A Player for the Ages by Jeff Shelley Kent Myers is arguably the Northwest’s bestever amateur golfer. Now 76, the Lake Oswego resident – who regularly shoots his age or better at the tough Oswego Lake Country Club – won five Oregon Amateur titles over three decades. He might also have notched more wins if workrelated travel, an Army stint, college and family requirements didn’t prevent him from entering. Myers played on more Hudson Cup teams than any other player (19 times!) and is also a six-time member of the Senior Amateur team. He was also a finalist in the PNGA Men’s Amateur in 1968 and 1987, the Senior Men’s champion in 1992 and, amazingly, the Men’s Master-40 winner two years later in 1994. Kent Myers once used his between-the-legs putting style while competing in the U.S. Senior Open – on the 18th green, in front of the largest gallery on the course. He sunk a 25-foot putt. I recently caught up with Kent through a Q&A. Jeff Shelley: How many Oregon Amateur titles did you win and on what courses did they occur? Kent Myers: Four Oregon Amateur titles and one runner-up: 1965 – Portland Golf Club, 37th hole 1969 – Runner-up, Tualatin Country Club 1972 – Riverside Golf and Country Club, 35th hole 1981 – Tualatin Country Club, 5+4 1983 – Eugene Country Club, 37th hole JS: Was there a particular victory that stands out for you? KM: My victory in 1965 was a shortgame tournament. I had the snap hooks, and I came from behind in five of six matches. In the semifinals I was 3 down to Bruce Cudd after 27 holes. In the final match I was 3 down late in the match. I won the 36th hole to earn a tie and made a 40-foot birdie putt on hole 37 (to win). A holder of a Stanford doctorate and a long-time school administrator, Myers had the skills to go pro but focused instead on his family, which includes his wife Joan Marie and four daughters. “I debated (turning pro),” he once Kent Myers after winning the My other favorite was in 1983 told me. “But I wanted to get my 1994 PNGA Men’s Amateur at Sun Willows GC in Pasco, Wash. at Eugene Country Club. I led in education and raise a family.” the morning 18, but my legs gave Those family members sometimes out and I slowly fell behind to the helped Kent during tournaments. 19-year-old George Daves. I won the “My daughters all caddied for me – they were probably the first female caddies in 36th hole to go to sudden death, then won the the Northwest. There were a few clubs where I 37th hole to win. I was 50 years old and had walked had to argue with officials to have them allow my 163 holes that week. daughters to caddie.” JS: How many times were you a member of the Myers was known for his competitiveness Hudson Cup and the Senior Hudson Cup teams? and relentless focus. Though slight of frame, he KM: I was a member of the regular Hudson Cup Team was a pure ball-striker with an uncanny short 19 times (more than any other player, professional game. That latter skill was shown – often in or amateur). In addition I was a member of the the heat of a match – by his mind-bending and Senior team six times. I was voted outstanding occasional behind-the-back putting style that amateur by the professionals three times. deflated many an opponent. Though he demurs when citing that as a reason – “If I didn’t make JS: What are some of your most enduring memories the putts I’d look foolish, but if I make them of the Oregon Amateur? and it shakes people up there’s nothing I can do KM: I loved match play. To have a chance to about that” – his unique technique with the flat qualify and play six matches in one week was stick was widely known throughout national both exhilarating and exhausting. It gives one golfing circles. an opportunity to gauge one’s mental and Photos courtesy PNGA Centennial History book 26 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER physical toughness. I loved playing headto-head with Oregon’s best. I valued the opportunity to feel the pressure where one shot could determine the whole outcome. It is a battle of skill and a battle of will. JS: How do your Oregon Amateur victories compare with your other wins? KM: I value my Oregon Amateur victories very highly. I am an Oregonian. I also value qualifying and playing in the U.S. Open in 1956 and the U.S. Senior Open. I finished second in the Washington Open and third in the Oregon Open. However, there is something unique about winning an event that runs six days and where the competition changes each day. In fact, you start all even six times in a week with six different players who gain confidence with each victory. JS: Did you ever use your between-the-legs putting style during the Oregon Amateur? If so, which ones, who were your opponents, and how did they react? KM: I did use my between-the-legs stroke in a number of matches. Most notably, the Oregonian covered my semifinal match with Bruce Cudd in 1965. I was 3 down after 27 holes, and I used the stroke on the 28th hole for the first time in the match. I made birdie – he missed from inside my distance. As I recall, I won the next two holes and eventually won 1-up on the 36th. The stroke affected some competitors, but the ball must go in the hole to be effective. I used the stroke in the U.S. Senior Open at Oakland Hills. I made a 25-foot putt on the 18th to the delight of a large gallery. The stroke is a pure stroke – easy to execute, easy to repeat, but it takes nerve to use an unorthodox method in a very traditional game. JS: How old are you now? Are you still playing competitive golf and, if so, in which events? KM: I am 76 years old and frequently shoot my age or lower. I was 33 when I won my first Oregon Am and 50 when I won my last. I am told that I won it twice [being] older than any other [player]. I was a finalist in the PNGA (Men’s Amateur) when I was 55. My short game is still quite good, but the years rob you of your distance. I still play some pro-ams and a few senior events. If I could gain 40 yards I’d be back out there in the Oregon Am. Jeff Shelley is the editorial director for www.cybergolf.com and www. golfconstructionnews.com. He also authored three editions of the book, “Golf Courses of the Pacific Northwest.” Life Is Sweet At Apple Tree! Yakima, WA Home of the world-famous apple island green, the Apple Tree Golf Course is the Yakima Valley’s premier golf experience. The challenging track plays over 6,900 yards and is carved from the beautiful terrain of 100 year-old apple orchards. For more information, call (509) 966-5877. For tee time specials and for information on stay & play packages, visit appletreeresort.com. CHAMPIONSHIP GOLF AWARD-WINNING DINING The Apple Tree Grill features legendary food & drink and a nostalgic theme showcasing Apple Tree’s unique homegrown heritage. Menu highlights include our signature Applewood Smoked Prime Rib, 11 different entree salads, a lighter side menu, and an outstanding Sunday Brunch. For hours of operation or to view the menu, visit appletreegrill.com. SPECTACULAR RESORT COMMUNITY The Apple Tree Resort is the Pacific Northwest's best value in golf course living. At Apple Tree, we call it the Sweet Life. It's the quintessential combination of beautiful weather, championship golf, distinctive homes, and exclusive resident amenities. Golf front homes start in the mid $400s and feature the quality craftmanship that has made Apple Tree Construction a 10-time award winner at the CWHBA Tour of Homes. Visit appletreeresort.com for more information. www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 27 Looking for the perfect gift for the golfer in your life? Look no further than Eagle Crest’s 2010 Peak Season Punch Pass. For just $299 you can purchase six rounds of golf at any of our three courses and they can be used any time. All punches come with a free bucket of range balls, and the pass entitles the holder to off 10% all pro-shop purchases as long as there are punches remaining on the pass. The punch pass is completely transferable, so it can be used by the entire foursome. This is a savings of up to 30% off. IF YOU BUY A PUNCH PASS BEFORE DECEMBER 23RD YOU WILL RECEIVE ONE DOZEN TITELIST PRO V1 GOLF BALLS ABSOLUTELY FREE*. TO PICK-UP YOUR PUNCH PASS STOP BY THE EAGLE RIDGE PRO SHOP. *There is a limit of two punch passes per household. {877 891 0080} 1522 Cline Falls Hwy, Redmond OR I www.eagle-crest.com Juniper Golf Course Your Group Play starts here Juniper Golf Course - Redmond Oregon Exciting new membership options available for 2010 Visit our website for more info: www.junipergolf.com Or call 1-800-600-3121 28 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER A costly view from Crossings at Carlsbad’s first tee. But worth it? Photo by Rob Perry Munis Ascending Money and resources are being spent on municipal courses, and they are starting to serve several needs in communities by Blaine Newnham N Not only was the U.S. Open of 2008 played on a muni (Torrey Pines in San Diego), the national championship of 2009 returned to what was a $39-a-round public course in New York, Bethpage Black. Given a chance to host our national championship – something never before even tried – both courses proved as memorable as they are municipal. This fall, the Presidents Cup was held on San Francisco’s ageless and priceless Harding Park. A muni. And, of course, upstart public project Chambers Bay on the shores of Puget Sound will host the U.S. Amateur in 2010 and the U.S. Open in 2015. What’s going on here? Did the USGA discover municipal golf, or simply celebrate its rise to another level? The truth is that in these days of limited land and sketchy financing, in some cases only municipalities are capable of creating or refurbishing courses that could hold an Open. The cities have it – land and location. But they also must have vision and political wherewithal to take public golf out of its sometimes dreary past. Surely the revamped muni is not the moldy municipal course we grew up on, when winter meant hitting off spongy mats and summer meant petrified fairways. But does it make sense for Pierce County in Washington to spend millions for a course many of its citizens can’t afford to play? Or the city of Carlsbad near San Diego to end up - when all was said and done - spending $60 million for its Crossings at Carlsbad uber muni? The Carlsbad course was given the go-ahead by a public vote in 1990 but took 17 years to clear permit hurdles. The green fees –around $100 – aren’t your Dad’s muni green fees, but when did he get to play a course with views of the Pacific Ocean? While losing money in this economy, the course has nonetheless fit in nicely with Carlsbad’s view of itself as a resort, and www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 29 The 18th hole at Harding Park was played as the 15th hole during the 2009 Presidents Cup. Photo courtesy KemperSports Did You Know… The top three courses on Golfweek magazine’s recent list of “Best Municipal Courses” – Bethpage Black, Chambers Bay and Torrey Pines South (in order) are U.S. Open venues. The only other Northwest municipal course on the list is Spokane’s Indian Canyon GC, at No. 24. as the home of many golf manufacturers. So the new munis are developed and run not by your city rec department, but at the behest of the mayor or the city manager, and more likely to enhance tourism and find a solution to an environmental problem than to provide a stroll in the park. Last spring the LPGA held a tournament at Papago Golf Course in Phoenix, Ariz. Papago is, yes, a muni. City-owned, the course recently completed a restoration and is now managed by the Arizona Golf Association. The restoration project was managed by The Golf Guys, LLC, under the direction of Marvin French, one of the principals of Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club in North Plains, Ore. Portland-based Tournament Golf Foundation still manages the LPGA event now at Papago, with the event having moved there this year from Arizona’s Superstition Mountain. Pierce County sought to reclaim a ravaged sand and gravel pit that had been privately mined for 100 years. At one end of the 900 shore-lined acres was the county’s sewer treatment plant. At the other would be a golf course that would become the only one built in the past 45 years to get a U.S. Open. And the eventual repository for a sewage plant. Redmond, Ore. built a course designed by John Harbottle – Juniper GC – near its airport. The course hosted the 2007 Oregon Open. Gold Mountain GC in Bremerton, Wash. is located on the city’s watershed. The civic mission indeed seems to be changing. The city of Palm Desert, Calif. has two beautiful courses, rivaling golf experiences in nearby Palm Springs. Seldom are the courses managed by the municipality. Chambers Bay is managed by Chicago-based KemperSports, just like Bandon Dunes is. “This was about economic development, about doing something that will last for 100 years,” said John Ladenburg, the former Pierce Home for the Holidays Give the gift that will bring them Home throughout the year Call (866) 964-0520 to order your Gift Cards ~ Host of the 2010 United States Amateur Championship, assisting Chambers Bay ~ DUPONT, WASHINGTON TAke I-5 exIT 118 SOUTH Of TAcOmA www.thehomecourse.com ~ Call 866.964.0520 for tee times and directions. 253.964.0520 www.thehomecourse.com 30 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER County executive who almost single-handedly conceived the construction of Chambers Bay. A golf course is the vehicle. The public has access to the course beyond the $85 green fees for residents. A walking-jogging path circles the 18 holes. These big munis are not without risk, of course, although municipalities have tax bases they can draw from if worse comes to worse. Had Chambers not gotten the U.S. Open seal of approval, and with the economy putting a dent in high-end golf, who knows where the county might be? Such is the risk of high-end golf. They used to talk about Pebble Beach and Pinehurst as U.S. Open venues available for public play. Well, they were if you got bonuses from AIG, with both courses asking and getting well over $400 a round. The real breakthrough came at Bethpage in 2002 – where the regulars were paying $39 green fees and sleeping in their cars all night for a chance to play, and then came Tiger and Co. in ’02. Bethpage was a classic Tillinghast design coaxed out of mothballs by the USGA. Torrey Pines and Harding Park were also redone. But Chambers came that way, the dream of one politician who reasoned after reading John Feinstein’s book on the major golf championships that if New York could do it, so could Tacoma. As it is, an independent economic analysis of San Diego’s experience with the 2008 U.S. Open at Torrey Pines indicated the tournament generated direct and indirect regional spending of more than $142 million, surpassing Ladenburg’s seat-of-the-pants estimate that $100 million could come his county’s way with hosting a U.S. Open. But the reality is you don’t have to host a U.S. Open to understand the benefits of a public-built top-end golf course. In the Chicago suburb of Bolingbrook, a mayor boldly predicted that a swampy bean field used for storm management could be turned into a golf course that would shape the future of his town. “There was the need for a high-end public golf facility for those who didn’t have the interest or the wherewithal to join a private club,” said Roger Claar, the mayor. So he went about having Arthur Hills design a course that, with a 76,000-square foot club house, cost the city $40 million. Green fees – $60 for residents – as well as the fee charged to build homes around the course will have it paid off in 15 years, said Claar. The clubhouse has become the site of business meetings and weddings and high school reunions, seating as many as 800 for dinner. Munis are seen as smart business. It’s good to be smart. Going… Going… Golf! order your Pre-Season Golf Cards before they're gone! Special Limited-Time Offer. A Select Number Of Cards To Be Sold. Save time and money on the links with our Pre-Season Rounds Card. You pick the days and rounds… we provide the savings! 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When teeing it up at your course this winter and the little sign on the first tee says “Play Winter Rules”, remember that you actually have a choice – you can play preferred lies, or you can play it as you find it. And why would you want play it as you find it, if given the choice? Well, statistically your scores are better when playing Winter Rules (you always have a perfect lie), which artificially lowers your handicap – so you might not do too well in your next club’s competition that does not use Winter Rules. Back in the misty days of the 1970s, the PNGA adopted its set of Winter Rules guidelines. B. If the ball fails to come to rest on the spot on which it was placed, Rule 20-3d applies. C. If the ball when placed comes to rest on the spot on which it is placed and it subsequently moves, there is no penalty and the ball must be played as it lies, unless the provisions of any other Rule apply. D. A player is entitled to exercise this preferred lies option one time only per stroke. 3. The Embedded Ball Rule shall be in effect through the green. A. Anywhere “through the green,” a ball which is embedded in its own pitch-mark in the ground, except in loose sand, may be lifted without penalty, cleaned and dropped as near as possible to the spot where it lay but not nearer the hole. B. When an embedded ball is lost “beyond a reasonable doubt” in wet, soft turf, another ball may be put into play as near as possible to the spot the original ball was lost without penalty. Exception: A player may not obtain relief under this Local Rule if it is clearly unreasonable to play a stroke because of interference by anything other than the conditions 1. A ball may be moved through covered by this Local Rule. (Unplayable lie, etc.). the green with the following restrictions: A ball must not be moved when it lies within 36 inches of the base of a tree, stump, shrub or out of bounds. 2. Before lifting, the player must mark the position of the ball; it may be cleaned; and must be placed no more than six inches from its original lie, no nearer the hole. Use of the clubhead in the movement and placement of the ball is prohibited. A. A ball so lifted is deemed to be back in play once it has been placed. 32 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER Rage, rage against the dying of the light…… or, just get an earlier tee time “We make our world significant by the courage of our questions and by the depth of our answers.” - Carl Sagan, astronomer “Let’s play two.” - Ernie Banks, Hall of Famer for the Chicago Cubs Spring, summer and fall fill us with hope. Winter alone reminds us of the human condition. - Mignon McLaughlin, Journalist Top 10 reasons to play winter golf in the Northwest Reading the spam in our email, checking our post-it notes, rifling through pockets for scribbled messages, digging through dumpsters behind clubhouses, and, let’s face it, approaching total strangers on the street, we came up with this random list. 1. Pace of play is usually pretty good – play slow and you freeze. 2.I feel like I’m gaining an edge on Tiger during his off-season. 3.Mosquitos don’t fly in subfreezing temps. 4.The first tee is usually open. 5. Can you say “19th Hole”? 6.I get to try out my Arctic-grade rain gear. 7.The twilight rate starts at 9am. 8.I believe the wind and rain levels the playing field. But, I believe in so many other things. 9. Do you really need a reason? 10. Because when I call in sick at work to play golf, my office really thinks that I might be sick. 11.I like the camaraderie with my foursome that’s borne of suffering. 12.When I lose my plugged ball in the middle of the fairway I start to cry; and when it’s one of those cold crystal clear days under a perfect blue sky, I start to weep. 13. When I watch golf’s “Silly Season” on TV, beaming into my living room from some warm and sunny Southwest locale, I can’t help but see how weak and deprived those people are, walking around in their short sleeves (in December!) and sun hats (sun hats!). 14. Are you gonna print this? Did we say Top 10? We meant to say 14. O P INION Winter Rules? Don’t get me started by Blaine Newnham On a nice day in December, I wonder why we play Winter Rules. On every day in December I wonder why our scores aren’t posted. Why our handicaps are frozen for the winter, why we have to live with the number we had in mid-November even if it no long reflects the quality of our game. The time has come, I think, to post scores year-round. The computer doesn’t belong to a union. And it is time as well to quit putting our hand on the ball as soon as the weather even begins to turn poor. The irony of it is that Winter Rules and frozen handicaps were thought of as a way of mitigating unusually high winter scores as players went about “building” a handicap that would in the spring give the year-round player an advantage in competition. They may conspire to do just the opposite, however, making the game easier and the scores better, giving you a perfect lie for almost every shot. Let’s start from the beginning. When you see the moldy “Play Winter Rules” sign hanging near the first tee, what does it mean? Winter Rules are local rules. More specifically, they are local guidelines. In our neck of the woods, the Pacific Northwest Golf Association has a set of guidelines that are different from other sections. Winter Rules, as such, are not rules. The USGA sort of recognizes them, but would rather you not use them. The guidelines for the PNGA date back to 1991. They allow you to lift, clean and place the ball, moving it no closer to the hole and not more than six inches. If you are within a club length of a tree or a stump or out of bounds, you can’t move it at all. You can’t roll it over with the clubface the way they do in Southern California. You can’t keep searching for the perfect tuft of grass. Once you take your hand off the ball it is in play. I’ve played in California and in Europe where “preferred lies” means moving the ball only when it is in the fairway. The USGA mentions “closely mowed” areas. The PNGA, however, allows balls in the rough to be lifted, cleaned and replaced. Perhaps our guidelines are more generous because our rough is deeper and wetter, or because we play in the winter when most Northern courses are closed. The reality is we can do nearly whatever we want. To this end, the PNGA is going to keep track of scores this winter from those clubs that choose to post. The course where I play allows posting because the members want it. We’re given a “trend” which reflects what our handicap would be throughout the winter, even when our handicap is officially frozen as of the middle of November. “If we have solid information that scores aren’t spiking in the winter,” said John Saegner of the Washington State Golf Association, “then we’ll consider a change. There are a lot of people who want to post year-round.” Saegner, the Sr. Director of Membership Services for the WSGA, rates courses in the Northwest as a USGA-certified Master Course Rater. He does so with mid-July conditions in mind. He thinks the courses are more difficult in the winter when the ball protests going anywhere, when a 350-yard par-4 plays agonizingly like a 400-yard par-4. To that end, Saegner has notified courses that they should alter tee placements to reflect seasonal changes, to move the tees forward in a wet winter and back in a dry summer. He suggests tees, if possible, be moved up 10 yards in winter for a par-3, 20 yards for a par-4 and 30 yards for a par-5. Tell that to the guy setting up your course. I’m not seeing it. Saegner admits that Winter Rules make the course easier as conditions make it more difficult. With better players, he estimates they can gain three to five strokes using winter rules because they mitigate the difficulty of rough by improving their lies. My home course plays very difficult in the summer. Our greens and shaved-downed surrounds have gotten faster and faster as Winter Rules? Why do I need Winter Rules? Maybe that should be our question to Jeffrey Ogburn of Eugene, Ore. when he found himself stranded mid-way through his round at River’s Edge GC in Bend, Ore. “It was only (only) a hailstorm,” he tells us. “It went away after awhile. But we had to change to orange balls to finish the round.” We’re glad the “One Ball” rule was not in effect at the course. the years have gone by. In the winter, the courses have gotten drier and drier with extensive sanding programs. So, I wouldn’t be surprised that the result is that with Winter Rules and attention to moving up the tees, scores are as good in the winter as they are in the summer. And better during the shoulder months when the greens soften but there is still some roll in the fairways. I’d like to see us not only post all year, but change our Winter Rules guidelines. We should consider lift, clean and drop. If the ball is imbedded in any way, then it would be dropped again. You might choose to play it as it lies. The way the game is supposed to be played. Blaine Newnham is the former sports editor for the Seattle Times. He plays golf in the spring, summer, fall….and winter. www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 33 > 800 SLOTS TABLE GAMES DINING DRINKS GOLF HOTEL KEEP yOuR EyE ON THE BALL. WE DARE yOu. Majestic mountains. Rolling wheat fields. And the Northwest’s highest paying casino only a few putts away. No wonder golfers have trouble staying focused on their ball at Wildhorse. Host to state and regional OPGA, PNWGA and OGA events, our nationally recognized course with wide fairways, fast greens, and numerous water hazards is a must-play for every level of player. After you step off the green, you can step up to more than 800 slots and all your favorite table games, or unwind at our fine dining and buffet restaurants, lounge and cabaret. Even if you lose a ball (or three), you’ll always find a great time at Wildhorse Resort & Casino. DELuXE DOuBLE EAGLE PACKAGE: Enjoy three days of unlimited golf with cart for two people, two nights of lodging (double occupancy) and more, starting at just $341 (+tax). Reservations required. Make yours by calling: 800-654-9453. How do you play? I-84, EXIT 216 PENDLETON, OREGON WILDHORSERESORT.COM 800.654.9453 < G O L F Golf O R E G O N O R E G O N A sense of place The allure of Broken Top Club is lifelong A way of life at Broken Top When you come to Broken Top Club in Bend, Ore., you rarely leave. It’s that kind of place. Ask Greg Robbins. He came here 12 years ago from back East. “It was a quality-of-life thing for my wife and I,” he said. Robbins wasn’t even in the golf business when he came to Central Oregon. He started working as a bag boy at Broken Top, and the next year he entered the PGA program. In 2003 he got his certification as a PGA Golf Professional, and is now the club’s head pro. Worth it? Yes. And the reasons are many. Club Play and Tournaments Broken Top Club has a tradition of top-notch golf tournaments at every level. There’s the Sagebrush Classic, one of Bend’s most popular fundraisers, Peter Jacobsen’s Oregon Legends Tournament, the Oregon PGA Pro-Am Series, the PacAm Sponsor’s Event and the Summit High Invitational. >>> www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 35 GOLF OREGON Sagebrush Classic All photos courtesy Broken Top Club >>> The course has also been the site of the Oregon Senior Amateur in 2004, and will host the 2010 OGA Team Championship. When the course opened in 1993 it set a new standard for Central Oregon. As the centerpiece of all the club’s recreational facilities, the golf course is an ideal venue for kids, couples, competitive foursomes, or company tournaments. Boredom never comes into play at Broken Top, a Weiskopf-Morrish design. There’s no back-and-forth. No sense of déjà vu because every hole has its own distinct character. There’s an old quarry on No. 11, panoramic views on Nos. 6 and 13, a risky drive on the 9th and a daunting lake on the 17th. You get the idea. For family activities, the club has a private two-acre lake for fly-fishing; they have two swimming pools plus a playground and a host of organized activities. They also have tennis lessons and a well-respected junior golf program that helps nurture a lifelong love of the game. Many of the club’s members spend a lot of time off-site, in activities such as skiing, hiking or bicycling. Clubhouse The clubhouse at Broken Top turns heads. It’s impressive, but not pretentious. Casual, yet elegant. Warm and inviting, and perfectly practical. The 27,000 square-foot building houses everything you’d expect in a first-class private club. You can attend a party or enjoy a romantic, sunset dinner. Hold a business meeting or get in a workout. Play cards, or curl up with a good book. Browse through the pro shop or lounge by the pool. It’s also the perfect venue for our social events or your private party. Weddings and Events It’s your big day, and every little detail is being handled to perfection at Broken Top 36 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER Club. They have a splendid scenic backdrop, an impressive clubhouse, elegantly prepared food and meticulous service. The event comes together precisely as planned. You don’t have to be a member to have a wedding at Broken Top Club. So if you want a truly distinctive location, give them a call and they’ll help with the planning. Restaurant and Grill Food critics and photographers agree – if you like fine food in a spectacular setting, nothing beats The Sunset Room at Broken Top Club. The view always inspires, and the chef impresses even the most critical customers with consistently distinctive seasonal dishes and a comprehensive selection of fine wines. If you have an appetite for something more casual, The Grill offers a creative selection of drinks and a menu that goes well beyond bar fare. Memberships Broken Top’s award-winning golf course, designed by Tom Weiskopf and Jay Morrish, is the perfect venue for a friendly match. The layout, the greens and the meticulous course maintenance are all on par with the most revered clubs in the West. It’s a fun, fair test of skill for any level of golfer. Broken Top’s new pricing structure makes buying a membership the best value in Bend. Choose from these different membership options: • Limited golf membership: $195/month and $5,000 initiation. • Full golf memberships: $425 per month, with initiation starting at $7,000. • Intermediate golf memberships, for those under 45, start at just $325 a month, with initiation of $2000. • Social membership: $125 per month and $1000 initiation. • Corporate memberships: $425 a month per designee. • Ask about end-of-the-year incentives. • Ask about equity golf memberships. Their new, long-term pricing strategy makes Broken Top Club more sustainable, and more accessible, than ever. You don’t have to be a Broken Top resident to join. Sagebrush Classic donates to local nonprofits Grants from the 2009 Sagebrush Classic charitable event proceeds have been made to Bend Community Center, Bethlehem Inn, Caldera, Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA), Family Resource Center, Grandma’s House, Healthy Beginnings, Jericho Road, Saving Grace, and St. Vincent de Paul. The Sagebrush Classic, founded by Deschutes Brewery, starts with a day of golf, then presents elite chefs from around the world serving their specialties to 1,000 guests in the meadow at Broken Top Club in Bend, Ore. A dance band, large auction and raffles keep the “Feast” hopping. Through a partnership with Deschutes Children’s Foundation, the Sagebrush Classic has returned more than $2 million to Central Oregon through nonprofits during its 20-year run. For further information about the Sagebrush Classic, call 800.601.8123 or visit www.sagebrush.org. Broken Top Club 62000 Broken Top Drive Bend, Oregon 97702 Golf Shop: 541-383-0868 www.brokentop.com For memberships information and a golf course tour, contact Sonja Donohue, Assistant General Manager/ Membership at 541-383-8200, or email her at sonjad@brokentop.com. THE G O L F FROM OG A Another Memorable Golf Season your calendars for the Portland Golf Show at the Oregon Convention Center, February 12-14. We also encourage you to visit our web site, and especially the OGA Community page. Our Forums page is the ideal place to ask questions, participate in discussions and interact with both the OGA staff and your fellow golfers. Have a great winter! The 2010 golf season will commence on Monday, March 1st. O R E G O N With the season officially ending on December 1, another memorable golf season has come and gone in Oregon and SW Washington. Two of the highlights this past season were the celebration ERIC YAILLEN OGA Director of our rich history at the 100th of Marketing & Communications occurrence of the Oregon Amateur and the inaugural staging of the OGA Players Championship. The Oregon Amateur is the only state championship of its kind in the nation with both men and women competing concurrently at the same location. Congratulations to this year’s Men’s Champion, Andrew Vijarro of Bend, Ore. and to our Women’s Champion, Amy Beth Simanton of Lake Oswego, Ore., the second youngest women’s champion in Oregon Amateur history. It was the second consecutive year that Bandon Dunes Golf Resort has hosted a major Oregon Championship and we thank them for their generous support of Amateur golf in the region. At Waverley Country Club, a founding OGA Member Club and site of the first Oregon Amateur, we also held the season-ending inaugural OGA Players Championship – another first of its kind event in the nation where top players representing the Men’s, Women’s, Senior Men’s and Senior Women’s Performance Points lists competed against each other. Congratulations to Chris Maletis for capturing this inaugural title! In addition to our championships, we increased the number and type of events all members can play in by expanding our Net Series and creating the OGA Tour. We’re already in the process of making improvements for next season and the OGA Tour will serve as an umbrella banner for a new variety of Net events for individuals, teams and seniors as well as casual non-competitive golf days. As we all get ready for what is sure to be another memorable year, please remember that although local scores are not valid to your official handicap after December 1, if you travel throughout the winter and play in areas served by year-round golf associations, you are obligated by the USGA Handicap System, the OGA and your club to post those scores. This is crucial to maintaining accurate handicaps and promoting fair play. Information on “How to Post Scores in Sunbelt States” can be found at www.OGA.org. To do our part, we are providing new off-season updates to your official USGA Handicap Index on January 1 and February 1. In the new year, we again will be conducting the OGA Winter Series beginning with the Stormy Stableford on January 23. And don’t forget to mark ABOVE: Andrew Vijarro is congratulated by his family on the final green after winning the 100th Oregon Amateur, held at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort. LEFT: Amy Beth Simanton hits her drive on the opening hole of the final match in the 100th Women’s Oregon Amateur, held at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort. Simanton would win the match, becoming the second youngest ever to win the women’s title. In the background are OGA CEO Barb Trammell (far right) and OGA Director of Tournament Operations Brent Whittaker (middle). Photos by Eric Yaillen/OGA 30 per player $ includes cart and small bucket of balls. Good any day of the week. Expires 2/28/2010. www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 37 GOLF OREGON OGA honors its volunteers for 2009 Each year the Oregon Golf Association (OGA) recognizes the contributions made by its volunteers for their contributions to the organization and the game of golf. “Volunteers are the life blood of the game, and giving back to the sport is simply what it’s all about,” noted OGA CEO Barb Trammell. “We are blessed to have a large group of devoted volunteers caring enough about the game of golf to give countless hours of their time to help us ensure that the services we provide, whether it’s a championship or golf course rating, are conducted at the highest level,” she added. Awards are presented to honorees representing volunteers in championships, junior golf and course rating with one named overall Volunteer of the Year. The first volunteer honoree was awarded to Gail Phillips of Eugene, Ore. Phillips, who is a member of Eugene Country Club, started volunteering for the OGA several years ago, and now serves as one of the OGA’s Team Leaders. She has been integral to teaching course rating to new volunteers. Gene Chambers of Aloha, Ore., who plays at Meriwhether National, was named an honoree for his efforts with the Tournament Assisting Group (TAG) Team. “Every year we seem to have a new volunteer who is a real go-getter, trying to do as much as possible to assist the association,” said Brent Whittaker, OGA Director of Tournament Operations. “It seems appropriate that we recognize a Rookie of the Year, and this inaugural award goes to Jesse Castillo of Crewsell, Ore.” Castillo retired from Qwest last year, allowing him time to be one of the most active volunteers. He’s volunteered at both adult and junior tournaments and is also a member of the OGA Course Rating team as well. He also volunteered his time assisting the Pacific Northwest Golf Association at their championships, as well as any other place or time his services could be put to use. At Emerald Valley Golf Club, where he plays, he marshals, helps with their Junior Golf program, and is a resident handyman fixing Play A Great Winter Course! Among the Top 8 Golf Courses in Oregon Owen Osborne (pictured on the right) leads a Course Rating Team. carts and broken plumbing and any odd jobs that need to get done there. Finally, Owen Osborne of Black Butte Ranch, Ore. was named the overall Volunteer of the Year. Osborne has worked on the OGA Course Rating team for seven years and this year was one of the Team Leaders who attended the annual USGA Course Rating Calibration Seminar. In 2006, the OGA renamed the Volunteer of the Year Award in honor of Bill Worden, an OGA volunteer who was the victim of a traffic accident while on a course rating trip. Visit www.oga.org for more information. THANKS OGA For Inspiring Me To Be The Golfer And Person I Am Today! Digest Golf Best Places to Play, 2004-2007 “Top 10 Affordable Golf Courses in the U.S.” Golf Digest, 1996 “The Oregon Golf Association has been an important part of my life and that of my family. It’s where I grew up and learned how to play the game. Oregon Junior Golf inspired the competitive juices in me and gave me the desire to compete at the highest level. When I started playing in Oregon Junior Golf around age 13, I frankly wasn’t a very good golfer. I certainly didn’t win very often, but that didn’t really matter. Regardless of what I scored, I was always treated with respect. It’s where I learned how to get along with others, how to trust others and how to depend on myself to accomplish what I needed to do to succeed at whatever task was at hand. The OGA is where I learned that character speaks louder than birdies and eagles. I learned that it’s easy to be magnanimous in victory, but true champions -the likes of Bobby Jones, Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson and Tiger Woods -- true champions and leaders are those who are magnanimous even in defeat. The OGA Golf Course is a Certified Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary Check out www.ogagolfcourse.com for the latest deals & to register for specials! 2850 Hazelnut Drive l Woodburn, OR 97071 l 503-981-4653 38 December 2009 Ad.indd 1 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER However, what really makes the organization great are the men and women volunteers who support OGA programs such as Oregon Junior Golf, the Evans Scholars, the First Tee, and Turfgrass Research. Join an OGA member club and support the OGA with your time, your effort and your money. Help kids learn the game we love. I jump at every chance I have to support the game and I hope you will too!” Oregon Golf Association 2840 Hazelnut Drive • Woodburn, OR 97071 • (503) 981-4653 12/1/2009 12:37:30 PM Rusty Beckel, overall gross champion of the 78th Annual OWPLGA Championship. OWPLGA marks 78th year In the fall, the Oregon Women Public Links Golf Association held its 78th annual gross and net championship at the OGA Golf Course in Woodburn, Ore. The OWPLGA has a rich history of promoting women’s golf in the area. It has a membership of over 130 women, representing 23 courses in NW Oregon and SW Washington. Rusty Beckel, from Eastmoreland Golf Course, shot 162 to take the gross award. The net winner was Michelle Smith, from Broadmoor Golf Course, with a 142. Founder of Patriot Golf Days, Major Dan Rooney (far left) speaks to participants of the event held at Langdon Farms Golf Club. Rooney makes appearance at Langdon Farms during Patriot Golf Day O R E G O N Birdies 4 Babies Melinda Bailey raised continues fundraising money for MountainStar by collecting and selling Amateur and professional thousands of golf balls. golfers from all over Central Oregon raised nearly $25,000 for MountainStar Family Relief Nursery through Birdies 4 Babies, a grassroots golfing fundraiser now in its fifth season. Following the “Birdie Club” tradition that rewards birdies with a dollar or two paid to the golfer, players donated their birdie money to MountainStar. MountainStar awarded its first annual “Birdies 4 Babies Volunteer of the Year” award to Melinda Bailey, a golfer at Widgi Creek Golf Club who collected and sold thousands of golf balls with all proceeds given to MountainStar. Also participating in the season-long fundraiser were 43 PGA club professionals, who asked friends, family, golfing pals, students and club members to sponsor birdies they made while competing in Oregon PGA chapter events. MountainStar, based in Bend, Ore., is a nonprofit organization whose mission is keeping children safe, parents successful and families together. Proceeds from Birdies 4 Babies support MountainStar’s child abuse and neglect prevention program that serves at-risk families with babies and toddlers. Contact MountainStar at 541-322-6820, or check out their website/ blog at www.birdies4babies.blogspot.com. G O L F Mulflur Inducted Into Grant High School Hall of Fame Northwest native Mary Lou Mulflur has been inducted into the Grant High School Hall of Fame. The Portland-area school honored 53 former athletes and 10 former coaches in the inaugural event. Mulflur was one of several speakers at the ceremony. While attending Grant, Mulflur won state high school golf titles in 1974 and 1975. She also won the 1975 Oregon Junior championship, and the Southern Oregon titles in 1980, 1982, 1995 and 1997 as well as the Oregon Coast Invitational in 1979, 1982 and 1990. Mulflur has competed in five USGA events – the U.S. Women’s Open in 1979 and 1980 and the U.S. Women’s Amateur in 1979, 1980 and 1982. She also competed in four National Collegiate Championships. Mulflur attended the University of Washington beginning in 1976 and was one of the first female athletes to receive a scholarship at the university. She is regarded as one of the most successful women golfers to come out of the UW. During her collegiate career Mulflur won three regular-season tournaments, including the inaugural Ihlanfeldt Invitational in 1980. Mulflur is now in her 27th season as the head coach of the women’s golf team at the University of Washington. Held over each Labor Day weekend since 2007, the Patriot Golf Day fundraiser is held at golf facilities all across the country. At Langdon Farms in Aurora, Ore., the event was held in conjunction with a tournament invitational, and together they raised over $25,000 during the weekend. Major Dan Rooney, founder of the fundraiser, gave the event an emotional boost by flying into Portland and attending the event and personally thanking supporters of the fundraiser. Rooney is an F-16 Pilot, PGA Professional, and USGA member. On Labor Day 2007 Rooney asked golfers to add $1 to their greens fees for the Folds of Honor Foundation, which provides postsecondary educational scholarships for the children and spouses of military men and women disabled or killed while serving our country. The Patriot Golf Day campaign is jointly supported by The PGA of America and the United States Golf Association. In the last two years, more than 550 postsecondary educational scholarships have been given through the Foundation. OGA sets Winter Series schedule The OGA has set its schedule for its popular Winter Series events for 2010. The Stormy Stableford will be held January 23, the Super Bowl Shootout will be held February 20, and the St. Patrick’s Day Men’s Four-Ball will be held March 20. All three events will be held at the OGA Golf Course in Woodburn, Ore. Entries will be accepted online at www.oga.org. Or call 866-981-4653 for more information. Swenson on board Stein Swenson has rejoined the staff of Golf Oregon and Pacific Northwest Golfer. He was the first advertising salesperson for the magazine, beginning in 1994. He operates the Maverix Golf Tour in Central Oregon, and plays to a 4.3 Index. Stein lives in Bend with his beautiful wife, Laura. For advertising inquiries, contact Stein at 541.318.5155 or sswenson@pacificnorthwestgolfer.com. www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 39 Golf Photos by Rob Perry BRITISH COLUMBIA The par-5 10th hole at Arbutus Ridge is a great risk-reward hole – not too long, with water guarding the green. The Details BC Women’s Amateur & Mid-Amateur A Championship Season The par-4 18th hole at Arbutus Ridge. Arbutus Ridge selected as the site of the 2010 BC Women’s Amateur and Mid-Amateur Championships The terrifically scenic 40 minute drive from Victoria or Nanaimo on Vancouver Island does a little bit to prepare you for the natural charm of this panoramic layout, which this summer will host the BC Women’s Amateur Championship, one of the oldest championships on the North American continent, first played in 1905. The BC Women’s Mid-Amateur will be held concurrently at Arbutus. Arbutus Ridge is named for the characteristic Arbutus trees that surround the Bill Robinsondesigned championship course. Located in the seaside community of Cobble Hill amongst nine of Vancouver Island’s finest wineries and 10 minutes from the city of Duncan, this is truly one of Canada’s hidden gems. The Arbutus Ridge Golf Club was voted the “Best Destination Golf Course in British Columbia” in 2006. If you’ve played it, then etched in your memory, and probably on your scorecard, will be three of the most demanding 40 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER finishing holes on Vancouver Island, highlighted by the knee-knocking 214-yard par-3 island green on the 17th hole. Signature hole? Well, yes. The course is active with the Audubon Society and has formed a Greening Committee to preserve and protect the environment. Arbutus Ridge is known for offering the best vistas on Vancouver Island and friendly, genuine service. The course opened in 1987 and is owned and operated by the GolfBC Group. AT A GLANCE Arbutus Ridge Golf Club 3515 Telegraph Road Cobble Hill, BC V0R 1L4 800.446.5322 www.golfbc.com Blue tees 6,193 yards 70.3 rating/125 slope White tees 5,834 yards 68.6/124 Red tees 5,535 yards 72.3//125 (Women) June 29 - July 2, 2010 Arbutus Ridge Golf Club Registration opens March 1, 2010 and closes May 31st at noon. All eligible entries will be confirmed at that point in time. If the event is not fully subscribed it will be opened for an additional two weeks. Entries will be available online at that time at www.bcga.org. Entry for the BC Women’s Amateur is open to female amateur golfers. Entry for the BC Women’s Mid-Amateur is open to female amateur golfers age 25 years of age and older as of June 29, 2010. The field will be open to a maximum of 96 competitors – 60 for the Women’s Amateur and 36 for the Mid Amateur, with exemptions for 16 Zone Team Members. Flights will be determined by factor. All competitors must be a member of a recognized provincial, state or national golf association and submit with their entry form a photocopy of their official BCGA/RCGA, Zone Junior or Foreign membership card certified as to current handicap factor within 15 days of entry. The membership card must also be available for inspection at the registration table. A Little Bit of History In 1905, the first British Columbia Ladies’ Championship was played at the Victoria Golf Club for the Flumerfelt Cup, donated by Mr. A.C. Flumerfelt of Victoria Golf Club. The Championship at that time was a Medal and Match Play tournament and remained in this format until 1988. Today, the Championship is played as a four-day, 72-hole stroke play format and showcases the best female amateurs in British Columbia. Recent Past Champions of the BC Women’s Amateur 2009 Christina Spence Proteau 2008 Kira Meixner 2007 Kira Meixner 2006 Christina Spence 2005 Inah Park 2004 Samantha Richdale 2003 Jackie Little Visit www.bcga.org for information. THE G O L F FROM B C G A A New Beginning B R I T I S H We still conduct championships, however we I have a new job. I wasn’t looking for one. have now added grass root and elite golfer Hadn’t even given it a thought. development and have added participation and And yet as Executive excellence to our strategic plan. Just as we have evolved, so has the Director of the British RCGA, and they are now the National Sport Columbia Golf Association Organization responsible for golf in Canada. I now find myself as the KRIS JONASSON BCGA Executive Director Executive Director of “Golf Golf is now part of the Canada Summer Games and in 2016 will become an Olympic sport. British Columbia”. In Canada we have a very good story to In marketing terms, the BCGA is rebranding and we are doing it in conjunction with the Royal tell in regards to our elite program. In 2009, Canadian Golf Association. Starting in 2010 the Abbotsford native Nick Taylor was the first public face of the RCGA Today the association is recognized by will be “Golf Canada”. I started with the government as the Provincial Sport BC Golf Association in Organization responsible for golf and April of 1996 and the provides services for both men and women. organization was very different from what it is today. At that time we Canadian ever to be ranked the No. 1 amateur conducted provincial championships for boys golfer in the world, while Matt Hill was ranked and men, rated golf courses, provided rules and in the top 10. Canada had five men ranked handicap support to our member clubs and in the top 200 worldwide. On the girls’ side, to a limited extent performed some advocacy Stephanie Sherlock, Kira Meixner, Sue Kim and work with government. Today the association Christine Wong are showing that Canadians will is recognized by government as the Provincial be competitive at the highest levels of women’s Sport Organization responsible for golf and golf. If the names seem familiar it’s likely because provides services for both men and women. the majority of these players all come from BC. Richmond native Kira Meixner is a product of the golfer development programs that the BCGA has initiated. The British Columbia Golf Association and the Royal Canadian Golf Association have rich histories that stretch back over 100 years. Despite our history we recognize that our organizations are not well known and largely not respected by our membership. Golf is the number one participation sport in the country and yet growth is flat to declining. Golf Canada and Golf British Columbia are dedicated to growing participation and excellence in the Sport of Golf in Canada. I am thrilled to be given the chance to lead this new organization as we head into 2010. C O L U M B I A BRITISH COLUMBIA G O L F A S S O C I A T I O N Establish your handicap and become a member today! BENEFITS INCLUDE: • Memberships to RCGA and PNGA • An official RCGA Handicap Factor, recognized world wide • Ability to enter BCGA, RCGA and PNGA events • Ability to play in club events requiring a RCGA Factor • Subscriptions to Golf Canada and Pacific Northwest Golfer • Access to online community with built in Event Calendar • Access to online member profile and game tracking ability • Search capabilities for courses and events throughout Canada British Columbia Golf Association ~ 2105 – 21000 Westminster Highway, Richmond, B.C. V6V 2S9 www.bcga.org • 1.888.833.2242 • E-mail: info@bcga.org www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 41 GOLF B RITISH C OLUM B I A NGCOA Canada honours Gary Player Last month at the Westin Bayshore Hotel in Vancouver, the National Golf Course Operators Association (NGCOA) honoured Gary Player, the Black Knight, with the first Golf Business Canada Lifetime Achievement Award during its annual conference. The award was presented by Jeff Calderwood, CEO, NGCOA Canada. Gary Player The NGCOA Canada is a not-for-profit trade association, owned and governed by its membership, providing business support to Canadian golf course operators and related stakeholders, presenting one united voice within the golf course industry. Goubault joins Predator Ridge Predator Ridge Resort in the Okanagan Valley announced the appointment of Douglas Goubault as the Director of Golf, reporting to Rod Cochrane, General Manager. In his new role at Predator Ridge, Goubault will be responsible for overseeing the existing course as well as the opening of the new 18-hole course scheduled for Douglas Goubault opening in the summer of 2010. Goubault spent the past ten years with Fairmont Hotels & Resorts in Mexico and Canada. He was instrumental in creating the first PGA Tour event outside Canada or the USA - the Mayakoba Golf Classic, now in its fourth year. Prior to moving to Mexico, Goubault worked at The Fairmont Chateau Whistler Golf Club. Goubault competed at the amateur level while growing up on Vancouver Island and was Captain of Team Canada at the World University Golf Championships in Northern Ireland. 42 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER Team BC players who competed in this year’s Canada Games were (front row, L-R) Soo Bin Kim, Sue Kim and Christine Wong; and (back row, L-R) Eugene Wong, Jared Hundza and Justin Shin. BC players shine at first golf competitions of Canada Games For the first time, golf was competed as a sport in the Canada Games, the biennial inter-provinicial competition held this year on Prince Edward Island. And golfers from British Columbia came to play, winning the Gold Medal in both the men’s and men’s team competition, while Eugene Wong won individual Gold and Justin Shin won individual Silver for the men, and Sue Kim won individual Gold and Soo Bin Kim won individual Bronze for the women. Not a bad start. “It was extremely gratifying to see golfers walk into a crowded stadium as a team in a Games atmosphere (during the Opening Ceremonies),” said Kris Jonasson, BCGA Executive Director. “A lot of work went into preparing the players, and our entire philosophy of the game of golf, to get to that point.” BC players selected to Team Canada Nick Taylor of Abbotsford, Eugene Wong of North Vancouver and Sue Kim of Langley have been selected by the RCGA for their 2010 Team Nick Taylor Canada golf team. Taylor, a Team Canada veteran, was ranked No. 1 on the Royal and Ancient’s (R&A) World Amateur Golf Ranking for 21 weeks. Christine Wong of Richmond was named to the RCGA’s Development Team. The RCGA National Team Program incorporates advanced coaching, sport science expertise, training camps and world-class competition. Players who are selected to the National Amateur and National Developmental Teams represent Canada at six to 10 internationally-sanctioned golf competitions throughout the year. For more information about Team Canada or to make a donation towards the development of Canada’s future golf stars, please visit www.rcga.org/teamcanada. Photo copyright USGA Earlier this year, the BCGA Course Society in Chase, B.C. was entered the “Sharing Our Stories” selected to receive the two tickets competition offered by 2010 to the 2010 Winter Olympic Legacies Now, and is pleased to Games Opening Ceremonies. announce that the story about “This is a once in a lifetime the success of the junior girls chance,” says Pittendreigh. “My during the 2008 championship wife and I never imagined we season was selected from all of would be watching the Opening the entries to win the “Sharing Ceremonies live.” Our Stories” prize. The prize Pittendreigh, 74, has been included two tickets to the 2010 a volunteer at Sunshore Golf Winter Olympic Games Opening Course for more than 25 years Ceremonies and $2,500 for one of and plays to a handicap of 15. the BCGA programs. The $2500 prize money will go The BCGA invited clubs to help amputee golfer Johannes from all corners of the province Grames to compete at the All to nominate an individual from Japan Physically Challenged Golf their club who contributes to the Championship in Tsu, Japan at overall success of the club in a the Tsu G&CC. volunteer capacity. Grames is an above-knee “We were overwhelmed Johannes Grames amputee golfer currently living in by the quantity and quality of Vancouver and plays to a singlenominees we received, and are proud of digit handicap. He is a board member at the volunteer work being done throughout large of the B.C. Amputee Golf Association, the province to support the game of golf,” a member of the Canadian Amputee Golf says Kris Jonasson, executive director of the Association, the B.C. Amputee Sports BCGA. Association and the BCGA. Johannes is the At the recent BC Golf Hall of Fame 2009 B.C. Amputee Open champion and inductee dinner, held at Capilano G&CC, finished second in the above knee division at Morris Pittendreigh of the Sunshore Golf the 2009 Canadian Amputee Open. Photo courtesy BCGA BCGA wins and bestows two honors The Simon Fraser University varsity golf program staged a major comeback this fall, after three years in which the program had been dropped from the university’s athletic offering. BCGA names 2009 Volunteer Recognition Award recipients Lill Dewar Vicki Redding Rena Titmus Dow Art Charpentier Berne Neufeld Lynn Benedictson Bob Bagnall Heather Marchildon and Dave Wright Zone 1 Zone 2 Zone 3 Zone 4 Zone 5 Zone 6 Zone 7 Zone 8 Bob Bagnall of Zone 7. Ray on Board Ray Bone has joined the staff of Golf British Columbia and Pacific Northwest Golfer. Ray has been involved in the hospitality/tourism sales and marketing field in BC for over 30 years. When he’s not working, and even sometimes when he is, you’ll find Ray in the big green office trying to perfect a more than slightly imperfect golf swing. For advertising inquiries, contact Ray at 250-883-2772 or ray@pacificnorthwestgolfer.com. President Stevenson recently held a “President and Friends” golf tournament in support of the team at Swan-e-set G&CC, which was a major success in raising funds. And the addition of Assistant Coaches Jared Boddy and Mark Strong, both former players on the team, has gone a long way in developing the young squad. The continued support of the Vancouver Golf Club, which opened its doors to the team as its home course and practice facility, was also an important step in the right direction. Furthermore, SFU athletics was recently approved as the first non-U.S. member of the NCAA. Beginning in the 2010-11 season, the university’s golf team will become the first Canadian competitor in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference in the NCAA Division II. Welcome back. www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 43 C O L U M B I A Each year volunteers are recognized throughout the province for their generous contributions to the game of golf. Congratulations to this year’s recipients. B R I T I S H Castlegar Golf Club, in Castlegar, will host the 2010 BC Amateur Championship on July 20-23. Pictured is Castlegar’s long 13th hole. Photo by Don Wexil. The return of the program is due to the hard work of former Head Coach John Buchanan, and the support and vision of both SFU President Michael Stevenson and SFU Athletic Director David Murphy. Coach Buchanan, who had retired from coaching the golf team a few years prior to the three-year hiatus, put the whole of his effort into re-establishing the program, and did so by developing a strong network of alumni and public supporters, and, eventually, by persuading the school’s president to back the idea which provided the significant clout necessary to turn the Athletic Department. G O L F SFU golf team reborn Golf I D A H O History in the making Beloved Twin Falls muni has seen just about everyone Modest? Maybe. Shy? No. Unheralded? Nope. The popular, frumpy, and beloved Twin Falls Municipal Golf Course has seen much of the history of Idaho Golf walk its fairways and order iced tea at its counter. The course, owned by the city of Twin Falls, opened for play back in the 1920s as a nine-holer with sand greens. The greens were converted to grass in 1931, and in 1958 it opened the back nine. 44 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER Mike Hamblin, the course’s current General Manager, pretty much grew up on the course. “My father (Don Hamblin) took over as head pro when I was a kid, in 1976,” said Mike. “This is where I learned the game, playing in the junior program.” The elder Hamblin grew up in Caldwell, and moved his young family to Las Vegas, where he was the pro at the now-defunct Desert Inn Country Club. The Hamblins then moved back to Idaho and Don hooked up at Twin Falls muni, where he served as head pro until he left in 1987 to become a Rules Official for the PGA Tour and Assistant Tournament Director for both the Senior (now Champions) Tour and the Hogan Tour (now called the Nationwide Tour). Mike was the assistant pro under his Dad in the mid-‘80s, taking over as head pro in ’87 when his Don left. “We’ve seen a lot on this course over the years,” says Mike. In 1958, when the course expanded to 18 holes, the Idaho Open was held there for the first time, with Tony Lema taking the title, just before his great run on the PGA Tour in the early 1960s, culminating in his major win at the ’64 British Open. The course has hosted the Idaho several times, including the past G O L F GOLF I D A HO I D A H O three consecutive years, with current Nationwide Tour player Tyler Aldridge winning in 2006, Champions Tour player Scott Masingill winning in ’07, and Boise State men’s golf coach Kevin Burton winning in 2008. The course has probably the strongest junior program of any golf course in the history of Idaho. Here is a “who’s who” of some of the young players who have gone through the program. Babe Hiskey (voted by Jack Nicklaus as the best player ever to come out of Idaho), Jim Hiskey, Sonny Hiskey, Jeff Thomsen (Idaho, Montana and Arizona Open Champion, who went on to play the PGA Tour in 1970s), Tracy Frank (Idaho Open Champion and 2nd in National PGA Assistant Championship in 1980s), Mike Hamblin (Montana Open Champion and four time Idaho Open Champion), Virginia Undhjem (four time State Amateur Champion), Karen Darrington (six time State Amateur Champion), Mandi Hedberg, and Jennifer Hedberg. The Hiskey dynasty of young players grew up on the muni when it was a nine hole course. Their father Pete took care of the maintenance of the course, and his kids made the most of the free reign they had on the holes, dominating the junior scene for several years. And Jordan Hamblin, a senior at Twin Falls High School and the son of head pro Mike Hamblin, won the low amateur honors at this summer’s Idaho Open, held at Twin Falls, shooting a final round 6-under 62 at the par-68 muni. “We’re proud of what we’ve done here at the course,” says Mike. “The Hamblins have been helping to run this place for 32 years. And we feel like every golfer who comes here is part of our extended family.” Not bad. The PGA Tour’s Tony Lema won the first Idaho Open held at Twin Falls muni, in 1958, the first year the course had expanded to 18 holes. IDAHO GOLF A S S O C I A T I O N An official representative of the United States Golf Association (USGA) Establish your handicap and become a member today! BENEFITS INCLUDE: • An official USGA Handicap Index • Discounts and Rewards program for FREE GOLF • Subscriptions to Golf Idaho and Pacific Northwest Golfer • Eligibility to Participate in IGA Tournaments and more www.theiga.org • 208-342-4442 www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 45 FROM THE IG A 2009 Championship Series The 2009 tournament season for the Idaho Golf Association was a season to be remembered. The Championship Series began at the bottom of the Snake River Canyon near Twin Falls JIM DURKIN and concluded under brilliant IGA Executive Director blue skies of the Sun Valley. Familiar names received the trophies this year with great performances to win their respective events. The State championship attracted the most players in recent history due to an unsuccessful attempt to have district qualifiers to field the championship. The IGA introduced a new championship to accommodate the working class guy. The Men’s Mid-Am (25 years old and above) was a resounding success. All in all, the 2009 Championship Series was exciting and unpredictable. Men’s Four-Ball The 2009 Tournament season got underway at Canyon Springs Golf Course which is nestled in the Snake River Canyon. Idaho’s finest players teamed up to play the partners’ event outside of Twin Falls. Joe Malay and Joe Panzari leaped to the top of the leader board with the exemplary play of Panzari. Panzari set a tournament course record 64 on the opening Saturday round. The teams of Todd Points / Jon Crozier, Jesse Hibler / Jeff Poulsen and teen stand-outs Jon Vandyk / Jordan Hamblin were only one back going into the final round. The first-day leaders were unable to duplicate the success of the prior round and fell back. The consistent play of Eric Peterson / Marc Rhoades would propel them over the equally consistent Points / Crozier tandem to claim the championship. Match Play Invitational Idaho’s best players were invited to participate in the annual Match Play Tournament which returned to the Valley Club. The spring event is one that has to contend with the forces of nature. This year was no exception – the event underwent several lightning delays which made it difficult for the players to maintain momentum and rhythm. Paul Lodge would roll through the matches to win his second Match Play Championship in as many years. University of Montana student, Carissa Simmons found her swing and rolled through the final two matches 46 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER to claim her first IGA title. Jesse Hibler was able to stop the hard charging Chris Reinke who powered his way through the last three matches to get to the Final. Hibler, with the precision of a surgeon, birdied three of the first four holes to put Reinke in a catch-up role. Reinke was unable to make the birdie putts that would close the gap. Hibler posted his first IGA title having recently re-established his Amateur status after a run at the PGA Tour. Women’s State Amateur The Twin Falls Municipal Golf Course proved to be more challenging than anticipated. The winds blew continuously during the opening round and morning Sheils rain would soak the course on the third day making the course sloppy and slow. Boise native and Washington State University player Allison Travis cruised to a 36-hole lead with steady rounds of 71-73 only to face the wet conditions and the pressure of the final round. University of Nebraska student, and Boise native, Madeleine Sheils, who was an Idaho Junior Golf sensation, shot a final round 71 to run away from the field and claim the championship. Men’s State Amateur The 2009 Idaho State Amateur would field the largest number of contestants in its history. The reason for the size of the field was the failed attempt to conduct qualifiers for the tournament. In order to maintain the mantra this Executive Director chanted to advertise the qualifiers, I allowed as Reinke many as manageable to enroll in the Championship. Having said that, the golf was fantastic. Falcon Crest Golf Club in Kuna was set up for Championship golf and was not an easy test for the players, combining length with fast greens. Match Play Champion, Jesse Hibler was the first round leader with a 67. Day Two would bring out the best with 23 players at par or better, highlighted by rounds of 63 by Jimmy Burnett (of Challis), 64 by Brad Tensen (of Boise) and 65 by Chris Williams (of Moscow). But only a handful of players would break par on the final day. The steadiest hand would win the tournament with three rounds under par. Chris Reinke of Ashton rolled to a three stoke victory with steady rounds of 71-69-69. Chris went on a final round tear with four tap-in birdies in the middle of his round, including a near ace on the 155-yard 10th hole. Men’s Mid-Amateur The Idaho Golf Association introduced a new tournament designed for the working class guy. The Men’s Mid-Am has a minimum age limit of 25 years old. This inaugural event was played at the venerable Pinecrest Golf Course in Idaho Falls. The tournament was enjoyed by all and had a dramatic finish. Eastern Idaho’s finest players, Mark Dance, Nick Higham and Lee Read would go to a sudden death playoff to crown the first champion. Dance would tragically miss a kick-in for par to eliminate himself from the first playoff hole. Read got a funny bounce on his approach shot on the second playoff hole which left him putting from off the green. Nick needed only to pure in his six foot birdie to win the tournament. David Bishop won the Master-40 flight of the tournament. Higham Bishop Senior Championship The Senior Championship went to the beautiful and wooded McCall Golf Club to determine the best player. In the Men’s division there was no surprise when Paul Darrington Lodge held off Doug Potter (of Coeur d’Alene) and Bruce Cadwell (of Boise). Paul had a one-two punch season, winning the Match Play and the State Senior. In the Women’s division, Karen Darrington had to go to extra holes to defeat Idaho’s most decorated female amateur, Jean Smith, to win her second consecutive Senior Championship. Tournament of Champions The sun shown brightly in Sun Valley for the annual trip to the playground of the rich and famous. The IGA’s Champions and Club Champions played in the best of conditions for the second year in a row. The old veterans would rise to the top of the leader board. Marc Rhoades defeated Shawn Aicher in a playoff to claim his first IGA Championship. Jean Smith got to hoist the crystal after defeating Abby Black in a playoff. The PNGA Hall of Famer was touched to be back in the winner’s circle. Shawna Ianson and Tom Smith won the Senior divisions. The 2009 golfing season was a great year for golf. In the Women’s Four-Ball, Penny Jones and Denise Oliver were victorious at the Jackpot Golf Club. Jordan Skyles and Gabby Barker won the Junior Championship, played at the Riverside Golf Course in Pocatello. This year the IGA proudly hosted the PNGA Cup, held at the Crane Creek Country Club, and the British Columbia Golf Association ran away with the crystal. We all look forward to next season and more thrilling championships. Scenes from IGA’s 2009 season 2009 www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 47 Hip check – your swing begins at home Practicing the golf swing without a solid physical foundation truly is an exercise in futility “You see a lot of golfers out on the range practicing their swings when what they really need to do is hit the gym,” says Todd Bindner, PGA Professional at the Whitetail Club in McCall, Idaho. Todd Bindner PGA Professional Whitetail Club Bindner, a former tri-athlete, McCall, Idaho estimates three out of four golfers have some form of restriction in their hips that limits mobility during the backswing. “Internal hip rotation allows you to coil around your trail leg during the backswing, and post up on the lead leg during the downswing,” Bindner says. “Unfortunately, when a golfer has limited hip mobility, maintaining a stable lower body becomes extremely difficult during the golf swing.” The resulting swing typically produces one of two results, neither of which is desirable: Physical compensations are made which lead to swing faults such as loss of clubhead speed and poor ball-striking. Too much stress is placed on the lower back during the swing, which produces physical problems in the lower back. The best way to improve hip rotation is with a consistent exercise routine focused on dynamic stretching of the muscles around the hip and strengthening the muscles that help rotate the hip. Prior to starting a routine, Bindner emphasizes that a physical assessment to assess range of motion is vital. “There’s no need to stretch areas you are already flexible,” he says. A few steps to keep your game in step this winter With the majority of golfers experiencing some degree of inflexibility in the hips, Bindner recommends a series of exercises aimed at improving hip range of motion. Side Step Ups: Step up Stork Turns: Stand on one leg with your with your near leg, lift arms folded across the chest. Use the hip the outer leg and the hips muscles to rotate from side to side. to move the outer leg in front of your body. Holding a weight in your hands increases effectiveness. Hip Drops: Rotate knees side to side while maintaining tightness in the stomach and keeping your lower back flat on the ground. Hip Windshield Wipers: Keep your back flat on the ground. Elevate the knees and put your hands between them. Use the hip muscles to move your lower legs in and out. Hip Circles: Keep your lower back stable while rotating your leg in a circular motion. 2010 IGA Championship schedule The 2010 IGA Women’s State Amateur Championship will be held June 10-12 at the Headwaters Club at Teton Springs Resort in Victor, Idaho. 48 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER May 15-16Men’s Four-Ball Jefferson Hills GC, Rigby June 3-5Match PlayThe Valley Club, Sun Valley June 10-12 Women’s State AmHeadwaters Club, Victor July 16-18Men’s State Am Clear Lake CC, Buhl August 4-5 Carter Cup Jackpot GC, Jackpot, NV August 16-17 Junior State Championship Bryden Canyon GC & Lewiston CC, Lewiston August 12-13 Women’s Four-Ball Jackpot GC, Jackpot, NV August 28-29Men’s Mid-Am Jerome CC, Jerome Sept. 15-17Seniors’ State AmTBD Sept. 25-26Tournament of ChampionsSun Valley Resort, Sun Valley I D A HO Aldridge making another run at PGA Tour Nationwide stroke average dropped from 73.54 in 2008 to 71.16 in 2009. “I had learned what life was like on (the Nationwide) tour by playing the year before and that made everything a lot easier,” Aldridge said. “You know the courses, where to stay, and a lot of the guys knew who I was from the year before. You just feel a lot more comfortable with everything the second time around.” Aldridge is confident that same progression will take place if he gets another chance to compete on the PGA Tour. “I think I would have a lot more success,” he said. “I think I’d really start believing in myself like I used to.” Aldridge spent some time with PGA Tour star Boo Weekley at The Travelers event on the PGA Tour. Weekley related how he struggled during his first appearance on the big stage in 2005 before gaining more experience with a return to the Nationwide Tour. Weekley flourished upon his return to the PGA Tour in 2007 with a victory and 25th-place finish on the money list. He’s been a regular on PGA Tour leaderboards ever since. “He just took off, and I think that happens with a lot of guys,” Aldridge said. “If you look at the success rate of those playing on the PGA Tour for the first time, it’s not very high.” Aldridge is relatively happy with the mechanical side of his game, but wherever he plays in 2010 it will be with the support of a sports psychologist to help with the mental side. “When you’re playing well it’s on a twolane road, mental and physical,” said Aldridge. “The top players work just as hard on their minds as they do on their golf swings. Even Tiger has a sports psychologist.” When highly successful players have to work on their mental games to maintain focus and confidence, it’s doubly important for those aspiring to succeed on the PGA Tour. “I’m not saying I lost confidence in myself, but it’s hard not to have some doubts when the results aren’t coming,” Aldridge said. “I’m pretty decent on the physical side. If I get the mental side going, I’ll be OK.” ABOVE: After playing on the PGA Tour in 2009, Caldwell native Tyler Aldridge is back in the Final Stage of the tour’s Q-School, looking to regain his card for the 2010 season. LEFT: After spending the 2009 season on the Nationwide Tour, Boise State grad Troy Merritt has his eyes on the PGA Tour. First Tee to have presence on bases The First Tee of Idaho has been selected to receive a Department of Defense grant to serve kids on a regional military base. The chapter will be conducting their program at Mountain Home Air Force Base beginning in January of 2010 and will continue through the year. The First Tee’s core curriculum will be made available on the two bases to kids age 5-18, of military families, including children of Guardsmen and Reservists. “This is a great opportunity for us and for the kids,” said Cindy Venosdel, interim Executive Director of the Idaho chapter. “Imagine being a kid whose parent is on deployment for months at a time. The First Tee is another on-base option to demonstrate that there are adults who care, and activities that support positive youth development.” Visit www.thefirstteeidaho.org for more information. IGA Winter GetAway to Primm, Nevada The Idaho Golf Association invites its members on our annual Winter Getaway to Primm Valley Casino Resorts, held January 28-30. Entry fee of $350 (single) and $300 (per person, double) includes four nights lodging, three rounds of golf, cart rental, range balls, and prize fund. For more information call the IGA office at (208) 342-4442. Entries need to be received by January 18, 2010. CLICK HERE FOR AN ENTRY FORM Wood on board Chris Wood has joined the staff of Golf Idaho and Pacific Northwest Golfer. Chris has been covering Idaho golf as a newspaper and magazine writer since 1985. He currently resides in Boise with his wife, Brenda. For inquiries regarding editorial or advertising, contact Chris at 208.914.3080 or chris@pacificnorthwestgolfer.com. www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 49 I D A H O by Chris Wood Wherever Tyler Aldridge lands in 2010, the Caldwell, Idaho, native plans to continue on the path to becoming a successful player on the PGA Tour. “I want to be able to play at the top level, and that’s the PGA Tour,” said Aldridge, who progressed to the final stage of Q-School, being held Dec. 2-7 at Bear Lakes CC in West Palm Beach, Fla. “I want my PGA Tour card, but I’ll be happy with whatever happens.” Aldridge must finish in the top 25 of the 132-man field to return to the PGA Tour in 2010. Players finishing out of the top 25 will have varying degrees of playing status on the Nationwide Tour. Aldridge progressed through all three stages of Q-school last year, and got his card on the big tour. He didn’t find much success on the PGA Tour, however, with three cuts made in 17 events and a total of $24,370 in earnings. “I’d like another shot,” Aldridge said. If he gets that chance, Aldridge won’t be wide-eyed when competing against the best golfers in the world. He’ll be used to the perks and pressures of the PGA Tour. “They treat you pretty well out there, which is nice, but playing with the guys you watch on TV is definitely an eye-opener,” Aldridge said. “It’s hard not to have some doubts whether you belong out there.” Aldridge competed on the Nationwide Tour in 2008 and had struggles similar to his 2009 PGA Tour campaign, with six cuts made in 23 events. He mixed in some Nationwide events with his PGA Tour schedule in 2009, and was much improved with five cuts made in 11 events. His G O L F GOLF Golf WA S H I N G T O N Arms wide open A completed renovation at Riverbend brought a good year to a good course After being reduced to nine holes last fall to make way for some serious reconfiguration of the levee that separates the Green River from the course, Riverbend Golf Complex, the city-owned facility in Kent, Wash. re-opened its full 18 holes on April 1, 2009. And what has the response been from golfers? “Nothing but positive,” said Pete Petersen, superintendent of golf course operations. “The course is much more playable, and more of a challenge for the better players.” According to Petersen, after the remodel the course played about the same difficulty for the average player, but more difficult for the longer hitters. “We moved several bunkers further down the fairway,” he said. “Where the bunkers had been, we were punishing the shorter hitters because the big hitters could blow their drives right over them. Now they can’t do that.” Because of the remodel, the course basically lost 50 feet of real estate on several holes all along the riverfront, and on the front nine only the first hole was left untouched in the remodel. The Army Corps of Engineers did the hard labor, the county paid the bill, and Petersen himself did most of the re-design, along with original designer John Steidel. And, since they were knee-deep in it already, the course ponied up a few dollars and 50 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER upgraded several tee boxes on the back nine, then later added a new back tee on the 5th hole this summer. Any plans to tweak the course this winter? “We’ll re-seed and add topsoil along holes 4, 5 and 6 (that run along the river). That’s where most of the construction was happening and it was the last section of the course to grow in.” Riverbend continued to be one of the busiest courses in the state in ’09. Despite not opening until April, they’ll still come close to 60,000 rounds by the end of the year. There has been some concern about the Green River rising above flood stage this winter. The dam upriver has been weakened, and the Army has provided some temporary fixes to it. Also, all along the Green River Trail that runs several miles through the valley – and along much of the golf course – the Army has set up a barrier of sand bags as a precaution. “The sand bag wall stretches from Auburn to Tukwila,” said Petersen. A distance of more than 15 miles. “We’re actually in a good position compared to downtown (Kent),” said Petersen. “The reason for last year’s remodel was the Army shored up the levee that runs along the course. So right here is where it is the strongest.” Riverbend marked its 20th year in 2009. A good position, indeed. The Army Corps of Engineers has built a barrier of sandbags all along the Green River Trail that runs along the Riverbend Golf Complex. The trail is popular among joggers and bikers. AT A GLANCE Riverbend Golf Complex 2019 W. Meeker St. Kent, WA 98032 877.224.3250 www.riverbendgolfcomplex.com Pete Petersen Superintendent of Golf Operations Marti O’Neill PGA Head Professional Amenities • 18-hole championship course • 9-hole Par-3 course •Miniature Putt-Putt course • Covered driving range • Discount Golf Center •Firecreek Grill restaurant • Divot Café What’s New On April 1, 2009, Riverbend re-opened its full 18-hole course after the completion of a $1.25 million remodel that affected eight holes on the front nine. The remodel included new greens on three holes, new tees on eight holes and new bunkers on six holes. Opened in 1989, Riverbend just celebrated its 20th year in operation. Upcoming winter events • Winter Demo Day – December 12 • Winter Scramble – December 19 • Ball Buster – February 11, 2010 G O L F Meet Mrs. Maplewood enhance winter play – which it has done. The par-72 layout is 6,112 yards from the blue tees, 5,698 from the white and 5,155 from the red (forward) tees, but it plays longer because of several uphill holes and elevated greens. The array of ponds, bunkers (with excellent sand, Kelly Beymer has things running at full sail at Maplewood GC. even in the winter), creeks and tree-lined fairways make solid low round at Maplewood is a 71, just eight ball-striking a must. Over all, the course is a strokes off the course record of 63. relatively easy walk (after you make it up the After playing basketball and softball hill between the first and second tees!) and the at Highline High School and St. Martin’s ample greens are firm, fair and fast. College, she took up golf at age 26 “and All of this contributes to Maplewood’s loved it from day one.” She has nothing but ranking as one of the busiest courses in the praise for her mostly male counterparts. state and to having among the largest men’s “The golf business is very competitive, and women’s clubs in Washington. And just especially in this economy,” she said. last May, the course became only the 12th in “It’s great that we can all share ideas the state to be designated a Certified Audubon and concerns.” Cooperative Sanctuary. It’s also been voted the “Best Public Course” four years in a row in the South County Journal’s Readers Choice Awards COFFMAN ON BOARD competition. Larry Coffman has Adding to Maplewood’s attractiveness joined the staff of Golf is the 10,000-square-foot clubhouse with a Washington and Pacific banquet facility that can accommodate 200Northwest Golfer. Larry has been in the publishing plus guests, a restaurant popular with locals business for 46 (yes, 46) and a Cheers-like bar that’s cozy in the winter years, writing for the and opens onto a picturesque patio for spring Associated Press and the Seattle Times, and summer patrons. My favorite fare is the and publishing the trade Marketing Sunday brunch and Ironside manhattans. Newspaper since 1986. He resides in Kelly is 47, married and the mother of Kirkland, and plays a little golf. two. Despite all the personal and professional For advertising inquiries, contact Larry at 425.487.9111 or LCoffman@ demands, she still finds time to maintain a earthlink.net. seven handicap – from the blue (back) tees. Her www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | W A S H I N G T O N by Larry Coffman Kelly Beymer is an anomaly in Washington state golf circles: a female golf course manager in a world dominated by males. Kelly grew up in Burien and for the past 20 years has lived in Maple Valley, not far from the busy Maplewood Golf Course in Renton that she manages today. But like the course, her career has seen changes over the years since she began working in golf course operations at Lake Wilderness in 1990. She was promoted to manager in 1997 and moved on to manage another American Golf Corp. property, The Classic in Spanaway, from 2000 to 2002. She was hired by the City of Renton in 2002 to manage Maplewood, its municipal course, and recently was promoted to Parks and Golf Course Director. Renton Mayor Denis Law said, “Kelly has done an outstanding job of managing the operations at Maplewood. I continue to receive praise from avid golfers for the quality of our course, our driving range and the restaurant and banquet facilities.” Your reporter can attest to the accuracy of that statement, after more than a dozen enjoyable rounds there. For starters, Maplewood has the only range-ball dispenser located in a heated indoor space that I’m aware of in the state. It adjoins the 30-stall heated and covered driving range that also features an unusual driving surface, covered entirely in Astroturf. Maplewood opened in 1927 with 27 holes but lost nine when Highway 169 was widened from two to six lanes. Following the course’s acquisition by the City of Renton in 1985, there have been continual upgrades, with a focus on improving drainage and adding topdressing to 51 GOLF W A SHINGTON Mark your calendars for Golf Shows The par-4 1st hole at Wine Valley Golf Club in Walla Walla, Wash. Wine Valley to host two championships in 2010 Wine Valley Golf Club, which opened in the spring of 2009 just west of Walla Walla, has been selected as the site of the Northwest Open and the WSGA Mid-Amateur Championship. Designed by Northwest native Dan Hixson, the inland links-style layout features rolling fairways and large undulating greens. The Northwest Open is one of the oldest and most prestigious tournaments in the Northwest, with a list of past champions that includes Fred Couples, Bob Gilder, Don Bies and Rick Acton. The field will consist of 168 of the region’s top professionals and amateurs. The 54-hole tournament will be held August 23-25, 2010. The Northwest Open is one of six major championships conducted by the Section. Visit www.pnwpga.com for more information. The Washington State Golf Association has selected Wine Valley GC as the site of its inaugural Mid-Amateur Championship. Open to amateur players age 25 and older with an established WSGA GHIN handicap, the creation of the championship is in response to the need for more statewide amateur competitions. Visit www.thewsga.org or www.winevalleygolfclub.com for more information. Jarin Todd Todd signs with Fehr Jarin Todd of Woodinville, Wash. has signed an exclusive representation agreement with Fehr Sports Management. Todd was the Jack Nicklaus Award winner in both 2007 and 2008 which is presented to the NCAA Division II Player of the Year. His collegiate career at Sonoma State University included nine individual victories. He also led his team to a Division II National Championship at Loomis Trail Golf Course in Blaine, Wash. this past May. Todd recently turned pro. Fehr Sports Management is owned and operated by former PGA Tour player and Seattle native, Rick Fehr. Also in Fehr’s stable of players is University of Washington graduate and PGA Tour player, Troy Kelly, and Champions Tour player Loren Roberts, winner of last summer’s Boeing Classic, held at TPC Snoqualmie Ridge. 52 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER Why not look toward the spring already? Remember the dates for the region’s consumer golf shows. The Seattle Golf Show, February 12-14, 2010, at the Qwest Field Event Center. Visit www.seattlegolfshow.com or call 206.818.4653 for information. The Spokane Golf Show, February 20-21, 2010, at the Spokane Convention Center. Visit their website at www.spokanegolfshow.com or call 866.468.8200 for information. WSGA sets Winter Series schedule Each winter, the Washington State Golf Association conducts a series of tournaments to keep your game from getting too rusty. Entries are open to amateur golfers who are in good standing of a WSGA member club and have a USGA Handicap Index not exceeding 36.4 for men and 40.4 for women. Entry fee is $70 per player, per event; this includes greens fees, range balls, tee prizes, tournament prizes, and a merchandise payout. Entries open online at www. thewsga.org on December 7, 2009. Or call 800-643-6410 for more information. January 22, 2010 Bellevue Municipal Golf Course Bellevue, Washington Stableford Format February 19, 2010 Oakbrook Golf & Country Club Lakewood, Washington 2-Person Scramble March 26, 2010 The Cedars at Dungeness Sequim, Washington Individual Stroke Play April 9, 2010 Apple Tree Resort Yakima, Washington Two-Person Best-Ball Semiahmoo Resort G O L F First Tee to have presence on bases Wrigley wins fifth consecutive SAWGA trophy Some habits are good to have, and Beth Wrigley has found one she likes by winning an unprecedented fifth consecutive Spokane Area Women’s Golf Association (SAWGA) championship title. Wrigley carries a handicap index of 2.1 at her home course, Indian Canyon GC in Spokane. The season-ending championship is Spokane’s most prestigious women’s golf event. This year’s three day Beth Wrigley event fielded over 100 players and was held September 15-17 at Qualchan GC, Meadowwood GC and Fairways at West Terrace in the Spokane area. Founded in 1948, SAWGA consists of 13 ladies golf clubs throughout the Spokane area. Visit www.sawgagolf.com for information. • OntheHouseTM hotbreakfast Semiahmoo Resort among North America’s finest W A S H I N G T O N The First Tee of Snohomish County has been selected to receive a Department of Defense grant to serve kids on two regional military bases. The chapter will be conducting their program at Naval Station Everett and Naval Air Station Whidbey beginning in January of 2010 and will continue through the year. The First Tee’s core curriculum will be made available on the two bases to kids age 5-18, of military families, including children of Guardsmen and Reservists. “This is a great opportunity for us and for the kids,” said Jeff Cornish, CEO of the Snohomish County chapter. “Imagine being a kid whose parent is on deployment for months at a time. The First Tee is another on-base option to demonstrate that there are adults who care, and activities that support positive youth development.” “Parents, teachers and communities have embraced our mission after seeing first hand how the core values associated with the program help young people succeed,” said Joe Louis Barrow, Jr., CEO of The First Tee. “We expect to have a similar level of meaningful impact on the children of service members.” Fifty U.S.-based military installations begin offering the program this winter, with 50 more to begin in the spring. Visit www.firstteesnoco.com for information. Semiahmoo Resort has been named as one of the “Top 75 Golf Resorts in North America” by Golf Digest for 2009. Semiahmoo was the only Washington state resort listed in the rankings. Ranked No. 55 among the top resort golf complexes, the recognition spotlights the resort’s two golf courses – Semiahmoo Golf & Country Club and Loomis Trail Golf Club – its AAA Four Diamond hotel, and resort amenities including numerous restaurants and world-class spa. Over the years, the resort’s courses have consistently ranked among the best in the U.S., including Golf Digest’s “America’s 100 Greatest Public Courses.” The magazine cited Semiahmoo Golf & Country Club as the “Best New Course in America” in 1987. Golf the Northwest… stay at the Best! Ask about the great golf packages at each of our locations! • 24-hourindoorpool andhottub • FREEwireless hi-speedInternet • 24-hourexercise facility 1-800-HAMPTON Pictured: Hampton Inn Richland on the Columbia River Hampton Inn Richland 509.943.4400 486 Bradley Blvd. Richland, WA 99352 Hampton Inn Spokane 509.747.1100 2010 S. Assembly Rd. Spokane, WA 99224 Hampton Inn Kalispell 406.755.7900 1140 Hwy 2 West Kalispell, MT 59901 www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 53 GOLF W A SHINGTON New WSGA president Ben Grinspan gives his acceptance speech at the Annual Meeting on October 30th at Tacoma C&GC. Grinspan elected WSGA President The Washington State Golf Association has announced that Ben Grinspan has been elected its new president. The announcement was made October 31 at the WSGA Annual Meeting held at Tacoma Country & Golf Club. Grinspan has been a WSGA board member since 1992, serving as vice president of District 1, which encompasses the north end of the Puget Sound region and is the most populous of the five WSGA districts. He will serve a twoyear term as president. Grinspan grew up in South Seattle and got his start in golf at age seven, when his father woke him up one Sunday morning and asked him if he wanted to go to Sunday school or go golfing with him. His father took him to the short course at Jefferson Park, the municipal course in Seattle, where he would learn the game during long summer days when his mother would drop him off in the morning and pick him up in the afternoon. These beginnings at the public facility have molded much of Grinspan’s attitude toward the game. “I’m a big proponent of inclusivity,” he says. “Let people play.” His goals for his term as president are to grow the game by cultivating youth programs and by giving more attention to the casual golfer. Top rated in the Seattle Metro Area! 4 Golfers for the Price of 3! On Scenic Whidbey Island, WA Just minutes from Deception Pass State Park (360) 257-2178 / gallerygolfcourse.com Extend Your Golf Season for Several Months! FEATURES Perfect Drive Enclosures The 2009 WSGA Volunteers of the Year – husband and wife team of Jane Sossamon and Ron Nelson. 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(253) 981-6458 OR (206) 786-2436 DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER The Washington State Golf Association (WSGA) has selected Jane Sossamon and Ron Nelson as the 2009 recipients of the George Holland Award, given annually to those chosen as the association’s Volunteers of the Year. The award recognizes volunteers who have made extraordinary contributions to the association and to the game of golf. The husband and wife team are members of Fairwood G&CC in Renton, Wash. This year’s recognition came at the WSGA Annual Meeting, which was held October 30 at Tacoma Country & Golf Club. The award is named in honor of George Holland, a longtime volunteer, contributor and two-time past president of the WSGA. Past recipients include H.M. “Monty Montgomery and Ben Stodghill (2008), Jackie Belsvik and Gomer Evans (2007), Stanley Bishop and George Pennell (2006), Brooks Whittle (2005), Chuck King and George Egge (2004), and Dan Farmer and Lew Kisling (2003). News & Notes • The Royal and Ancient (R&A) Golf Club of St. Andrews selected Washington Husky senior golfer Nick Taylor as the third recipient of the Mark H. McCormack Medal, the award given to the top-ranked amateur golfer at the conclusion of the amateur season. • Tyler Jones has been named the new general manager at Palouse Ridge Golf Club, the new course in Pullman, Wash. that is owned by Washington State University and managed by Jones CourseCo, Inc. A 1992 WSU graduate in hotel and restaurant management, Jones returns to Pullman from Poppy Hills GC in Pebble Beach, Calif., where he served as general manager for the past five years. Jessica’s winning work of art. • Jessica Kent, age 14, of Bellevue, Wash. was selected as the winner of the KemperSports Kids Fore Kids Art Contest. As the winner, Jessica traveled to San Francisco with her family to attend The Presidents Cup at Harding Park Golf Course. Jessica’s winning art work was framed and autographed by both U.S. and International Presidents Cup teams, then auctioned to raise money for The First Tee programs. Jessica has been in the program at The First Tee of Greater Seattle since 2007. • Rui Li of Kent, Wash. has been named an HP Scholastic Junior All-American by the American Junior Golf Association. Li is a senior at Kentwood High School. • Erynne Lee of Silverdale, Wash., and Seo Hee Moon of Mukilteo, Wash., were named Rolex Junior All-Americans by the American Junior Golf Association. • Steve Sholdra, who is in the program of The First Tee of Greater Seattle, was among 50 selected nationally to attend the Future Leaders Forum, held in Orlando, Fla. in conjunction with the PGA Tour event in November. Ready to Quit? “Give us 10 days, we’ll give you back your life.” You’re smart. You know what you’re doing. Now be even smarter and call Schick. Schick Shadel Hospital providing the best medical treatment in the world for all forms of addiction. Located in Seattle, Washington. Call 1-800-CRAVING visit schickshadel.com www.thepnga.org | DECEMBER 2009 | 55 Back Nine 18-hole Championship “Scottish Style” Links Course Rated by Golf Digest! Tied for the highest rated golf course in Washington State! Receive 4 golfers for the price of 3 or $5 off green fees and carts. (Must present ad. Not valid for groups, twilight or with any other discount. Expires 12/31/10.) KENNEWICK, WA www.canyonlakesgolfcourse.com 509.582.3736 Juniper Golf Course has your perfect day Great golf…great views…and great food Call for your individual or Group Play arrangements Tee time specials available at www.junipergolf.com 800.600.3121 Redmond, Oregon 56 | DECEMBER 2009 | PACIFIC NORTHWEST GOLFER Like playing the ball down? Our course has some of the best year-round playing conditions in the Pacific Northwest. Our green fees aren’t bad either! NorthBellinghamGolf.com 360.398.8300 • 888.322.NBGC 205 W. Smith Road, Bellingham, WA 98226 Top 10 New courses in 2007 –GOLF Magazine Range Balls and Yardage Book Included With Regular Round of Golf www.bandoncrossings.com 541-347-3232 Bandon, Oregon: where land was made for golf • Sign up for our Gold Card • Our restaurant offers free wireless! • Visit us online for web specials www.mtsigolf.com 425-391-4926