Thursday, February 28, 2008

More Americans Are Giving Up Golf

HAUPPAUGE, N.Y. — The men gathered in a new golf clubhouse here a couple of weeks ago circled the problem from every angle, like caddies lining up a shot out of the rough.

“We have to change our mentality,” said Richard Rocchio, a public relations consultant.

“The problem is time,” offered Walter Hurney, a real estate developer. “There just isn’t enough time. Men won’t spend a whole day away from their family anymore.”

William A. Gatz, owner of the Long Island National Golf Club in Riverhead, said the problem was fundamental economics: too much supply, not enough demand.

The problem was not a game of golf. It was the game of golf itself.

Over the past decade, the leisure activity most closely associated with corporate success in America has been in a kind of recession.

The total number of people who play has declined or remained flat each year since 2000, dropping to about 26 million from 30 million, according to the National Golf Foundation and the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association.

More troubling to golf boosters, the number of people who play 25 times a year or more fell to 4.6 million in 2005 from 6.9 million in 2000, a loss of about a third.

The industry now counts its core players as those who golf eight or more times a year. That number, too, has fallen, but more slowly: to 15 million in 2006 from 17.7 million in 2000, according to the National Golf Foundation.

The five men who met here at the Wind Watch Golf Club a couple of weeks ago, golf aficionados all, wondered out loud about the reasons. Was it the economy? Changing family dynamics? A glut of golf courses? A surfeit of etiquette rules — like not letting people use their cellphones for the four hours it typically takes to play a round of 18 holes?

Or was it just the four hours?

Here on Long Island, where there are more than 100 private courses, golf course owners have tried various strategies: coupons and trial memberships, aggressive marketing for corporate and charity tournaments, and even some forays into the wedding business.

Over coffee with a representative of the National Golf Course Owners Association, the owners of four golf courses discussed forming an owners’ cooperative to market golf on Long Island and, perhaps, to purchase staples like golf carts and fertilizer more cheaply.

They strategized about marketing to women, who make up about 25 percent of golfers nationally; recruiting young players with a high school tournament; attracting families with special rates; realigning courses to 6-hole rounds, instead of 9 or 18; and seeking tax breaks, on the premise that golf courses, even private ones, provide publicly beneficial open space.

“When the ship is sinking, it’s time to get creative,” said Mr. Hurney, a principal owner of the Great Rock Golf Club in Wading River, which last summer erected a 4,000-square-foot tent for social events, including weddings, christenings and communions.

The disappearance of golfers over the past several years is part of a broader decline in outdoor activities — including tennis, swimming, hiking, biking and downhill skiing — according to a number of academic and recreation industry studies.

A 2006 study by the United States Tennis Association, which has battled the trend somewhat successfully with a forceful campaign to recruit young players, found that punishing hurricane seasons factored into the decline of play in the South, while the soaring popularity of electronic games and newer sports like skateboarding was diminishing the number of new tennis players everywhere.

Rodney B. Warnick, a professor of recreation studies and tourism at the University of Massachusetts, said that the aging population of the United States was probably a part of the problem, too, and that “there is a younger generation that is just not as active.”

But golf, a sport of long-term investors — both those who buy the expensive equipment and those who build the princely estates on which it is played — has always seemed to exist in a world above the fray of shifting demographics. Not anymore.

Jim Kass, the research director of the National Golf Foundation, an industry group, said the gradual but prolonged slump in golf has defied the adage, “Once a golfer, always a golfer.” About three million golfers quit playing each year, and slightly fewer than that have been picking it up. A two-year campaign by the foundation to bring new players into the game, he said, “hasn’t shown much in the way of results.”

“The man in the street will tell you that golf is booming because he sees Tiger Woods on TV,” Mr. Kass said. “But we track the reality. The reality is, while we haven’t exactly tanked, the numbers have been disappointing for some time.”

Surveys sponsored by the foundation have asked players what keeps them away. “The answer is usually economic,” Mr. Kass said. “No time. Two jobs. Real wages not going up. Pensions going away. Corporate cutbacks in country club memberships — all that doom and gloom stuff.”

In many parts of the country, high expectations for a golf bonanza paralleling baby boomer retirements led to what is now considered a vast overbuilding of golf courses.

Between 1990 and 2003, developers built more than 3,000 new golf courses in the United States, bringing the total to about 16,000. Several hundred have closed in the last few years, most of them in Arizona, Florida, Michigan and South Carolina, according to the foundation.

(Scores more courses are listed for sale on the Web site of the National Golf Course Owners Association, which lists, for example, a North Carolina property described as “two 18-hole championship courses, great mountain locations, profitable, $1.5 million revenues, Bermuda fairways, bent grass, nice clubhouses, one at $5.5 million, other at $2.5 million — possible some owner financing.”)

At the meeting here, there was a consensus that changing family dynamics have had a profound effect on the sport.

“Years ago, men thought nothing of spending the whole day playing golf — maybe Saturday and Sunday both,” said Mr. Rocchio, the public relations consultant, who is also the New York regional director of the National Golf Course Owners Association. “Today, he is driving his kids to their soccer games. Maybe he’s playing a round early in the morning. But he has to get back home in time for lunch.”

Mr. Hurney, the real estate developer, chimed in, “Which is why if we don’t repackage our facilities to a more family orientation, we’re dead.”

To help keep the Great Rock Golf Club afloat, owners erected their large climate-controlled tent near the 18th green last summer. It sat next to the restaurant, Blackwell’s, already operating there. By most accounts, it has been a boon to the club — though perhaps not a hole in one.

Residents of the surrounding neighborhood have complained about party noise, and last year more than 40 signed a petition asking the town of Riverhead to intervene. Town officials are reviewing whether the tent meets local zoning regulations, but have not issued any noise summonses. Mr. Hurney told them he had purchased a decibel meter and would try to hire quieter entertainment.

One neighbor, Dominique Mendez, whose home is about 600 feet from the 18th hole, said, “We bought our house here because we wanted to live in a quiet place, and we thought a golf course would be nice to see from the window. Instead, people have to turn up their air conditioners or wear earplugs at night because of the music thumping.”

During weddings, she said: “you can hear the D.J., ‘We’re gonna do the garter!’ It’s a little much.”

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Columbia Selected to Host the 2009 NCAA Golf East Regional

The NCAA Division I Men's Golf Committee has selected Columbia University to host the 2009 NCAA Division I East Regional at the Galloway National Golf Club in Galloway, N.J. on May 14-16th, 2009.

“We are extremely pleased to have the opportunity to host the Division I East Regional,” said Dr. M. Dianne Murphy, Columbia’s Director, Intercollegiate Athletics and Physical Education. “This is another step in our commitment to excellence for Columbia Athletics and the Columbia golf program. This will be an outstanding event.”

Galloway National Golf Club is a private, world-class, 18-hole championship golf course, designed by world-renowned architect Tom Fazio. The facility has played host to the Ivy League Championship in 2007, as well as many other prestigious events, including the U.S. Senior Amateur Qualifier in 2004 and the N.J. State Mid-Amateur Championship in 2001, 2002 and 2005.

A par 71, with new tees being added before the championship, the course will stretch over 7,000 yards.

"It is truly an honor to host the East Regional in 2009,” said Rich Mueller, Director of Golf/Head Men’s Golf Coach at Columbia University. “I know that teams fortunate enough to make it to this event are going to have their hands full with this golf course. This Fazio design is extremely difficult, tee to green, and I have every expectation that truly only the best teams in the region will advance to the final.”

In addition to the staff at Galloway National, this tournament will receive support from the Atlantic City Convention and Visitors Authority.

In preparation for hosting the NCAA Regional, Columbia University will also host a Preview Tournament, October 24-26, 2008 at Galloway. The tournament features a strong 18-team field that includes some nationally-ranked powerhouses. Competing in the Preview will be:

Coastal Carolina University
Columbia University
University of Denver
Eastern Kentucky University
University of Florida
Georgetown University
University of Hartford
Kennesaw State University
University of Louisiana, at Monroe
University of Louisville
University of Pennsylvania
Princeton University
University of Richmond
St. John’s University
San Jose State University
Texas Christian University
College of William & Mary
Western Illinois University

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Saint Andrew's Golf Club in N.Y. to Commemorate 120th Anniversary

On February 22, 1888, a Scottish sportsman named John Reid gathered several of his friends and took them to a pasture in Yonkers, N.Y., for what became the first official round of golf in the United States. Armed with a handful of clubs and balls imported from his homeland, Reid roughed out a three-hole course and made history.

Some 120 years later, Reid's legacy lives on at the Saint Andrew's Golf Club in Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y., America's oldest golf club. Following Reid's competition, his golfing converts were dubbed "The Apple Tree Gang" to memorialize the tree located at the apple orchard where they hung their coats and wicker decanters of whisky. Several months later, on November 14, 1888 during a meeting at Reid's home, Saint Andrew's Golf Club was founded.
American golf tips its cap to Saint Andrew's rich history for its many "firsts." The club hosted the first unofficial U.S. Amateur as well as the first "open" championship. Saint Andrew's was a founding member when the USGA was formed in December 1894 along with The Country Club, Brookline, Mass.; Chicago Golf Club in Wheaton, Ill.; Newport Golf Club in Newport, R.I.; and Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampton, N.Y.

In 1988 Saint Andrew hosted a gala to celebrate the first 100 years of golf in America. Many of the game's greats assembled to play the golf course, by then redesigned by Jack Nicklaus, who has since made many changes to the layout as the club continues to invest in improvements.
The legendary Bobby Jones once said of the club: "The finest thing the Saint Andrew's Golf Club did in starting the game of golf was . . . that they started it right, with the right traditions." Those traditions carry on today, 120 years later at a hallmark club where members take seriously their stewardship of the birthplace of golf in America. The facility continues to preserve important memorabilia and a priceless collection of early clubs and balls in the clubhouse museum.

PGA welcomes eight new members to Association's Board of Directors --Derek Sprague of Malone, N.Y. sworn in

Eight new members of The PGA of America's Board of Directors were sworn in Wednesday, Jan. 16, at The Association's 91st Annual Meeting at the Orange County Convention Center in Orlando, Fla.

Junior Bridgeman of Louisville, Ky., Ray Cutright of Macon, Ga., Rod Loesch of Easton, Conn., David Mocini of Harbor Springs, Mich., Derek Sprague of Malone, N.Y., Mike Thomas of Goshen, Ky., and Roger Wallace of Polston, Mont., will each serve three-year terms. Tour professional Brad Faxon of Barrington, R.I., a two-time Ryder Cup Team member, was appointed Player Director.

The PGA Board of Directors is composed of the Association's President, Vice President, Secretary, Honorary President and 17 Directors. The Directors include representatives from each of The PGA's 14 Districts, two Independent Directors and a member of the PGA Tour. New District Directors are elected by their local PGA Sections.

Junior Bridgeman, 54, a former University of Louisville and NBA standout, is one of the most respected restaurant entrepreneurs in the country. After retiring from a 10-year NBA career with the Milwaukee Bucks and Los Angeles Clippers, Bridgeman established himself in the business world.

He is the chief executive officer of Bridgeman Foods Inc., which he founded in 1988, and is the owner and president of Manna Inc., and oversees the administration and operation of 160 Wendy's restaurants in five states and 103 Chili's restaurants in seven states. He is a 1975 graduate in psychology from the University of Louisville.

Bridgeman succeeds Lt. Gen. Norm Lezy of Garden Ridge, Texas, as an independent director.

Ray Cutright, who succeeds Tony Austin of Orlando, Fla., as District 13 Director for the Georgia, North Florida and South Florida Sections, was elected to membership in 1976 and earned PGA Master Professional status in 1991. Since 1993, he has served as PGA director of golf operations at Idle Hour Golf Club in Macon, Ga.

Cutright, 56, has served as a member of the PGA Board of Control from 2000 to 2004, and was an original staff member of the PGA Professional Golf Management Program. He served as president of the Georgia PGA Section from 1996-97; and spent six years as Education Chairman in the Section.

Cutright was the 2003 national Horton Smith Award winner, and the 1992 and 1997 Georgia PGA Golf Professional of the Year. He was honored by Golf Digest in 2000, '03 and '04 as one of the Best Teachers in the state of Georgia.

Rod Loesch, a PGA member since 1981, has served since 1984 as the PGA head professional at Connecticut Golf Club in Easton, Conn. He succeeds Ted O'Rourke of Convent Station, N.J., as District 2 Director for the New Jersey, Philadelphia and Metropolitan PGA Sections.

Loesch, 53, is a 1976 graduate of Ohio State University, where he competed on the Buckeyes' golf team. He competed in the 1982 PGA Championship and competed in four PGA Professional National Championships.

Since 1993, he has been a member of the Metropolitan PGA Section Board of Directors; and served as Section president from 1999-2002. Loesch was a PGA District 2 Director in 2001; and served as a PGA Board of Control member from 2002 to 2006; a member of the 2006 PGA Code of Ethics and Assistant Professional Task Forces; and serves as a co-chairperson of the PGA Membership Committee.

David Mocini, a PGA member since 1987, has been a general manager and PGA director of golf since 2004 at True North Golf Club in Harbor Springs, Mich. He is a 1977 graduate of Hillsdale (Mich.) College and is an original faculty member of the PGA Professional Golf Management Program and a three-time Section Horton Smith Award winner. Mocini, 52, served for more than 12 years on the Michigan PGA Board of Directors and was Growth of the Game Chairman. He is a past president of the Section, a member of the PGA Education Committee (2001-04); and served from 2004 to 2005 as a member of the President's Council.

Mocini will succeed Joe Flogge of Norton, Ohio, as District 5 Director for the Michigan, Northern Ohio and Southern Ohio PGA Sections.

Derek Sprague, 40, has served since 1989 as the general manager and PGA head professional at Malone (N.Y.) Golf Club. A graduate of James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Va., Sprague was elected to PGA membership in 1993, and has served since 1995 on the Northeastern New York PGA Board of Directors, including as Section president from 2003 to 2004. He is a two-time Section Merchandiser of the Year award winner; a three-time Section Bill Strausbaugh Award winner and was the 2005 Section Golf Professional of the Year.

In 2006, Sprague achieved Certified PGA Professional status in General Management. He will succeed Donnie Lyons as District 1 Director for the Connecticut, New England and Northeastern New York PGA Sections.

Mike Thomas, 48, a PGA Master Professional, has served the past 18 years as the PGA head professional at Harmony Landing Country Club in Goshen, Ky., and will succeed Zack Veasey of Durham, N.C., as District 10 Director for the Carolinas, Kentucky and Middle Atlantic PGA Sections.

Elected to PGA membership in 1985, Thomas has served since 1993 on the Kentucky PGA Board of Directors and was Section president from 2002 to 2003. He was the 1997 Section Golf Professional of the Year and the 1999 Section Horton Smith Award winner.

Thomas serves on the National Disabled Golfer Committee and is co-chair with fellow PGA Board member Derek Sprague on the Affinity Affiliate Committee.

Thomas has been the chair of the Section's Communications and Education Committees; and was co-chair of the Tournament Committee. From 2000 to 2005, Thomas was a member of the Kentucky Golf Association-PGA board of directors.

Roger Wallace, 47, is PGA director of golf at Polson Bay Golf Course in Polson, Mont. A graduate of Eastern Washington University, Wallace competed on the golf team and was the Pacific Northwest Golf Coaches Association Division II Player of the Year.

Wallace was elected to PGA membership in 1987, and was a member of the Pacific Northwest PGA Board of Directors from 1990 through 2002, and served as Section president from 1998 to 2000. Since 2005, Wallace has served on the Western Montana Chapter PGA Board of Directors.

He is a two-time Pacific Northwest PGA Golf Professional of the Year and a two-time Section Bill Strausbaugh Award winner. He is a member of the PGA Employment Committee, and from 1999 to 2001 served on the PGA Awards Committee. Wallace will succeed Kevin Lewis of Green Valley, Ariz., as District 14 Director for the Pacific Northwest and Southwest PGA Sections.

Brad Faxon, 46, who succeeded Joe Ogilvie as Player Director, has been a member of the PGA Tour since 1983. He competed on the 1995 and 1997 U.S. Ryder Cup Teams, and is the winner of eight Tour titles between 1991 and 2005, and 11 other career victories including the 1993 Heineken Australian Open. Since 1991, he has teamed with Tour professional Billy Andrade for the Billy Andrade/Brad Faxon Charities for Children Inc., which has donated more than $7 million to youngsters in the Rhode Island and southeastern Massachusetts. The organization received the 1999 Golf Writers Association of America's Charlie Bartlett Award for unselfish contributions by playing professionals to society.

Faxon and Andrade also host the CVS Charity Classic, which has raised more than $10 million for charity, and is serving his third term on the PGA Tour Policy Board. Faxon was the recipient of the 2005 Payne Stewart Award for his respect for the traditions of the game, his commitment to uphold the game's heritage for charitable support and his professional presentation of himself and the sport.

Since 1916, The PGA of America's mission has been twofold; to establish and elevate the standards of the profession and to grow interest and participation in the game of golf. By establishing and elevating the standards of the golf profession through world-class education, career services, marketing and research programs, the Association enables PGA Professionals to maximize their performance in their respective career paths and showcases them as experts in the game and in the $195 billion golf industry.

By creating and delivering dramatic world-class championships and exciting and enjoyable golf promotions that are viewed as the best of their class in the golf industry, The PGA of America elevates the public's interest in the game, the desire to play more golf, and ensures accessibility to the game for everyone, everywhere. The PGA of America brand represents the very best in golf.

Nicklaus/PGA teaching grants awarded to 18 chapters of The First Tee --Metro NY Chapters are Recipients

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. -- The PGA Foundation, in conjunction with golf legend Jack Nicklaus, has begun the 2008 golf season awarding teaching grants totaling $90,000 to 18 chapters of The First Tee representing 14 states.

To date, 155 of the 206 active chapters of The First Tee nationwide have been recipients of either a PGA of America or Nicklaus/PGA teaching grant. The combined PGA and Nicklaus/PGA grants total $1,810,000.

Since 2001, The PGA of America and Nicklaus have partnered to create a $2 million endowment to provide teaching grants to certified chapters of The First Tee that utilize PGA Professionals for instruction.

"The PGA of America is proud to kick off this New Year with our partner Jack Nicklaus to extend Nicklaus/PGA Teaching Grants coast to coast," said PGA of America President Brian Whitcomb. "The wonderful messages and reports we receive are that these grants continue to produce success stories in communities. The First Tee momentum has helped grow the game of golf and brought many young people into the game."

The program continues to highlight The PGA of America's commitment to partner with its PGA Professionals to grow participation in golf.

The current Nicklaus/PGA teaching grants totaling $5,000 each have been awarded to The First Tee Chapters in California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Louisiana, Maryland, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina, Texas and Washington.

Since its inception in 1997, there are 206 chapters of The First Tee in operation and 264 golf-learning facilities that have introduced the game of golf and its values to more than 2.2 million participants and students (which include the students of the National School Program). The focus is to give young people of all backgrounds an opportunity to develop, through golf and character education, life-enhancing values such as honesty, integrity and sportsmanship.

The PGA Growth of the Game Program is one of a number of initiatives administered by The PGA of America through its PGA Foundation

The PGA Foundation, a 501(c)(3) non-profit charity, is dedicated to enhancing lives through the game of golf. The Foundation provides people of every ability, race, gender, and social and economic background an opportunity to experience the game and learn vital life lessons. The PGA Foundation achieves its mission through programs which provide instruction and access to playing the game of golf along with enriching those lives by providing educational, employment and scholarship opportunities.

For more information about the PGA Foundation, visit www.pgafoundation.org, or call (561) 624-7612.

Nicklaus/PGA of America Teaching Grant - $5,000 awarded to each chapter
The First Tee of Greater Trenton - Hamilton, N.J.
The First Tee of The Tri-Valley - Pleasanton, Calif.
The First Tee of Myrtle Beach - Myrtle Beach, S.C.
The First Tee of Columbia Basin - Pasco, Wash.
The First Tee of New Orleans - New Orleans, La.
The First Tee of Albany - Albany, Ga.
The First Tee of Clearwater - Clearwater, Fla.
The First Tee of Modesto - Modesto, Calif.
The First Tee of Metropolitan NY/Essex County - Newark, N.J.
The First Tee of Northern Nevada - Reno, Nev.
The First Tee of Eagle County - Edwards, Colo.
The First Tee of Idaho - Boise, Idaho
The First Tee of the Lake Norman Region - Cornelius, N.C.
The First Tee of Central Louisiana - Pineville, La.
The First Tee of Harford County, Md. - Aberdeen, Md.
The First Tee of Metropolitan NY/Nassau County - East Meadow, N.Y.
The First Tee of Metropolitan NY/Golf Club at Chelsea Piers - New York, N.Y.
The First Tee of Brazoria County - Lake Jackson, Texas

Since 1916, The PGA of America's mission has been twofold: to establish and elevate the standards of the profession and to grow interest and participation in the game of golf.

By establishing and elevating the standards of the golf profession through world-class education, career services, marketing and research programs, the Association enables PGA Professionals to maximize their performance in their respective career paths and showcases them as experts in the game and in the $195 billion golf industry.

By creating and delivering dramatic world-class championships and exciting and enjoyable golf promotions that are viewed as the best of their class in the golf industry, The PGA of America elevates the public's interest in the game, the desire to play more golf, and ensures accessibility to the game for everyone, everywhere.

The PGA of America brand represents the very best in golf.

New Yorker Brown ties record to claim PGA Stroke Play Championship

Mark Brown of Oyster Bay, N.Y., completed a wire-to-wire performance with a closing 2-under-par 70, his highest score of the week, to win the 55th annual TaylorMade-adidas Golf PGA Stroke Play Championship, Jan. 31, on the Wanamaker Course at The PGA Golf Club in Port St. Lucie, Fla.

The PGA head professional at Tam O'Shanter Golf Club in Brookville, N.Y., Brown equaled the scoring record for the nine years the PGA Stroke Play Championship has been played at The PGA Golf Club. The mark of 16-under-par 272 was first set two years ago by Bob Sowards of Dublin, Ohio.

Brown finished with a two-stroke margin over Tim Weinhart of Duluth, Ga., who birdied the last hole for a 67-274. It was the second day in a row that Weinhart, a PGA teaching professional at St. Marlo Country Club, had shot the lowest score of the day. He moved into contention with a 65 in the third round. Weinhart trailed Brown by eight after the first 36 holes.

Brown, Weinhart and Jeff Sorenson of Blaine, Minn., the third member of the final pairing, collectively agreed that when Brown salvaged his par-5 at the 16th hole, the championship was over.

After hitting a cut into the water at 16 in the third round, Brown may have over-corrected in the final round, pushing his tee shot into the right rough. His 4-iron second shot hit an overhanging branch and dropped well short of the green. He followed with a gap wedge to within three feet and two-putted.

"I thought I might have a chance for an eagle and pick up three strokes," said Weinhart, who reached the green in two. "Then, he stiffed it," added Sorenson, "I'm looking at eagle and he's looking at a six, but that was a great shot he hit there." Sorenson finished third at 69-276.

"I was pretty sure I would win after the 16th, especially after I got my tee shot on the green at the 17th," said Brown.

After starting with bogey from a bunker at the par-5 first hole, Brown birdied the seventh, ninth and 11th holes, then parred in. Over 72 holes, he had 19 birdies and three bogeys. "I never three-putted and that's unusual for me," he said. Brown opened with 66 on the Ryder Course and shot a pair of 68s the middle two days on the Wanamaker.

Brown, who was runner-up in the 2000 and 2001 PGA Professional National Championships, called his win one of his biggest ever. "When you consider the level of competition, it's pretty exciting," he said. Brown's only Metropolitan PGA Section victory last year was in the Treiber Memorial, the final event of the year.

He also won the last Srixon PGA Tournament Series event of the season on Dec. 14. Weinhart and Sorenson were also Srixon winners late in 2007.

Brown earned $5,000 from a $74,630 purse. Weinhart received $3,500 and Sorenson $2,800.

TaylorMade-adidas Golf PGA Stroke Play Championship
The PGA Golf Club, Port St. Lucie, Fla., Wanamaker Course (Par-72, 7,020 yards)

Player, Hometown Money Score
Mark Brown, Oyster Bay, N.Y. $5,000 66-68-68-70--272
Tim Weinhart, Duluth, Ga. $3,500 71-71-65-67--274
Jeff Sorenson, Blaine, Minn. $2,800 67-68-72-69--276
Frank Bensel, Greenwich, Conn. $2,400 71-69-68-69--277
Frank Esposito, Monroe, N.J. $2,175 69-72-69-68--278
Bob Rittberger, Garden City, N.Y. $2,175 67-71-70-70--278
Danny Balin, Rockville, Md. $1,975 72-70-69-68--279
Steve Schneiter, Sandy, Utah $1,750 73-67-74-68--282
Don Berry, Brooklyn Park, Minn. $1,750 69-71-73-69--282
Chad Kurmel, Margate, Fla. $1,750 73-69-70-70--282
Sonny Skinner, Sylvester, Ga. $1,550 72-70-72-69--283
Mark Faulkner, Marion, Ill. $1,318.75 73-72-71-69--285
Curt Sanders, Wilmington, N.C. $1,318.75 75-68-71-71--285
J.C. Anderson, Quincy, Ill. $1,318.75 68-75-71-71--285
Ed Sabo, Tequesta, Fla. $1,318.75 72-68-71-74--285
Dennis Colligan, Cazenovia, N.Y. $1,125 72-74-73-67--286
Gary Robison, Canton, Ohio $1,125 69-73-72-72--286
Micah Rudosky, Cortez, Colo. $1,025 75-71-70-71--287
Eric Manning, Utica, N.Y. $1,025 73-71-70-73--287
Brett Melton, Washington, Ind. $940 73-68-78-69--288
Michael Tucker, St. Louis, Mo. $940 72-70-74-72--288
Charles Meola, Mamaroneck, N.Y. $940 72-72-71-73--288
Colin Amaral, Danbury, Conn. $940 70-73-71-74--288
Darrell Kestner, Glen Cove, N.Y. $940 69-68-74-77--288

Classic Courses: Shinnecock Hills Golf Club

© L.C. Lambrecht

Southampton, New York

When the U.S. Golf Association was deciding where to take the organization’s Really Big Show, the 1995 Centennial U.S. Open, they had their pick of most of this country’s top courses.

The requirements were obvious: a club of historic significance; a course able to withstand the abilities of the modern golfer and at the same time one with sublime elegance and character; a layout with just the right amounts of fairness, challenge and open space for corporate tents and media relations; finally, a course with undulating terrain, impassable rough, narrow fairways, slick putting surfaces and the potential for lots of wind. That’s exactly what the governing body received when it accepted the invitation of Shinnecock Hills Golf Club.

This Long Island club was one of five that sent representatives to the meeting in New York City in December 1894 that led to the founding of what became the USGA. To this day, it honors golf with its pure and simple approach to the game.

There have been several courses in Shinnecock’s history. The first was a 12-holer. It opened late in 1891 and the architect often credited with the work was Willie Dunn, although records suggest that it really was Willie Davis.

In 1929 the Philadelphia-based architectural firm of Toomey and Flynn was asked to design a new course for the club. Before Shinnecock signed off on William Flynn’s design it had the British expert C.H. Alison review and comment on the proposal. He concluded: “We are entirely satisfied that Bill Flynn’s plans are as good as can be made on this site and that the proposed course will prove to be of the first order.”

Flynn’s holes he designed are the ones played today with very few minor changes over the past 66 years. The course has a ruggedly refined, natural look and feel to it, and the holes just flow together, one undulation after another after yet another. To the uninitiated, the fairways at Shinnecock Hills appear to be generously wide, but with the wind, the actual playable width of many is less than half of what they appear to be.

The course is made up of marvelous mix of holes: the par 3s range from the 158-yard 11th to the 226-yard 2nd. The 11th, “Hill Head,” requires a lofted shot—usually downwind—to the smallest green on the course.

There are only two three-shot holes, the rather short but narrow 5th hole and the famous 16th, with the tee box that points you to heaven. For the first and only time during the round the straight-on view is one of the entire north side of the clubhouse as well as a side view of the spectacular 9th green area.

It’s interesting that nowhere in its terrific layout does Shinnecock Hills have what you would consider a really short par 4. What it does have, however, is a stable of 12 really fine two-shotters. “Thom’s Elbow,” the 444-yard 14th hole, is a perfect example. As you look down the narrow fairway toward the green, it appears as if you are looking in the wrong end of a telescope. The fairway starts out 30 yards wide and is guarded on both sides by Shinnecock brambles, scrub pines and bunkers in all the right spots. But as you approach the green the fairway narrows.

The one feature that defines Shinnecock Hills more than any other is its simplicity. Unfortunately, simplicity, like its kid sisters, beauty and grace, is a very difficult concept to adequately describe in words; they somehow seem to get right smack dab in the way. But one round at Shinnecock Hills explains it perfectly.