Dan Scavino, Executive Vice President and General Manager of Trump National in Briarcliff raised over $110,000 at his 1st Annual Charity Golf Classic to benefit the Eric Trump Foundation and St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. He hosted the event at sister club Trump National Hudson Valley with a sold out field.
Donald Trump arrived in grand style at the affair, landing right behind the clubhouse in his new helicopter for the reception. 148 golfers, and 250 for dinner enjoyed the day, which included not only golf but dinner, awards, and a fireworks display to top off the evening.
St. Jude representatives were there, as was Colin, a child from St. Jude whom Scavino met two years ago while visiting the institution with Eric Trump and the foundation board. Colin was two years old at the time and terminally ill with brain cancer. He is now four. All of the money raised at the event will be presented to Eric Trump and the Eric Trump Foundation to benefit St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
We've Moved
We've Moved!
We're still about all things golf, especially those pertinent to golfers in Westchester and the NY Metro, but now we're in a much bigger space!
Please visit our new home at
Sunday, July 31, 2011
Saturday, July 30, 2011
Mount Kisco CC Video For Westchester Magazine
I explain my assignment as Exec Editor of Westchester/Hudson Valley Magazines Golf Guide and publisher Ralph Martinelli talks about one of the best holes at Mount Kisco CC.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
Friday, July 29, 2011
Par Three Jewels At Forsgate
One of my pet theories about golf course design is that a variety of par threes distinguish the best courses from the rest. Each hole should require the player to hit his or her one shot from the tee with a different club to handle distance, prevailing winds, and shot shape. If they are pleasing to the eye, so much the better. The Banks Course at Forsgate Country Club in central NJ meets all these criteria and then some.
Charles Henry Banks, aka "Steam Shovel" Banks, created four of the finest par three holes in the game for this course, which opened in 1931. All are guarded by his trademark deep, deep bunkers and have heavily-sculptured contours on the putting surface, but each one presents a different challenge.
The #3 hole, Eden, is named after the 11th hole at St. Andrews, and may be the most difficult of the four. It's 182 yards of full carry over a ravine from the blue tees to a steeply elevated green. Depending on pin position and wind, it can play much, much longer. The massive bunker guarding the right side must be nearly 20 feet below the putting surface. The green itself has a ridge that runs from front to back, effectively cutting the target area in half.
Hole #7 is named after the original Redan, the 15th at North Berwick in Scotland. The green is huge and breaks not only strongly left to right but slopes away from the tee so that club selection and shot placement are crucial.
photo courtesy of Forsgate CC
At 140 yards playing slightly downhill, the #12 hole would seem to be a pushover--but it's not. The hole earned it's name, Horseshoe, from a circular ridge that creates some near-impossible breaking putts for anyone who doesn't hit a precise shot from the tee. The green is also completely surrounded by bunkers. They're not quite as deep as others on the course, but getting up and down is complicated by that infernal circular ridge.
The final par 3 is #17, Biarritz, a 201-yard monster patterned after the original with that name in France. The long, narrow green can have pin positions ranging from about 160 to as much as 240 yards from the tee and the need for distance control is magnified by a Grand Canyon-esque swale that divides the green into three parts.
The Banks Course at Forsgate was the last design on American soil for Banks, who died at the age of 48. The one-shotters on the course combine to form a perfect tribute to the talented earth mover.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
Charles Henry Banks, aka "Steam Shovel" Banks, created four of the finest par three holes in the game for this course, which opened in 1931. All are guarded by his trademark deep, deep bunkers and have heavily-sculptured contours on the putting surface, but each one presents a different challenge.
The #3 hole, Eden, is named after the 11th hole at St. Andrews, and may be the most difficult of the four. It's 182 yards of full carry over a ravine from the blue tees to a steeply elevated green. Depending on pin position and wind, it can play much, much longer. The massive bunker guarding the right side must be nearly 20 feet below the putting surface. The green itself has a ridge that runs from front to back, effectively cutting the target area in half.
Hole #7 is named after the original Redan, the 15th at North Berwick in Scotland. The green is huge and breaks not only strongly left to right but slopes away from the tee so that club selection and shot placement are crucial.
photo courtesy of Forsgate CC
At 140 yards playing slightly downhill, the #12 hole would seem to be a pushover--but it's not. The hole earned it's name, Horseshoe, from a circular ridge that creates some near-impossible breaking putts for anyone who doesn't hit a precise shot from the tee. The green is also completely surrounded by bunkers. They're not quite as deep as others on the course, but getting up and down is complicated by that infernal circular ridge.
The final par 3 is #17, Biarritz, a 201-yard monster patterned after the original with that name in France. The long, narrow green can have pin positions ranging from about 160 to as much as 240 yards from the tee and the need for distance control is magnified by a Grand Canyon-esque swale that divides the green into three parts.
The Banks Course at Forsgate was the last design on American soil for Banks, who died at the age of 48. The one-shotters on the course combine to form a perfect tribute to the talented earth mover.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
Monday, July 25, 2011
Women--And Men--Are Playing The Wrong Tees
Women golfers are being asked to play courses that are generally more than 1,000 yards too long for them to reach greens in regulation, according to the “fairness test” devised by Arthur D. Little and Jann E. Leeming.
In a recent post on their blog, Golf With Women, Little asks the following questions:
•How fair is a 5,600-yard course for the average woman?
•What would you think if we told you that a 5,600-yard course would be equivalent to an 8,400-yard course for the average man?
•How about an 11,200-yard course for Matt Kuchar?
If the average woman should play from 5,600 yards, the average LPGA player should be playing a 9,600-yard course and a good male amateur should play a 10,400-yard course, Little contends.
“That’s how the math works if ‘fair’ is defined as having to hit the same clubs to reach greens in regulation from their respective tees,” Little writes. “This concept is what we define as the ‘fairness test.’ Sorry, Dustin Johnson, you are at 12,320 yards based on your average drive of 308 yards.”
According to Little and Leeming, the “average women golfer” hits her tee shot 140 yards. Hence, based on the data they have collected in their research, the length of the course she should play in order to have the opportunity to reach greens in regulation is 4,200 yards. Note that this is 30 times her average drive, which, Little adds, turns out to be a very good rule of thumb for everyone.
He goes on to note that the average male golfer hits a drive of 210 yards, while Kuchar’s average drive of 280 yards is within a few of yards of the PGA Tour average in 2010.
“If the woman is at 4,200 yards, the average male golfer should be playing tees at 6,300 and the average PGA pro should be at 8,400 yards,” he writes. “These yardages seem much more reasonable, even though 8,400 yards is approximately 900 yards longer than the longest courses played on the PGA Tour. No wonder those guys are good!”
A graph that accompanies the blog posting shows that the average woman is asked to play courses that are generally more than 1,000 yards too long for her to meet the “fairness test” of reaching greens in regulation. The yardage for the average male is just about right, observes Little, who adds that better players usually play courses that are close to 1,000 yards shorter than would be indicated by multiplying their average drive by 30.
“The problem is that there are very few 4,200-yard golf courses in the United States, never mind the world,” Little writes. “As a result, most women golfers do not have the choice of a set of tees that gives them a fair chance to hit greens in regulation and thus give them the opportunity to score well.”
Little and Leeming believe the idea of courses with sets of tees that fit players with a wide range of driver swing speeds (from 60 to 110-plus mph) is critical. He writes that courses built (or retrofitted) this way will be more fun for all and much faster to play, and points to Old MacDonald Course at Bandon Dunes as one such shining example.
“We neither realistically believe courses will be built that are long enough to ‘fit’ players with faster than average swing speed, nor do we support such an effort – 7,500 yards is plenty long enough,” he writes.
Little offers this advice for players when choosing their yardage:
•Play a course where the yardage is approximately 30 times your average drive. If a course is longer than this, it will be a lot less enjoyable.
•If you don’t really know how long you hit your average drive (most people significantly overestimate), use two times your average nine-iron yardage. If you are among the great majority (98 percent) of golfers, this will be accurate.
•If your 30 times calculation results in a number shorter than the most forward set of tees at the course you are going to play, Little encourages them to read the “Move On Up” post to see how to deal with this situation.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
In a recent post on their blog, Golf With Women, Little asks the following questions:
•How fair is a 5,600-yard course for the average woman?
•What would you think if we told you that a 5,600-yard course would be equivalent to an 8,400-yard course for the average man?
•How about an 11,200-yard course for Matt Kuchar?
If the average woman should play from 5,600 yards, the average LPGA player should be playing a 9,600-yard course and a good male amateur should play a 10,400-yard course, Little contends.
“That’s how the math works if ‘fair’ is defined as having to hit the same clubs to reach greens in regulation from their respective tees,” Little writes. “This concept is what we define as the ‘fairness test.’ Sorry, Dustin Johnson, you are at 12,320 yards based on your average drive of 308 yards.”
According to Little and Leeming, the “average women golfer” hits her tee shot 140 yards. Hence, based on the data they have collected in their research, the length of the course she should play in order to have the opportunity to reach greens in regulation is 4,200 yards. Note that this is 30 times her average drive, which, Little adds, turns out to be a very good rule of thumb for everyone.
He goes on to note that the average male golfer hits a drive of 210 yards, while Kuchar’s average drive of 280 yards is within a few of yards of the PGA Tour average in 2010.
“If the woman is at 4,200 yards, the average male golfer should be playing tees at 6,300 and the average PGA pro should be at 8,400 yards,” he writes. “These yardages seem much more reasonable, even though 8,400 yards is approximately 900 yards longer than the longest courses played on the PGA Tour. No wonder those guys are good!”
A graph that accompanies the blog posting shows that the average woman is asked to play courses that are generally more than 1,000 yards too long for her to meet the “fairness test” of reaching greens in regulation. The yardage for the average male is just about right, observes Little, who adds that better players usually play courses that are close to 1,000 yards shorter than would be indicated by multiplying their average drive by 30.
“The problem is that there are very few 4,200-yard golf courses in the United States, never mind the world,” Little writes. “As a result, most women golfers do not have the choice of a set of tees that gives them a fair chance to hit greens in regulation and thus give them the opportunity to score well.”
Little and Leeming believe the idea of courses with sets of tees that fit players with a wide range of driver swing speeds (from 60 to 110-plus mph) is critical. He writes that courses built (or retrofitted) this way will be more fun for all and much faster to play, and points to Old MacDonald Course at Bandon Dunes as one such shining example.
“We neither realistically believe courses will be built that are long enough to ‘fit’ players with faster than average swing speed, nor do we support such an effort – 7,500 yards is plenty long enough,” he writes.
Little offers this advice for players when choosing their yardage:
•Play a course where the yardage is approximately 30 times your average drive. If a course is longer than this, it will be a lot less enjoyable.
•If you don’t really know how long you hit your average drive (most people significantly overestimate), use two times your average nine-iron yardage. If you are among the great majority (98 percent) of golfers, this will be accurate.
•If your 30 times calculation results in a number shorter than the most forward set of tees at the course you are going to play, Little encourages them to read the “Move On Up” post to see how to deal with this situation.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
Thursday, July 21, 2011
Three More Major Champions Coming To Westchester
A trio of major champions--Mark Calcavecchia, Corey Pavin and Nick Price--have joined the field at the Constellation Energy Senior Players Championship, to be held August 18-21 at Westchester Country Club.
13-time PGA TOUR winner Calcavecchia captured his most notable victory at the 1989 British Open at Royal Troon where he defeated Wayne Grady and Greg Norman on the fourth playoff hole. The fan favorite has been a member of four U.S. Ryder Cup teams and one Presidents Cup team. Calcavecchia has had six top-10 finishes this year on the Champions Tour, but remains in search of his first victory.
A 15-time winner TOUR, Pavin found success in the form of a major title in New York at the 1995 U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills. The California native is a three-time Ryder Cup member and served as captain of the 2010 U.S. squad at Celtic Manor in Wales. Since turning 50 in November of 2009, Pavin has recorded 13 top-10 finishes on the Champions Tour.
“It's nice for us to be able to go back to Westchester again this year,” said Pavin, who made 15 starts at the course when it hosted The Barclays on the PGA TOUR. His best finish was T9 in 1996. Pavin continues, “It's a pretty interesting golf course. It's a course you look at and think you can shoot a pretty good score on and it's just very difficult to do. It's very tricky. The greens are very difficult to putt and hit in to. To me, it's very much of a position golf course. You really need to hit very clean iron shots into the greens from the fairway. The greens have lots of slope and it's hard to make putts there. I think it's tough to score (at Westchester), but everybody always enjoyed playing there."
photo courtesy of Westchester CC
2003 World Golf Hall of Fame inductee Price has amassed over 50 professional wins across four decades in his career. One of the TOUR’s most dominant players in the mid-1990s, Price captured three major championships including back-to-back majors at the 1994 British Open and PGA Championship and was named Player of the Year in 1993 and ‘94. A native of South Africa, Price has won four events on the Champions Tour since his debut in 2007, most recently at the Toshiba Classic in Newport Beach, CA this past March.
Players announced thus far include defending champion Mark O’Meara, David Frost, Bob Gilder, Jay Haas, Hale Irwin, Tom Kite, Loren Roberts, Scott Simpson, Bob Tway, Bobby Wadkins, Tom Watson and D.A. Weibring. More player announcements will come as additional commitments are received leading up to the Championship.
For information on the event, visit www.ceseniorplayers.com, or by calling the championship office at 914-481-5900.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
13-time PGA TOUR winner Calcavecchia captured his most notable victory at the 1989 British Open at Royal Troon where he defeated Wayne Grady and Greg Norman on the fourth playoff hole. The fan favorite has been a member of four U.S. Ryder Cup teams and one Presidents Cup team. Calcavecchia has had six top-10 finishes this year on the Champions Tour, but remains in search of his first victory.
A 15-time winner TOUR, Pavin found success in the form of a major title in New York at the 1995 U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills. The California native is a three-time Ryder Cup member and served as captain of the 2010 U.S. squad at Celtic Manor in Wales. Since turning 50 in November of 2009, Pavin has recorded 13 top-10 finishes on the Champions Tour.
“It's nice for us to be able to go back to Westchester again this year,” said Pavin, who made 15 starts at the course when it hosted The Barclays on the PGA TOUR. His best finish was T9 in 1996. Pavin continues, “It's a pretty interesting golf course. It's a course you look at and think you can shoot a pretty good score on and it's just very difficult to do. It's very tricky. The greens are very difficult to putt and hit in to. To me, it's very much of a position golf course. You really need to hit very clean iron shots into the greens from the fairway. The greens have lots of slope and it's hard to make putts there. I think it's tough to score (at Westchester), but everybody always enjoyed playing there."
photo courtesy of Westchester CC
2003 World Golf Hall of Fame inductee Price has amassed over 50 professional wins across four decades in his career. One of the TOUR’s most dominant players in the mid-1990s, Price captured three major championships including back-to-back majors at the 1994 British Open and PGA Championship and was named Player of the Year in 1993 and ‘94. A native of South Africa, Price has won four events on the Champions Tour since his debut in 2007, most recently at the Toshiba Classic in Newport Beach, CA this past March.
Players announced thus far include defending champion Mark O’Meara, David Frost, Bob Gilder, Jay Haas, Hale Irwin, Tom Kite, Loren Roberts, Scott Simpson, Bob Tway, Bobby Wadkins, Tom Watson and D.A. Weibring. More player announcements will come as additional commitments are received leading up to the Championship.
For information on the event, visit www.ceseniorplayers.com, or by calling the championship office at 914-481-5900.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Finally, Someone Does Something About Pace Of Play
If your idea of a great round of golf includes playing 18 holes in less than four hours, no waiting for the group in front of you and finishing before noon, then the new “Fast Track Golf” program at Crystal Springs Resort is for you.
Located in the mountains of northern New Jersey, Crystal Springs Resort surveyed hundreds of their golfers and quickly discovered overwhelming support for a faster pace of play. With such strong sentiment voiced, the Resort quickly implemented a proactive program that enables golfers to complete a round in less than four hours.
On weekends throughout the summer season, Crystal Springs will implement “Fast Track Golf” on two of the Resort’s seven award-winning courses, with designated “Fast Track Golf” tee times at Wild Turkey prior to 7:30 a.m. and at Cascades prior to 10 a.m. “Fast Track Golf” is available to daily fee players or to resort guests.
“Fast Track Golf is one of the alternative golf concepts we have successfully implemented at Crystal Springs,” said Art Walton, Vice President of Golf Operations. “We want our guests to have a great time here, even if that means we actually shorten their time playing golf.”
Features of “Fast Track Golf” include:
•Maximum 7 strokes per hole
•Maximum 3 putts per hole
•Lost balls must be abandoned after a 60-second search
•No “honors” – play when ready
Those who don’t maintain pace will be warned, moved, or may be required to play another course.
AS most of us know, there's really no reason for a round of golf to take more than four hours. I've played plenty of rounds in three hours or less--walking in a foursome! All it takes is some common sense steps like being ready to swing when you get to the ball, picking up when you're out of the hole in your match, and not spending time looking for a ball you couldn't play even if you found it. If you're playing in a tournament, things may be different, although I've also competed in MGA events that didn't take more than four hours so I know it CAN be done.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
Located in the mountains of northern New Jersey, Crystal Springs Resort surveyed hundreds of their golfers and quickly discovered overwhelming support for a faster pace of play. With such strong sentiment voiced, the Resort quickly implemented a proactive program that enables golfers to complete a round in less than four hours.
On weekends throughout the summer season, Crystal Springs will implement “Fast Track Golf” on two of the Resort’s seven award-winning courses, with designated “Fast Track Golf” tee times at Wild Turkey prior to 7:30 a.m. and at Cascades prior to 10 a.m. “Fast Track Golf” is available to daily fee players or to resort guests.
“Fast Track Golf is one of the alternative golf concepts we have successfully implemented at Crystal Springs,” said Art Walton, Vice President of Golf Operations. “We want our guests to have a great time here, even if that means we actually shorten their time playing golf.”
Features of “Fast Track Golf” include:
•Maximum 7 strokes per hole
•Maximum 3 putts per hole
•Lost balls must be abandoned after a 60-second search
•No “honors” – play when ready
Those who don’t maintain pace will be warned, moved, or may be required to play another course.
AS most of us know, there's really no reason for a round of golf to take more than four hours. I've played plenty of rounds in three hours or less--walking in a foursome! All it takes is some common sense steps like being ready to swing when you get to the ball, picking up when you're out of the hole in your match, and not spending time looking for a ball you couldn't play even if you found it. If you're playing in a tournament, things may be different, although I've also competed in MGA events that didn't take more than four hours so I know it CAN be done.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
Monday, July 18, 2011
Metropolis Gets Set For An Upgrade
Metropolis Country Club, one of my favorites in the Westchester County neighborhood, will undergo some renovation after the completion of the 2011 season. It sounds like they're planning to make a couple of holes better, not just longer.
The tees on the 5th hole will be rebuilt, with 15 yards added to the back tees to stretch the hole to 401 yards. The dogleg right will be softened and the fairway will be more visible from the tee boxes.
For the 18th hole, the goal is to create a memorable finish that reflects the character of the complete layout and underscore the caliber of golf course. The renovation will eliminate the severity of the dogleg right and add approximately 20 yards to the back tees, lengthening it to 404 yards.
The work, planned and overseen by golf course architect Dave Heatwole, will slightly alter the two holes and enhance the playability of this venerable golf course. Famous, as well as infamous, for its relentless dogleg par 4s, Metropolis is making the modifications to meet the changing needs of its golf membership.
A challenging par 71, Metropolis was established in 1922, with the original design enhanced by noted architect A. W. Tillinghast. The course features many doglegs, as well as a collection of undulating greens that tests every aspect of even the best player’s shot-making ability.
The original 18 holes at Metropolis were designed by Herbert Strong, with architect Joe Finger assigned in the 1970s to make the changes to allow room for parking and tennis courts.
Long respected for its golf course, Metropolis has a roster of notable head golf professionals: Paul Runyan (1931-43); Jack Burke, Jr. (1948-50); Joe Moore and Bob Watson (co-golf professionals from 1950-53), Harry “Lighthorse” Cooper (1953-1978); Gene Borek (1980-2005); Ron Philo (06-07), Craig Thomas (2007-present), and its prominent members.
Named 2011 Club of the Year by the Metropolitan Golf Writers Association (MGWA), Metropolis was cited for upholding the spirit and traditions of golf through energetic support and consistent dedication to the game.
Metropolis has hosted every significant championship in the Metropolitan area, including the Met Open, Met Amateur and The Ike.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
The tees on the 5th hole will be rebuilt, with 15 yards added to the back tees to stretch the hole to 401 yards. The dogleg right will be softened and the fairway will be more visible from the tee boxes.
For the 18th hole, the goal is to create a memorable finish that reflects the character of the complete layout and underscore the caliber of golf course. The renovation will eliminate the severity of the dogleg right and add approximately 20 yards to the back tees, lengthening it to 404 yards.
The work, planned and overseen by golf course architect Dave Heatwole, will slightly alter the two holes and enhance the playability of this venerable golf course. Famous, as well as infamous, for its relentless dogleg par 4s, Metropolis is making the modifications to meet the changing needs of its golf membership.
A challenging par 71, Metropolis was established in 1922, with the original design enhanced by noted architect A. W. Tillinghast. The course features many doglegs, as well as a collection of undulating greens that tests every aspect of even the best player’s shot-making ability.
The original 18 holes at Metropolis were designed by Herbert Strong, with architect Joe Finger assigned in the 1970s to make the changes to allow room for parking and tennis courts.
Long respected for its golf course, Metropolis has a roster of notable head golf professionals: Paul Runyan (1931-43); Jack Burke, Jr. (1948-50); Joe Moore and Bob Watson (co-golf professionals from 1950-53), Harry “Lighthorse” Cooper (1953-1978); Gene Borek (1980-2005); Ron Philo (06-07), Craig Thomas (2007-present), and its prominent members.
Named 2011 Club of the Year by the Metropolitan Golf Writers Association (MGWA), Metropolis was cited for upholding the spirit and traditions of golf through energetic support and consistent dedication to the game.
Metropolis has hosted every significant championship in the Metropolitan area, including the Met Open, Met Amateur and The Ike.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Tom Watson Joins The Field At Westchester CC
Tom Watson is the latest major champion to join the field at the Constellation Energy Senior Players Championship, to be held August 18-21 at Westchester Country Club.
Watson, who is competing in his 34th British Open this week, has won 14 times since joining the Champions Tour in 1999. A native of Kansas City, MO (near where I grew up, caddied, and learned to love the game), Watson collected 39 career wins while on the PGA TOUR including five British Open victories (1975, ’77, ’80, ’82 and ’83), the 1977 and 1981 Masters and the 1982 U.S. Open. His breathtaking near-win of the 2009 British Open is etched in the memories of golfers everywhere. A four-time Ryder Cup competitor and 1993 Ryder Cup captain, Watson earned player of the year honors on the PGA TOUR six times during his career (1977-’80, ’82 and ’84).
Watson is one of 78 players who will tee it up at next month’s Constellation Energy Senior Players Championship, the final major of the Champions Tour season. Though it’s been 17 years since he last competed at Westchester Country Club, he is excited to return. “It’s terrific we are going back there to play and I’m really looking forward to it.”
Watson had eight top-10s at Westchester, including a runner-up finish to David Graham in 1976, when the venue previously hosted the PGA TOUR’s Westchester Classic (now known as The Barclays).
“I like Westchester because the greens have an elevation and you have a few blind shots. It’s really a good golf course because of the variety of shots you have to hit,” Watson recalls. Some of the venue’s off the course treats left a lasting impression on him as well. “I remember they had the best hot dogs in the world down the right side of No. 5.”
Previously announced players include defending champion Mark O’Meara, David Frost, Bob Gilder, Jay Haas, Hale Irwin, Tom Kite, Loren Roberts, Scott Simpson, Bob Tway, Bobby Wadkins and D.A. Weibring.
Tickets to the vent are on sale now at www.ceseniorplayers.com, or by calling the championship office at 914-481-5900. A single-day grounds ticket is just $20 plus tax and fees. It's valid for grounds admission, good any one day, from August 17-21. A weekly clubhouse-access ticket is available for $125 plus tax and fees and offers admission to the grounds and to the clubhouse every day during the competition rounds, August 18-21. Food and beverage is available in the clubhouse for additional purchase. Children 18 and under and active, retired and reserve military personnel are admitted to the grounds at no charge.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
Watson, who is competing in his 34th British Open this week, has won 14 times since joining the Champions Tour in 1999. A native of Kansas City, MO (near where I grew up, caddied, and learned to love the game), Watson collected 39 career wins while on the PGA TOUR including five British Open victories (1975, ’77, ’80, ’82 and ’83), the 1977 and 1981 Masters and the 1982 U.S. Open. His breathtaking near-win of the 2009 British Open is etched in the memories of golfers everywhere. A four-time Ryder Cup competitor and 1993 Ryder Cup captain, Watson earned player of the year honors on the PGA TOUR six times during his career (1977-’80, ’82 and ’84).
Watson is one of 78 players who will tee it up at next month’s Constellation Energy Senior Players Championship, the final major of the Champions Tour season. Though it’s been 17 years since he last competed at Westchester Country Club, he is excited to return. “It’s terrific we are going back there to play and I’m really looking forward to it.”
Watson had eight top-10s at Westchester, including a runner-up finish to David Graham in 1976, when the venue previously hosted the PGA TOUR’s Westchester Classic (now known as The Barclays).
“I like Westchester because the greens have an elevation and you have a few blind shots. It’s really a good golf course because of the variety of shots you have to hit,” Watson recalls. Some of the venue’s off the course treats left a lasting impression on him as well. “I remember they had the best hot dogs in the world down the right side of No. 5.”
Previously announced players include defending champion Mark O’Meara, David Frost, Bob Gilder, Jay Haas, Hale Irwin, Tom Kite, Loren Roberts, Scott Simpson, Bob Tway, Bobby Wadkins and D.A. Weibring.
Tickets to the vent are on sale now at www.ceseniorplayers.com, or by calling the championship office at 914-481-5900. A single-day grounds ticket is just $20 plus tax and fees. It's valid for grounds admission, good any one day, from August 17-21. A weekly clubhouse-access ticket is available for $125 plus tax and fees and offers admission to the grounds and to the clubhouse every day during the competition rounds, August 18-21. Food and beverage is available in the clubhouse for additional purchase. Children 18 and under and active, retired and reserve military personnel are admitted to the grounds at no charge.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
Even If Your Clubs Are Off The Shelf--Get Fitted!
Golfers will find the best of both worlds at DD Custom Golf, a new club fitting service operating at Fairview Golf Center in Elmsford. Owner Steve Kurnit, a club fitter of long-time good standing in the metro area, not only offers high-tech measurement, but you can see what's happening with your ball flight as he tweaks your clubs on the range.
"The flight monitor only watches the ball for 15 inches," Kurnit points out, "but having the range lets the client see how the ball really behaves."
Kurnit estimates he's done 1500 fittings since he started in the business 25 years ago. He set up shop in partnership with Fairview just a few days ago. He not only has all the tools to measure your swing there, but a shop on the premises to tweak your sticks on the spot, too. The shop is only a few steps away from the privately-curtained hitting bay he uses to check your swing.
In addition to measuring the golfer's lie, loft, and shaft length, Kurnit emphasizes the importance of having the right shaft flex for your swing. "You hit the ball with the head, but you hit it right because of the shaft," he says. It's also not enough to pick the right shaft according to the manufacturer's specs, either, since any one graphite shaft in a supposedly identical group of ten can vary as much as a full flex from the others. If you're going to spend $300 on the perfect shaft, he emphasizes, you should have it tuned to be sure you're getting what you want.
Kurtin uses a GC2 Foresight flight monitor to check swing speed, ball speed, launch angle, shaft angle at impact, back spin, side spin, percent off line, carry, roll, and peak height. Since the golfer is hitting on a full range, he or she can see what all those numbers really add up to.
I'm a big believer in proper club fitting and can personally attest to one of Kurtin's points: most players will hit their driver further and straighter if they use a shaft shorter than the standard 46 inches. "It's all about controlling the club face so it strikes the ball in the center," Kurtin says. "Center hits on square club faces have less spin so they fly straighter." Even if your clubhead speed is a little shower, it's axiomatic that balls that land in the fairway run out more than those that hit the rough.
A full 14-club fitting can run three to five hours in total (not all at once!) and runs $275. Each driver, fairway wood, and hybrid are individually measured, as are all the irons and even your putter. Irons or woods only are $150. A great way to try out the service is with a one-club "quick fit" for $75. Take your driver--and see what a shorter shaft will mean to you.
DD Custom Golf is at Fairview Golf Center in Elmsford. For more information, call (914) 715-8486. By the way, the "DD" in the name doesn't stand for Dave Donelson--it's "Dynamic Diagnostic" Custom Fitting.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
"The flight monitor only watches the ball for 15 inches," Kurnit points out, "but having the range lets the client see how the ball really behaves."
Kurnit estimates he's done 1500 fittings since he started in the business 25 years ago. He set up shop in partnership with Fairview just a few days ago. He not only has all the tools to measure your swing there, but a shop on the premises to tweak your sticks on the spot, too. The shop is only a few steps away from the privately-curtained hitting bay he uses to check your swing.
In addition to measuring the golfer's lie, loft, and shaft length, Kurnit emphasizes the importance of having the right shaft flex for your swing. "You hit the ball with the head, but you hit it right because of the shaft," he says. It's also not enough to pick the right shaft according to the manufacturer's specs, either, since any one graphite shaft in a supposedly identical group of ten can vary as much as a full flex from the others. If you're going to spend $300 on the perfect shaft, he emphasizes, you should have it tuned to be sure you're getting what you want.
Kurtin uses a GC2 Foresight flight monitor to check swing speed, ball speed, launch angle, shaft angle at impact, back spin, side spin, percent off line, carry, roll, and peak height. Since the golfer is hitting on a full range, he or she can see what all those numbers really add up to.
I'm a big believer in proper club fitting and can personally attest to one of Kurtin's points: most players will hit their driver further and straighter if they use a shaft shorter than the standard 46 inches. "It's all about controlling the club face so it strikes the ball in the center," Kurtin says. "Center hits on square club faces have less spin so they fly straighter." Even if your clubhead speed is a little shower, it's axiomatic that balls that land in the fairway run out more than those that hit the rough.
A full 14-club fitting can run three to five hours in total (not all at once!) and runs $275. Each driver, fairway wood, and hybrid are individually measured, as are all the irons and even your putter. Irons or woods only are $150. A great way to try out the service is with a one-club "quick fit" for $75. Take your driver--and see what a shorter shaft will mean to you.
DD Custom Golf is at Fairview Golf Center in Elmsford. For more information, call (914) 715-8486. By the way, the "DD" in the name doesn't stand for Dave Donelson--it's "Dynamic Diagnostic" Custom Fitting.
In addition to writing about golf, Dave Donelson distills the experiences of hundreds of entrepreneurs into practical advice for small business owners and managers in the Dynamic Manager's Guides, a series of how-to books about marketing and advertising, sales techniques, hiring, firing, and motivating personnel, financial management, and business strategy.
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