Monday
Feb102014

Give D.A. points for class

    The Morning Nine for Monday, February 10, 2014


    The thermometer reads zero as this is typed. Does that mean Mother Nature is at even par? While we chill out on that question, here’s the Morning Nine.

    1. Pekin native D.A. Points may not know every rule in the book, but he knows how to act. Disqualified on Friday for using a training aid while practicing his swing during one of the many lulls in the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, he came back anyway on Saturday for the benefit of his pro-am partner, former Secretary of State (and Augusta National member) Condoleezza Rice.
    “She’s such a sweet, warmhearted woman and loves golf,” Points, who won at Pebble Beach three years ago, told the San Jose Mercury News. “I signed up to play the Pebble Beach AT&T Pro-Am. It’s not just about me and the golf tournament. It’s about playing with our amateurs and making sure they have a good time.”
    There is the definition of class. And Rice responded in kind.
    “It meant an enormous amount to me,” Rice told the paper. “He didn’t have to do that. I, more than anybody, know what it’s like to be on the road a lot and perhaps get to go home early. But he’s a wonderful, wonderful person, and it really speaks well for him and the Tour that he came out and played anyway.”
    The duo finished 147th, near the bottom of the 156-team field, and didn’t make the cut for Sunday.

    2. So what did Points do? While waiting on the 18th tee at Pebble Beach, he grabbed a green foam ball out of his bag and tucked it under his right arm while making a practice swing. Since the ball was a training aid, that was illegal under the rules, and once the Tour officials found out via a video, he was disqualified.
    Points didn’t know the rule, which isn’t unusual for a pro, especially for something this obscure.
    Here’s something odder: Had Points just grabbed a head cover and done the same thing, there would be no penalty, since a head cover isn’t a training aid.
    Does that make sense? Of course not. The rule should be “You can’t use anything during a round.”
    And, curiously, Points wasn’t disqualified from the Pro-Am. Were’t the Rules of Golf in effect for that?

    3. Congrats to Point O Woods Golf & Country Club and the WGA for making official what was reported here on January 6, that the Western Amateur is returning to what Chick Evans once called “the peerless Point.” The Western Am returns to the course just outside of Benton Harbor, Michigan, in 2019. It was played there in 1963, 1965, and from 1971 through 2008, when disagreements over financing ended a long run that featured wins by, among others, Tom Weiskopf, Ben Crenshaw, Andy North, Curtis Strange, Phil Mickelson, Justin Leonard and Tiger Woods.
    Expect a big promotional push in 2019. The Point has a new clubhouse and members with a new outlook, but the classic course designed by Robert Trent Jones is still a tremendous test, even for big hitters. They still have to hit the fairways and the proper portion of the greens.
    Said Point president Mark Matthews in a WGA release, “We’ve hosted many great Western Amateur championships. A good number of our champions, and scores of other top amateurs who have competed here, have gone on to enjoy highly successful professional careers. We’ve enjoyed giving back to golf by hosting such a prestigious championship, and we’re thrilled now to be back in the Western Amateur rotation.”

    4. There was a changing of the guard in the USGA over the weekend, Glen Nager leaving the presidency and Tom O’Toole taking over. Or Thomas J. O’Toole Jr., if you want to get formal – and the USGA suffers from formality. But that may change. In his incoming chat, O’Toole spoke of wanting to diversify the game, of the USGA’s failure to do so in the past.
    He even said the recent push for alternative golf – cups the size of hubcaps, non-conforming clubs – is a way to increase the interest in the game.
    Quoth O’Toole, “I think some of these things that would enhance or entice people to play golf by playing a different game, that's perfectly okay with us.”
    But O’Toole also said, “We’re not going to call that golf.”
    He’d better call it golf, or someone else will come up with a name for it, and those who play it will pay attention to that someone else and not the USGA. And the boys in the blue coats will be on the outside looking in. Golf is golf, in all its forms, formal and informal, and the sooner O’Toole embraces that, the sooner the game stops its downward slide in participation and begins to grow.
    Or does he not recall how someone picked up a soccer ball one day and ran with it, thus inventing rugby?

    5. Nager? He defended his wild last few months, in which he tried to overhaul the USGA’s governing structure and install himself as the overseer of the staff and the executive committee, to which the executive committee said, “You’re out of bounds.” Nager, a Washington lawyer, accepted a thank you gift from O’Toole and left the annual shindig without hanging around for dinner.
    Meanwhile, Gary Stevenson, the one-term member of the executive committee who, with Nager, helped push through the Fox Sports television contract, has also left the building, having his duties increased at Major League Soccer, his real life job.

    6. The USGA also joined the R&A in its recent declaration that it will allow electronic distance measuring devices in its amateur competitions, invoking the local rule it’s had on the books since 2006. The idea is to speed play.
    How many seconds per stroke it will save compared to searching out a yardage marker, nobody could say. How much natural feel it will take out of the game, nobody could say. The guess here is that a player who can’t judge distance on his or her own will end up taking more time, not less, no matter how much gadgetry is in use.
    But the USGA will call that golf.

    7. Parkas. Hand-warmers. Weather delays. The Winter Olympics? Nah. Crosby weather at the Crosby. All that was missing over the weekend was Phil Harris. But the best save at Pebble Beach wasn’t from a bunker, it was 83-year-old Clint Eastwood’s performing the Heimlich Maneuver to save tournament CEO Steve John from choking on food during a Wednesday night volunteer party. Talk about making a guy’s day.

    8. Hey, Woods finally won a tournament. No, not Tiger Woods.
    His niece, Cheyenne Woods, captured the Ladies European Tour tournament in Queensland, Australia, over the weekend. She birdied two of the last four holes to close with 69 for 16-under-par 276 and beat Aussie amateur Minjee Lee by two strokes. Remember when ol’ Uncle Tiger would win with monotonous regularity? Ah, the days before fire hydrants.

    9. Finally, if you can’t get the Olympics out of your head these days, here’s more good news: Golf Channel confirmed the other day that it will televise the Olympic golf competitions from Rio de Janeiro in 2016. This was a foregone conclusion, since Golf Channel is part of the NBC behemoth, but now we know for sure.
    Of course, it would help if the golf course is ready by then. Architect Gil Hanse says it will be. He thinks. He hopes. Don’t run to Vegas on that.

    – Tim Cronin

Sunday
Feb022014

Tinley Park Golf Expo tees off local season

The Morning Nine for Monday, February 3, 2014

Writing from Chicago

    Golf can enlarge one’s vocabulary, and not just when someone in your group hits his third straight ball in the water. Here’s how: Ever hear the word “tributary” outside of the Masters, when CBS’s guys talk about the tributary of Rae’s Creek that runs through the 13th hole? Of course not.
    This week brings the traveling circus of the American tour to Pebble Beach, and that means the word is “felicitous.” As in Robert Louis Stevenson, that old 3-handicapper, calling Pebble Beach “The most felicitous meeting of land and sea in creation.” So if you ever need to use felicitous in a sentence, there you go. And here we go with the Morning Nine.

    1. So here it is the first Monday in February, there’s too much snow on the ground, it hasn’t been above freezing since Thanksgiving, more snow is on the way, the Super Bowl is over – it was over by halftime, come to think of it – and they could play the Winter Olympics in your driveway.
    What to do? Go to a golf show. The third Tinley Park Golf Expo at the town’s convention center begins a three-day run on Friday. New this year is an emphasis on junior golf, with lessons for kids provided by the First Tee of Chicago. There’s a hitting area for adults as well.
    Based on the list of exhibitors through Sunday, about two dozen courses, more of them local than regional resorts, will be represented. Several manufacturers will also be on hand, along with equipment sellers.
    The Tinley show runs from noon to 7 p.m. on Friday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday, and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday. Go on Friday, when admission is just $5. It’s $10 on Saturday and Sunday. Parking’s free. The Tinley Park Convention Center is at Interstate 80 and Harlem Ave.
    Tinley’s show is the first of two in the Chicago area, the Chicago Golf Show in Rosemont  on Feb. 21-23 being the other.

    2. Cue the Augusta music: Kevin Stadler wins the Phoenix Open, will join dad Craig in the field for the Masters. And Craig says this will be his farewell appearance. He was waiting to for his boy to win to play just one more. Neat.

    3. Don’t know if there were really 189,000 people at the Phoenix Open on Saturday, but the aerial shots show there certainly was a throng on hand. And they were able to get in and out without a great hassle, unlike a certain football game in East Rutherford, New Jersey. The most impressive stat of the weekend wasn’t Stadler’s winning score, but this one: 200 suites encircling the par-3 16th hole, sold at $46,000 per. That’s $9.2 million in revenue, a boatload of it going to charity.

    4. The best and worst of golf television arrives this week. The best are the views of Pebble Beach – and the traditional aerial shot of Cypress Point – during the Crosby Clambake. The worst is Saturday’s telecast, three hours of inanity that features the quasi-celebrities who play in the amateur portion of the tournament.
    The problem is, nobody’s cared since Jack Lemmon died. Jim Nantz hamming it up with Larry Gatlin just doesn’t cut it.
    How about a three-hour show explaining why Pebble Beach is an architectural masterpiece, and how Cypress, which used to host a round of the tournament, is even better? Go into the risk-reward on the eighth, ninth and 10th holes along the cliffs. And come on the air before they play the fifth and sixth holes, for crying out loud. The golf course starts on No. 5.

    5. Maybe we shouldn’t feel bad about the lousy weather. Reporter and radio broadcaster Rory Spears, who never saw a golf course he didn’t want to play at least once, was in Pinehurst a few days ago, and was snowed out of a round on No. 2. That’s a long way to go to see a new site for the NHL’s Winter Classic.

    6. Kevin Streelman, the Winfield native, might as well have stayed in bed rather than play for the first time in a month. He tied for 53rd at 1-under-par 283 at Phoenix, making $14,284.80. His previous outing was a tie for third at Kapalua (worth $382,000).

    7. Streelman’s finish was better than that of D.A. Points. He missed the cut for the first time this year (and season), and hasn’t cracked the top 25 in six tournaments.

    8. Golf history department, division of “How crazy is this?” Lloyd Mangrum won the 1946 U.S. Open in a double-round playoff, surviving after he, Byron Nelson and Vic Ghezzi tied after 72 holes and after an 18-hole playoff. And survived is the proper word, for they played the last three holes of a playoff in a thunderstorm.
    Writers opined that Mangrum wasn’t concerned since he’d survived being wounded in the Battle of the Bulge. They didn’t have a 2-iron in their hands. What was USGA boss Joe Dey thinking?

    9. Finally, when does the Super Bowl start? A Seattle safety via a Denver miscue and two Seahawks field goals in the first quarter almost made the commercials interesting by comparison. Haven’t seen a favorite look so out of place since Tiger Woods in the Dubai Desert Classic, 18 hours earlier. But at least it wasn’t freezing.

    – Tim Cronin

Monday
Jan272014

Tuckaway latest course sale

The Morning Nine for Monday, January 27, 2014

    Feeling a bit chilly? Warm up to golf with the latest edition of the Morning Nine:

    1. Add Tuckaway Golf Course in Crete to the list of courses that have been sold or put up for sale recently. Tuckaway, around the corner from the for-sale Balmoral Woods layout, also in Crete, was sold by the owning family for about $1.2 million, a source close to the family tells Illinois Golfer.
    Tuckaway, a John Ellis design that opened in 1960, will remain open. That’s in contrast to Woodbine, the Homer Glen layout that has been sold to the village and will close after this season to become a park, the clubhouse becoming the village hall. But like Woodbine, it’s a course that won’t beat you up. At 6,225 yards from the tips, it’s a place to learn how to play. It’s good news for beginners and seniors that it will stay open.

    2. In case you were wondering, Balmoral Woods will be open for business as well while the Mortell family has it for sale – and presumably after.

    3. Will there be more turmoil in the Chicago area golf business? The guess is yes, if only because rounds played have slid for over a decade now. It’s a difficult business locally and nationally. Cog Hill’s famed Dubsdread course only has handful of people on it at any given time some weekdays in the shoulder season, and that’s the best public layout in the area. If Dubs isn’t full, imagine how it is on other courses.

    4. The most sensible words from the PGA Merchandise Show’s State of the Game Forum in Orlando came from former USGA executive director David Fay: “We have suffered from real fallacies — fallacies of numbers. We don’t have 25-26 million golfers. I think that’s a myth. I think the real number is somewhere around 15 million golfers. And we have too many golf courses … out there that are under utilized. Let’s talk about 15 million golfers and let’s see what they (course owners) can do with these courses.”

    5. TaylorMade is planning to sell clubs and balls (more like oversize whiffle balls than golf balls) that don’t hew to USGA rules. Some people think this is a bad thing. Wrong. Anything that gets people to play golf, or some form thereof, and hook them on the game, is a good thing. Eventually, many will come around to buying “real” clubs that conform to the rules – and TaylorMade might make a second sale.

    6. It’s Phoenix Open week, so get ready for hooting and hollering on the famous par-3 16th – but no more caddie races, which have been banned by the fun police – plus announcements of six-figure crowds given by television announcers with straight faces. The aerial shots don’t show any more people than pile into a U.S. Open, and that’s rarely more than 45,000, so who are the people in Phoenix kidding?

    7. Back-to-back double bogeys and a slew of other bogeys for Tiger Woods en route to his 79 at Torrey Pines South on Saturday. If you’ve always wanted to play like Woods, now you can.

    8. Checked the Winter Olympics schedule and found sliding and ditching on it. Wait, that’s the traffic report. Enough with the deep freeze, already. When it’s too cold to go to a dome to practice, it’s just too cold.

    9. Finally, kudos to Jessica Korda from recovering from a shank – it pains us to write the word – on Saturday to win the LPGA’s season-opening tournament on Sunday. Guess that makes Saturday’s gaffe shanks for the memory.

    – Tim Cronin

Monday
Jan202014

For Sale: Balmoral Woods

The Morning Nine for Monday, January 20, 2014

                              Writing from Chicago

    News and views for the third Monday in January, and buddy, can you spare $1.5 million?    

    1. If you want to buy a golf course – and a good one – get in touch with the Mortell family. Balmoral Woods, the challenging, fun course in Crete the family has owned and cared for from the beginning, is for sale.
    The price: $1.5 million, down from the original $1.9 million. Crete’s off the beaten path unless you’re in the south suburbs. That’s helped keep the green fee down over the years, making Balmoral one of the most affordable top-grade courses, but it also means the sale price may not be as high as the quality of the course would warrant.
    Here’s what you’d get: Eighteen holes winding across hill and dale on 124 acres (110 owned, the rest on a long-term lease) designed in two stages, first by Arthur Davis and Ron Kirby in 1975, then expanded in 1977 by George Fazio and owner Don Mortell, that were converted from bluegrass to bentgrass about a decade ago. A 10,000 square-foot clubhouse with a banquet room for 160 sitting high on a hill in the northeast corner of the property. A range that’s not as close to the clubhouse as you’d like – probably the only logistical drawback considering the course was originally nine holes and the clubhouse was actually a hotel – now a senior citizen center – that sits between the current sixth green and seventh tee.
    You’d also get a steady clientele that isn’t as large as it once was – the problem for virtually every public course. More than one owner will tell you the dip that followed the attack on Sept. 11, 2001, never fully rebounded. In the sales listing on the Links Capital Advisors web site, this is noted: “Club needs new owner with aggressive marketing campaign to increase rounds and revenue.”
    One thing the Mortells haven’t done over the years is engage in the coupon chase that many other courses in the south suburbs and across the border in Lake County, Ind., go for. There are discount rates, but they’re not crazy. The belief is that the golf course should pay for itself, not be subsidized by bar and restaurant business.
    The next notation: “Club has positive cash flow.”
    But for how long? That’s the $1.5 million question.

    2. Balmoral is the site of the annual start to amateur tournament play each year, in the form of the Will County Amateur. Any new owner would be expected to continue that, including the traditional awarding of the Brown Jacket, one of Don Mortell’s old sport coats. A tradition unlike any other ... hey, is that phrase taken?

    3. Balmoral on the block follows the sale of private Bull Valley in Woodstock and public Chalet Hills in Cary to different parties in the last few months. Chalet Hills, a similar facility to Balmoral Woods, was offered for $2,150,000, which shows the old adage in real estate still applies: location, location, location. Bull Valley, well down in membership the last few years, was said to go for $1.55 million.

    4. Patrick Reed first came to our attention – almost everybody’s attention outside of his family – with a good showing in the John Deere Classic last year. A big start and diminutive wive Justine carrying his bag made for easy columns and fun feature stories. He followed that up with a win later in the year, and Sunday proved he wasn’t a one-hit wonder by hanging on to win the old Bob Hope Desert Classic – these days with an insurance company as the title sponsor and former president Bill Clinton schmoozing – in La Quinta and Palm Springs, Calif.
    And with his brother-in-law on the bag. Justine is pregnant, but once the girl they’re expecting is born, Justine returns to work.

    5. Memo to Phil Mickelson: Just because you can try a right-handed shot to get out from under a bush in the final round in the middle of the desert doesn’t mean you have to. Taking a penalty drop would have been less penalizing than the double-hit-creating triple-bogey 7 you fashioned en route to missing the title in Abu Dhabi. But hey, better there than Pinehurst, no?

    6. Memo to Rory McIlroy: When taking relief, take complete relief. No more standing on the hazard line while hitting a shot after dropping out of the hazard. That two-stroke penalty on Saturday put you in the same second-place boat with the aforementioned Lefty in Abu Dhabi, and gave the win to the one and only Pablo Larrazabal on Sunday.

    7. In case you were wondering, it’s official: The Illinois Open is back at The Glen Club this summer. Mark down July 21-23 on your calendar. Meanwhile, the WGA has strung together an intriguing list of local courses to host the Western Junior the next few years. It’s at Flossmoor Country Club this year (June 16-20), venerable Riverside Golf Club in 2015, Rich Harvest Farms in 2017, and Evanston Golf Club in 2018. The 2016 Junior is TBA. And this year’s soiree at Flossmoor is the 100th anniversary of the inaugural, held at Chicago Golf Club.

    8. Yes, that was a U.S. Open promo last night on Fox’ NFC Championship telecast. Fox’s USGA package starts in 2015, which means it will be televising the U.S. Amateur from Olympia Fields Country Club on Fox and cable network FS1. No word on commentators. How about Joe Buck and Greg Norman in the tower behind 18?

    9. Finally, the big circuit drops in – undoubtedly via hang-glider – to Torrey Pines this week. That means one E.T. Woods will be on the premises for his first start of 2014, and the official 2013-14 season. So will a certain P.A. Mickelson. How timely, what with no football and the return to network television, that being CBS. The public is invited to tune in.

    – Tim Cronin

Monday
Jan132014

Mining for golf gold in Sand Valley

The Morning Nine for Monday, January 13, 2014

    Writing from Chicago
    Monday, January 13, 2014

    A trip around the world of golf on a reasonable Monday morning, one that doesn’t bring visions of polar bears on Michigan Avenue. We start, however, by looking to the northwest.

    1. Sand Valley may not be the most evocative name at first blush, but what Chicagoan Mike Keiser is planning to accomplish in west central Wisconsin will make the complex a household word among golfers who seek out the best. As he did at Bandon Dunes in Oregon and Cabot Links in Nova Scotia – and did first at the Dunes Club in New Buffalo, for those fortunate few who can play it – Keiser wants to create an unparalleled destination for golf.
    At Sand Valley, currently a Christmas tree farm on 1,500 acres of rolling land 18 miles south of Wisconsin Rapids, Keiser will have two of his three prerequisites for great golf: sandy soil and a lot of room for a golf architect to find the best holes. He will not have No. 3: an ocean, the wind the flows from it, and the views that inspire. Neither does Sand Hills in western Nebraska, and that non-Keiser club’s single course, while remote, is one of the best in the world.
    Sand Hills was designed by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw, who have worked for Keiser at Bandon Dunes and Cabot Links, and have gotten the nod for the first course at Sand Valley.
    Coore and Crenshaw think alike, but are specialists. Coore leads the search for the proper routing, with Crenshaw’s say on green sites and the shape of green complexes taking precedent as a project moves along. They’re a perfect combination, whether it’s a new course or a touch-up of an old favorite, as the world will discover this June, when their restoration of Donald Ross’ Course No. 2 at Pinehurst hosts the U.S. Open and U.S. Women’s Open in back-to-back weeks.

    2. So where is Sand Valley, exactly? A little more than halfway to the Twin Cities, and so far off the beaten path you need to leave bread crumbs. It’s the inland version of Bandon, Ore., in that regard. But closer than Keiser’s installation in Tasmania. really. Chicago is 247 miles away – roughly the distance to Ann Arbor, Mich. – while the Twin Cities is 193 miles out. Sand Valley is 54 miles north of Wisconsin Dells and 167 miles from Milwaukee.
    What’s it near? Well, there’s the town of Nekoosa, 2,600 strong, about a mile to the west. Nobody’s heard of it except those who live there and those who stumble into – and out of – the Lure Bar and Grill, hard on the bank of Petenwell Lake, a wide spot on the Wisconsin River. There’s a bridge to Saratoga, a marina and ... the potential for growth, once Keiser’s latest oasis is up and running. He’d like to start with two courses and a clubhouse with hotel, and go from there. But as he told Rory Spears, the market for a short-season course is different from a place like Bandon, which is open year-round. Much will depend on the acceptance of the first course, which is why the selection of Coore and Crenshaw is key. They’re likely to hit a home run.

    3. Keiser has an ace in the hole with Sand Valley that doesn’t exist with his other sites. It will be just close enough to Erin Hills and Kohler’s four courses Blackwolf Run and Whistling Straits for well-heeled golf junkies to consider making a week of it and playing all of them. Fly into Milwaukee (or Wausau, 67 miles away). and go from there. Maybe he should invest in a helipad.

    4. Congrats to Ismael Perez, winner of Cog Hill’s Eskimo Open low net division with a 43 on January 5. Likewise, a tip o’ the toque to low net winner Randy Iatesia, who carded a 33. Actually, congratulations to all 35 who played nine holes for just surviving it in blizzard conditions, with snow coming in sideways and the big cold snap descending upon the area.

    5. Back to Bandon for a moment, or, to be accurate, a half-hour south of Bandon, which is to say, farther off the beaten path. There one will find the Knapp Ranch, perched on the cliffs overlooking the Pacific Ocean, as does Bandon Dunes.
    And there, presuming the financing is firm, by 2016, one will find on a portion of that sand-dune strewn ranch Pacific Gales, fronted by Jim Haley of Highland, Ind., and designed by Chicago-area architect David Esler. His design calls for a double green for the ninth and 18th holes on a cliff overlooking the ocean. (Haley knew the area from working as a shaper on the first course at Bandon Dunes.)
    Esler’s best-known design around here is the 27 holes of Black Sheep Golf Club, an all-male enclave in the western boondocks. Anyone will be able to play Pacific Gales.

    6. Matt Fitzpatrick left Northwestern before some people knew he was there. The Englishman won the U.S. Amateur last year, before classes started in Evanston, and as of Thursday, he’s out the door, going back to merry old England to play amateur golf and ... that’s it. No school, apparently, just amateur tournaments and appearances in the three majors he gained exemptions to by winning the U.S. Am: The Masters, the U.S. Open and the British Open.
    That makes us believe he’ll be like Johnny Manziel and be turning pro as soon as his final putt drops in the British – unless he waits to defend his title in the U.S. Am. Going pro, he’ll be able to ring up some healthy endorsements, and if he does well as a pro, he’ll be able to buy a school. The University of Phoenix, say.

    7. Want to learn how to play? Put down that copy of Golf Digest and hie yourself out to the White Pines Golf Dome on Thursday, where Illinois PGA pros will be giving free lessons from 5 to 9 p.m. These guys and gals know of what they speak.

    8. Condolences to the family and friends of Lee Milligan, the longtime pro at Barrington Hills Country Club. Milligan, 81, died last Monday in San Antonio, Texas, of complications from a spinal injury. A protege of Bill Erfurth at Lincolnshire Country Club in Crete, Milligan ran the shop at Barrington Hills through 2000. But his biggest claim to fame came when he was in Madison, Wis., and worked with a young lad at Nakoma Golf Club.
    Andy North grew up, stuck with Milligan, and won two U.S. Opens.
    “I’ve taken his advice to heart since I was 12 years old ... for 50 years,” North told the San Antonio Express-News. “He was one of the special people in my life.”

    9. Finally, it’s too bad Buddy Hackett’s not around any more. Golf Channel could station him at the 16th at Waialae Country Club, site of those four palm trees tilted just right, giving him a chance to say, “It’s the Big W!” every time. You’ve got to love a golf club where the members – especially the guy who was a fan of “It’s A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World,” have a sense of humor.

    – Tim Cronin