ARIZONA GOLF AUTHORITY

Blog

  • Eight Countries – 32 Players to Compete for New LPGA International Crown

    Eight Countries – 32 Players to Compete for New LPGA International Crown

    (Daytona Beach, FL) – The Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) announces the International Crown, a first-of-its-kind, biennial, global match play competition commencing in 2014 that will feature teams from eight countries battling for the right to be “Crowned” the world’s best golf nation.

    LPGA International Crown - Arizona Golf AuthorityShowcasing the strength of Golf’s Global Tour, this even-year tournament will feature a four-day, match-play format with a total purse of $1.6 million – of which $100,000 will go to each member of the winning team. Each of the eight countries will be represented by four players.

    “At the LPGA, we celebrate great players from all over the world on a weekly basis, but this is the first time we’ll pit country versus country for global bragging rights,” said LPGA Commissioner Michael Whan. “Only countries that have produced the best female teams can compete and only four players from any one country will be invited. The International Crown will take women’s golf to the next level and allow fans to rally behind their homelands. In sports, there is simply nothing greater than wearing your nation’s flag, fans singing your national anthem, and bringing the CROWN home.”

    The inaugural tournament will debut July 21-27, 2014 at Caves Valley Golf Club in Owings Mills, Maryland, outside Baltimore. In 2016, the Crown will be played at Rich Harvest Farms in Sugar Grove, Illinois, host of The 2009 Solheim Cup.

    Qualification criteria for the International Crown are:

    Eight teams: Based on cumulative Rolex Rankings of each country’s top four players at the conclusion of the 2013 CME Group Titleholders

    Four players from each country: Based on Rolex Rankings at date to be determined.

    Whan formally announced the International Crown today at the PGA Merchandise Show in Orlando, Fla. If teams for the Crown were selected according to the current Rolex Rankings, South Korea, the U.S., Japan, Sweden, Australia, Spain, Taiwan and England would battle for the inaugural title.

    “Our Tour is so global and we need this type of event,” said Stacy Lewis, the top-ranked American. “People always want to know why golfers from Asia are so good. Well, now we can see how all the countries stack up. The more we can showcase our Tour around the world, the better. Representing your country is the ultimate thing. Getting announced on the first tee when you are representing the USA, it doesn’t get any better than that. It’s a goal of mine to be in the event.”

    The format of the International Crown will feature three days of Four Ball matches wherein countries will be seeded into two brackets with four countries in either bracket. Each country will play every other country in their bracket over the course of the first three rounds to determine which five countries will advance to Sunday singles play. All points from the Four Ball matches will carry over to Sunday’s Matches where each country will play a singles match against every other country. The total cumulative points for the four days of competition will be used to determine the overall champion.

    For more information on the format, please visit LPGAInternationalCrown.com.

  • Secret Grip – Boccieri Golf

    Secret Grip – Boccieri Golf

    From the Excellent Arizona Golf Adventures at the Arizona Golf Authority

    Boccieri-Golf-Stephen-Boccieri-photoStephen Boccieri’s “ah-ha” moment occurred quite by accident it turns out.

    Stephen’s practice putting session was interrupted by a telephone call. He was leaning against his work bench at home, tolerating the delay and putting golf balls one-handed with a putter he’d covered with several layers of lead tape.

    Golf is the game Stephen had chosen as a respite from his day job as an engineer with world-wide construction giant Stone and Webster, Inc.

    As an engineer and a skilled player, tinkering with his clubs was part of the game’s allure.

    Through personal trial and error, Stephen had discovered the additional weight improved his putter’s performance; however he was disappointed his “if some is good, then more is better” lead-tape theory was producing diminishing returns.

    “It was pure coincidence that a weight-plug was laying on my bench and was the perfect diameter to slide right into my putter shaft,” Stephen shared. “While I was on the phone, I inserted it, one-handed a couple more putts and then, rather abruptly, ended the telephone call.”

    At that moment, the simple science behind the fact Stephen’s club was now easier to move in a predictable and repeatable fashion became very clear to him: the back-weight at the grip end had moved the club’s balance point up the shaft, closer to him.

    And moving the balance point closer to the player would add the same reliable performance to irons and drivers as well!

    His reaction? Stephen founded Boccieri Golf in 2005.

    Boccieri-Golf-Scottsdale-Headquarters-photo

    Fast forward a few years to the practice range at the annual PGA Show in Orlando, Florida, where Boccieri Golf stunned the equipment manufacturing world with Stephen’s revolutionary technology.

    The news traveled quickly that competition-savvy professionals were driving the golf ball farther with Stephen’s Boccieri driver than they were with the new Ping®, Taylor Made® and Nike® offerings located alongside.

    Remember, the mantra preached by the top-line driver manufacturers in those days proclaimed “a lighter golf club is better golf club because you can swing it faster.” The manufacturers had achieved making their 460-cc clubheads as light as possible by reducing the thickness of the titanium material.

    Unfortunately, the competitive long-drive champions testing the drivers on the range were swinging the club so fast, the clubhead literally buckled and collapsed. “I cratered my driver” was a phrase heard regularly among groups of avid players in those days.

    When they picked up the Boccieri driver, not noticing its back-weighted grip, the pros assured Stephen they wouldn’t hit too many balls because they didn’t want to “destroy another driver today.”

    He told them not to worry and to hit as many drives as they wished. That was the easy part.

    Secret-Grip-Boccieri-Golf-photo

    Explaining to them how they drove the golf ball farther with the Boccieri driver, and why they could swing a heavier golf club as fast as the lighter drivers they had destroyed earlier in the day was a bit more difficult.

    After all, the heavier driver violated every tenet of the “lighter is better” gospel. And to make matters worse, common sense said, “There’s no way I can swing a heavier club as fast as a lighter club.”

    That’s the problem with common sense, it’s so easy to embrace and at times, so completely wrong.

    Boccieri Golf’s back-weighted product line proves you can swing it faster, if the club’s additional weight is located in precisely the right spot. The facts, rooted in physics and proved with a bit of arithmetic, are quite clear and rather elementary.

    It turns out that when a player swings a golf club at any given swing speed, yours or mine, his or hers, the closer you locate the golf club’s balance point to your body’s core, the faster the clubhead will travel.

    And the faster swinging clubhead, together with the additional club weight, produces more momentum which is delivered to the golf ball at impact. And when you put more momentum into the golf ball, you get more distance out of it.

    These simple facts don’t represent some unique circumstance that requires hours of practice to refine and make happen either.

    These things occur anytime something on earth swings, no matter who does the swinging. The likes of Pythagorus, Galileo, Newton and Einstein scrutinized such details years ago, and each of them is on record as satisfied.

    Now that Boccieri Golf has made this technology common knowledge in the industry, other major manufacturers are quickly following suit. Although some choose different language to describe the technology, others quote the facts rather directly.

    The advertising material for the popular PING® G20™ driver now promotes that “PING’s proprietary high-balance-point-shaft enables you to swing a clubhead with more mass at the same speed, generating fast ball speeds.”

    Materials from Fujikura® promote their Blur 005 with TaylorMade® Tip shafts as “designed with a high-balance-point.”

    Boccieri-Golf-Training-photo
    Boccieri Golf Research and Performance Center – 15816 North Greenway-Hayden Loop – Scottsdale AZ

     

    When you are ready to improve your golf game, add “investigate Boccieri Golf Secret Grip” to your to do list. You’ll find a swing tempo, solid ball contact and shot dispersion pattern you probably haven’t experienced before. The extra distance you gain, right through the bag, is fun too.

    Do your homework, in person, at the Boccieri Golf Research and Performance Center in Scottsdale, Arizona. They’re located at 15816 North Greenway-Hayden Loop, just south of the Scottsdale TPC.

    When you visit, you’ll find a 9,000 square-foot state-of-the-art facility full of all latest swing-analysis equipment and a professional staff who knows how to handle avid players and their equipment.

    Boccieri-Golf-Stephen-Boccieri-Demonstrates-photoDon’t be surprised if Stephen, CEO and President of Boccieri Golf, walks up and introduces himself while you’re working with his staff.

    He’s always there, apron on, building clubs to order; a hands-on craftsman that values the opportunity to get feedback directly from the players who use his products.

    The latest product from Boccieri Golf is revolutionary, indeed: the new Extended Length EL Series putter.

    Boccieri Golf has produced the rare combination of stability and consistency in the EL Series putters and delivered to the market the first, true alternative to anchoring.

    The EL Series’ slightly longer putter shaft, patented, Tour-proven high mass head and 17″ long counterweighted grip produce the reliable stability of anchoring in a free-swinging putting stroke.

    28 models, available in three different finishes and three custom shaft lengths means every player will find an EL Series putter to match his or her eye.

    “With this Research and Performance Center,” Stephen shared, “We’ve created a true equipment think tank where creative ideas will flourish and new concepts will be tested and brought to fruition.”

    Boccieri-Golf-Sandra-and-Stephen-Boccieri-photoWhen Sandra, his loving bride and former Broadway theater performer, comes out to collect Stephen and put him back on task, thank him for his diligence and then let him go.

    Boccieri equipment is assembled by hand and those clubs won’t build and ship themselves.

    Stephen shared, “This facility is an incredible metamorphosis for a company that started in my basement. It’s grown into a true force due to some real persistence, coupled with a revolutionary approach.”

    The golf equipment industry has voted and their verdict says this technology is now mainstream.

    You can’t go visit with Steve Jobs, Karsten Solheim or several other people who started at home and revolutionized their respective industries.

    Stephen Boccieri, however, is front and center every day at Boccieri Golf. When you decide you want to play more enjoyable golf, go see him and his staff. You’ll be glad you did.

  • Boccieri Golf Let’s You Get Fit… In More Ways Than One

    Boccieri Golf Let’s You Get Fit… In More Ways Than One

    From the Golf News Desk at the Arizona Golf Authority

    SCOTTSDALE, Arizona – Stephen and Sandra Boccieri are disciples of properly fit golf clubs; they know it improves your game. They also know it is really important to be physically fit to play the game long into the sunset years.

    Boccieri-Golf-Training-photo

    That’s why they have teamed with Golf Channel Personality and celebrity yogi Katherine Roberts to host her 90-minute “Yoga for Golfers” workshop at their Scottsdale Research and Performance Center. The class begins at 9:30am on Saturday, November 17 at its headquarters, 15816 North Greenway-Hayden Loop.

    A regular contributor to The Golf Channel, Roberts has starred in seven DVDs and authored two books on golf-specific yoga and fitness – “Yoga for Golfers” and “Swing Flaws and Fitness Solutions” – the latter of which was written with renowned instructor Hank Haney.

    Space for this exclusive event is limited and costs $50 per person. All attendees will receive a copy of Roberts’ acclaimed “Yoga for Golfers” DVD and Boccieri Golf’s latest product, the Secret Grip. The session will explore:

    Trends in golf fitness

    Yoga exercises which enhance the golf swing

    Breathing awareness, relaxation and visualization

    “Our facility was designed to be the ultimate golf learning environment and now we’re supplementing first-class fitting and instruction with top-line fitness and mental education and training,” says Stephen Boccieri, President and CEO of Boccieri Golf. “We’re strong believers in working outside the box to create better players, and Katherine’s golf-specific yoga provides students of all abilities with a major on-course advantage.”

    Roberts’ unique training approach is a hybrid of western bio-mechanical research and eastern mind/body conditioning to optimize the golf swing. Specific benefits include an increased range of motion that translates to greater distance, accuracy and strength on the course. Beyond her work in the golf world, Roberts is the yoga fitness expert for the LA Dodgers and San Diego Padres.

    For more information, visit http://boccierigolf.com/rpc/scottsdale-az/events/

     

  • Dickey was “first” First Tee of Phoenix – Bill Huffman’s Arizona Golf Blog

    Dickey was “first” First Tee of Phoenix – Bill Huffman’s Arizona Golf Blog

    From Huff’s Stuff Arizona Golf Blog by Bill Huffman at the Arizona Golf Authority

    They say you can learn a lot about a man by the confines of his office, and maybe that’s why I took the time to drive into Phoenix this week, to stir my memories of William “Bill’’ Dickey, one of golf’s great gentleman.

    Mr. Dickey, a leader among black golfers and a champion of minority youngsters everywhere, died early Tuesday morning (Oct. 16). The news came via Facebook, where one of the hundreds of kids he had put his arms around over the past 30-some years, Andy Walker, had delivered this sad message: “RIP, Mr. Dickey. You did a lot for golf and minority participation in the greatest game ever. I hope to continue your legacy.’’

    Mr. Dickey was 84. He will be buried next Friday (Oct. 26) following a celebration of his life at Chaparral Suites Scottsdale (5001 N. Scottsdale Road) from 1 p.m. until 4 p.m. A prior visitation and viewing earlier in the day will be held at Universal Memorial Mortuary (1100 E. Jefferson Street) from 10 a.m. until noon.

    The Facebook tribute by Walker, a long-time Phoenix resident and an All-American at Pepperdine University, where he helped the Waves win an NCAA title, got me thinking about those days I had spent with Mr. Dickey in his office off Washington Street. It was a special time with a special man in an office that once served as the “guard shack’’ at the entrance of a red brick building that sits on the edge of the city. And I smiled when I recalled the way he used to greet me at the door with a big smile and that deep, smooth voice that could have been in television or radio.

    “Hello, Mr. William ‘Bill’ Huffman,’’ he would say. That we shared a similar name(s) was his way of making me feel comfortable. That he called me “Mr.’’ certainly was a courtesy that, unfortunately, is not spoken often enough these days.

    But this time when I visited Mr. Dickey’s office there was no one to greet me so I just looked around in amazement at the photographs, plaques, crystal and other awards Mr. Dickey had collected through the years. There were pictures of him with other black pioneers of the game like Charlie Sifford, Ted Rhodes and Joe Louis (yes, the great boxer); a photo from 1948 of the Desert Mashies Golf Club, an organization of black golfers that Mr. Dickey had been the president of for eight terms; a photo with his arm around another Arizona golf icon, Karsten Solheim, and the PING founder’s wife, Louise; photos with former PGA Tour greats Chi Chi Rodriquez and Calvin Peete; and numerous shots of Mr. Dickey with his close friend Earl Woods and Earl’s son,Tiger.

    There was a visor from the Masters with the lone signature of Jack Nicklaus on it; signed and sealed letters from Arnold Palmer and former presidents Gerald Ford and George W. Bush; plaques from the Arizona Golf Hall of Fame, the Western States Golf Association Hall of Fame, and the National Black Golf Hall of Fame, all saying he was a member; and the highest honors you can receive from the PGA Tour (Card Walker Award, 1992), PGA of America (Distinguished Service Award, 1999) and USGA (Joseph C. Dey Jr. Award, 2003). In fact, Mr. Dickey is believed to be the only man ever honored with all three of those prestigious awards by the PGA, PGA Tour and USGA.

    Also on Mr. Dickey’s office walls was the Golf Digest Junior Development Award he received in 1989, the Dr. Ed Updegraff Award from the Arizona Golf Association in 1991, the Sharing and Caring Award from the Tiger Woods Foundation in 1999, the Anser Award from the Southwest Section of the PGA in 2001, the Martin Luther King Jr. Sharing the Dream Award from 2005, and the Life Team Captain award from Jackson State University from 2005. And there were other accolades from several fraternities and other civic organizations, including one from the Pat Tillman Foundation.

    As if that wasn’t enough, there also was an honorary doctor’s degree from the University of Maryland-Eastern Shore on the wall, a Bachelor’s degree from Arizona State University, as well as several books he was featured in, including “Uneven Lies, The Heroic Story of African-Americans in Golf.’’ And the trophies he had won in various tournaments through the years, oh my! They were everywhere, as he had apparently cherished every single one of them.

    Still, if Mr. Dickey were here today, he would probably tell you that all those accomplishments were very nice, but what he was most proud of during his life was helping to provide over 1,000 kids with over $3.1 million worth of scholarships. He did that through his National Minority Junior Golf Scholarship Association, which was later changed to the Bill Dickey Scholarship Association. And to think, Mr. Dickey never drew a salary from his foundation in all those years.

    So I guess you could say with absolute resolve that Mr. Dickey’s life was devoted to kids, golf and education, and in many ways he was the first tee of Phoenix long before we had an organization called the First Tee of Phoenix. Mr. Dickey’s wife of over 50 years, Alice, said her husband had “three loves of his life’’ – family, golf and kids.

    “Bill was a very soft-spoken person with stern principles,’’ Mrs. Dickey pointed out. “He was always very kind to kids, although he wanted them to earn his respect.

    “In fact, I never heard him holler or cuss, although he might have done a little bit of that on the golf course. He was such a good person, and enjoyed his golf and life so much that I guess people, particularly kids, felt safe in his presence. And he had a great sense of humor and intelligence, which is why people were drawn to him.’’

    Mr. Dickey founded two tournaments that grew in national stature and helped fund his scholarship ambitions for kids. One was the Bill Dickey East-West Golf Classic, which celebrated its 30th anniversary this spring with an appearance from Mr. Dickey, whose health had been on the decline since 2008, when he suffered a stroke while at that very same tournament. The second was the Bill Dickey Junior Invitational he founded in 2000 for the nation’s top high school minority golfers. Mr. Dickey also was the co-founder of the prestigious National Minority Collegiate Golf Championship, which most recently celebrated its 26th year.

    Or as Mr. Dickey wrote in the program for this year’s East-West Classic: “I have had a love affair with the game of golf since the 1950s, when I made the move to Phoenix, and I picked up a club for the first time. I developed a desire over the years to provide opportunities for young people to learn the game because it helps develop character and integrity.’’

    Those just happen to be some of the same values that are among the mission statement of The First Tee, an internationally respected youth program that promotes life skills and leadership through the game of golf. Hugh Smith, the executive director of the First Tee of Phoenix, was a disciple of Mr. Dickey’s going back to when Smith was a kid growing up in Seaside, Calif. It was Mr. Dickey, he said, who selected him for a scholarship to Jackson State.

    According to Smith, the connection with Mr. Dickey came through his father, who picked up golf in the Army, and then formed a group with his military buddies in Northern California called the Ebony Seaview. Every time Mr. Dickey came to visit, Smith said, they would get to play special golf courses like Pebble Beach, Cypress Point and Del Monte, the oldest continuously operated course west of the Mississippi River.

    “I’ve known Bill most of my life, and it seemed he always was a profound part of it,’’ recalled Smith, who won the National Minority Collegiate Golf Championship during his senior year at Jackson State.

    “Whenever he would visit us, back as far as when I was 7, 8, 9 years old, we’d play all these great golf courses like Pebble and Cypress and Del Monte, which was our favorite back then. The kids would either play right in back of the adults or out in front, but we always got to play, and that was what was important.

    “Later, when I moved to Phoenix (in 2006), Bill and I reconnected. He was so inspirational in the lives of so many kids. That topic came up the other day when I was talking with (First Tee CEO) Joe Louis Barrow Jr., and he told me, ‘Bill Dickey had more impact on the game with young kids with diverse backgrounds than anybody else,’ and he was absolutely right about that. So I’ve always listened carefully to what Mr. Dickey had to say.’’

    Mr. Dickey was born March, 29, 1928 in Darby, Pa., a small town just outside of Philadelphia. Mrs. Dickey said her husband attended an integrated school, and that his family believed deeply in education. The youngest of four children, Mr. Dickey also was an all-around athlete in high school who was good enough to earn a football scholarship to Virginia Union University, a historically black college located in Richmond, Va. Shortly after a brief stint at VUU, he entered the Air Force, where he spent three and a half years before being honorably discharged and moving to Phoenix.

    “A lot of people don’t know this, but Bill got kicked out of his first college (VUU). It wasn’t that he was a bad kid, but his teachers could never find him — he just wasn’t in class!’’ said Mrs. Dickey, laughing at the thought.

    “But when he got out of the Air Force his sister, Eleanor Dickey Ragsdale, who was an influential teacher and educator here in Phoenix, was waiting for him at the airport. She already had him enrolled in Phoenix College before he hit the ground, and he ended up graduating from ASU (economics and management). So Bill got a lot of help and a little ‘push’ from Eleanor and her husband, Lincoln Ragsdale, who was a very strong civil rights activist nationally as well as a civic leader here in the black community.’’

    Shortly after graduating from college, Mr. Dickey took up golf. He was now 28 and apparently the game didn’t come quite as easy as other sports because he often told his friends that the first round he played, “I shot in the 150s.’’ Eventually he figured it out, as Mr. Dickey did get down to a 4 handicap before spending much of his later years as an 11. Mrs. Dickey said he became “a little depressed’’ when he couldn’t play the game in recent years like he once did.

    For 25 years, Mr. Dickey sold insurance and real estate in the Valley, but in 1981 he retired early. Even though he had been quite successful in business and was a pillar of various golf groups, including the Mashies and the Western States Golf Association, Mr. Dickey’s big mission in life had not yet begun.

    Or as Dickey told an early corporate sponsor shortly after his retirement and just before his life blossomed for a second time: “There are thousands of black golfers throughout this country who belong to organized golf clubs. My interest is to improve communications among those clubs. Eventually, I would like to see a national tournament with golfers from coast-to-coast. This could also lead to establishing a nationwide junior golf program for interested minority youths.’’

    Three years later, it all came to fruition — the national tournament, the kids, the scholarships. Mrs. Dickey said it happened that way because her husband, “naturally leaned toward helping African-Americans, as well as other minorities.’’

    In 1999, about midway through his diversity campaign for kids and shortly before he accepted his Distinguished Service Award from the PGA, Mr. Dickey gave this synopsis of why he did what he did: “Although the means is golf, our end is to help kids further their education. There are too many youngsters in the U.S. who don’t have the financial backing to realize their academic potential. Our goal is to make that happen.’’

    Walker, who attended Scottsdale Community College before making the big move to Pepperdine, said that he was one of the “lucky ones who grew up under Mr. Dickey’s watch.’’

    “I had known Mr. Dickey since I was a little kid,’’ said Walker, who not long ago was featured in the Golf Channel’s “Big Break Ireland.’’ “It all began when he invited my dad to join the Desert Mashies, and my dad introduced my brother and myself to the game.

    “But through the years Mr. Dickey influenced hundreds of kids, and funded black golf in general through a lot of colleges. His generosity and philanthropic nature were simply amazing. In fact, he even impacted Tiger Woods’ career when he was coming up, as well as Tiger’s niece, Cheyenne, and just so many other kids. He was amazing.’’

    Cheyenne Woods had twittered earlier this week: “I began my golf career as a member of Mr. Dickey’s Desert Mashie Golf Club when I was about 8. He had a huge influence on my golf career.’’ Later she added: “Rest in peace, Mr. Bill Dickey. This man opened so many doors and gave so many opportunities to minority golfers. Thank you, Mr. Dickey.’’

    Those series of photos of Cheyenne’s famous uncle that adorn Mr. Dickey’s office walls began when Tiger was a 13-year-old. Mrs. Dickey said that her husband was so close to the family that they were invited to visit Tiger when he was at Stanford. The Dickeys also attended Tiger’s 21st birthday party, which was held here in Scottsdale at the Fairmont Princess.

    “Bill delighted in being part of that, knowing Tiger Woods. But the reality was he took so much pride in every kid he could help,’’ Mrs. Dickey said. “And there were a bunch of them.’’

    Two of those were the Crawford brothers, Daryl and Derek, who are now the general managers at the ASU Karsten Golf Course and Raven Golf Club-Phoenix, respectively.

    “Mr. Dickey is the reason that Daryl and I are in golf,’’ said Derek Crawford, who like his twin brother played golf for ASU. “With his support and the support of the Desert Mashies, we were able to travel and play in golf events.

    “I can still remember traveling with Bill, his wife Alice, and daughter Debbie, driving to California for a Desert Mashie tournament. As we all know, he loved golf and wanted to see all kids, no matter what color, be involved with this great game. It’s hard to believe he’s gone . . . he will be missed by so many.’’

    Added Daryl: “Mr. Dickey was always there for us; literally, a second father figure. I have so much respect and love for him, and what he accomplished for others in his life.’’

    That’s kind of what I was thinking as I scanned Mr. Dickey’s extremely full office for one final time. Mrs. Dickey told me that her husband had only been in the hospital for about a week, and that Mr. Dickey had left this world from Ryan’s House while under the care of Hospice of the Valley.

    Maybe that’s why a small stack of letters on his desk caught my eye. All had been opened recently, as Mr. Dickey’s well-worn letter opener shaped like a miniature 5-iron was laying nearby. And all were in a neat little stack with his eyeglasses still opened up and centered atop the pile.

    Those letters were probably his only piece of unfinished business. Everything else about the life and legacy of Mr. William “Bill’’ Dickey had been answered brilliantly.

  • TRUE Linkswear Has a Double Win

    TRUE Linkswear Has a Double Win

    SCOTTSDALE, Arizona – October 7th, 2012 was a “double win” day for Scottsdale-based TRUE Linkswear.

    True Linkswear Golf Shoes Co-founder Ryan Moore won his second PGA TOUR event at the Justin Timberlake Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in Las Vegas, while another TRUE co-founder, Rob Rigg, completed the Portland Marathon.

    What makes this so special? The fact both athletes competed in the same TRUE Linkswear shoe.

    “What a crazy and amazing weekend for our company,” said Moore. “I really thought the novelty of Rob running a marathon in golf shoes would be pretty unique and would generate some buzz for our brand. Winning a PGA TOUR event the same day just takes it to a whole new level. It really speaks to the comfort and versatility of these shoes.”

    Running in his first marathon, co-founder Rigg completed the Portland Marathon in a time of 3 hours and 48 minutes. He’s registered for the New York Marathon next month and will run in the company’s “sensei” shoe.

    “As far as I can tell, I was the only person running in golf shoes,” said Rigg. “I’ve been running in our shoes since we founded the company and completing the marathon was just a natural progression in my training. I’m really excited about this new sensei platform. I’ve been running in them and wearing them on the course all summer, and my feet have never felt better.”

    TRUE became the first company to build a golf shoe on a barefoot platform. By removing the midsole of the shoe and providing a wider toe box, the foot is able to operate naturally throughout the swing. The sensei platform builds off of TRUE’s original sole design, but features a new spike configuration. The sensei platform provides durability and the thinnest sole in golf (only 2.5 mm), while maintaining slipper-like comfort.

    The TRUE sensei is the first shoe by TRUE with a mesh upper, a result of listening to the many TRUE fans who were using the shoe both on and off the course. The TRUE sensei will be available in four colors at a cost of $99 beginning Nov. 4th at select retailers and online at www.truelinkswear.com.

    The TRUE proto features the same sole platform as the sensei, but with a waterproof leather upper. The proto will be available in January of 2013.

    To take a look at the entire TRUE Linkswear product line, visit www.truelinkswear.com.

     

  • 3rd Annual West Valley Amateur Championship

    3rd Annual West Valley Amateur Championship

    From the Golf News Desk at the Arizona Golf Authority

    PEORIA, Arizona – The Valley of the Sun is home to a lot of great players and the ongoing debates about who’s the best are never settled for very long.

    But this December, the folks at Trilogy at Vistancia and the Raven Golf Club at Verrado will put the question to rest as they host the 3rd Annual West Valley Amateur Championship.

    The two-day competition takes place December 15-16 and promises to deliver great golf, great competition and great prizes. The tournament is open to everyone, from scratch players to those with higher handicaps, and features both gross and net divisions.

    Here are the details:

    Your entry fee of $180 includes two tournament rounds, cart, practice balls, championship cap, 1st tee amenities and the chance to take home part of the $3,000 in prize certificates.

    The registration deadline is 4:00 PM Monday, December 10th.

    Saturday’s round (December 15) begins with 8:00am tee times at Raven Golf Club at Verrado. Tee times will be released on December 13. Player check-in begins at 7:00am.

    Sunday’s round (December 16) starts with 8:00am tee times at Trilogy Golf Club at Vistancia. Tee times will be based on 1st day scores and check-in begins at 7:00am.

    Open Division – No handicaps will be applied: Top three spots will be paid.

    Handicap Division – Three flights: Each flight will pay the top three gross and the top three net finishers. A player finishing in the top three in both net and gross will be eligible to receive the highest payout of the two but not both.

    Senior Division – One Flight: Top three gross and net finishers will be paid out.

    For more information on the two award-winning host courses, click www.trilogygolfclub.com and www.ravenverrado.com.

    Then visit the Arizona Golf Authority, it’s “All Things Arizona Golf.”

    Our Arizona Golf Courses Reviews and Guide List Directory has an AZGA Player’s course review for every golf course in Arizona, click www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory.

  • First Tee of Phoenix Receives $5,000 Donation From Local O.B. Sports Managed Courses

    First Tee of Phoenix Receives $5,000 Donation From Local O.B. Sports Managed Courses

    From the Arizona Golf Authority Golf News Desk

    SCOTTSDALE, Arizona – Thank you, ASU Karsten Golf Course, Eagle Mountain Golf Club, Longbow Golf Club, Raven Golf Club-Phoenix and the management firm for all four clubs, OB Sports Golf Management.

    Back Row L-R: Bret Greenwood – Eagle Mountain, Jay Larscheid – Longbow, Hugh Smith – First Tee of Phoenix, Derek Crawford – Raven-Phoenix, Joey Jones – ASU Karsten.

    This distinguished group recently donated $5,000 to The First Tee of Phoenix, the culmination of their custom-designed charitable program called “Tee It Up at 10 For The First Tee.”

    Each of the four golf clubs set aside one foursome tee time each morning in the 10 o’clock hour, Monday – Friday, June 11, through August 31, 2012 and sold it to the general public for $100.

    Each club then donated the entire $100 to The First Tee of Phoenix.

    “We are happy to pitch in to raise well deserved funds for The First Tee of Phoenix,” said Daryl Crawford, Director of Golf for ASU Karsten Golf Course. “Through the years, The Thunderbirds and Hugh Smith have made a positive impact on thousands of kids through the game of golf. We’re proud to support their efforts.”

    The First Tee of Phoenix teaches youngsters the game of golf by focusing important core values such as responsibility, respect, integrity and confidence, all of which are key to success on and off the golf course.

    Hugh Smith, Director, First Tee of Phoenix and Students

    “We truly appreciate the positive boost that our local chapter received from these clubs,” said Hugh Smith, Executive Director of The First Tee of Phoenix. “Their generosity ensures a host of youngsters will pick up the game as well as the many valuable life lessons that go hand-in-hand.”

    The First Tee of Phoenix is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization made possible by The Thunderbirds. The First Tee’s mission is to provides educational programs that build character, instill life-enhancing values and promote healthy choices through the game of golf to young people who would not otherwise be able to have affordable access to the game.

    The First Tee is designed to serve as a place for participants to learn valuable life skills and character lessons through creative activities and instructional programs that incorporate the fundamental teachings of golf. Currently, The First Tee of Phoenix is impacting over 70,000 youth ages 4-17 yrs. each year through regular programming at 5 area locations, The National School Program and special Outreach Programming with allied organizations like Boys & Girls Clubs, YMCA, church groups and many others.

    For more information on The First Tee of Phoenix call 602.305.7655 or visit www.thefirstteephoenix.org.

    Scottsdale-based, OB Sports manages premier golf courses and country clubs throughout the United States. Known for its comprehensive and personalized services since 1972, OB Sports has become widely acclaimed as the leader in boutique-style golf course management. For more information about OB Sports Golf Management, visit www.obsports.com, or call 480.948.1300.

    Then visit the Arizona Golf Authority, it’s “All Things Arizona Golf.”

    Our Arizona Golf Courses Reviews and Guide List Directory has an AZGA Player’s course review for every golf course in Arizona, click www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory.

  • AUR Golf Shirt Technology Beats the Heat in High Style

    AUR Golf Shirt Technology Beats the Heat in High Style

    From the Arizona Golf Authority Golf News Desk

    Kona-Kailua, HI and Scottsdale, AZ – Heat comes in many forms at golf courses around the country and two golf shirts from the AUR AWARE line handled the most extreme playing tests we could find in high style.

    The Big Island of Hawaii and Scottsdale, Arizona are two world class golf destinations, certainly. But they also anchor opposite ends of the golf climate yardstick: 80-degrees and high humidity vs. 110-degrees and no moisture at all.

    The AUR AWARE line polos we tested performed in both conditions as if we hadn’t left the climate controlled 19th hole at all. Turns out, the performance is all a product of the unique eco-friendly fabrics AUR is using for these shirts: EcoSmart™ fabric and S.Cafe™ fabric.

    The AUR EcoSmart™ fabric is made from recycled polyester yarn manufactured from plastic consumer products like water bottles.

    That’s right, the plastic is cleaned and crushed, melted and spun into Recycled Polyester Yarn. The yarn is woven into bolts of fabric from which the fashionable AUR EcoSmart™ apparel is crafted.

    During play in both climates, the AUR EcoSmart™ shirt refused to become damp. Now the bar’s not too high in Scottsdale when it comes to transferring moisture into the atmosphere with a relative humidity of only 7%.

    But at sea level, on the 17th at Hualalai when its 86%? That’s a test. And the shirt remains as bone dry as when it came off the hangar? Remarkable.

    The second AUR Aware shirt we tested, our favorite, is crafted from a unique fabric named S.Cafe™. Just as the moniker implies, this fabric is the result of a patented process which transforms spent coffee grounds into a composite-fiber yarn, which is then knitted and woven into bolts of fabric.

    Let’s circle back just to be sure: “transforms spent coffee grounds into yarn.” Yes, that’s correct.

    Four years of lab work revealed that the traditional roasting of coffee beans, the procedure which releases the fascinating phenols, esters and oils responsible for brewed coffee’s endless allure, actually expands the green coffee bean.

    And once the hot water brewing has washed away those components we crave, the expanded bean structure is available for tasks other than taking up space in landfills – a lot of space.

    In 2008, the International Coffee Organization reported green coffee bean production world-wide at 7.6 million tons. Let’s be generous and assume grinding reduces the volume of coffee beans by one-half. Simple arithmetic shows the total volume of those spent coffee grounds would fill 795 million 1-gallon milk jugs. We have trouble fitting two of them in the refrigerator at the same time.

    We found the AUR AWARE S.Cafe™ shirt to be the most comfortable and stylish “performance fabric” polo of them all, from the boardroom in the morning, to the 19th hole that afternoon.

    The S.Cafe™ fabric allows blending with other fibers during manufacture and ours was matched with 55% combed cotton. The style, drape and most importantly the feel is capital-E, Elegant.

    And both shirts provide all the easy care, UV guard, and anti-odor properties you expect from these eco-friendly fabrics.

    No matter what part of the country you play golf in, or what type of heat you experience there, you’ll get great performance and high style at a comfortable price point from these AUR AWARE golf shirts.

    Click AUR AWARE, ACTIVE and AUTHENTIC to visit the complete AUR product lines from Fletcher Leisure Group. Headquartered in Montreal, Quebec, Fletcher combined their original Canadian brands Aureus and Aurea, rebranded them as AUR and introduced the popular brand to the U.S. golf market in 2011.

    Then visit the Arizona Golf Authority, it’s “All Things Arizona Golf.”

    Our Arizona Golf Courses Reviews and Guide List Directory has an AZGA Player’s course review for every golf course in Arizona, click www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory.

     

  • Your Shot at $1 Million Begins November 1st Thanks To Wells Fargo and the Fiesta Bowl

    Your Shot at $1 Million Begins November 1st Thanks To Wells Fargo and the Fiesta Bowl

    From the Arizona Golf Authority Golf News Desk

    PHOENIX, Arizona – It’s time to sharpen your 125-yard shot because the $1 Million Wells Fargo Fiesta Bowl Hole-in-One tee opens November 1st at the Arizona Biltmore Golf Club.

    2012 marks the 28th anniversary of this exhilarating opportunity for players of every skill level. Most avid players from the Phoenix-metro area have teed a few up at this event down through the years, and for good reason, too. In 2002, Phoenix resident Ray Mills qualified for the final day, holed an ace and took home the $1 million check.

    This year’s dates are Thursday, November 1 through Sunday, November 11 and everything else is still the same. The Arizona Biltmore Golf Club hosts the event. It’s a dollar per ball, or $10 buys you a bag with 11 balls. The tee is open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. MST each day; 9 a.m. – noon on pre-finals Sunday the 11th.

    Each day, the three top qualifiers and anyone who makes a hole-in-one advance to the finals at 2:00 p.m. on Sunday. During the finals, the players will find one $1 million cup and two additional $50,000 cups cut in the green.

    In the event no one claims the cash prizes with a hole-in-one during the finals, no worries; the top three shots will be awarded grand prizes. And that’s in addition to the three daily prizes awarded to the top three daily qualifiers which include PING irons, golf bags, complimentary foursomes of golf at area courses and gift certificates for fine dining at local restaurants.

    With the rye grass ‘overseed’ season upon us, now is the perfect time to grab your shag bag and get on the range to hone your 125-yard move. Is your ball flight left-to-right, straight, right-to-left? – doesn’t much matter. Just check out the pin sheet below and match your shot to the day it will best fit the cup’s location.

    For all the details, click Wells Fargo Fiesta Bowl Million Dollar Hole in One.

    Then visit the Arizona Golf Authority, it’s “All Things Arizona Golf.”

    Our Arizona Golf Courses Reviews and Guide List Directory has an AZGA Player’s course review for every golf course in Arizona, click www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory.