ARIZONA GOLF AUTHORITY

Tag: arizona golf

  • 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.

     

  • Arizona Golf – Phoenix Needs To Get Out of Golf Business

    Arizona Golf – Phoenix Needs To Get Out of Golf Business

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

    Once upon a time, when golf ruled the recreational scene in Arizona, they couldn’t build the courses fast enough. It took 75 years to get to approximately 50 courses in Arizona, another 10 to get to 100, 10 more to get to 200 and 10 more to get to 350.

    Today, we are holding steady at 350 (give or take a few) and there hasn’t been a course built in Arizona for the past five years, although that will change shortly when Tucson adds another high-end public facility at the new Casino Del Sol. (By architect Notah Begay, no less!)

    Yes, there are a lot of golfing opportunities if you live in fun-in the-sun Arizona. Apparently, too many if you’re paying attention to local and national reports on our golf industry.

    Recently the Arizona Republic bannered a story across the top of its Valley & State section that proclaimed: “Golf’s decline proving costly.’’ That was followed by a subhead that declared: “As sport loses luster, Phoenix’s courses face $14.8 million deficit.’’

    At first, not knowing that the article was specifically aimed at Phoenix’s six municipal golf courses, I was a little perplexed. That’s because the National Golf Foundation released a report this past year that stated Arizona’s rounds were up 7 percent in 2011. And when I called Rob Harman, the Phoenix Parks and Recreation’s deputy director of special operations (a.k.a. golf), he told me that rounds at Phoenix’s six municipals were up 8.2 percent for the past two years.

    “They’re up, but yet it’s troubling because pretty much any way you do the numbers on rounds played, (the municipal courses) are probably never going to make money,’’ he said. “That’s why we’ve appointed a special committee to study the issue through a series of town hall-type meetings that will bring together the ideas of our golfers and the general public.

    “When that committee gets the feedback from those who attend those (five) meetings, it will make a recommendation to the City Council, which will then decide the fate of our six municipal golf courses.’’

    The choices, according to Harman and a study done by the City, are as follows:

    *Outsource the course pro shops to increase revenue. (I can tell you right now, this won’t get it done. It’s not enough.)

    *Close the courses from July to September when golf is slowest and cheapest. (Once again, not realistic from a maintenance perspective although it could reduce heat strokes.)

    *Cut the course hours from 14 hours a day to 10 hours a day. (Again, not realistic if you’re trying to maximize tee times and revenues.)

    *Since the golf courses are deeded public access and can’t be sold, turn them into parks. (Again, get real. The costs associated with that move would dwarf the golf losses.)

    *Privatize some or all of the courses by leasing them out to golf management companies. (Completely realistic.)

    *Keep offsetting the losses with the City’s general fund. In other words, suck it up in the name of recreation. (Completely acceptable when you consider the low-cost recreational opportunities it provides both junior golfers and senior citizens.)

    The Republic’s story, which included other findings from the NGF, noted that there was a decline (no percentage listed) in the average number of rounds played in Phoenix between 1990 and 2010. It also pointed out that during that 20-year span, golf courses increased in Maricopa County from 153 courses to 214, thus driving down the number of rounds played at the munis.

    However, the worst news about keeping open the City’s municipals – Aguila, Cave Creek, Encanto, Maryvale, Palo Verde and Papago – was that the hefty $14.8 million debt was accruing at a rate of $2.4 million a year, a running total that dates back to 1999. The City apparently has been keeping the courses afloat through its general fund – the taxpayer-supported fund that covers the bulk of the city’s costs such as salaries and services, and was referred to as one of its possible “solutions.”

    Harman said this isn’t unusual, that other cities cover their golf deficit through a general fund. He also said that munis across America are facing similar dilemmas, which is troubling because we need more affordable golf like municipals provide if the game is going to grow.

    But Harman is all over the flag with his assessment that munis, in general, are bleeding red with a few exceptions, the biggest being San Diego, where Torrey Pines, Coronado and Balboa Park bring in so much money they subsidize other city programs. Believe it or not, that also was the case in Phoenix during the 1990s, Harman said.

    Sadly, it’s not the case today. In fact, just to the south of us, the City of Tucson has been stumbling through the same scenario as Phoenix to the tune of $1.2 million a year for its five munis – Dell Urich, El Rio, Fred Enke, Randolph North and Silverbell. And like Phoenix, Tucson has a committee that is studying the issue to see what solutions, if any, can be put in place.

    “We’ve been aggressive controlling our costs; we can’t control how many people play,’’ Tucson Parks and Recreation director Fred Gray told Inside Tucson Business.

    Harman said that’s how the ball is rolling in Phoenix, too. No matter how they swing it, the munis are going to land in the red. And, no, there is no money for the novel idea of marketing them, Harman said, with the exception of its ties to EZLinks.com. (That Harman thinks EZLinks.com is a marketing tool should tell you right away that the City doesn’t get it when it comes to advertising. Discounting your golf tee times is the equivalent of hari-kari, especially when your green fee for residents is the least expensive in Arizona to start with, ranging from $18 in the summer to $43 in the winter.)

    How did it come to this? Well, poor planning for one thing, and a couple of bobbles for another. What the City of Phoenix doesn’t realize about golf is, it’s a lot like the restaurant business: If you don’t know what you’re doing you’re probably going to get burnt.

    First of all, Phoenix doesn’t need six municipal golf courses at the moment. Maybe four, but definitely not six, although that could change in the future.

    As I mentioned earlier, the financial troubles involving the municipal golf courses date back to 1999, the year Phoenix, coincidentally, purchased Palo Verde and opened Aguila. And despite what some might think, the problems with Papago over the past five years didn’t cost the city a red cent when it comes to its beleaguered golf fund. The actual $1.8 million settlement with a local bank came out of the general fund. So it was just the opposite: The $12 million renovation enhanced Papago with, hopefully, the rewards still to come (once a clubhouse is in place).

    Aguila, however, fell into the category of overkill, something that has plagued the Arizona golf industry in general in recent years. Aguila is a great golf course, but it’s poorly located (S. 35th Avenue in Laveen), and it pulls tee times away from Encanto, Maryvale and Cave Creek, so it’s ultimately counter-productive. Palo Verde also should never have happened. It did because area residents who lived around the golf course didn’t want it razed for condos and apartments, and so the City bought it to placate the neighborhood. But remember, times were also “good,’’ and golf was a money-maker with no end in sight.

    So where do we go from here? Well, don’t expect a revelation from those town hall-like meetings beyond what’s already on the table. And whatever the recommendations are, don’t expect the City Council to necessarily follow them. If you read blogs on the subject, it is obvious that at least two (or more) Council members don’t care much for the game.

    The good news is, at least from a golfer’s standpoint, that the first meeting was very well attended, according to a couple of golf buddies who reported back to me. And the message was clear: Phoenix needs to keep its six munis in operation but with better management and presentation, so they can compete with other golf courses in the Valley. And — believe it or not! — a lot of golfers think those munis need to be marketed way better than they are now, which is basically like starting from Ground Zero.

    That’s why a golf management company or companies need to be in charge of the Phoenix Six. It’s the only solution, really. Local companies like Blue Star Golf, OB Sports and Troon Golf, to name a few, have the expertise and the lower-cost maintenance staffs to get the job done in the black column rather than the red. Not only are they professionals, but they actually understand the concept of marketing, something you have to have if you’re going to survive in a heavily saturated market.

    You look at the numbers for the Phoenix Six and you wonder: How are they losing money? In the golf industry, it is generally accepted that 40,000 rounds a year will get you to the break-even point when it comes to running a golf course and everything else is gravy. So get this: Cave Creek did 57,000 rounds in 2011, Encanto did 44,600, Aguila came in at 43,800, Papago did 39,100, and Maryvale 35,500. That’s an average of 44,000 rounds per course per year.

    And wait! The Encanto Nine did 33,000 rounds while Palo Verde did 30,500 even if the Aguila Nine only did 8,000 rounds. But remember, those are nine-holers, where you need half the maintenance and presumably half the staff, so double those numbers and the Encanto Nine and Palo Verde should make money, too. As for the Aguila Nine, the best solution is to turn it into a practice facility.

    The bottom line on all of this muni mess: Keep the Phoenix Six open and do a better job. And here’s how:

    *Papago is way under the radar, as it should be doing a minimum of 60,000 rounds a year. Hey, it did over 100,000 rounds a year back in the 1980s and ’90s, and the course is in its best shape/condition ever, easily among the top 10 public courses in the state as we speak. Don’t take my word, just go play it.

    *Granted, Aguila is off the beaten path, but it also has a untapped potential primarily because it’s so good that it rivals many of the public courses in the Valley that charge a $100-plus green fee. Definitely worth saving, if not right now then for the future.

    *As for Cave Creek and Encanto, they are already meeting expectations, but if you bring in a more focused direction and a lower-cost maintenance staff, well, the profits will rise because you’re paying an employee $10 an hour to cut the grass vs. $20 or $25, the hourly it costs the City for many of its golf course workers.

    *Maryvale, well, it wouldn’t take much to get it over 40,000 rounds a year, and it’s hidden gem, designed by the legendary William F. Bell, the same architect who built Papago, as well as Torrey Pines. Yeah, it’s a tough neighborhood, but tough kids can learn how to play golf, too.

    *The nine-holers? Keep ’em with the exception of the Aguila Nine, and let the bigger courses subsidize them because they are kid-friendly and affordable for seniors.

    Of course, the key to this solution, no matter how you slice it, is to get the City out of the golf business while still keeping the courses up and running. Hopefully, we can still call them “munis’’ even if they are being managed under different brands.

    Click to visit our Arizona Golf Course Guide List Directory and read the AZGA Player’s Review for every golf course in Arizona at www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory.

    It’s “All Things Arizona Golf” from the Arizona Golf Authority.

  • 2013 We-Ko-Pass Makes We-Ko-Pa Even Better

    2013 We-Ko-Pass Makes We-Ko-Pa Even Better

    From the Arizona Golf Authority Golf News Desk

    We-Ko-Pa Golf Club’s frequent player 2013 We-Ko-Pass is back again, with plenty of new enhancements for 2013.

    Arizona’s avid golfers agree that We-Ko-Pa Golf Club may well be the finest public golf facility in the State of Arizona. And as 36-hole days go, Scott Miller’s 2001 Cholla course (has it really been that long?) and the 2007 Coore-Crenshaw Saguaro course offer one of the best one-two punches available anywhere in the southwestern U.S.

    When you add in the tranquil natural-desert surroundings, the artful clubhouse and gracious service you’ll find yourself wondering why you ever tee it up anywhere else. And when you’re armed with the attractive 2013 We-Ko-Pass rates? Well, let’s just say we’ll see you there.

    Visit www.wekopa.com to order your 2013 We-Ko-Pass or telephone 480.836.9000.

     

  • Play the TPC Stadium and Get Tickets for Three PGA Events

    Play the TPC Stadium and Get Tickets for Three PGA Events

    From the Arizona Golf Authority Golf News Desk

    TUCSON, Arizona – PGA TOUR Intoduces All Arizona Golf Pack

    The PGA Tour’s new $399 All Arizona Golf Pack is great news for Arizona golfers, and one very lucky friend.

    Here’s the drill: Watch the Champions Tour pros play the Charles Schwab Cup at Desert Mountain Golf Club in November, and then go play your own round at the TPC Scottsdale Stadium in December.

    Next, watch the PGA Tour pros show you how the TPC Stadium should really be played during the Waste Management Phoenix Open in January, and finally, watch the intricacies of match play unfold at the WGC Accenture Match Play Championship in February at the Ritz Carlton Dove Mountain Golf Club.

    The All Arizona Golf Pack is available for purchase through October 31, 2012, and includes:

    Two good any-day tickets to the 2012 Charles Schwab Cup Championship at Desert Mountain’s Cochise course, October 29 – November 4.

    Two rounds of golf at the TPC Scottsdale Stadium course with Forecaddie. The two rounds must be redeemed between November 25 and December 30, 2012.

    Two good any-day tickets to the 2013 Waste Management Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium course, January 28 – February 3.

    Two good any-day tickets to the 2013 WGC Accenture Match Play Championship at the Ritz Carlton Dove Mountain golf course, February 18-24.

    Total cost for the package: $399

    To purchase the All Arizona Golf Pack, visit www.worldgolfchampionships.com.

  • Arizona Golf Trips Made Easy

    Arizona Golf Trips Made Easy

    Zona Hotel & Suites - ScottsdaleIf you want to save time and money on your next Arizona golf trip, connect with the experts at Phoenix Scottsdale Golf vacations. They have been arranging golf packages, complete with tee times on great courses and stays at some of the top Arizona golf resorts and hotels for years.  They will have no trouble designing a package to put you where and when you want to play/stay within your budget.

    Just take a look at the current package they have for an incredible Scottsdale golf experience:

    Scottsdale Golf Resort Vacation

    Located in North Scottsdale lies the beautiful Zona Hotel & Suites. The property offers spacious suites with full kitchen and separate living area. On site enjoy one of the four sparkling pools and relax, take a dip in one of the three whirlpool spas, get a workout in the fitness center, enjoy the surrounding lush resort gardens, order room service to the privacy of your suite, or enjoy dining at Gordon’s restaurant. TPC of Scottsdale Golf Club (host of the FBR Open, formerly the Phoenix Open)

    Golf is included with your accommodations at any of these nearby Arizona golf courses:
    TPC of Scottsdale Stadium, Kierland, Grayhawk, Legend Trail.

    Season 1: Oct – Dec    Price Starts At:
    2 nights / 2 rounds        $340 per person
    3 nights / 3 rounds        $540 per person
    4 nights / 4 rounds        $740 per person

    Season 2: Jan – Apr     Price Starts At:
    2 nights / 2 rounds        $445 per person
    3 nights / 3 rounds        $710 per person
    4 nights / 4 rounds        $1,050 per person

    Season 3: May – Sep   Price Starts At:
    2 nights / 2 rounds        $215 per person
    3 nights / 3 rounds        $332 per person
    4 nights / 4 rounds        $445 per person

    * Package prices are based on 8 person occupancy. All packages are inclusive offering accommodations, golf and applicable taxes. Prices are subject to change based on availability.

    Go ahead, make it easy on yourself. Call the experts at Phoenix Scottsdale Golf Vacations at 866-218-6941 or Click Here for a Free Scottsdale Golf Vacation Quote and create your own custom Arizona golf trip online.

  • $5,552,416 – WOW!

    $5,552,416 – WOW!

    From the Arizona Golf Authority Golf News Desk

    WM Phoenix OpenPHOENIX, Arizona – No sport backs up its commitment to philanthropy better than golf.

    In 2011, the industry raised over $3.5 BILLION for charity – more than the NFL, NBA, NHL and MLB COMBINED!

    The number will only continue to grow, thanks to the efforts of the Thunderbirds and Waste Management, who today handed over the proceeds from the 2012 Waste Management Phoenix Open – a check totaling $5,552,416 – to local Arizona Charities.

    That’s right, $5.5 million+ will stay in Arizona and help such organization as Phoenix Children’s Hospital, the First Tee, Junior Golf of Arizona, Homeward Bound and the Make-A-Wish Foundation, as well as other deserving causes.

    “This is one of my favorite days each year, the day when a year’s worth of hard work truly pays off and shows the real winners of the Waste Management Phoenix are the local charities,” said Thunderbird Big Chief Alex Clark. “The more than $5.5 million donation we announced will help thousands in need; we can’t thank the community and our sponsors enough for their outstanding support of the tournament.”

    “As North America’s environmental solutions leader, Waste Management is proud to be the title sponsor of the greenest show on grass, and we are extremely pleased that more than $5.5M of golf tournament proceeds are going to charities through Arizona,” said David Aardsma, Waste Management chief sales and marketing officer.

    WM Phoenix Open DonationsAs important as the $5.5 million donation is, the contribution Waste Management makes to saving the planet during the Phoenix Open is just as valuable.

    The company instituted the Zero Waste Challenge with a goal of recycling 80% of the waste during the 2012 tournament. As part of the Challenge, they recruited and trained more than 500 volunteers who spread the word about Zero Waste, all week long. The result? During the 2012 tournament, Waste Management diverted an astounding 97% of the tournament waste from landfills and recycled more than 82% of it. A simply amazing feat!

    The 2013 edition of the Waste Management Phoenix, to be contested January 28 – February 3, 2013, will mark the 78th playing of the event and the third year Waste Management will serve as title sponsor. Last year, the tournament broke the single-day attendance record on Saturday with over 173,000 spectators and saw more than 518,000 pass through the gates during the week.

    Henry Ford said “Coming together is a beginning; keeping together is progress; working together is success.” The Thunderbirds and Waste Management have certainly proven that statement to be true, and we have no doubt they will continue to enhance “The Greatest Show on Grass”.

    For information about the 2013 Waste Management Phoenix Open, visit Phoenix Open.

     

  • Annika Sorenstam Academy Introduces Online Lessons

    Annika Sorenstam Academy Introduces Online Lessons

    From the Arizona Golf Authority Golf News Desk

    ORLANDO, FL – The ANNIKA Academy now offers online golf lessons from its acclaimed team of instructors. Highlights of the program include individual swing analysis and side-by-side comparisons with Annika’s Hall of Fame swing.

    ANNIKA Academy Students - Arizona Golf AuthorityIndividual online lessons cost $59 per swing analysis. Using state-of-the-art V1 Pro software, instructors will break down video of a player’s swing with drawing tools while offering audio commentary. They will also suggest drills to accelerate progress. The analysis will be emailed back to the player within seven days.

    An annual membership option is also available. For $499 golfers will receive 12 swing analyses; one review per month.

    As an added bonus, side-by-side comparisons with Annika’s swing – revered by some as the most technically sound in golf history – are featured.

    “Golfers of all ages, genders and abilities learn a more efficient, consistent and body-friendly swing through our online lesson platform,” says Annika, a 10-time major champion and the only female to ever shoot 59 in competition. “Our skilled Academy team will pinpoint areas needing improvement and offer advice to help your game reach its full potential.”

    For players seeking in-person instruction, the ANNIKA Academy presents a diverse menu of custom-tailored corporate packages, individualized golf instruction, personalized fitness programs, club fitting and even opportunities to play with Annika.

    ANNIKA Sorenstam Academy - Arizona Golf AuthorityNew to the roster in 2012 is the ‘Player’s Package.’ The program includes three hours of instruction on three consecutive days; 54 holes of golf; and full-service breakfast daily. Groups are limited to no more than eight guests, fostering an intimate guest-to-instructor ratio and environment conducive to learning. Prices start at $1,900 per person.

    Tailored to suit a variety of tastes and budgets, the ‘Championship,’ ‘Platinum,’ ‘Major Championship’ and ‘Soren-Slam’ packages are also available. Annika participates in three of the four, creating an authentic learning environment unmatched in the marketplace.

    For more information, visit www.theannikaacademy.com, or contact Pam Kehoe: pamk@theannikaacademy.com / 888.266.4522

    The ANNIKA Academy is a state-of-the-art, boutique teaching facility at Orlando’s Reunion Resort. The Academy opened in 2007 as a platform to share Annika’s passion for golf and fitness, and features her long-time personal coaches, Henri Reis, lead swing instructor, and Kai Fusser, Annika’s personal physical trainer.

    Their swing training techniques allow players of any age, gender and skill level to reach their potential by transferring more energy and power to the golf course.  One of only 15 certified Callaway Performance Centers in the country, the Academy provides custom-tailored corporate packages, individualized golf instruction, personalized fitness programs, club fitting and even opportunities to play with Annika.

    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.