Blog Description

You are likely to find everything golf here. Product reviews, course reviews, tournament commentary, and of course reports on my on-course travails. I hope you find it enhancing.

Note: The way the editor works, the appearance of the blog is different depending on the laptop/pc/smartphone that you are using and the screen resolution. It may look great on one and very different on another. Sorry, but I can't control that. Hopefully you get the gist and won't be too put off if it doesn't look the way it does on my monitor...which of course is fantastic :)!

Friday, August 26, 2016

SUMMER 2016 GOLF HIGHLIGHTS- ACT III: WORLD AMATEUR HANDICAP CHAMPIONSHIP

Although it has been a tough health week for us, Steph and I will be leaving for Myrtle Beach and the World Amateur Handicap Championship tonight. Yes, that time is here! I get to hangout with Steph, wake up and play golf six days in a row! Oh, and this time, my fellow golf-a-holic Chris Capps, the Director of Tennis at Verandah Golf Club will be playing in  his first World Am event! It could only get better than that if we had the entire Golf-a-holics Anonymous crew (CJ, Curr Dawg), and Tara to join Steph in keeping us from overdosing. 

The links fest begins on Sunday, when Chris and I
Prestwick #18 green
take 
Prestwick Country Club, the thought provoking, curse producing marvel designed by Pete and P.B. Dye. I must be a masochistic glutton for punishment because this is one of the most enjoyable courses I’ve ever played (check out my review here). Hoping that Steph will be up to joining us at least for the ride.

The World Am begins on Monday the 29th, and if

Chris and I win our flights, our tournament will culminate in the championship round on Friday September 2nd. If not, we will have had four rounds of competitive golf on cool courses in Myrtle Beach. Can't be too upset either way, huh?

But how cool would it be for Chris and I to be
battling for the title of World Amateur Handicap Champion on the back nine on Friday? Of course, I'll nip him by a stroke to claim the title, but because we both played so well all week, we win the International Pairs competition and an all-expenses paid golf trip to Europe. Sweet!

There are at least a couple of you out there who
might care about what we're doing this coming week...well, at least Marius...and maybe Connie (goof luck Connie!)...and Linda...Anyway, just in case you are interested, here's the rundown for Chris and me this coming week:



T. A.
I am in Flight 16, with 48 other players carrying handicap indices ranging from 8.5 to 9.0. Yup, I'm in over my head, but if I shoot a couple more 78s...Not likely, but here's my tournament lineup:

DAY 1- River Club (scorecard): On Pawley's Island,


just south of Myrtle Beach. Boasting a 4.5-star
Photo courtesy of playriverclub.com
rating from Golf Digest, with enough water to stop California's drought and sufficient sand (over 100 sand traps) to salvage Fort Myers Beach's beachfront or drive CJ Weber crazy.

DAY 2- Carolina National Golf Club Heron/Ibis (scorecard):
Photo courtesy of Rudd.com
A Fred Couples design in Bolivia, North Carolina. Do they grow coffee there? Ever heard of Bolivia, North Carolina? Me neither. Online reviews suggest the layout is a good one, but nothing that I should be overly excited about.

DAY 3- Blackmoor (Scorecard): Touted as the only
Photo courtesy of blackmoor.com
Gary Player design on the Grand Strand, located on the south end of the Strand. Reading the reviews reminded me of what I have heard about The Hideaway. Hey, when 57 of 63 players rate a track good-to-excellent, I’m feeling good about the day going in.

DAY 4- Shaftesbury Glen Golf & Fish Club (Scorecard, Yardage Book): An off the beaten path
Shaftesbury #8
Photo courtesy of onthegreenmagazine.com
track that promises to be the least entertaining in the lineup from a shot-making perspective. Although this is my first repeat course in the tournament, the good news is that Shaftesbury is where I shot my second best score (81) in the 15 rounds I’ve played at the World Am, and it was on Day 4 that time as well. 


Chris
Chris will be playing in Flight 11 with 46 other
players carrying handicap indices ranging from 3.9 to 5.3. His course lineup, which I won’t presume to discuss, is as follows:

DAY 1- Tidewater Golf Club (Scorecard, Individual
Photo courtesy of golfholiday.com
Holes
) The reviews make this course sound better than anything my flight will be playing. Yep, the green tinge you see on my face is definitely envy.

DAY 2- Shaftesbury Glen Golf & Fish Club: We both get this one, but Chris is playing from a bit further back. Hope he has some tips for me, since he is first. Gimme a read partner :).

DAY 3- Possum Trot (Yardage Book): 

If the reviews
Photo courtesy of glensgolfgroup.com
are accurate, this is a decent, low stress track, with an improved staff. By the end of this round Chris should be leading his flight by at least a couple of shots.



DAY 4- Founders Club (Scorecard): Reviews didn’t make this course sound like one to write home
Photo courtesy of golfholiday.com
about, but the aerial view sure does make it seem like an interesting and different way to end flight play. Chris prefers beach to grass, so he should have a blast with the waste bunkers on this track. Uh, just so ya know Chris, I produced the worst score of my World Am career at this course. Well, keeping it in perspective, it was the very first course I ever played in tournament play. That might have had something to do with it and this ain’t Chris’s first rodeo.


Well, that's going to have to do it. We've got a long drive ahead and I gotta get some zzzzzs. I'll keep you posted on this third and final golf highlight of Summer 2016. 

SUMMER 2016 GOLF HIGHLIGHTS- ACT II: TENNIS PRO GOLF

One reason I love the game!
Mediterra Wildlife- Outing 2015
If the Chicago trip was the only highlight of the summer, that would have been plenty, but this summer has been chock full of golf. I am really grateful for that, since golf (for a tennis pro in Southwest Florida) is banished from October through April. Less than a week after my memorable weekend in the Chicago suburbs, I had my scoring highlight of the summer.

I’m pretty sure it only seems this way, but Southwest Florida

Baldwin & Curran: Outing Organizers
has more golfing tennis pros than anywhere on Earth. Seriously! Maybe I should have written "aging golfing tennis
pros." In any event, we do have a love for the game, and that love of the game has led to what I’ll call the Tennis Pro Golf Outing Series that USPTA District 14 President Mike Curran (Director of Tennis & Fitness at Gulf Harbour) and Mike Baldwin (Director of Tennis at Mediterra) have coordinated the past couple of summers (read more in News-Press here). 

The venues we play are terrific and include courses such as
Old Orange at Verandah
Gulf Harbour, Mediterra, The Hideaway, Kelly Greens, Verandah, West Bay, Collier’s Reserve and others terrific tracks. If you know tennis players, then you know that even though it’s an opportunity for camaraderie and networking, it’s also a time to compete. For an old-timer like me whose tennis skills have been eroded, golf offers a similar adrenaline rush with far less physical toll.

This past Friday, Jeff Diggs (Director of Tennis) and Travis
Travis Wehrs- Director of Golf,
Fiddlesticks Country Club
Wehrs (Director of Golf) were the generous hosts at Fiddlesticks Country Club, where 32 players had the thrill of playing the Long Mean course, the same course that hosted the Florida State Golf Association Amateur Championship in June. Yes, what started as a group of about eight to twelve tennis professionals a couple summers ago, peaked last Friday into a group of 32 with eight players on a waiting list.

I suppose at this point it has to called a “Tennis Pros and
Sean Balliet- Director of Golf, Hideaway Country Club
Friends Golf Outing,” because at Fiddlesticks tennis pros made up about one third of the players, with tennis students, club members, a university tennis coach, two golf professionals, and even one club general manager joining the fun.


My best golf photo ever.
Thanks Steph!



I had the good fortune of being on a team with Mike Curran, the best tennis pro golfer in the group (now that Mike Lawver needs a hip), or at least the player that seems to win the booty most often. It wasn’t the first time I’ve been on a team with Mike, but it was the first time I shot my low score ever in competition and contributed to the team win. It was just the second time I shot as low as 78, and to do it on Long Mean was definitely a treat. 
Both Curran and Balliet were -4 after four holes, and the battle 

Mike Curran at Streamsong
they waged was fierce. In the end, Mike finished +1 and pocketed 43 points for the team. Sean carded an even par round of 72
and 45 points for his team, thereby upholding the dignity of the PGA. Wouldn’t do to have a tennis pro beat all three golf professionals who played.

T. A. & Jim "Katman" Katterfield
One of the other two professionals, Hideaway Head Golf Professional Dave Bartoe shot 74 and earned 37 points for his team. Unfortunately, he had the Katman on his team, and finished just two points out of the money. Kat is a heckuva lot better in tennis, right DP :)?  

This was a highlight not because I played well, heck, I shot 79
Chris Capps at Treviso Bay
in one of these outings before and collected zip, zero, nada. This time, however, I played well and shot my best score ever; played with and beat three young guys (Luke Beverly- one of the members of my online club that I
Luke Beverley at Talis Park 
hadn't met before and his very cool friends Travis Kaulbars and Randy Ristic); scored better than one PGA Professional who will remain nameless; tied my far superior golfing buddy Chris Capps; AND chalked up 32 points for my winning team. Talk about highlight! 

Ed Noble of Hideout notched 21 points with his 88 and Jonas Kushner added 21 to push our team to victory. 
Mike Baldwin, Doug Small, Mike Curran & Jeff Diggs
Our host Jeff Diggs didn’t go home empty handed, finishing second with Perry Rende (34 points), Randy Craycraft (21), and Gary Eskilson (13). Sean Balliet (45), Russ Crutchfield (22), Pete Minerich (18) and Marius Espeleta (7) took third place honors. Mike
Oliver Stenger, Marius Espeleta, John Ramsey
at Collier's Reserve in 2015
and Marius always seem to end up in the money. I think I’m going to change my name to something beginning with “M.”
 Closest to the pin honors went to Jimmy Martineau (the youngster who retired me from Pro League), Jason Gunias, Gary Eskilson and, of course, Mike Curran.

The "tennis pro tour:" makes its next stop at West Bay on
Prestwick 9th green
Sunday, August 28. Unfortunately...well, not so unfortunately, I'll be missing it because Chris and I will be in Myrtle Beach, hopefully playing Prestwick on Sunday. The World Amateur Handicap Championship begins on Monday! Check out preview here.



SUMMER 2016 GOLF HIGHLIGHTS- ACT 1: CHICAGO GOLF

Fountain on #8 at The Hideaway
One of my favorite times of year is here, and if you know me you know that that must be somehow related to golf. Although I usually have a terrific August, simply because it’s the time that Steph and I head to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina for the World Amateur Handicap Championship, there has been some icing on that cake this August.

Tee Box on Silver #4
Can you see our caddie way below in the background?
The tastiest portion of that icing thus far was my trip to the Chicago Area in mid-August. Courtesy of the generosity, hospitality and sway of Richard and Ruth Edelman (tennis friends from Gulf Harbour), I experienced the beauty of Stonebridge Country Club in Aurora, Illinois and the magnificence of Rich Harvest Farms (RHF) in Sugar Grove, Illinois.

I’m excited to play almost any two new golf courses, but I really anticipated playing these two, given the fact that one was a Tom Fazio design, one is characterized as a midwestern Augusta, and both have hosted professional events (gotta be special to attract pro events, right?). 

As Richard, Patty and Russ Taruscio and I traversed the Stonebridge track,the only disappointment was in my own play on the front side. At times I was so caught up in the beauty of my surroundings, that I forgot that the objective was getting the little ball in the hole.

That gorgeous Saturday afternoon at Stonebridge featured generous, sweeping fairways lined with ancient oaks, punctuated by brimming lakes, and framed with fescue. Stonebridge's changes in elevation (something we don’t encounter much in Florida) were gradual and gentle. Despite recent heavy rains, the fairways offered solid footing and ample roll, and the undulating greens rolled true and quick.

The architecture of the homes bracing the links was as
splendid as the course itself. My attention was repeatedly diverted by the diversity of dwellings sitting on hills above the fairways, and visible through the majestic oaks that guarded this suburban Chicago gem. 

After a less than stellar and touristy 49 on the front side, I buckled down a bit and shot a relatively respectable 42 on the back, even with an "8" on the last hole! Thanks for sharing all that local knowledge Russ. Patty, next time all those around the edges will drop in...

Day 2: Rich Harvest Farms
If Saturday afternoon was sensational, then Sunday morning

was spectacular. A cool breeze and high def sunshine characterized this midwestern morning, and that was a fitting backdrop for lush contours of Rich Harvest Farms. Russ and Richard had done their best to scare-uh-prepare me for
the Rich Harvest Farms test, and I knew from reviewing the scorecard ahead of time that it would be different from any other course I had played to date. I believe that is what Jerry Rich, owner and president intended when he designed this golfing treasure (Here’s a link to all the accolades for Rich Harvest Farms).

Looking at my list of 304 scores posted over the past five

years, Rich Harvest Farms has the highest course rating (74.7) and slope (145) from the members tee of any course I’ve played. Old Corkscrew in Estero, Florida is a close second from the members (or 3rd tee) at 72 and 144 rating and slope respectively.
Rich Harvest Farms Silver #5 Green
I went into the round at RHF thinking that if I bogeyed every hole I’d be happy. After all, the 2017 NCAA Championships are going to be played there, so it must be a pretty stern test of golf. And it was a stern test, but in a different way than Old Corkscrew.

Although both courses present considerable challenges, I
#5 from the tee box
think most of the difficulty at Old Corkscrew rests primarily in the tricky, often very fast greens, which demand precision on approach shots. Perhaps it was because I was new to the course, but RHF seemed to present challenges, different and interesting challenges, on almost every shot.

I think my favorite tee shot challenge at RHF was Hole 4 on
Rich Harvest Farms Silver #4
the Silver (back) nine. The fairway had to be at least 80 feet below the tee box with plenty of trouble between the tee box and fairway and what appeared like narrow goalposts in the distance to hit through. Fair to say it was an intimidating tee shot. I just barely cleared the junk and went on to make one of the few pars I had that day. Uh, by the way, the 430-yard par-4 hole is listed as the second hardest hole on the course.

Speaking of how I played, I was passing the stern test through 15 of the 18 holes. Consistent with my goal going in, I had played bogey golf on the front (45) and was on my way to

surpassing my goal on the back (+4 after six holes), when, inexplicably, my golf mind vanished and took my golf swing with it. To put it in perspective, I shot +9 on the final three holes! That’s the same number over par that I shot on the entire front side! Yes, I love this game even when it doesn't love me. I walked off the course in shock.
Ya know, I would like another crack at playing that
formidable track, but I might relish even more the opportunity to just ride the course taking shots of the nifty bunkering, the blind tee shots, the tantalizing risk-reward options, the unwavering undulation of fairway and green, and just the sheer beauty of Rich Harvest Farms. Perhaps another time.

The best shots I took (click here for RHF photos), were not of


the course itself, but of the incredible collection of vehicles housed in the one-of-a-kind “Clubhouse.” RHF is home to
RHF Museum
one of the world’s finest automobile collections, featuring horse-drawn stagecoaches to Ferraris. I could try to do this collection justice with words, but I would be bound to fail. And heck, others have tried (click here for one such attempt).

Richard and Ruth's generosity and hospitality will stay with
At the Edelmans
me long after images of the golf courses fade, and the entire weekend was a reminder of how good it is to have good friends with whom to share special moments. Thanks folks! But there are more golf highlights to share with you. If you care to read now or later, click here for installment #2.