ARIZONA GOLF AUTHORITY

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  • Mickelson Rewrites Legacy with Open Win

    Mickelson Rewrites Legacy with Open Win

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

    mickelson-open-champion-claret-jug-photoPhil Mickelson’s victory at the 142nd Open Championship on Sunday was pure shock and awe. Even more than that, it changed the perception we have of the player I’ve always considered the People’s Choice.

    Seriously, I can’t think of a bigger moment in a major championship since Jack Nicklaus captured the 1986 Masters at the age of 46. Not even Mickelson’s first win at the Masters in 2004 — when he broke a 12-year, zero-for-46 drought in the majors — was more captivating or improbable.

    “The best round of my career,” Lefty proudly proclaimed in the aftermath of his three-shot victory over Sweden’s Henrik Stenson at magical Muirfield Golf Club in Scotland, where he came from five shots back in the pack with a sterling 66 to snatch the Claret Jug.

    “I hit some of the best shots I’ve ever hit, and certainly it was my best round putting. . . . I never knew if I’d be able to win this tournament. I hoped and I believed, but you never know . . . until about an hour ago.”

    It’s the thing that people love the most about Phil: He tells it from the heart, and doesn’t mind giving us those extra details that make his most personal thoughts our thoughts. It’s why he’s the modern day Arnold Palmer, and why even those who don’t play the game admire him.

    Sure, Mickelson won his fifth major and moved to No. 2 in the world behind Tiger Woods, but even more than that, Phil established himself as the most interesting man in the world when it comes to golf.

    I mean, had third-round leader Lee Westwood prevailed, it would have been a good story, the Brit’s first major, especially at his country’s Open. Or had Woods claimed his 15th major after a five-year drought, yeah, that would have been good stuff. Even the other guy who grabbed the lead during the final round, Australia’s Adam Scott, would have been compelling had he added the Open title to this year’s green jacket just a year after Scott blew the British to Ernie Els.

    Instead, we got the rarest of moments, where “Phil the Thrill,” the guy who has experienced more heartbreaks in the majors than all of the above, gave us a homestretch run that was one for the ages. Yes, only the golf gods fully understand how difficult it was to make birdie on four of the last six holes of a golf course that was as slick as the back of a Cadillac.

    First, there was the birdie at the 13th, a putt that the reigning Waste Management Phoenix Open champ said was pivotal.

    “I was behind, obviously, the whole day, and I was 1 over for the championship, and I hit a really good 5-iron in there,” Mickelson said of the shot that set up the 10-foot birdie. “It was a putt that was going to make the rest of the round go one way or another.”

    This time, in his 20th appearance in the Open, it finally went Phil’s way, and he added another birdie at No. 14 for a share of the lead. That was followed by a huge save from seven feet after he got a bad break at the par-3 16th. Then, while walking down the 17th fairway after just hitting back-to-back “career 3-woods” that left him putting for eagle from 35 feet, it suddenly dawned on Mickelson that he was in the driver’s seat.

    “As I was walking up to the green at 17, that was when I realized this was very much my championship, in my control, and I was getting a little emotional,” he revealed in a statement you would never hear come out of the mouth of Tiger.

    “I had to kind of take a second to slow down my walk, and try to regain my composure, because not only do I still need a two-putt birdie, but I also needed to make a tough par on 18, and I fortunately made birdie on both.”

    mickelson-open-family-harmon-loy-bones-group-photoThat’s where the tournament really became unique TV, as first Mickelson first embraced his long-time caddie, Jim Mackay, in what led to tears from the guy better known as “Bones.” Then, one by one, his three kids that look an awful lot like their father, jumped into his arms followed by his wife, Amy. That the family laughed and cried while scrumming for a good minute or so also was a photographer’s dream. And then Lefty grabbed long-time agent Steve Loy and well-known coach Butch Harmon to complete what was terrific theatre.

    Think you’d ever see such a parade of humanity from Westwood or Woods or even Scott for that matter? And that’s what makes Mickelson so different from all of his peers.

    Asked by the Golf Channel why he was crying so hard, Bones said what a lot of people were thinking: “It was for Phil. “

    When Amy was interviewed later, she said that despite all the doubts about her husband’s chances in the Open, where he had but two top-10s and missed four cuts, including the last one, she always believed.

    “He’s always optimistic, always thinks he can get it done,” she said, adding that when Phil left the house Sunday morning he told her, “I’m going to get us a Claret Jug.”

    Mickelson’s sunshine attitude, the one that some people have questioned for its sincerity but now we know is as real as his never-ending smile, also was reflected to Harmon, who said he had told Mickelson prior to the round that he needed to get to even par or 1 under if he wanted to have a chance on Sunday.

    “He said, ‘I’m going to be better than that,’ ” Harmon related, adding, “He wasn’t lying.”

    And so Mickelson joined Seve Ballesteros, Byron Nelson and Peter Thomson on the all-time list with his fifth major, leaving 12 players still ahead of him. Lee Trevino and Nick Faldo are next on that list with six majors, and it would be conceivable that Lefty can still catch Tom Watson (eight majors) or Gary Player and Ben Hogan (nine each) if he truly is, as he says, “Playing the best golf of my career.”

    Sure, Mickelson never is going to pass Walter Hagen (11 majors) or Tiger (14) or Jack Nicklaus (18), but here is an interesting stat: Since he won his first Masters back in 2004, Phil’s won five majors to Tiger’s six. And considering how dominant Woods has been in the modern era, I, for one, think that elevates Mickelson’s status as a player considerably.

    Chances are Mickelson might be a little burnt out when he plays in the PGA Championship next month at Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, N.Y. After all, this is whirlwind stuff, and when last seen Phil had yet to release his clutch on the Claret Jug. (Yeah, he’s going to hang on for quite awhile.)

    But I do like his chances at the next U.S. Open, which takes place next June on his 44th birthday at a place he is very familiar with, Pinehurst No. 2. Who can forget his epic battle with Payne Stewart there in 1999, when Mickelson, waiting nervously for his first child, watched in disbelief as Stewart made a 22-foot birdie on the final hole for the win. Four months later, Stewart was dead from a fatal Lear-jet crash.

    As we all know, Mickelson has had five runner-up finishes in the U.S. Open since then, including one last month at Merion Golf Club outside Philadelphia, which makes him the player with the most near-misses ever in the national championship. Or as Phil said about the U.S. Open in reference to the possibility of joining Nicklaus, Woods, Player, Hogan and Gene Sarazen, as the only players to ever win the career Grand Slam: “I’m a leg away. But it’s been a tough leg for me.”

    It’s why people love Phil: He treats his failures just like his successes in that he learns from both, as Arnie once did. And Mickelson had an insightful response when a reporter asked him how he was able to bounce back so quickly after Merion.

    “You have to be resilient in this game, because losing is such a big part of it,” he said. “After losing the U.S. Open, it could have easily gone south; where I was so deflated I had a hard time coming back.

    “But I looked at it and thought I was playing really good golf. I had been playing some of the best in my career. I didn’t want it to stop me from potential victories this year, and some potential great play. I’m glad I didn’t, because I worked a little bit harder, and in a matter of a month, I’m able to change entirely the way I feel.”

    Such a positive thought is the difference between Phil and Tiger, and might just be what’s ailing Woods now. The chip on Tiger’s shoulder seems to grow a little bit larger with each setback in the majors, or are we to make something different out of his latest collapse?

    Asked by reporters what’s wrong with his game on the big stage, where he has gone 25 over par on the weekend in his last seven majors, Tiger, who had several well-documented, profane-laced tirades on Saturday and Sunday, when he shot 72-74 to finish tied for sixth, got testy: “I’ve won 14 (majors). It’s not like I lost my card and can’t play out here.”

    mickelson-open-press-photoObviously, there is a great divide between the game’s two biggest names, and it has nothing to do with the nine majors that Woods has on Mickelson. Tiger might be the greatest golfer of his time, but he’s always guarded and uptight with his world. Mickelson is the game’s greatest personality, giving fans his time while always bearing his good-natured soul. (Have you seen the latest ESPN commercial with Mickelson and Scott Van Pelt? See it!)

    Plus, Phil remains humble to the end; Tiger not so much. When asked about his prediction to Amy, that he was going to bring home the Claret Jug, Mickelson made light of it: “I just felt I was playing some of the best golf I’ve ever played, and that we were going to try to get something that we didn’t have, which was a Claret Jug. There were no predictions because you just don’t know what’s going to happen out here.”

    Well, now we do, and it was a beautiful thing. Certainly Lefty’s perfectly played victory at Muirfield might go down in history as the defining moment in the career of the game’s greatest left-hander.

    Or as Phil put it: “This is just a day and a moment that I will cherish forever. This really is a special time, and as fulfilling a career accomplishment as I could ever imagine.”

    Few would argue that no one deserves it more than Phillip Alfred Mickelson.

    Click “Huff’s Stuff” Arizona Golf Blog to visit Bill’s complete archive at the Arizona Golf Authority.

    Then, before you tee it up, click Arizona Golf Course Reviews for our “Insider’s Playing Review” of every golf course in Arizona – all 325 of ’em!

    It’s just part of “All Things Arizona Golf” presented by the Arizona Golf Authority.

     

  • Light it Up Celebrates a “Dynamite” Golf Shot

    Light it Up Celebrates a “Dynamite” Golf Shot

    From the Arizona Golf News Desk at the Arizona Golf Authority

    tin-cup-light-it-up-photoTin Cup Products, LLC announces the introduction of “Light it Up,” the latest style in its award-winning range of patented stainless steel golf ball marking stencils, all Made in U.S.A.

    Light it Up is the company’s “Cup of the Month” for July and celebrates the tradition of Independence Day as well as the dynamite feeling of a well struck tee shot.

    In a nod to its legions of devoted fans worldwide, Tin Cup named this cup based on comments posted to its Facebook page.

    “Some of the coolest product names have come directly from the growing community of golfers that always anticipate the designs we premiere each month,” says Tin Cup President Cabell Fooshe. “Given the early outpouring of enthusiasm for Light it Up, we’re expecting it to be in high demand for individual, outing, event and gift purchases.”

    Since being named “Best New Product” at the 2010 PGA Merchandise Show, Tin Cup has grown rapidly. Some of the company’s newest creations were named a top pick by Golf Digest at the 2013 PGA Merchandise Show and earned SCOREGolf’s “Surprise Product of the Year” honor for 2012.

    Available at hundreds of retailers nationwide and www.tin-cup.com, Tin Cup stencils ($19.95) boast a personalization process that takes seconds. Players simply place the template of their choice over a ball and trace it using an ultra-fine point permanent marker.

    More than 130 unique styles are available, including emblems from all four major military branches, visualization/game improvement marks and college logos. The company also offers an affordable customization program that’s trusted by well-known corporations, charities, media outlets, celebrities and individuals.

    For more information: www.tin-cup.com, 888.984.6287.

    About Tin Cup Products, LLC

    Tin Cup’s patented golf ball marking stencils are crafted from 100 percent stainless steel and Made in the USA. The entire personalization process takes just seconds, placing the Tin Cup over a golf ball and tracing the design using an ultra-fine point permanent marker. In addition to more than 130 existing models, a customization program provides low minimums, affordable pricing and prompt delivery for corporations, charities, media outlets, celebrities, events and others seeking a distinctive gift.

    Tin Cup stencils are currently sold at more than 1,200 retail locations worldwide, including PGA Superstore, Edwin Watts, Roger Dunn and Golfsmith, as well as elite clubs and resorts like Baltusrol, Bandon Dunes, Congressional, Kingsmill, Medinah, Reynolds Plantation, The Boulders, Torrey Pines, Wailea and Sea Island. The company also has distribution in Canada, the UK and Japan.

    Winner of “Best New Product” at the 2010 PGA Merchandise Show, it has been heralded by leading authorities worldwide, including CBS Sports, Cigar Aficionado, CNN, Forbes, Gifts.com, Globe & Mail, Golf Business, Golf Digest, GOLF Magazine, Good Housekeeping, Men’s Journal, People Country, TheStreet.com, TODAY Show, USA Today, Yahoo! and many others.

  • Why I Love the Bloody Open

    Why I Love the Bloody Open

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

    Open-Championship-2013-Muirfield-logoWhen it comes to the Open Championship, just never make the mistake of calling it the British Open. As a friend from over the pond once told me: “Only Americans refer to it as the British. Everyone else in the entire world calls it ‘the Open.’ ”

    For some odd reason, such bloody snobbery appeals to me when it comes to golf. And considering we’re returning to Scotland this year, the country where the game was born, and to magical yet mysterious Muirfield Golf Club, no less, it just got me thinking about how much I love “the Open.”

    That feeling goes back to my childhood, when I would watch the tournament early in the morning on TV – yes, a black-and-white set. I still remember how the putts would leave a tracer-like effect on the screen, so you could see how the ball traveled from the moment it left the blade until it arrived at the cup. I was fascinated. (Who would have guessed that’s now a “special effects” feature of every golf broadcast, proving that the game has come full circle?)

    Of course, the BBC was a new and different media to me back in those days, and this announcer guy Peter Alliss was sensationally sarcastic and a little salty, at least compared to his American counterparts. Alliss, the guy who gets credit for the golf cliché “Hit the ball, Alliss (most believe it’s “Alice”),” is a big part of why I have enjoyed the Open to the max over the years. Alliss, who is picking recently crowned U.S. Open champion Justin Rose “to go on and on and on” this week at Muirfield, only makes cameo appearances these days, which is why it’s important — at least to me — to listen to the entire broadcast each day.

    Alliss has been “the Voice of British golf” for almost 40 years, same as his sidekick, Ivor Robson, the Open Championship’s emcee, so to speak. Robson with his distinguished yet high-pitched voice is the gentleman who makes the introductions annually on the first tee of the Open, with his trademark: “And now from the United States . . . Tiger W-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-ds!” He almost sounds like a boxing announcer, except its better. It’s British, baby! (Think Austin Power.)

    I still love to get up early in the morning, except now the Open is earlier than ever. Because it’s carried live, we’ve got about an eight-hour difference, meaning they’re teeing it up while most people are sleeping. But for some reason, I instinctively pull myself out of deep sleep when it comes to the Open if for no other reason than to see if it’s going to be one of those days when the wind erects flags and the rain goes sideways. Sad to say, it won’t happen this week, as the forecast calls for sunny skies with temperatures in the mid-70s. The wind won’t get beyond a whimpering 8 mph, which will leave the tall grass mostly untrampled.

    Thankfully, this time around we won’t have to listen to Nick Faldo, an announcer who has the right dialect but obviously has spent too much time in America. Sir Nickie just doesn’t stack up against these Alliss and these BBC guys. The three-time Open champion, who won two of his Claret Jugs at Muirfield, is skipping his usual gigs with ABC and the Golf Channel to tee it up in the tournament at age 56. (Be careful what you wish for!)

    During his press conference Monday, Faldo called his somewhat surprising appearance in the field “the last chance I get to walk with fellow Open champions.” After his game bombed big-time three years ago at St. Andrews, who would have guessed Faldo would put his ego on the line again? And, no, this won’t be anything close to what 59-year-old Tom Watson did three years ago at Turnberry, or, for that matter, Greg Norman in 2008 at Royal Birkdale at 53.

    “I’m trying to bust my buns and get to learn this golf course, because it’s like a main road out there – hard and fast,” said Faldo, who probably knows he’s in over his head. “The bottom line: I hope by the end of the week I’m inspired, like all of us.”

    Apparently Faldo likes his chances of winning about as much as he does the co-favorites, Woods and Rory McIlroy. “(McIlroy) is still testing clubs,” Faldo pointed out in his somewhat arrogant, “he doesn’t have a chance” style. “Tiger is in a different mode, where he’s winning regular tournaments but he gets to the majors and something happens. There’s a little dent in there somewhere. He hits the wrong shot at the wrong time, where before Tiger would hit the right shot at the right time.”

    Open-Championship-2013-claret-jug-photoYes, the Open is inspiring and unpredictable despite Faldo, which is why they occasionally crown champions like Paul Lawrie and Ben Curtis and . . . John Daly. Or as Ernie Els, “the defending defender” put it during his media gathering on Monday, “Any player is good enough to win an Open.” And the Big Easy means it.

    “Phil seems like he’s comfortable (in the Open) after so many years (of being uncomfortable),” added Els, who won the Claret Jug at England’s Royal Lytham & St. Annes Course last year and also was the winner at Muirfield in 2002, the last time the Open was held there.

    Ernie is an astute, down-to-earth guy, as Mickelson is coming off a win last week at the Scottish Open. But Lefty has a track record of not playing well in this tournament even though he tied for second in 2011 before shooting himself in the foot last year with a 78 on Friday that sent him packing. But if a runner-up finish in this year’s U.S. Open could serve for momentum, you never know about “Phil the Thrill.” And the Claret Jug could be the perfect elixir, Els explained.

    “Winning the Open Championship, you can actually have the actual trophy and keep it for a year,” Els said, beaming like a kid. “I know it went around the world in the last year, and it was a wonderful time.”

    Yes, the Claret Jug inscription ceremony is hard to beat, just like the bagpipes and the crusty presentation by the Royal & Ancient Club of St. Andrews. Not surprisingly, and unlike their brethren at Augusta National Golf Club, the R&A stubbornly keeps hosting its events at all-male clubs like good ol’ Muirfield and everybody keeps turning a head to the notion of equality because, after all, this is THE Open.

    Asked about the all-male status, Els gave a thoughtful answer that tried to cover both ends of the opinion spectrum even if he failed badly. “(Muirfield has) been here for many years, and they’ve never thought about changing their policy. We play the Open Championship on this wonderful course, and I’m not going to miss it for the world, whether it’s got, unfortunately, this policy or not. In fact, I’m going to play it in the Sahara Desert if I have to.”

    Muirfield is a big part of this 150-year-old tournament, ranking fourth in most Opens held there with 15, the first dating back to 1892. Sure, I don’t agree with the all-male philosophy, but I’m all about tradition, and it lives on at Muirfield.

    “(Muirfield is) the No. 1 reason I’m playing,” said Faldo, adding that when it comes to the old guys running the club and excluding women, “That’s for the club to decide.”

    Yes, don’t mess with the Brits when it comes to all-male golf clubs that host the Open, which also include St Andrews and Troon. And don’t ever – EVER! — call it the “British Open” if you know what’s good for you.

    Just turn off your alarm, lay back on your pillow and savor one of golf’s greatest treasures. The real world can wait.

    Click “Huff’s Stuff” Arizona Golf Blog to visit Bill’s complete golf blog archive at the Arizona Golf Authority.

    Then, before you tee it up, click Arizona Golf Course Reviews for our “Insider’s Playing Review” of every golf course in Arizona – all 325 of ’em!

    It’s just part of “All Things Arizona Golf” presented by the Arizona Golf Authority.

  • 2013 Golden Ticket – $100 Wins Two Season Tickets for Nearly Every Game in Town

    2013 Golden Ticket – $100 Wins Two Season Tickets for Nearly Every Game in Town

    From the Arizona Golf News Desk at the Arizona Golf Authority

    Sponsored by the Phoenix Regional Sports Commission, each $100 raffle ticket is a chance to win the “2013 Golden Ticket.” This year, the drawing is scheduled for August 7, 2013.

    phoenix-regional-sports-commission-logoThis year’s “Ticket” specifically includes:

    Two 2013 Season Tickets to the Arizona Cardinals
    Two 2013-2014 Season Tickets to the Phoenix Coyotes
    Two 2013-2014 Season Tickets to the Phoenix Suns
    Two 2014 Season Tickets to the Arizona Diamondbacks
    Two 2014 Season Tickets to the Arizona Rattlers
    Two 2014 Season Tickets to the Phoenix Mercury

    Two Tickets to the 2014 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl
    Two Tickets to the 2014 Waste Management Phoenix Open
    Two Tickets to the 2013 Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl
    Two Tickets to two (2) Phoenix International
    Raceway Races

    Two 2013 Season Tickets to ASU Football
    Two 2013-2014 Season Tickets to the ASU Men’s and Women’s Basketball
    Two 2013-2014 Season Tickets to the Grand Canyon State University Men’s and Women’s Basketball

    The Golden Ticket Raffle is one of the Phoenix Regional Sports Commission’s primary fundraising events. 100% of the proceeds from the sale of Golden Tickets will benefit the Youth Sports programs of the PRSC, including the annual Youth Sports Awards and Youth Sports Summit.

    In the recent past, PRSC has sold approximately 300 tickets per year.

    For more information, contact Justin Balich at Justin@phoenixsports.org or 602.258.6272.

    Visit www.PhoenixSports.org for all the details.

  • Boccieri Golf Introduces EL Putter Series

    Boccieri Golf Introduces EL Putter Series

    From the Arizona Golf News Desk at the Arizona Golf Authority

    SCOTTSDALE, Arizona – Boccieri Golf has launched it’s new Extended Length EL Series Putters – the first, true alternative to anchoring.

    By combining a slightly longer putter shaft with the company’s patented, Tour-proven high-mass head, and a balanced counterweight in the 17″ long grip, Boccieri’s EL Series Putters provide the reliable stability of anchoring in a free-swinging putting stroke.

    boccieri-golf-el-putter-phots

    Part of the award-winning Heavy Putter line, the EL Series delivers unmatched stability and consistency, making it equally suited to players using regular length putters and those relying on belly and long models.

    Each of the new styles showcases a shaft that extends beyond the hands, but does not attach to the body. This unique design allows golfers to use the same stroke they would with a traditional length putter while benefiting from a 175-gram counterweight that produces a dramatically raised balance point and the industry’s highest MOI.

    “One reason belly putters became so popular was because the additional grip and shaft materials created a natural back-weight,” says Stephen Boccieri, President and CEO of Boccieri Golf. “Other OEM’s are just now adopting counterweighting while we’ve been touting it for nearly a decade and have now taken it to the next level.”

    Available in 36, 38 and 40-inch lengths, the EL Series includes 28 styles in three finishes and three distinct weight categories LITE (840 grams), MID (865 grams) and HEAVY (930 grams). This stands in stark contrast to competing brands that offer only one or two models with longer shafts. In all Heavy Putter models, the extra weight engages the body’s larger, more stable muscles to promote greater control with each stroke.

    For more information: www.boccierigolf.com, 888.788.8374.

    About Boccieri Golf

    Founded in 2005 by Stephen Boccieri, the company’s popular Heavy Putter collection and Control Series line of full-swing products were the first to integrate counterweight principals. This unique approach to club design is proven to benefit golfers of all abilities, as strategically placed weight in the butt-end of the shaft produces a higher balance point for smoother, more repeatable swings from driver through putter. Boccieri Golf’s Secret Grip, endorsed by Jack Nicklaus, was introduced in 2013.

    The company recently opened a state-of-the-art Research and Performance Center at 15816 N. Greenway-Hayden Loop in Scottsdale. The 9,000-square-foot facility offers golfers a variety of services, including custom club fitting, high-tech swing analysis and practice time on life-like simulators.

    Boccieri Golf equipment has played a key role in victories on the PGA, European, Champions, Nationwide, Asian, Canadian and European Challenge Tours, and has received critical acclaim from golf and lifestyle media worldwide.

  • Troon Privé Adds Pine Canyon & Torreon Clubs

    Troon Privé Adds Pine Canyon & Torreon Clubs

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

    After five years of relatively sluggish-to-no growth, or in some cases financial disaster, the private golf scene in northern Arizona seems to be on a bit of a resurgence. Amazing, when you consider that pretty much every club north of Payson but Forest Highlands in Flagstaff has been through the wringer.

    pine-canyon-clubhouse-flagstaff-photo
    Pine Canyon Golf Club, Flagstaff, Arizona

     

    Especially coming out of this economic funk in good shape are the Pine Canyon Club in Flagstaff and Torreon Golf Club near Show Low. One of the reasons I can say this is because both private clubs recently hired Scottsdale-based Troon Privé to manage their operations and agronomy. Troon Privé is the private arm of Troon, and includes about 40 elite clubs around the globe, including the Ocean Club in the Bahamas, Cordillera in Colorado, Pronghorn in Oregon, and Silverado in Napa, Calif., to name just a few.

    Both Pine Canyon and Torreon fit into that spectacular mold, perhaps Pine Canyon a tad more than Torreon. I say that because, if you’ve ever been to Pine Canyon, the clubhouse complex is off the charts. Located east of I-17 and south of I-40 on the outskirts of Flag, Pine Canyon would dominate any other small-city market if not for the presence of Forest Highlands, the pioneer of all that’s private about summer golf in Arizona.

    Still, Pine Canyon, which opened in 2004, has made its niche by being a little bit more family-oriented than its Flagstaff rival, and I’ll take Pine Canyon’s clubhouse any day over either of the two retreats at Forest Highlands. Some of my golf buds that are lucky enough to tee it up at Pine Canyon tell me it’s got a membership that is “really friendly,” and I think that’s a big deal if you’re in the market these days. Flagstaff, with its Northern Arizona University campus and lots of great eateries and breweries, also is nothing but fun for a mountain town.

    Rather than quote you a bunch of prices about how much property is going to cost at Pine Canyon, let’s just say plenty. I can be a little more specific about golf memberships, which range from $60,000 (refundable) to $30,000 (non-refundable) to $10,000 (sport membership with limited golf). There’s even a $40,000 (non-refundable) membership available to non-residents.

    Besides a new management company, Pine Canyon also has new owners. That would be Taber Anderson’s True Life Companies. If that last name looks familiar, it’s because Taber is the son of Lyle Anderson, who developed many of Arizona’s most influential private clubs, including Desert Highlands, Desert Mountain and Superstition Mountain.

    Kevin Betts, the new general manager at Pine Canyon, says that all of the newness has translated into lots of interest in his club. And while he’s just getting used to Flagstaff, “everything so far has just been awesome.”

    “Pine Canyon is a wonderful club, whether you’re talking about the golf course, the clubhouse, the pool, the membership, or just walking through the pines,” said Betts, who was the GM at The Phoenician for the past nine years.

    “I guess most perceive us as a summer club, but we’re year-round (with skiing in the winter). And with our new owner and their visions, the future could not look brighter.”

    As for the Jay Morrish-inspired Pine Canyon golf course, it boasts some picturesque holes although I’ve always thought it was more on par with the Meadows Course at Forest Highlands and not the Canyon, which is the highly-decorated, Morrish-Tom Weiskopf design that set the standard for mountain golf in Arizona way back in the mid-1980s. It’s a standard that no one has ever equaled.

    Sure, there are holes at Pine Canyon like Nos. 16 and 18 that give a little bit of that Augusta National-like feel. But the ones I always remember are Pine Canyon’s pair of “19s” – the 85-yard tee shot over water to an island green that ends your round (No. 19, the betting hole), and the traditional bar in the clubhouse. I can’t imagine a better way to end your round.

    Like I said, if you’re thinking about a place to play for the entire family that’s just a two-hour drive from the Valley, Pine Canyon looks pretty good these days. It’s basically established, and its financial problems seem to be in the rear-view mirror. You can check out other details at www.pinecanyon.net.

    Torreon, too, is all about the dad, mom and the kids, maybe even more than Pine Canyon when you consider they’ve dedicated 10 acres to family-friendly facilities that range from a trout pond to an equestrian stable, as well as Torreon’s 36 holes of golf.

    Yes, it’s about a three-hour drive from the Valley, or three-and-a-half hours from Tucson, but that will get you up to about 6,300 feet above sea level, which is the altitude you need to be at to receive noticeable relief from the heat.

    According to Joe Long, the general manager at Torreon, his club is no longer Arizona’s best-kept secret.

    “After four years of recession, we’re finally starting to bounce back, and a big part of that has been the arrival of Troon Privé,” said Long, who happens to be a tennis pro who somehow found his way into private golf.

    According to Long, Torreon always has been a stable club financially thanks to its long-time owners, Desert Troon. But the club had relied more on word-of-mouth than a major marketing campaign, which is why when the economic downturn came it dropped Torreon from 485 members down to around 400 members.

    “Troon Privé has got us back in the big picture, which is very important when you consider how many clubs we’re competing with for summer golf,” he pointed out.

    Long is right down the middle of the fairway with that assessment. And the difference between Torreon and Pine Canyon, besides 36 vs. 18 holes of golf, is that Torreon is more affordable. You’re talking about million-dollar-and-up homes at Pine Canyon versus homes at Torreon that boast more of a range, from $199,000 to $1.4 million.

    Memberships at Torreon are a deal, too, and the formula is simple: $20,000 initiation fee if you own property, and just $350 a month. Seriously, it’s hard to find those kinds of numbers for such quality golf.

    About the only drawback, Long added, is the nearby town of Show Low.

    “It’s our weakness,” he said, sheepishly. “The place is just a little too sleepy compared to Flagstaff, probably because we don’t have any college students.”

    That may be a plus or minus, depending on your view of college kids. And forget about Show Low, as Pinetop is just up the highway along with Sunrise Ski Park.

    Laurie McCain, who has been selling homes at Torreon since it opened in 1999, said there are numerous reasons why people love the club, which is located in the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest, where the pines don’t grow quite as tall as they do in Flagstaff’s Coconino Forest.

    “We’re affordable, casual, friendly and family-oriented, and it’s a mix of avid golfers from both Phoenix and Tucson, as we draw from both metropolitan areas,” McCain explained. “People really enjoy the atmosphere, and it’s easy to meet friends.

    “Plus, people really love to play our golf courses, both the husbands and the wives. I mean, we had a ladies day member-guest recently, and we had 144 players.”

    That’s impressive, when you can get 144 women to turn out to play golf at a destination golf course. But we’re not surprised, either, as Robert von Hagge’s two gems, the Tower (original) and Cabin, are dramatic and distinctive. The club itself designates four holes as signature – No. 8 and No. 15 on the Tower, and No. 9 and No. 12 on Cabin – but we would bet there are at least a dozen or more that could easily merit such status.

    I’ve always said that von Hagge, who died in 2010, was the van Gogh of golf course architects, and there were certainly moments of sheer brilliance at Torreon. In fact, you can check it out at www.torreon.com.

    So what’s it going to be: Pine Canyon or Torreon? The feeling here is, the time is right (again) and you can’t go wrong with either of them, especially with Troon Privé in charge.

    Click “Huff’s Stuff” Arizona Golf Blog to visit Bill’s complete golf blog archive at the Arizona Golf Authority.

    Then, before you tee it up, click Arizona Golf Course Reviews for our “Insider’s Playing Review” of every golf course in Arizona. All 325 of ’em!

    It’s just part of “All Things Arizona Golf” presented by the Arizona Golf Authority.

  • Marilynn Smith, LPGA – Have Clubs, Will Travel

    Marilynn Smith, LPGA – Have Clubs, Will Travel

    From the Arizona Golf News Desk at the Arizona Golf Authority

    marilynn-smith-book-coverHave Clubs, Will Travel is an entertaining “insider’s look” at the LPGA from the tour’s founding member and “ultimate insider,” Marilynn Smith.

    A native of Topeka, Marilynn called herself “Just an ordinary gal from the Kansas prairie who has lived an extraordinary life.

    “We were a mixture of war heroes, young kids, mothers and world-class athletes. We did things for ourselves, without management companies, a headquarters staff or swing gurus.”

    With equal parts humor and sage commentary Marilynn notes, “Amazingly, we survived without corporate logos on our clothing.”

    Marilynn and twelve co-founders started the Ladies Professional Golf Association in 1950:

    lpga-founders-1950-photoAlice Bauer
    Patty Berg
    Bettye Danoff
    Helen Detweiler
    Marlene Bauer Hagge
    Helen Hicks
    Opal Hill
    Betty Jameson
    Sally Sessions
    Shirley Spork
    Louise Suggs
    Babe Zaharias

    Remember what the U.S. looked like at that time? Here’s a tip, Harry S. Truman was in the White House, Texaco Star Theater led the television popularity rankings and Ben Hogan would author his “Miracle at Merion” in June of that year.

    GolfDigest-1950springWith an assist from Bob Cayne, Marilynn blends personal stories from her World Golf Hall of Fame career with the hardscrabble realities of starting and nurturing the LPGA Tour right up to present day.

    Courtesy cars and manicured golf courses may be considered customary today – after all, it is the LPGA Tour.

    But if you’d like to know what it’s like to hit golf balls off home plate before the baseball game at the local MLB park to grow a gallery for tomorrow’s tournament round, Marilynn will tell you all about it.

    Over sixty years later, Marilynn’s enthusiasm for the game is just as high, as it was on day one.

    Join her for a day of golf at the 5th Annual Marilynn Smith LPGA Charity Golf Classic, scheduled for Monday, October 7, 2013 at Tuscany Falls – Pebble Creek in Goodyear, Arizona.

    Four amateurs will be paired with an LPGA professional for a day of charity golf, good works and great fun. Click lpgafoundation.org/msmith for all the details.

    You’ll find several ways to order hardcover copies of Have Clubs, Will Travel  at MarilynnSmith.com, including a PayPal link for credit card transactions. Other options include paperback versions from Amazon, and eBook versions offered by Amazon, Barnes & Noble and other book vendors.

    If you like golf, and the rich rewards it grants those who summon the grit and perseverance it sometimes demands of those who play, you’re gonna love this book.

     

  • Quintero Golf Club Q-Card

    Quintero Golf Club Q-Card

    From the Arizona Golf News Desk at the Arizona Golf Authority

    $495 Q-Card Offers 10 Rounds – No Restrictions – June 1 – August 31

    Quintero-Golf-Club-PhotoPEORIA, Arizona. – Quintero Golf Club General Manager Tom Wilcox announced today that Quintero’s popular Q-Card is back for 2013 and on sale now.

    The Q-Card, good from June 1 – August 31, is a summer golf package that offers 10 rounds of golf with no restrictions (including cart) for only $495 (+tax). Q-Card rounds are fully transferable and can be used individually or divided up within a group.

    “With Father’s Day coming up, this makes a perfect gift for those golfing dad’s out there, or just a great gift for yourself to get a fantastic deal for summer play at Quintero,” Wilcox said.

    Q-Cards can be purchased at the Quintero Golf Shop or by calling (928) 501-1500.

    Quintero Golf Club, formerly Quintero Golf and Country Club, is a semi-private club that recently opened for daily-fee play in November of 2011. This accessible, yet secluded club is located 45 minutes northwest of downtown Phoenix in the high Sonoran Desert, and sits at elevations between 1,986 and 2,670 feet in the stunning Hieroglyphic Mountains.

    Quintero is ranked among the “Top 100 Residential Courses” and “American’s Greatest Modern Courses” by Golfweek, and was recently ranked second in the state of Arizona by both Golfweek and Golf Digest. For more information about Quintero Golf Club or to make a tee time reservation, go to www.quinterogolf.com or call (928) 501-1500.

    Click Quintero Golf Course – Arizona Golf Course Reviews at the Arizona Golf Authority.

     

     

  • Mickelson Has ASU Golf Team On Its Way to Top 50

    Mickelson Has ASU Golf Team On Its Way to Top 50

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

    Tim Mickelson looks back and laughs, while insisting that there never was a real defining moment of panic in his debut season as the Arizona State men’s golf coach. Indeed, if there were any doubts about the 2011-2012 campaign, a year of that saw the Sun Devils plunge to No. 83 in the country and miss the NCAA tournament, it didn’t come from the little brother of ASU icon Phil Mickelson.

    tim-mickleson-asu-photo“I always felt like we were on the right track,” said the younger Mickelson, who shook up his team last summer after his initial season by paring the roster almost in half and bringing in three freshmen and a transfer from East Tennessee State.

    “I know that a few of our fans disagreed with that – us being on track. In fact, I even got an email from one of them in October, saying that I should be fired. It was like, ‘Whoa, dude, after just one year (on the job)?’ I just don’t think they really understood the state of the program.”

    Imagine how that disgruntled fan(s) feels now after Mickelson pulled off what has to be the biggest resurgence in college golf for 2012-13. Ranked most of the season between No. 63 and 82, the Sun Devils made a late-season charge, entered the West NCAA Regional at No. 50 in the polls, and promptly qualified with a gutsy performance as one of 30 teams that will play this week (May 28-June 1) in the NCAA Championship in Atlanta.

    That’s right, nobody came from farther down in the rankings to earn a spot in the six-day shootout that is set for the Crabapple Course at the Capital City Club.

    “I’m proud to say that (this week) we’ll be representing ASU in the NCAA tournament for a 50th time, which is a really cool milestone,” said Mickelson, pointing out that only Oklahoma State (69), Texas (59) and USC (54) have been to the big dance more.

    “It’s something we’re going to talk a little bit about when we get to Atlanta. I want the guys to know just how special this really is. Sure, the goal is to finish in the top eight and gain the match play (portion of the tournament). But they’re also going to get some wonderful experience out of it – they’ll know what it feels like — and that’s invaluable for such a young team going into next season.”

    After dominating men’s college golf for most of this season, No. 1 California is the heavy favorite this week along with No. 2 Alabama, which has the experience factor. It’s certainly no easy feat that after three days of medal play (Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday), in which the individual champ will be crowned after 54 holes, and then the final eight schools will battle it out in a team vs. team format until one survives the match-play gauntlet to win the NCAA title.

    asu-golf-flag-photoShoot, ASU came from similar depths at the regional, which was hosted at the ASU Karsten Course in Tempe, rallying on the final day to get the fifth and final spot over No. 9 Duke. That its top three players were all freshmen certainly bodes well, as Trey Ka’ahanui (tie for ninth), Max Rottluff (T20) and Jon Rahm (T23) led the way. And as Mickelson pointed out, Spencer Lawson (T25), his junior transfer, and Scottsdale sophomore Austin Quick (T41), also contributed.

    Mickelson said he had expected strong performances from Rahm, the Pac-12 Freshman of the Year, and Rottluff, a highly recruited standout from Germany. But Ka’ahanui, a 19-year-old from Tempe McClintock, well, that was “my biggest surprise.”

    “Trey had struggled off the tee in the fall, but when he got his chance this spring, he seized it,” Mickelson said. “I could see it coming after he realized he didn’t have to hit his driver off every tee. Hey, he hits his 3-wood farther than most guys hit their driver, and when he scaled it back, he actually became a better driver of the ball when he did use that club.

    “That part of his game certainly showed in the final round of the regional, when he helped us pull away from (No. 9) Duke with a (career best) 65. And all the guys came through at one time or another, which is why we’re going to Atlanta.”

    Mickelson called Ka’ahanui “a stud athlete who plays any sport well.” He wasn’t necessarily a standout his senior year at McClintock, but Mickelson knew that Ka’ahanui had won the AJGA Heather Farr Classic as an eighth-grader, and state 4-A high school titles his sophomore and junior years before he sort of bottomed out as a senior and failed to finish in the top 20 at state. Oh, yes, and there was one other factor that came into play — Ka’ahanui’s older brother, Trent, had played for Mickelson when Tim was the coach at the University of San Diego.

    “I’ve always had a great relationship with Tim,” said Ka’ahunui, who moved here from Hawaii when he was just a small child and grew up playing Shalimar Golf Club, just a few miles south of ASU.

    “Tim’s not really a disciplinarian, but we all know exactly what he expects. He’s a really, really good teacher, but he still lets us play our game. He kind of lets us figure it out on our own, and I think that’s probably the reason we kept getting better as the season went on.”

    The name Mickelson always brings great expectations, that’s true. Phil Mickelson is probably the most well-known, former ASU athlete in history along with the late Pat Tillman. But Tim Mickelson just might be onto something, the way he’s bringing his Sun Devils along slowly but surely. Plus the good players are starting to multiply, which also is a good sign.

    For instance, Mickelson already has another great freshman on the team in Alberto Sanchez from Nogales, who played most of the season before struggling this spring. And Mickelson’s got three solid incoming freshmen in Nicola Galletti, a Phoenix kid who moved here from California a year ago; Ki Taek Lee, a standout from Palm Springs, Calif.; and Scottsdale’s Blake Cannon.

    “Two of those three (incoming freshman) will play next year, as will Alberto,” Mickelson predicted. “So I love the direction we’re heading, and getting to the (NCAA) tournament this year, well, that’s just a really big bonus.”

    Let’s see, the current five plus three more equals eight players vying for a five-man team, a situation that ever coach wants to be in, especially those who arrived at one point to find the cupboard bare. No doubt Mickelson is savoring his future.

    “What does this season mean to me, personally?” Mickelson asked rhetorically. “Well, I think we’re a little bit ahead of where I thought we might be, and that’s nice.

    Then he added with a wink: ““And I think there’s a good chance I’ll have a job next year.”

    Ya think?

    Click “Huff’s Stuff” Arizona Golf Blog to visit Bill’s complete golf blog archive at the Arizona Golf Authority.

    Then, before you tee it up, click Arizona Golf Course Reviews for our “Insider’s Playing Review” of every golf course in Arizona. All 325 of ’em!

    It’s just part of “All Things Arizona Golf” presented by the Arizona Golf Authority.