2012年5月25日星期五

very specail golf course at at Talis Park Golf Club


It was 2003 and Stewart’s job was to work with the famous golfers as they created the course.

Witt said Stewart is also skilled at making people happy.

Stewart, the head of golf at Talis Park, said it was an amazing experience to be part of the beginning of such a special golf course.

After the course was done, Stewart Taylormade R11 driver turned his attention to personal customer service. The community, which was owned by WCI, then a foreign bank and now Kitson and Partners, currently has only 30 homes and only about 70 golf members.

Stewart said that even when Talis Park is built out at 585 homes, he plans to maintain that personal touch with each golfer. This will be possible because he’s not a general manager who sits in an office. He’s out there helping his staff do everything from wipe tables to prepare drinks for golfers as they come off the course.

“It was taking a piece of land that was nothing and turning it into what Talis Park is today,” Stewart said.

Stewart said he loves golf because it’s an opportunity to be around people and enjoy the game with others. While he only gets to play once every two weeks now, he still loves the sport and his job.

“He’s totally involved in the club and all aspects of the club,” said Dave Witt, director of golf. “He’ll be the first to jump in and clear tables or make a Bloody Mary when golfers come in for lunch.”

“Pete Dye and Greg Norman, they flew in Pete’s helicopter and landed right here,” Stewart said as he pointed to Taylormade R11 irons the Talis Park golf course. “I would pick up sandwiches at Subway and we would sit by the helicopter and eat and discuss plans. It was unbelievable. Then Greg and Pete would jump in my truck and we would drive around.”

“He always has the ability to tell somebody no and they would still walk away happy,” Witt said.

“Our uniqueness is all our guys know everybody’s first and last name and their children and their pets,” Stewart said. “It gives us a more personal ability.”

Stewart, 53, began playing golf when he was discount golf clubs just five years old. His dad was a scratch golfer, and he originally learned from his father. He played golf in high school and after graduating from Texas Tech, went on to the golf academy in California. He is also a member of the PGA.

2012年5月22日星期二

Blue Valley won 6A golf crown


It took a few holes for Yates, who signed with Missouri-St. Louis, to find his putting stroke, but when everything finally clicked, it turned into an impressive runaway win, including a 45-foot downhill chip-in from 2 yards off the green on No. 16.

It wasn’t the same kind of Taylormade R11 irons course either as the regional meet, and the winds were blowing today,” BV North coach Susan O’Dell said. “It was probably pretty steady at 25 or 30 miles per hour, and it came in earlier than expected. It died off a little in the afternoon, but not that much. It was probably still at least 15 miles per hour.”

It feels great to bring it home on our home course,” Pirates coach Ryan McCarty said. “We battled with them all year long and it came down to 1 shot today. Even though it was only 1 stroke, it feels good to get them. The kids had a lot of pressure playing on our home course, and they stepped up.”

I’m ecstatic for the kids,” said O’Dell, who will retire from teaching after 32 years but will coach the golf team one more season. “They’ve worked hard and just couldn’t get over that last hurdle. We’ve been talking all year about finishing strong and staying focused. These guys finished about as strong as any team I’ve ever seen. They finished strong at league, regionals and were strong again today.”

Still, the Mustangs were mighty impressive, firing a collective 300 and winning state for the first time since 1993. BV West was runner-up at 315, and third-place Shawnee Mission East was at 316.

You think about winning a state title, but you never think it will happen to you,” Yates said. “You figure you’ll always be the second- or third-place guy, but you’ll never get it done. But I finally got Taylormade R11 driver done today and it feels great.”

Despite an abysmal start, senior Zach Tate, who has signed with Drury, capped his Mustangs career with a 1-over 73 for the individual gold medal.

Follow BV North senior, Ross Thornton, who signed with Colorado, tied for the second-lowest round at 74 with SM Northwest’s Jackson Foth.

No team handled the conditions quite as well as BV North, which placed four golfers among the top seven individually.

Mustangs sophomore Evan Shartzer shot a 76 and finished alone in fourth place, and junior Alex Higgs wound up seventh after a six-way tie for the fifth-best round (77) played out.

He found himself 4 over through five discount golf clubs holes and wasn’t able to make up any ground halfway through his round. But Tate played the first six hole on the back nine in 5 under par before a double bogey at No. 16 — a long hole into the teeth of the wind.

2012年5月16日星期三

75th anniversary for Anoka’s Green Haven Golf Course



The third golf course in the area was the L.O. Jacob Golf Course, or “Jake’s Course,” as it was affectionately called by some. That course stood where Mississippi Elementary School now stands.

Pease said Green Haven was built on the Taylormade Burner 2.0 irons sand plain on the western side of the city of Anoka “where some people said no golf course could ever be built.”

Anoka’s first golf course was located on property now known as Goodrich Field with the first tee in the neighborhood of the entrance of the Anoka junior high school on Fourth Avenue. Several fairways crossed each other “making for an interesting, but very hazardous layout,” Pease wrote.

Anoka High School’s boys’ and girls’ golf teams practice at Green Haven, and the course hosts several annual tournaments including the Celebrate Anoka Golf Tournament, the Past Presidents Tournament, the Halloween Tournament, the Tournament of Champions and the Club Championship.

“This course was popularized by many of the good golfers of the area and the first Anoka Men’s Golf Club was formed here,” Pease wrote.

After reviewing more than 100 entries, the Name the Course committee chose the name Green Haven, a name submitted by Clara Wickstrom, “who was also a very fine golfer,” according to Arch Pease.

But golf wasn’t the only diversion practiced on the property. There were grounds for lawn bowling, an area set aside callaway razr x irons for trap and skeet shooting, and a rifle and pistol range where the 18th fairway is now.

“All of the other golf courses didn’t show up until the ‘60s and ‘70s. If you played golf, this was the place,” Norland said.

Of course, Green Haven also entices its hometown golfers to the links.

Among established groups golfing at Green Haven Golf Course is the Men’s Club, established in 1928 and boasting some 275 members.

But sure enough it was built and as the new course neared completion, a Name the Course Contest was announced with a season’s free play awarded to the lucky winner.

“At its peak there were something like 400 members and it was an exclusive club, requiring recommendation and an initiation fee before you could join,” Norland said.

Golfing at Green Haven carries rich discount golf clubs history steeped in tradition, and since Green Haven opened back in 1937, the fairways and greens have welcomed golfers from miles beyond the historic city where it rests.

There are also two Ladies Clubs, the morning club with a more competitive flair to it, and the evening club for the more relaxed lady golfers.

2012年5月7日星期一

it was Fowler's turn this time



"I didn't want to play it safe," Fowler said. "I had a good number (133 yards), and I was aiming right of the hole with the wind coming out of the right, and if I hit a perfect shot, it comes down right on the stick. ... I hit a perfect shot at the right time, and I was going for it."

McIlroy established himself on the same green two years ago, a 20-year-old who closed out a record 62 by making a 40-foot putt for his first PGA Tour win, and the biggest of his career until adding a record-breaking U.S. Open title last summer at Congressional.

"I didn't want to play it safe," Fowler said. "I had a good number (133 yards), and I was aiming right of the hole with the wind coming out of the right, and if I hit a perfect shot, it comes down Titleist 712 AP1 Irons right on the stick. ... I hit a perfect shot at the right time, and I was going for it."

McIlroy established himself on the same green two years ago, a 20-year-old who closed out a record 62 by making a 40-foot putt for his first PGA Tour win, and the biggest of his career until adding a record-breaking U.S. Open title last summer at Congressional.

Fowler stuffed his shot into 4 feet for a birdie on the first extra hole to beat McIlroy and D.A. Points and win the Wells Fargo Championship on Sunday. It was his first PGA Tour win in his 67th start as a pro, bringing him a small measure of relief and a big dose of credibility.

Fowler stuffed his shot into 4 feet for a birdie on the first extra hole to beat McIlroy and D.A. Points and win the Wells Fargo Championship on Sunday. It was his first PGA Tour win in his 67th start as a pro, bringing him a small measure of relief and a big dose of credibility.

For all his endorsements and marketing prowess, Fowler was starting to hear whispers about when he was going to win. What carried him along was patience and impeccable manners, which have Titleist 712 AP2 Irons  made him a favorite among his peers.

"I'm over the top," his mother said, fighting back tears. "I'm relieved for him because this is an expectation from the people, the fans, the tournament staff directors. And now he can hopefully carry on and do the work that he likes to do."

Ryan Moore, who played in the final group with Simpson, didn't make a birdie until the 15th hole and shot 74. He tied for fifth with Lee Westwood (66) and Ben Curtis (67), who finished before the leaders got to the back nine.

"I think it was just a matter of time before he won," McIlroy said. "It seems like this tournament produces first-time winners -- Anthony Kim, myself, now Rickie. It's great to see. He probably has went discount golf clubs through a little bit of scrutiny and a lot of pressure trying to get that first win. But now that win is out of the way. Hopefully, that will ease the pressure a little bit."

2012年5月2日星期三

Tiger needs to change his swing





During a week in which he went only 2 under on the par-5s, the four-time Masters champion was haunted by his old swing, the one crafted by a man who had just released a tell-all book about their six-year relationship. You could see Tiger's frustrated attempts to fight off the last vestiges of Hank Haney's lessons. Woods' swing coach, Sean Foley, could be there on the range to try to correct those old habits, but he couldn't be on the golf course in the thick of things when his player had to hit real shots.

Woods is playing in his first tournament since that Masters disappointment this week at Quail Hollow. On Monday, he took questions from his fans via social media. He said he had resolved the swing issues that plagued him in Augusta.

"At the Masters, I was kind of struggling with my ballstriking a little bit," Woods said. "Sean and I fixed it. It had to do with posture. My setup wasn't quite right, as well as my takeaway, so we worked on that."

Alec Wilkinson, a longtime New Yorker contributor, had the late jazz bassist Jimmy Garrison as his faculty TaylorMade R11S Driver adviser when he was a student at Bennington College in the early 1970s. Wilkinson once heard the former John Coltrane quartet member say: "First you have to learn all about your instrument, then you have to learn all about music, then you have to forget it all and learn how to play."

"If he ever asked me what I thought he needed to do, I'd tell him, look, go on the practice tee without anybody -- without me, without Sean, without Haney, without a camera, and start hitting golf shots," Harmon said. "Hit some high draws, some low draws, high fades, low fades, move the ball up and down, move it around; don't worry about how you do it and go back to feeling it again."

But Woods has to come to this realization on his own. The more weight he puts on his swing, the farther he gets from finding the real answers to his problems. He doesn't need me to tell him the importance of the mental game -- no one has had a better mind game over the years than Woods -- but I think he's being dishonest with himself to deny that his confidence as a player and a person has been shaken over the years by his injuries and personal travails and disappointments in big tournaments.

Even Jack Nicklaus, who has mostly praised the man trying to break his record of 18 majors, has questioned Tiger's mental game since the Masters.

Tiger won at Quail Hollow in 2007 and he loves the course. It's possible that it's true he has indeed "fixed" his swing, but he's never going to find that mythical perfect swing or some major resolution about his game by winning this week, as long as he takes the perspective that his issues lie primarily with his swing.

Tiger won at Quail Hollow in 2007 and he loves the course. It's possible that it's true he has indeed "fixed" his swing, but he's never going to find that mythical perfect swing or some major Taylormade Rocketballz Irons resolution about his game by winning this week, as long as he takes the perspective that his issues lie primarily with his swing.

I know Foley wants this for Tiger. No good teacher worth his salt wants his player standing over the ball in a pressure situation with a million swing thoughts running through his head.

Perhaps the golf swing has become a convenient way to deflect attention from some of the larger issues in his life. During Masters week, I heard another reporter say of Woods: "It must be hard for him to play well carrying around all that anger."

"I don't know what goes [on] between his ears," Nicklaus said. "That's really the X factor. His golf game and his golf swing look pretty similar to what I've been looking at and he hits a lot of discount golf clubs great shots. But you never know what's going on in somebody's head."

"I don't know what goes [on] between his ears," Nicklaus said. "That's really the X factor. His golf game and his golf swing look pretty similar to what I've been looking at and he hits a lot of great shots. But you never know what's going on in somebody's head."

Yet thanks to the PGA Tour, Woods has a tournament this week at Quail Hollow to try to make amends for his embarrassing performance at the Masters. He can answer all of his critics who say he's done or he can affirm the predictions of his believers who say he'll make it back to No. 1 in the world.