2022 Golfweek Awards: Best Male Player of the Year

2022 Golfweek Awards: Best Male Player of the Year

2022 Golfweek Awards: Best Male Player of the Year

Men’s professional golf in 2022 was dominated by the back-and-forth battle between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf.

One of the most outspoken players, Rory McIlroy managed to put together a year to remember by claiming both the PGA Tour and DP World Tour’s season-long titles. Two rising stars in the game, Scottie Scheffler and Cameron Smith, each won their first major championship in 2022. Scheffler led the Tour in wins with four (all in an eight-week period) and set a record for prize money. Smith won the Tour’s flagship event, then took his talents to the LIV where he continued a successful five-win season worldwide.

So, of the three noteworthy season, who stood out the most?

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PGA Tour golfers can skip one 'elevated' event; Rory McIlroy to do so at 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions

PGA Tour golfers can skip one 'elevated' event; Rory McIlroy to do so at 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions

PGA Tour golfers can skip one 'elevated' event; Rory McIlroy to do so at 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions

It’s almost 2023, which means it’s almost time for tournament winners—plus non-winners who made the Tour Championship—to tee it up in Kapalua at the Sentry Tournament of Champions.

But as the 5 p.m. deadline for Tour members to enter came and went Friday, one name not on the entry list belongs to Rory McIlroy.

But it’s all good.

PGA Tour members are allowed to opt out of one of the 13 elevated events, and this just happens to the one the reigning FedEx Cup champion wants to skip.

McIlroy qualified by winning the 2022 RBC Canadian Open. His lone appearance in the Sentry came in 2019 when he tied for fourth.

McIlroy didn’t play his first event of the 2022 calendar year until the Genesis Invitational in mid-February.

As of 5:02 p.m. on Friday, the PGA Tour has 39 names listed in the field for the Sentry.

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Ghost tree at Bandon Dunes' Old Macdonald course stabilized with cables after recent storm

Ghost tree at Bandon Dunes' Old Macdonald course stabilized with cables after recent storm

Ghost tree at Bandon Dunes' Old Macdonald course stabilized with cables after recent storm

Trees are synonymous with the game of golf, and there are quite a few popular ones that stand out.

The cedar in the center of Pebble Beach’s 18th fairway. The tall pines at Augusta National. The Lone Fir at Chambers Bay.

There’s also the ghost tree at Bandon Dunes’ Old Macdonald course. If you’ve been to Bandon Dunes, you can see the tree from pretty much anywhere on the Old Macdonald course, but even if you haven’t seen it in person, it’s one you have likely heard of.

The Port Orford Cedar situated on the third hole sustained damage in a recent storm, causing it to lean. Storms brought wind gusts of 70 miles per hour.

On Friday, Bandon Dunes provided another update.

The club added cables to help support the tree and it continuing to monitor it.

The ghost tree is so popular, it has memorabilia in Bandon Dunes’ pro shop, where you can buy hats, shirts and more sporting the iconic figure.

Here’s to hoping the tree is able to make a full recovery.

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Lynch: 2022 was a year of conflict in golf. Don't expect a ceasefire in '23

Lynch: 2022 was a year of conflict in golf. Don't expect a ceasefire in '23

Lynch: 2022 was a year of conflict in golf. Don't expect a ceasefire in '23

Nadine Gordimer, the South African Nobel laureate, wrote that time is change, that we measure its passage by how much things around us alter. By that standard, 2022 in golf felt like many more than a dozen flips of the calendar. What was the status quo just 12 months ago seems now about as current as sepia-toned photos of Old Tom Morris, an era often spoken of yet irretrievably lost.

Back then, the PGA Tour was governed with an eye toward mollifying the many rather than favoring the few who drive business. LIV Golf existed more in rumor than in reality. Phil Mickelson’s reputation was, if not pristine, then at least largely intact. Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka were subjects of febrile focus among fans. Greg Norman was more infamous for the majors he choked than for the sentiments he voiced. Were it not for Pat Perez still being an overpaid vulgarian, it might seem as though only Patrick Reed remains unchanged from what he was a year ago.

None of which assumes that ’23 portends change that is equally chaotic and rapid. But change there will be.

Start with the PGA Tour. Its fixation on securing the loyalty of star players—leveraging cash, calendar and cards to that end—risks provoking an uprising by resentful members below deck, men who draw no eyeballs but who have nonetheless grown accustomed to being well-compensated for mediocrity. Bridging the chasm between what elite players are demanding and what the rest of his membership will concede is an onerous challenge for Jay Monahan, made no easier by the disquiet among some sponsors who are now underwriting events unlikely to attract many stars.

With hostile fire incoming on every flank, it seems inevitable that Monahan will face calls to surrender his position from some aggrieved constituency. The most powerful voices on the Tour’s board remain firmly in his corner, but much will depend on his ability to build alliances, a skill not historically valued in the autocratic world of PGA Tour commissioners.

For all of those looming challenges, Monahan begins ’23 on firmer footing than his opposite number, Greg Norman, at least in the eyes of those who don’t interpret social media posturing and bot-bluster as metrics of success. LIV has lost its novelty value and must soon show what can sustain it, beyond Norman’s seemingly inexhaustible animus. Players have, for the most part, chosen sides. Eventually the courts will choose too. But LIV doesn’t have the luxury of time to wait for the wheels of justice to turn, even if they were to land in its favor. Which is why 2023 will see a growing stench of desperation emanating from the upstart league.

Nothing is more crucial to LIV than a broadcast deal that would place its product before more consumers, regardless of the fact that any new platform will have less reach than YouTube, where its audiences quickly stagnated. In September, Golfweek reported that LIV was nearing a deal in which it would pay Fox Sports to air its tournaments, a move embarrassingly far short of conventional agreements that see leagues paid by broadcasters. Stung by the resulting criticism and mockery, Fox passed. LIV is now reduced to discussing a similar deal with The CW, which currently offers its affiliate stations no network-supplied sports.

Playing schedules for ’23 will reflect the prevailing dynamics within and between the rival tours. Next week, the PGA Tour stages the first of 13 “elevated” events that guarantee the participation of needle-moving stars, and will eventually unveil a fall timeline that includes tournaments through which journeymen may secure status for ’24, a return of Q-School and a closer union with the DP World Tour. On the LIV side, despite all the bombast about growing the game globally, its schedule heavily favors time zones it hopes will appeal to a U.S.-based television network.

Many themes that emerged in ’22 will continue into the coming year: LIV players caterwauling that the Official World Golf Ranking is conspiring against them by not awarding points to which they’re not entitled; Norman’s insistence that fans would embrace his product if not for biased critics bringing up things like 9/11 and the odd dismemberment by his employer, as if they themselves had never made a “mistake”; the explicit politicization of LIV as it welded itself to Donald Trump’s cult, turning tournaments held on his courses into de facto political rallies at which Saudi government officials donned MAGA hats; legal scuffling, both at the center with antitrust litigation but also on the lunatic fringe; and, of course, greed, the motif that has now come to define this game and its competitors, regardless of the tour on which they compete.

These are boom times for disbarred lawyers, bots and bullshitters. With a little luck, fans will be rewarded for their forbearance with dramatic, history-making moments that distract, if only momentarily, from the noise.

For all of the developments witnessed in ’22, one thing remains unchanged. I concluded my final Golfweek column of ’21 with an observation that remains my view as we careen into ’23: “If nothing else, the Saudis are offering a reminder that the values on which golf prides itself—integrity, honor, respectability—are not immutable, but must be defended against charlatans and chiselers, some of whom are card-carrying members of the PGA Tour.”

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/5JNgYkO
The top 20 amateur golf moments from 2022: Conner Willett's emotional win at Massachusetts Amateur is No. 1

The top 20 amateur golf moments from 2022: Conner Willett's emotional win at Massachusetts Amateur is No. 1

The top 20 amateur golf moments from 2022: Conner Willett's emotional win at Massachusetts Amateur is No. 1

From national championships, course records, outstanding performances and improbable shots, there was no shortage of memorable moments in 2022.

A pair of freshmen won NCAA individual championships, a rising star captured the inaugural Elite Amateur Series Cup and a battle-tested veteran won his first USGA championship.

The top-ranked female amateur in the world set a course record at famed Pebble Beach, an 18-year-old turned in an unforgettable performance at Seminole, the Curtis Cup was successfully defended at Merion and the inaugural U.S. Adaptive Open produced two inspiring champions at Pinehurst.

There were also moments that changed lives, moved us to tears and delivered countless memories as only golf can. Such was the case at the 114th playing of the Massachusetts Amateur at Concord Country Club in suburban Boston which produced an emotional story that was equally tragic, triumphant and remarkable.

Five days after the unexpected death of his father, Rick, Conner Willett, a 19-year-old from Wellesley, Massachusetts, delivered one of the most inspiring and emotional moments of the year by winning the Bay State’s most coveted championship.

After Willett rolled in the clinching birdie putt on the 16th hole to win one of the longest-running amateur championships in the United States, the tears that flowed from a large gallery of family and friends were filled with joy and sorrow, the long embraces were both congratulatory and consoling.

“It was one of the more emotional things I’ve ever seen on a golf course,” said Ethan Whitney, Willett’s close friend who served as his caddie in the championship match. “It’s amazing how great people can be.”

As golf oftentimes offers a brief escape from the challenges of everyday day life, Willett dealt with heartbreak the only way he knew how: by playing with passion and joy, just as his father had taught him from the time he first put a plastic club in his hands as a little boy.

“That was the best day of my life,” said Willett, who played 138 holes over five days to win the Arthur G. Lockwood trophy. “That was by far the happiest I’ve ever been.”

To see the full list, click here for that and more from our friends at AmateurGolf.com.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/5JNgYkO
Surprise? Here are some things Tiger Woods hasn't done in golf

Surprise? Here are some things Tiger Woods hasn't done in golf

Surprise? Here are some things Tiger Woods hasn't done in golf

Most wins in PGA Tour history? That’d be 82, and Tiger Woods is tied with Sam Snead atop that list.

Most money? That’s also a mark held by Mr. Woods, as he has won nearly $121 million in on-course earnings since turning pro.

Majors? Woods has 15, three shy of the all-time mark held by Jack Nicklaus. He may never catch him, but Tiger’s place in major history is secure.

Most weeks ranked No. 1 in Official World Golf Ranking? Woods blows the field away there with 683 weeks (Greg Norman is next with 331).

The list of his accomplishments takes a while to pore over, but when one scans the PGA Tour record book, some items of note stand out.

Here’s a closer look at some of the (perhaps surprising) things Woods hasn’t done in his pro golf career.

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2022 Golfweek Awards: Female Player of the Year

2022 Golfweek Awards: Female Player of the Year

2022 Golfweek Awards: Female Player of the Year

Heading into the 2022 season, fans were eager to see Nelly Korda and Jin Young Ko build upon the rivalry that emerged in 2021. While health issues for both players kept that from materializing, a host of new winners kept the season fresh, as 11 players broke through to win for the first time.

Chief among those was Atthaya Thitikul, the rookie who rose to No. 1 in the world.

When it came to who had the best season in golf, however, the discussion at the table among staff was fairly short. It wasn’t a new face who impressed the most, but rather one who hadn’t been in such a position in a long, long time.

Without further ado, the 2022 Golfweek Award winner for Best Female Player of the Year goes to …

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Tiger Woods: 47 wild stats and facts for his 47th birthday

Tiger Woods: 47 wild stats and facts for his 47th birthday

Tiger Woods: 47 wild stats and facts for his 47th birthday

Golf is a game that revolves around numbers. Lots of numbers.

There’s par and yardage, irons, woods and wedges, golf balls and holes, strokes and strokes gained. The list goes on. When it comes to impressive lists of numbers and stats related to golf, nobody’s compiled a better one over a career than Tiger Woods. Even with all his injuries, he still isn’t done.

In fact, he’s adding another number today: 47. As in, years old.

From his record PGA Tour earnings to his record-tying 82 Tour wins and 15 major championships, here are 47 facts and stats to celebrate Tiger’s 47th birthday.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/V1TcRb5
Scottie Scheffler headlines the early wave of commitments to WM Phoenix Open, the second 'elevated' event in 2023

Scottie Scheffler headlines the early wave of commitments to WM Phoenix Open, the second 'elevated' event in 2023

Scottie Scheffler headlines the early wave of commitments to WM Phoenix Open, the second 'elevated' event in 2023

The second elevated event on the PGA Tour’s 2023 calendar announced its initial list of commitments Thursday.

The WM Phoenix Open, which will have a purse of $20 million in February, will have its defending champion back, as Scottie Scheffler headlines the early wave of commitments.

The tournament was one of four named in October as “elevated” events featuring a massive increase in prize money. The Sentry Tournament of Champions, which is next week in Hawaii, is also an elevated event with a purse of $15 million.

Pat Williams, the 2023 tournament chairman at TPC Scottsdale, also announced Xander Schauffele and Sam Burns will be in the field.

“With the WM Phoenix Open being named a designated event, we have high expectations for showcasing the best field we’ve ever had,” Williams said in a release. “We can’t wait to introduce the rest of the field as we get closer to the 88th edition of ‘The People’s Open.'”

In 2022, Scheffler broke through at the Phoenix Open for his first PGA Tour win. He went on to win three more times, including the Masters, in the span of six starts. He later rose to No. 1 in the world ranking and capped his season atop the Tour’s money list.

Schauffele won three times last season, the Zurich Classic, the Travelers Championship and the Genesis Scottish Open, and posted seven top-10s. He also had a top-15 finish in three of the four majors: the Open Championship, U.S. Open and PGA Championship. He finished solo third last year in Phoenix behind Scheffler, who beat Patrick Cantlay in a playoff.

Burns had three wins last season and was a member of the Presidents Cup team. He was one of five golfers to win at least three times last season.

The field will be 132 with the winner taking home an oversized check good for $3.6 million. PGA Tour members have until 5 p.m. Friday, Feb. 3 to commit to play in the 2023 WM Phoenix Open, Feb. 9-12.

Barring a long playoff, the tournament will conclude about 20 minutes before kickoff of the Super Bowl, which will be played about 30 miles to the west in Glendale.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/V1TcRb5
Jim and Tabitha Furyk to be honored with Deane Beman Award

Jim and Tabitha Furyk to be honored with Deane Beman Award

Jim and Tabitha Furyk to be honored with Deane Beman Award

Jim and Tabitha Furyk, whose PGA Tour Champions event they host has raised nearly $2.5 million for charity and has been voted the top tournament on the circuit by players, will receive the Deane Beman Award, presented annually by the Jacksonville Area Golf Association and the Northern Chapter PGA.

The Furyks will receive the award, named for the former PGA Tour commissioner and World Golf Hall of Fame member, at the seventh Northeast Florida Celebration of Golf Banquet on Feb. 22, 2023, at the Sawgrass Country Club. The banquet has not been held since January of 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Constellation Furyk & Friends tournament, which has been played at the Timuquana Country Club, is an off-shoot of the Furyk & Friends charity tournament that was held for 10 years at the Sawgrass Country Club.

Furyk is a 17-time PGA Tour winner, highlighted by the 2003 U.S. Open title and the 2010 FedEx Cup championship. He has won three PGA Tour Champions titles, including the 2021 U.S. Senior Open. He is a past winner of the PGA Tour’s Payne Stewart Award.

The Furyk Foundation has raised money for charities such as Wolfson Children’s Hospital, Blessings in a Backpack, the MaliVai Washington Foundation, St. Johns Riverkeeper, Habitat for Humanity, Hope for the Holidays and The First Tee.

The Celebration of Golf banquet brings together members of area golf organizations, volunteers and players to recognize and honor those who have made contributions to golf on and off the course. In addition to JAGA and the Northern Chapter PGA, it is supported by the Jacksonville Women’s Golf Association and the North Florida Golf Course Superintendents Association.

Past Beman Award winners include John Tucker, Anne Nimnicht, Joe Louis Barrow Jr. and John Hayt.

Proceeds from the Celebration of Golf will support the tax-exempt JAGA Charitable Trust, which annually awards scholarships to college-bound students who have affiliations with JAGA and its 40 member clubs from the area.

The previous six Celebration of Golf banquets were sold out and 325 attended the last banquet at the TPC Sawgrass. Tables and individual tickets will go on sale on Jan. 10 through JAGA’s BlueGolf platform, found at jaxareagolf.org. All table and individual seats are priced at $125 per person.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/V1TcRb5
Patriot All-America Invitational features loaded men's and women's field ahead of 12th edition

Patriot All-America Invitational features loaded men's and women's field ahead of 12th edition

Patriot All-America Invitational features loaded men's and women's field ahead of 12th edition

It’s again time for one of the premier amateur events of the year.

The Patriot All-America Invitational is set for its 12th edition at Wigwam Golf Resort in Litchfield Park, Arizona, Dec. 29-31. It’s the second year there will be women in the field.

The tournament features Ping All-Americans from the previous season in NCAA Divisions I, II and III, NAIA and NJCAA as well as 2021 First Team All-America seniors from the AJGA. The golfers also have to be ranked high enough in the World Amateur Golf Rankings.

“We’re eager to kick off this year’s Patriot All-America, and we’re thrilled to see the exponential growth of the women’s division,” said Mark James, Luke Air Force Base. “Women play a pivotal role in the U.S. Armed Forces, and we’re happy to see them so well-represented in this year’s tournament.”

There will be 84 men and 66 women in the field. The women’s field was expanded from 42.

Participating golfers have an opportunity to recognize a fallen or wounded military hero during the event by carrying a commemorative Ping golf bag bearing the serviceman or woman’s name and branch. At the end of the event, they sell the bags, with the proceeds benefiting Folds of Honor, a nonprofit that provides scholarship funding for the children and families of fallen or disabled military members and first responders. Participating golfers also get to tour Luke Air Force Base.

Play gets underway Thursday, as golfers will compete over 54 holes of stroke play to determine a champion.

It’s also the first year of the Thunderbolt, which will be played at the same time as the Patriot at Sterling Grove Golf and Country Club in Surprise, Arizona. It will feature golfers that met the initial eligibility, but did not make it into the Patriot.

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How golfers can support their team in the College Football Playoff

How golfers can support their team in the College Football Playoff

How golfers can support their team in the College Football Playoff

The College Football Playoff draws near which means that the college football season is nearly over. But hey, on the bright side, there’s now less than 100 days until the Masters.

Whether it’s your team’s first appearance or you expect your alma mater to be playing for a championship every year, we have items from all four playoff teams so you can rep your favorite school on and off the course.

From the Bulldogs and Wolverines, to the Buckeyes and Horned Frogs, make sure to check out the conference championship collections to fully bask in the glory of a stellar 2022 season.

Conference Championship gear: GEORGIA | MICHIGAN

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A golf tour with 54-hole events will start to receive OWGR points in January, but it's not LIV Golf

A golf tour with 54-hole events will start to receive OWGR points in January, but it's not LIV Golf

A golf tour with 54-hole events will start to receive OWGR points in January, but it's not LIV Golf

The Official World Golf Ranking has announced that a tour will start to receive points in 2023, but it’s not LIV Golf.

The OWGR will begin to include the Gira de Golf Professional de Mexicana after the first week of January following a 16-month application process. The tour was founded in 2017.

“This is a significant milestone for golf and OWGR is deeply encouraged by the achievement and the continued efforts in the advancement of the sport of golf in Mexico,” said chairman Peter Dawson via a release. “We look forward to watching the progress of Gira de Golf Professional de Mexicana as it continues to play a key role in the development of players from the region.”

Tournaments on the Gira de Golf Professional de Mexicana schedule are contested over 54 holes with a 36-hole cut. The tour is accessible via open qualifying school and features a no-cut, season-ending championship. The OWGR release commended the tour for its efforts in providing pathways for players, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, when Gira de Golf hosted tournaments in conjunction with the PGA Tour Latinoamérica.

Fans may wonder what this move means for LIV Golf, the upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and supported by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. LIV applied for OWGR points in July of 2022 and a decision has yet to be made. The circuit attempted to undermine the lengthy process with its “strategic alliance” with the developmental MENA Tour, which led to the OWGR announcement that LIV events – which feature a team and individual competition over 54 holes with no cut and daily shotgun starts –  would not receive points in 2022. The 16-month process would point to a November 2023 decision for LIV, but the more pertinent information in Wednesday’s OWGR announcement centers on Gira de Golf’s 36-hole cuts and open qualifying school.

From the release: “As such, the Gira de Golf Professional de Mexicana is in keeping with long-standing OWGR Eligibility and Format Criteria providing inclusion for professional tours at the development level with available Ranking Points commensurate with the format and anticipated fields.”

“We are very proud that after almost 5 years of work, the Mexican Professional Golf Tour becomes part of the OWGR,” said Gira de Golf commissioner José Miguel Bejos. “It is one of the most important achievements that Mexican professional golf has had in recent years and we will continue with the commitment to promote golf in our country.”

The tour returns to action Jan. 27-29, 2023.

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Gannon Buhr is a 17-year-old Iowa high schooler — and an international disc golf superstar

Gannon Buhr is a 17-year-old Iowa high schooler — and an international disc golf superstar

Gannon Buhr is a 17-year-old Iowa high schooler — and an international disc golf superstar

The sun was starting to set on a warm November day as Gannon Buhr walked off the disc golf course at Waterford Park in Urbandale, Iowa. He stops when a man walking a dog notices him.

“Great season this year,” the man yells to Buhr, who was out trying some new discs.

He didn’t know the fan, but these interactions on the disc golf course are common for Buhr, one of the sport’s top players in the world. He can stroll in and out of most places around Iowa and go unrecognized. But the second he steps on a course, it seems everyone knows him.

“It’s cool to a certain extent,” Buhr said. “Sometimes I just want to go out and practice myself and tune the world out.”

At age 17, the Waukee Northwest High School student racked up nearly $90,000 in prize money in 2022 and tallied a victory in one of the sport’s top events. After quickly rising to fame, he could be even better next year. That’s why he’s one of the Des Moines Register‘s People to Watch for 2023.

“I think it’ll be very big because people are looking for him to prove that he is actually that good and it wasn’t just a fluke,” said disc golf star Will Schusterick.

Disc golf was the sport one that stuck

Buhr played flag football, was a pitcher in baseball, tried basketball and even played golf.

But none of those sports stuck with him. Disc golf did. He got into it when he was around 9 years old by using a disc golf basket in his neighbor’s yard.

Disc golf offered him something most of those other sports didn’t. Buhr had complete control of his results and didn’t need to rely on teammates to get him the ball, force a stop or make a big play. Buhr was the entire team.

The sport requires participants to throw discs, smaller than frisbees, into a basket in as few tries as possible. It requires precision, focus and coordination. But it’s also accessible to people of all ages and many physical abilities.

And it has become increasingly popular. According to UDisc, which helps players find the often-free courses, the number of courses in the U.S. has grown from a few hundred a few decades ago to more than 9,000 today. Travel Iowa says the state has more than 300 courses and nearly 100 tournaments, making it, potentially, “the amateur disc golf capital of the world.”

Gannon Buhr

Gannon Buhr of Iowa is one of the top disc golf players in the nation. (Photo: Bryon Houlgrave/The Des Moines Register)

Buhr traded his junior golf clubs for golf discs and baskets. He arranged a set in the backyard of his family’s Urbandale home.

“We lived on, like, a park. There was a lot of room to throw everywhere,” Buhr said.

Buhr played as often as he could, even if there was a foot of snow on the ground. He learned forms and techniques by watching YouTube videos of some of the sport’s biggest players. His favorite was Schusterick, now a three-time United States Disc Golf Championship winner.

Buhr and his mother, Michelle Nesheim, followed Schusterick around at a tournament so Buhr, who was around 10, could watch the star play. He made an impression on Schusterick, who posed for a picture with Buhr and gave him a disc.

“I wasn’t even playing well … but after every shot, he would clap,” Schusterick said.

Buhr competed in his first tournament in June 2015. Later that year, he won his first victory, at Maytag Park in Newton. The prize was $70 that he could use to purchase discs. He bought four and kept playing.

Buhr put up a new net in his basement to practice throws and a basket to improve his putting. As he got better, he competed more. Tournaments across the country became family vacations.

“All of our time has been spent at disc golf tournaments,” his mother said.

By 2017, Buhr won the 2017 PDGA (Professional Disc Golf Association) Amateur and Junior Disc Golf World Championship. The following year, he tallied eight wins. In 2019, he added another PDGA Junior Disc Golf World Championship and finished the year with seven victories.

Buhr joined the Disc Golf Pro Tour, the highest level of competition, in 2021. In October of 2022, he won one of the sport’s most prestigious events, the United States Disc Golf Championship. Buhr, who had turned 17 just five months earlier, became the youngest player to win the event and earned a $25,000 payout.

“It’s been within the last couple of years that I thought, ‘You know, I think this could actually go somewhere,'” Nesheim said.

At the same time, he’s still a student at Waukee Northwest. He said teachers have been accommodating about his schedule, letting him miss as much time as he needs as long as he keeps up on his schoolwork. That’s not always easy. According to a write-up of his championship victory on United States Disc Golf Championship’s website, he said he was “very behind” on his school work at the time.

He’s had precious little time for other typical teenage pursuits. Buhr has yet to buy a car. Because of his hectic schedule, he hasn’t even gotten his license yet.

Career earnings top $100,000, and he’s got sponsorship deals

Fans treat him like a celebrity at tournaments, his mother said.

“They have set up areas for autographs and things like that after the tournament,” Nesheim said. “When he’s walking around the area, he gets a lot of people coming up to him, a lot of little kids and some older people and really kind of all ages. So, it’s pretty cool.”

Buhr has won 24 events and as of late November had accumulated $106,869 in career earnings. He believes he reached the $100,000 plateau faster than any player in the history of the sport.

That doesn’t include the money he receives in endorsement deals from his five sponsors, who pay him to wear their clothing or throw their discs.

Buhr has also become a social media star, with more than 31,000 followers on his Instagram account @gannon_buhr_dg. The account is full of videos of Buhr hurling discs and working on his game.

“Dude, you killed this season. I knew it was coming. You’ve got a long, successful career ahead of you. To be where you are at the age you are is a gift. Keep having fun, enjoy the ride,” one person wrote on a Buhr Instagram post.

Buhr says the money is nice and the fame is interesting, but it’s not what drives him. Most of his earnings have gone into the bank, he said. He hasn’t splurged on any big purchases. He bought some nice shoes and some LEGO sets, he said.

What’s important to Buhr is getting better.

“Paul McBeth is our Tiger Woods of disc golf,” said disc golf player Gavin Babcock. But he said of Buhr, “He’s definitely got the potential to overtake that title.”

Buhr does not plan to go to college. He’s found his career.

“People are expecting a lot,” Buhr said. “But, I think, I’ll be even better.”

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/sXudiby
Ohio Supreme Court ruling on golf course ends decades of arguments, confrontations, even arrests

Ohio Supreme Court ruling on golf course ends decades of arguments, confrontations, even arrests

Ohio Supreme Court ruling on golf course ends decades of arguments, confrontations, even arrests

NEWARK, Ohio − The Ohio Supreme Court ruled the Ohio History Connection can take Moundbuilders Country Club by eminent domain and transform the golf course property, which includes the Newark Earthworks’ Octagon Mounds, into a public park.

The country club ran out of legal options to save the golf course on Tuesday, when the Ohio Supreme Court denied the club’s motion to reconsider its Dec. 7 decision, a 6-1 ruling that upheld Ohio’s Fifth District Court of Appeals and Licking County Common Pleas Court verdicts.

Megan Wood, executive director and CEO of the OHC, said the History Connection was prepared for a longer wait to get a ruling on Moundbuilders’ motion to reconsider. A decision next year would be with a new chief justice — Sharon Kennedy, who cast the lone dissenting vote in the Dec. 7 decision. The current chief justice is Maureen O’Connor.

“We were prepared for it to take longer, but we’re ready to move on to the next steps,” Wood said. “Maybe they wanted to resolve it with the court that originally heard it, but they didn’t have to do that. They weren’t required.”

The decision ends four years of court battles and will soon close the chapter on decades of arguments, confrontations and even arrests as emotions ran high between those committed to increasing public access to an historic site and those determined to keep it operating as a private golf course, which its lease allowed.

The decision sets the stage for a jury trial in Licking County Common Pleas Court to determine the value of the lease, and the amount OHC must pay to Moundbuilders.

The golf course includes the Octagon Earthworks, which is part of Newark Earthworks, the largest set of geometric earthen enclosures in the world, along with Wright Earthworks in Newark and the Great Circle in Newark and Heath.

Newark Earthworks is part of the Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks nomination to the UNESCO World Heritage list. Inscription on the World Heritage List would show the cultural significance of the site and bring international attention. The nomination will be considered next year.

Newark's Octagon Earthworks

The axial alignment of the moonrise with Newark’s Octagon Earthworks. (Courtesy of The Ancient Ohio Trail)

The Ohio History Connection, which owns the site and leases it to Moundbuilders, said it is allowed just four full access, no-golf days annually for public visitation of the mounds.

“This has been a top priority for us,” Wood said. “It’s important to get access. It’s a sacred American Indian site. It’s not an appropriate use of the site, whether or not we have a World Heritage site.”

Joe Fraley, attorney for Moundbuilders Country Club, said the reconsideration filing was based on new information. He said OHC had argued it needed control of the site to pursue World Heritage status.

“The grounds for the reconsideration are that the trial court in reaching its decision on necessity relied on evidence which time has proven to be inaccurate,” Fraley stated in the motion to reconsider. “Appellee stated that it was necessary to take appellant MCC’s leasehold interest by eminent domain because appellee could not, and would not, apply for World Heritage status if a golf course existed on the site.

“There is no question that this argument was heavily relied upon by the trial court in reaching its decision on the necessity of the taking and accepted as true by this court in affirming on appeal.”

OHC submitted its World Heritage application of the Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks to the U.S. Department of Interior in December 2021. Then in March, the U.S. Department of Interior submitted to UNESCO the nomination of the site for World Heritage status.

The Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks is a group of eight archeological sites in Ohio, including Newark Earthworks, Fort Ancient between Cincinnati and Dayton and the Hopewell Culture National Historical Park in Chillicothe.

The Ohio History Connection said pursuit of World Heritage status had no bearing on the key eminent domain questions facing the court and is a separate issue.

The OHC stated the court’s decision was based on three facts – the plans to create a public park on the site of the Octagon Earthworks; that a park is a public use; and that appropriation of the site is necessary because a public park cannot be located at a private country club. World Heritage consideration does not affect those key elements, the OHC stated.

“Nothing in the country club’s motion provides any reason why the court should revisit those aspects of its decision,” OHC argued. “The History Connection still seeks to establish a public park, meaning its taking is as necessary as ever.

“The country club admitted in its answer, for example, that the presence of the golf course on the Octagon Earthworks site was incompatible with the use of the site as a public park. Because the court’s decisions rested on the planned park use, the reconsideration motion provides no sound basis for reconsideration.”

In November 2018, the Ohio History Connection, previously the Ohio Historical Society, filed a civil lawsuit against Moundbuilders Country Club, intending to buy back the lease on the Newark property, which has been operated as a golf course since 1910.

The OHC said it has had three goals:

  • open the Octagon Earthworks for public use
  • “preserve the original religious, ceremonial, and cultural significance of the site”
  • nominate it to the World Heritage list

On Jan. 29, 2020, the Ohio Fifth District Court of Appeals rejected a Moundbuilders’ appeal, affirming a May 10, 2019, decision of Licking County Common Pleas Court Judge David Branstool that OHC had the authority to acquire the lease by eminent domain. The 1957 lease was amended in 1997, providing a 50-year extension of the lease from an expiration date of 2028 to 2078.

The Ohio Supreme Court voted 5-2 in July 2020 to hear the Moundbuilders’ appeal and both sides made their cases to the justices with oral arguments in April 2021. Then, both sides waited 20 months.

In its Dec. 7 ruling, the Ohio Supreme Court stated, “The Ohio History Connection presented evidence to establish that it made a good-faith offer to purchase the Moundbuilders Country Club Company’s lease interest, and the country club failed to offer anything other than speculation to rebut that evidence.

“Further, the country club failed to rebut the statutory presumption that the creation of a public park for the Octagon Earthworks constituted a public use and that the taking was necessary for that public use.”

The Octagon Earthworks consists of a 50-acre, 8-sided enclosure with earthen walls measuring about 550 feet long and 5 to 6 feet in height. Built between 1 and 400 A.D., it was part of a 4-square-mile complex now known as the Newark Earthworks, which was part cathedral, part cemetery and part astronomical observatory.

The Octagon is aligned to the four moonrises and moonsets that mark a complicated 18.6-year-long lunar cycle.

The remaining question is what will the property look like when the country club leaves and it becomes a public park.

Brad Lepper, senior archeologist for the Ohio History Connection, said it will no longer look like a golf course, but that doesn’t mean it’s not being maintained.

“These sites are not supposed to look like a golf course,” Lepper said. “They’re supposed to look like a park. A grassland, almost a prairie. They were prairies before the Earthworks were built. It was a managed environment by American Indian people.

“People have tried to diminish it by saying it’s just piles of dirt,” Lepper said. “That’s so naïve, in the same way the Parthenon is just a pile of stones.”

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/sXudiby
Your 2022 picks: Golfweek's top 10 golf equipment stories of the year

Your 2022 picks: Golfweek's top 10 golf equipment stories of the year

Your 2022 picks: Golfweek's top 10 golf equipment stories of the year

For the final days of 2022, we’re offering up snapshots of the top 10 stories from each of Golfweek’s most popular sections, including the PGA and LPGA tours, travel, instruction and fitness. Here’s what we’ve already counted down.

Now it’s time to put our top equipment features in the spotlight.

Here’s a look at the top 10 golf gear stories, as clicked on by you, during  2022:

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Players to watch: Predicting 10 first-time PGA Tour winners in 2023

Players to watch: Predicting 10 first-time PGA Tour winners in 2023

Players to watch: Predicting 10 first-time PGA Tour winners in 2023

After taking a nearly two-month holiday hiatus, the PGA Tour will return to action the first week of January with the 2023 Sentry Tournament of Champions in Hawaii.

The last time we saw the boys in action, Adam Svensson earned his first win on Tour at the RSM Classic in November. Tom Kim earned his second career win a month before at the Shriners Children’s Open.

There were 12 first-time winners on Tour in 2022. Golfweek predicted two of them, while four won on other tours. So who do we have our eyes on for next year? From veterans to rising stars from the amateur ranks, here are 10 players who we predict will hoist a trophy on Tour for the first time in 2023.

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2022 Golfweek Awards: Female amateur of the year

2022 Golfweek Awards: Female amateur of the year

2022 Golfweek Awards: Female amateur of the year

When it came time for the Golfweek staff to decide the Female Amateur of the Year, there wasn’t much conversation.

Sure, there were talented athletes across the world who made their mark during the 2022 calendar year. There were first-time winners, young stars shining on the brightest stage and others cementing their legacy, But one female golfer stood out among them all.

In the end, it came down to three athletes, two who made honorable mention and the Golfweek Female Amateur of the Year. The best women’s amateur in the game has held this title for some time, and she’s going to make plenty of splashes in the professional ranks before long. The 2022 Golfweek Award winner for Female Amateur of the Year goes to …

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2022 Golfweek Awards: Tournament of the Year

2022 Golfweek Awards: Tournament of the Year

2022 Golfweek Awards: Tournament of the Year

The discourse that dominated professional golf in 2022 largely focused on the off-course battle between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf.

Despite the back-and-forth war of words and lawsuits, the on-course action in both the men’s and women’s game was just as compelling. But which tournament was the best of the rest?

The Golfweek staff debated the topic, and after all the deliberation, four events stood out from the pack, three of which were major championships, and two even included a tie to LIV, the upstart Saudi Arabia-backed circuit.

Check out the 2022 tournament of the year (as well as the three honorable mentions).

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My year in golf travel: Big resorts, short munis and a competitive dream that lives on for 2023

My year in golf travel: Big resorts, short munis and a competitive dream that lives on for 2023

My year in golf travel: Big resorts, short munis and a competitive dream that lives on for 2023

I have one of the best jobs in the world, but don’t tell my boss that I acknowledged such. Truth is, plenty of people would line up to do this travel job for free. Play golf around the world and write about it – just about a perfect gig.

There are some downsides. The 3 a.m. wakeup calls, the flight delays, the time away from family, the late nights staring at the keyboard, not to mention all the bogeys. But these are niggles, easily dismissed.

I played 79 golf courses so far in 2022, and I am likely to add at least one or two more before the calendar flips. There were affordable munis, high-end private clubs and plenty of top-dollar resorts. I see the full spectrum of golf in my travels, from dirt fairways to perfect putting surfaces. They all were among the 250-plus stories I filed in 2022, and I remember just about every shot from each round – my wife calls this ability to recall and fret about shots I struck months ago a major character flaw.

The author hits a tee shot on the Castle Stuart Course at Cabot Highlands on his trip around Scotland in October. (Courtesy of Cabot Highlands)

With the year wrapping up soon, it’s time to take a look back at several of my favorite experiences of 2022. I played from California to Scotland, and some days, courses and golf holes just stood out.

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5 things we want to see on the LPGA in 2023: Majors for Lydia Ko and Lexi Thompson, buy-in from PGA Tour stars and more

5 things we want to see on the LPGA in 2023: Majors for Lydia Ko and Lexi Thompson, buy-in from PGA Tour stars and more

5 things we want to see on the LPGA in 2023: Majors for Lydia Ko and Lexi Thompson, buy-in from PGA Tour stars and more

As we look ahead to 2023, there’s plenty to wish for inside the ropes on the LPGA. With major championship venues like Pebble Beach and Baltusrol on the horizon, and the first-ever Solheim Cup set in Spain, the stages are ripe for epic drama.

Watching Lexi Thompson, Nelly Korda and Annika Sorenstam compete alongside the men at the last two silly season events of 2022 got the excitement levels revved up for a mix-team format. Sorenstam’s continued presence in the game also serves as a reminder that the LPGA is in need of its next dominant superstar.

And with that, here’s what we’re wishing for in 2023:

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/XaDeEjU
Who will win their first major championship in 2023? Golfweek's staff makes its picks

Who will win their first major championship in 2023? Golfweek's staff makes its picks

Who will win their first major championship in 2023? Golfweek's staff makes its picks

Three of the four major champions on the men’s side in 2022 were first-time winners. As for the women? Two of five.

That got us thinking, who is most likely to add a major championship to their resume for the first time in 2023? Several writers on Golfweek’s staff have made their picks, some surprising, some not so much.

Men’s 2023 major venues: Augusta National Golf Club (Masters), Oak Hill Country Club (PGA Championship), Los Angeles Country Club (U.S. Open) and Royal Liverpool (Open Championship).

Women’s 2023 major venues: The Club at Carlton Woods (Chevron Championship), Baltusrol (KPMG PGA Championship), Pebble Beach Golf Links (U.S. Women’s Open), Evian Resort Golf Club (Evian Championship) and Walton Heath Golf Club (AIG Women’s Open).

MORE: 2022 Golfweek Awards

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Quivira Golf Club: You've yet to experience a resort course like this

Quivira Golf Club: You've yet to experience a resort course like this

Quivira Golf Club: You've yet to experience a resort course like this

Oftentimes, resort courses come with expectations of rolling fairways, marginal views and multiple visits to the beverage cart. Quivira Golf Club located in Los Cabos, Mexico, exceeds those expectations and then some. Quivira is a Jack Nicklaus course design with a 7,085-yard layout.

Quivira opened its course in 2014 and is an exclusive amenity for owners and guests of Pueblo Bonito Golf and Spa Resorts. Quivira features carpet-like fairways, white sandy bunkers and greens fit for a tour championship. This resort course is designed to provide a challenge to players of all skill levels with a variety of elevated tee boxes and “not so conveniently-placed” bunkers.

There is a view of the Pacific Ocean from every hole and the comfort stations are a golfer’s dream. It’s common to find resort courses that claim to have ocean-front holes, but only two or three holes are actually near the water.

At Quivira you get to see the ocean from all 18 holes as you start your round at sea-level and climb through the cliffs around the Old Lighthouse for panoramic views. The comfort stations located throughout the course offer fresh, made-to-order libations, tacos, sliders, desserts, snacks and more.

Quivira Golf Club hole 18

Quivira Golf Club hole 18. (Quivira Golf Club)

After your round, the 19th Hole Bar and Quivira Steakhouse at the clubhouse offer you a place take a seat around the fire pit for drinks or a delicious meal overlooking the Pacific. If you happen to visit between the months of December and May you might even get lucky and catch a glimpse of humpback whales migrating just off the beach.

Pueblo Bonito Pacifica pool

Pueblo Bonito Pacifica pool. (Pueblo Bonito)

Pueblo Bonito Golf and Spa Resorts is not only a golfers paradise, but also boasts luxurious amenities that cater to anyone’s dream vacation. Pueblo Bonito is home to eight different resorts of varying aesthetic and views. Quivira’s residential resort communities feature two resorts by the names of Pacifica and Sunset Beach and a third lodging option known as Montecristo Estates Luxury Villas.

Each resort has a slightly different vibe to it with some properties maintaining a more contemporary feel and others paying an ode to Mexican heritage. Guests of Pueblo Bonito Resorts are granted access to all other restaurants and bars in sister properties.

LaFrida Oceanview Terrace at Sunset Beach

LaFrida Oceanview Terrace at Sunset Beach. (Sunset Beach)

Schedule yourself a massage or spa treatment in a relaxing environment to unwind after a round, or a beautiful dinner at LaFrida. This restaurant in Sunset Beach features the ambiance of traditional Mexican art, but with modern flavors and cocktails.

Whether you are looking for a romantic getaway at Pacifica, a Greco-Roman fantasy at Rosé, Mediterranean style at Los Cabos or a luxury estate, Pueblo Bonito has amenities and resorts for every preference.

You can learn more about Pueblo Bonito Resorts here.

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PGA Tour, LIV Golf and college players share 2023 Masters invitations

PGA Tour, LIV Golf and college players share 2023 Masters invitations

PGA Tour, LIV Golf and college players share 2023 Masters invitations

It’s the most wonderful time of the year.

As the holiday season rolls on, a group of elite golfers received a coveted gift in the mail from Augusta, Georgia.

The Masters sent out invitations last week ahead of the 2023 tournament, meaning golfers who received them are in the field at Augusta National come April. Those who received invites include those inside the top 50 in the Official World Golf Ranking, past champions and more.

Even LIV golfers took to social media to show off their invitations, after Augusta National announced last week there would be no change in qualification criteria for the 2023 Masters.

Here’s a look at some golfers who took to social media to show off their invitations.

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2022 Golfweek Awards: Shot of the Year

2022 Golfweek Awards: Shot of the Year

2022 Golfweek Awards: Shot of the Year

The Shot of the Year divided the staff more than any other category among the 2022 Golfweek Awards because there are so many to consider. Pros make hard shots look routine every week, and sometimes Lady Lucky plays a part too, but the writers, reporters and editors also felt that the circumstances and the moment mattered. A miraculous shot in a major championship is just bigger than the same shot hit on a Thursday at a week-to-week event.

In the end, it came down to six shots. Five have been awarded honorable mention, and in some other years they each could have been the winner, but the 2022 Shot of the Year delivered in every way. A star player, on a massive stage, in a tight situation. The 2022 Golfweek Award winner for Shot of the Year goes to …

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Photos: Kathy Whitworth's remarkable golf career through the years

Photos: Kathy Whitworth's remarkable golf career through the years

Photos: Kathy Whitworth's remarkable golf career through the years

Kathy Whitworth was born in Monahans, Texas, and raised in Jal, New Mexico, near the Texas border, where her family owned a hardware store and her father, Morris, was elected mayor three times. She took up golf at age 15 when the friends she played tennis with wanted to give it a try.

Whitworth died suddenly on Dec. 24, 2022, with family and friends. She was 83.

Whitworth won 88 titles on the LPGA, six more professional titles than Mickey Wright, Sam Snead and Tiger Woods.

Here’s a look at some moments from one of the most illustrious careers in professional golf history.

 

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Kathy Whitworth, the winningest professional in golf history with 88 titles, dies suddenly at 83

Kathy Whitworth, the winningest professional in golf history with 88 titles, dies suddenly at 83

Kathy Whitworth, the winningest professional in golf history with 88 titles, dies suddenly at 83

Kathy Whitworth, the winningest player in professional golf history, died suddenly on Christmas Eve with family and friends. She was 83.

“Kathy left this world the way she lived her life, loving, laughing and creating memories,” said Bettye Odle, long-time partner of Whitworth, in an LPGA release.

Rhonda Glenn, author of “The Illustrated History of Women’s Golf,” wrote that Whitworth’s strength was her determination and inability to quit. She wanted to be the greatest player in the world and wasn’t afraid to admit it.

Born in Monahans, Texas, and raised in Jal, New Mexico, near the Texas border, Whitworth’s family owned a hardware store. Her father, Morris, was elected mayor three times. She took up golf at age 15 when the friends with whom she played tennis wanted to give it a try.

“I don’t remember playing tennis again,” Whitworth told Golfweek some years ago. “Once I started playing golf, I kind of put myself on a diet – mother always wanted me on a diet – but I would go out and practice so I wouldn’t be by the refrigerator.”

She quickly developed an appetite for winning, joining the LPGA at age 19.

Whitworth won 88 titles on the LPGA, six more than Mickey Wright, Sam Snead and Tiger Woods. When Annika Sorenstam announced her retirement in 2008, Whitworth’s phone lit up. Her LPGA record of 88 victories was safe; Annika wasn’t interested in chasing.

Whitworth wasn’t exactly relieved by the news that her record will stand for quite some time. She didn’t aim to set the standard for professional golf, nor did she covet the achievement.

“(While playing) I wasn’t aware there was a record of tournament wins,” Whitworth told Golfweek. “Didn’t know how many tournaments Sam (Snead) had or Mickey (Wright) had. I feel like Mickey would’ve won 100 if she hadn’t quit.”

Whitworth reached her 88th victory in 1985 at the United Virginia Bank Classic but didn’t officially retire until 20 years later.

At a celebration for her 80th birthday, Whitworth noted that records are meant to be broken, and she enjoyed the fact that Woods’ victory at the 2019 Masters reignited the conversation of whether hers will ever be matched.

At 80 years old Whitworth could recall with great detail everything from her first lesson with Harvey Penick (they spent three days on the grip) to the amount of her first check ($33).

Whitworth liked to talk about how she almost quit the game after that first year on tour in 1959. A conversation with her mom and dad at the kitchen table coupled with a quote she read from Betsy Rawls – “I always work harder for an 80 than I do a 70” – turned everything around.

She learned how to grind out the bad rounds and turn them into good. A seven-time Player of the Year and Vare Trophy winner, Whitworth finished second 95 times. Her first LPGA victory came in 1962, and her last in ’85.

She credited her “winning syndrome” to a mindset learned through years of discipline, becoming an expert at focused concentration.

“The bad rounds never became really bad,” said Whitworth, “and the good rounds became better.”

The statuesque and dignified-looking Whitworth never had a hair out of place. The seventh member of the LPGA Hall of Fame was as modest as she was kind.

Kathy Whitworth (courtesy LPGA)

Whitworth wasn’t an LPGA founder, but she was a pioneer in those early days of the tour, performing whatever task it took to ensure success. Glenn noted that near the end of her LPGA career, Whitworth agreed to serve a fourth term as tour president. One of the issues she faced was that of an all-exempt tour.

“The LPGA doesn’t owe us older players anything,” Whitworth told Glenn. “The LPGA doesn’t owe me anything. All this stuff about what we’ve done for the LPGA, why, I owe the LPGA everything.

“We’ve got to make way for these younger players. People don’t even know who we are, unless we keep our names in front of the public. You watch, when I quit, after a couple of years, people will forget who I ever was.”

That never happened, of course. Whitworth’s record and her generous spirit will never be forgotten.

Of all the Whitworth stories, however, one involving her friend Renee Powell, the second African-American to play on the LPGA after Althea Gibson, stands above the rest in revealing her character.

Fifty-plus ago, when players arrived at their hotel for the week, the desk informed Powell that they didn’t have a registration for her. It had been “lost.”

Whitworth walked in and told the hotel employees: “Either she stays, or we all go.”

The golf world will never stop celebrating the humble woman from Jal, New Mexico, who knew what it meant to win at life.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/bkrQ3lS
Which PGA Tour Player Impact Program recipients were searched the most in 2022?

Which PGA Tour Player Impact Program recipients were searched the most in 2022?

Which PGA Tour Player Impact Program recipients were searched the most in 2022?

The purse for the PGA Tour’s Player Impact Program continues to swell, but as with everything, the added cash has brought added strings.

For example, at the Tour Championship, commissioner Jay Monahan explained that players would be eligible for their share of the $100 million in bonus money only if they played in the 13 elevated events plus three more of their choosing during the upcoming 2023 season.

Of course, a key component of the Tour’s PIP is engagement, or using social media to keep one’s name relevant.

That got us thinking, with the year coming to a close, which of the PIP recipients were searched the most in 2022?

Overlooking the possibility of a late push (these numbers are from Jan. 1 to Dec. 17), here’s the list of PIP recipients who fans Googled over the past 12 months.

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A two-year renovation project at this historic California golf club is done and the results are impressive

A two-year renovation project at this historic California golf club is done and the results are impressive

A two-year renovation project at this historic California golf club is done and the results are impressive

A two-year renovation project at Thunderbird Country Club in Rancho Mirage, the oldest 18-hole course in the desert, was about more than just swapping out older generations of grass for newer grass.

“It was maintaining the history of the property, revitalizing the golf course, re-doing bunkers to make them aesthetically appealing,” said Nick DeKock, director of golf at Thunderbird. “And it was a tremendous opportunity to change out the grass, to have hybrid wall to wall. Killing two birds with one stone, if you will.”

The renovations that started in the summer of 2021 officially ended last month with the Nov. 19 re-opening of the course. While the course was open for play last winter and spring, both nines of the course that opened in 1951 closed in April to allow for extensive work on greens, fairways and trees.

In the summer of 2021, only the first three holes and the practice areas of the course saw some changes through the work of Oklahoma-based architect Tripp Davis. DeKock said that while the course is still playing along the same footprint as before, Davis’ work, particularly with bunkers, has revived the course.

The April closing dates allowed Thunderbird officials to eradicate all turf from the golf course, much of which was common Bermuda grass. Newer hybrid grasses like tifdwarf were planted on the course, with mini verde, a grass growing in popularity because it needs less overseeding in the winter, was planted on all the putting surfaces.

With the grass off the course, Davis and his team went to work adding movement to many of the fairways and reshaping bunkers, adding some bunkering and eliminating some features like filling in a lake to the left of the seventh green.

“I’m so impressed with the bunkers and the reshaping of the greens,” DeKock said. “I think there is so much more intrigue and interest to play the golf course. Members have been very impressed with how it came out.”

Some of the new bunkering around the greens was designed specifically to mimic the nearby Santa Rosa Mountains, with jagged edges on the bunkers at the top of the mountain range. Other bunkers were added to give a more layered look of bunkers around greens, DeKock said.

“The bunkers are so much more aesthetically pleasing and visible,” DeKock said.

Reshaped bunkers throughout the course, like this bunker in front of the fourth green, are a major feature of the renovations at Thunderbird Country Club. (Photo by Larry Bohannan/The Desert Sun)

Changes to some greens, trees

Keeping the same footprint of the golf course does not mean changes haven’t been made. The 11th hole has seen its green pushed back 32 yards to 392 yards from the back tees, called the Ryder Cup tees in honor of the course hosting the Ryder Cup in 1955. In turn, tees on the 12th hole were pushed up 30 yards, making for a 295-yard par-4 that can be made drivable depending on the tee setup.

On the 17th hole, the green has also been moved 20 yards, but laterally to the right to bring a lake more into play on the approach shot. The 17th hole and the 11th hole share a new bridge over that same lake.

Other smaller changes include revamping the tee boxes to have the teeing area blend in with the fairways near the boxes, what DeKock calls a natural, understated look to the tee boxes. Several holes, like the par-4 13th also saw changes because of the elimination of trees, many of which had stood for decades and become overgrown. The right side of the 13th fairway saw several trees eliminated, opening up a landing area for more players, while a large eucalyptus tree near the green was eliminated to open up views of the mountains to the south of the course.

In the end, DeKock believes Davis has helped preserve the tradition of the desert’s oldest 18-hole golf course while giving the could a solid facelift after 71 years of play.

Reshaped bunkers throughout the course, like this bunker in front of the fourth green, are a major feature of the renovations at Thunderbird Country Club.

“I think the members should be very proud of their golf course, which they are,” DeKock said. “It should stand for decades to come.”

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/bkrQ3lS
2022 Golfweek Awards: Best Moment of the Year — Tiger Woods' walk up the Swilcan Bridge

2022 Golfweek Awards: Best Moment of the Year — Tiger Woods' walk up the Swilcan Bridge

2022 Golfweek Awards: Best Moment of the Year — Tiger Woods' walk up the Swilcan Bridge

For good reason, the moment of the year in golf drew several nominations at the Golfweek editorial summit earlier this month. But once Tiger Woods crossing the Swilcan Burn Bridge was proposed the debate was over. It’s tough on some of these year-end awards to reach consensus, but there was unanimity as everyone nodded in agreement and we quickly moved on to the next category. Such was the goosebumps-on-goosebumps moment that was Tiger Woods potentially saying farewell to his competitive days at the Old Course at St. Andrews in the 150th British Open.

All that was missing from this moment was it happened on Friday afternoon with Woods missing the cut badly rather than being feted on Sunday. Woods, who won three Claret Jugs among his 15 major championship victories and two of them at St. Andrews, in 2000 and 2005, skipped the U.S. Open in order to allow his surgically repaired right leg and the rest of his ailing body to heal enough so he could even play. This was the one tournament Woods had circled on his calendar to play in 2022 and he wasn’t about to miss it.

And so it didn’t really matter that he was 9 over and destined to miss the cut by a long shot. Fans had arrived early that morning and assembled around the 18th hole. They waited for Woods to approach the famed Swilcan Bridge that leads players over the burn, which meanders across the first and 18th holes, and onto the 18th fairway.

Playing competitors Matt Fitzpatrick and Max Homa as well as Woods’ caddie Joe LaCava hovered behind as Woods approached the bridge alone, the stage set for the monumental moment. Here is where Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Tom Watson before him took turns bidding adieu to the Old Grey Toon. Woods slowed his walk and lifted his white Nike cap in appreciation but never truly broke stride for the long ceremonial stop that many expected. Did that signal that Woods expected to have at least one more spin around the Old Course down the road? Not even he knows.

“I don’t know if I ever get back to playing St. Andrews in a British Open, but to be able to experience that maybe one last time at this level was very special to me,” he said afterward. “That was my favorite golf course in the whole world, and if that was it, that was it, to be able to possibly finish up my career there, I don’t know. That’s one of the reasons why I was kind of emotional because I don’t know if I’ll ever play St. Andrews again. I’ll play Open Championships in the future but I don’t know if I’ll be around when it comes back there again.”

2022 Open Championship

Tiger Woods tips his hat to the crowd after teeing off on the 18th hole during the second round of the 150th Open Championship at St. Andrews Old Course. (Photo: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports)

As Golfweek’s Steve DiMeglio wrote, “There were tears in his eyes, weight in his heart.”

“It’s very emotional for me,’’ Woods said. “I had a few tears. The warmth and the ovation at 18, it got to me. I’m not one who gets very teary-eyed very often about anything.’’

Woods speculated that the Open likely won’t return to St. Andrews until 2030 when he’d be 53 years old.

“I don’t know if I will be physically able to play by then,’’ he said. “So, to me, it felt like this might have been my last British Open here at St. Andrews.’’

Fans weren’t the only ones to shower Woods with applause as he walked the 18th fairway. Rory McIlroy played nearby on the first fairway and tipped his cap to the golfer who inspired him to take up the game. And when Woods reached the 18th green, Justin Thomas had just teed off and did likewise.

“It was just incredible,” Woods said. “The nods I was getting from guys as they were going out and I was coming in, just the respect, that was pretty neat. And from a players’ fraternity level, it’s neat to see that and feel that.”

Fitzpatrick said the scene “gave me goosebumps,’’ adding, “It’s something that will live with me forever.’’

And with all of us. That’s why it was the moment of the year.

Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/bkrQ3lS