ARIZONA GOLF AUTHORITY

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  • Arizona Golf Message Delivered to Congress by Daryl and Derek Crawford

    Arizona Golf Message Delivered to Congress by Daryl and Derek Crawford

    From the Arizona Golf Authority Golf News Desk

    We Are Golf Visits Congress on National Golf Day

    PHOENIX, Arizona – Daryl and Derek Crawford, fondly known as D&D in the golf community, are heading to Washington D.C. as part of the WE ARE GOLF coalition. The group will meet with Members of Congress on National Golf Day, April 18th, to share stories as well as data about golf’s diverse businesses, employees, tax revenue creation, tourism and charitable benefits, and environmental leadership.

    WE ARE GOLF was formed three years ago, in part because the golf industry was misunderstood by too many elected officials, and many longstanding perceptions of the game simply didn’t square with the current golf industry facts. By focusing on the nearly two million Americans whose livelihoods are tied to golf, WE ARE GOLF will make sure Congress understands golf’s contributions to the economy at the local, regional and national levels, nationwide.

    The day-long exhibit in the Rayburn Office Building Foyer will feature live lessons (from 9:30 a.m. to 10 a.m.) for Members of Congress from Golf Channel’s Michael Breed (Host of “The Golf Fix”); a golf simulator; a Republican vs. Democrat putting challenge; photo opportunities with the Wanamaker Trophy; and an educational display illustrating golf’s cutting-edge environmental stewardship.

    We are all very fortunate to have Phoenix natives Daryl and Derek deliver the Arizona golf message to Capitol Hill on our behalf. The Crawford brothers have each spent over 30 years serving the Phoenix golf community. Currently, Daryl is the Director of Golf at ASU Karsten Golf Course and Derek is the General Manager at Raven Golf Club.

    For more information, visit http://wearegolf.org/; to join the Twitter campaign, visit http://twitter.wearegolf.org/ and tweet why golf is more than just a game.

  • PING Adds To “Bubba and Friends Drive to a Million”

    PING Adds To “Bubba and Friends Drive to a Million”

    Arizona Golf Courses List - Bubba’s PING G-20 Driver - Arizona Golf Authority
    PING G-20 Driver

    PHOENIX, Arizona — PING announced April 12th it will increase its charitable contribution through the sale of 5,000 pink G20™ drivers. PING will donate $50 per club, thus ensuring a $250,000 donation toward Masters Champion Bubba Watson’s goal of raising $1 million for charity in 2012.

    PING’s announcement follows Bubba’s popular win at the 2012 Masters. The 5,000 limited-edition drivers will be available in golf shops around June 1.

    “We looked back at the last few days and realized that with all the tremendous energy Bubba has created with his win at the Masters and for our brand, we needed to do more with this opportunity to give back to those in need,” said John A. Solheim, PING Chairman & CEO. “The response to the pink G20s has exceeded expectations at this point, so we’re increasing our commitment to help bring Bubba closer to his goal of raising $1 million for charity this year.”

    In January, Watson announced the formation of “Bubba & Friends Drive to a Million” – a year-long effort to raise $1 million for charity through his own efforts and the support of his partners and sponsors. At that time, PING launched “Bubba Long in Pink. Driven by PING,” a program that pledges $300 for every drive Bubba hits farther than 300 yards (up to 300 drives). It kicked off the initiative with a $10,000 donation.

    Bubba has launched 172 eligible drives of 300-plus yards on the 2012 PGA Tour, raising $61,600 from PING. He is 128 qualifying drives short of 300. Based on his current pace, it’s expected he’ll reach the 300 milestone in June.

    Best of all, the funds raised through “Bubba Long in Pink. Driven by PING” will stay in the Phoenix area, home base for PING Manufacturing’s worldwide headquarters.

  • Arizona Golf Course Reviews Legend Trail Golf Club Offers Great Golf With a Touch of Scottsdale’s Old West Spirit

    Arizona Golf Course Reviews Legend Trail Golf Club Offers Great Golf With a Touch of Scottsdale’s Old West Spirit

    Excellent Arizona Golf Adventures from the Arizona Golf Authority

    Legend Trail is the perfect course to play when you want to savor the unique experience of playing golf in Arizona’s Sonoran desert. Whether you choose the par-72 Black tee “Long Trail” at 6,845 yards, or the 4,910-yard “Short Trail” Sage tees, you will enjoy stunning North Scottsdale picture postcard-type panoramas, excellent Tif-Eagle turf course conditioning and a first-rate Rees Jones layout.

    Legend Trail Golf Club – #14 Navajo Tapestry

    The fairways at Legend Trail Golf Club are wide and virtually uninterrupted by desert from tee to green. The desert-carries over native plants are mostly limited to the distance between your tee box and the generous fairways in front of you. The tee boxes rise up as grass islands growing out of the dry desert floor. They deliver a surreal experience of feeling marooned in the prickly desert flora, and add to the high-adventure of playing your way through its remarkable arid-lush beauty.

    Now be advised, you choose your own tee box for the round, and therefore, the desert-carries you’ll face for the day, so choose wisely. The “Long Trail” is rated 72.3 and carries a healthy 138 slope; it’s a more modest 68.1 and 115 for the “Short Trail”. Four additional sets of tee markers are located between them so everyone can find a comfortable challenge for the day.

    But no matter what teeing ground you choose, Legend Trail will perch you high above manicured fairways that seem to go on forever, and elegantly crafted green complexes molded into the natural terrain. And yet, each time you arrive at your ball, if you glance over to survey the fairway’s edge, you will witness just how quickly the pristine golf course turf vanishes and the harsh, natural desert surface returns. In a word: instantly; it’s quite a sight to behold.

    Rees Jones’ layout at Legend Trail presents an enjoyable and playable routing up and over this undulating portion of high-desert property in North Scottsdale, and includes a unique combination of back-to-back 5-pars at the 16th and 17th holes – more on those two later.

    Legend Trail Golf Club #6 – Painted Desert

    A favorite pair on the front-9 starts at the par-4 sixth, playing at just 335 yards. It presents the classic temptation to try and squeeze a bit more distance out of a tee ball than may be safe, accuracy-wise. Desert left and bunkers right narrow the fairway that Mr. Jones decided shouldn’t provide a level lie, anywhere.

    The short approach shot, played from an uneven lie, must carry a dry desert arroyo fronting a raised, severely contoured green which wraps around a cavernous front-left bunker. The arroyo and bunker see plenty of action as they collect all the “chunky” second shots those undulating fairway lies produce.

     

    Legend Trail Golf Club #7 – Water Chant

    Standing on the seventh tee box, Mr. Jones tempts you with an eminently reachable, 495-yard par-5. He provides a target-bunker at the top corner of the generous, gently sweeping, right-to-left fairway to aim at, and draw your tee ball off of. That will leave you a reasonable hybrid or long-iron second shot to an enormous putting surface, protected by a lake on the left, but wide open on the right side for a run-on shot.

    What he doesn’t show you from the tee is the left-side lake guarding the second half of the fairway and green complex, and the fact that it extends back, close enough to the tee, to drown any “gonna go for it in two” tee ball is launched too far left. Rinse one here and this routine birdie hole now looks like a long third shot, over water, to get on in regulation and get out with a well-earned par.

    The back-9 at Legend Trail Golf Club is about as good as golf in Arizona gets. The routing, the shot values and the scenery combine for a high energy thrill-ride you won’t soon forget. The crescendo is reached at the 16th and 17th holes, a back-to-back 5-par pairing which can take a good round really low, or destroy 15 holes of solid play.

    Legend Trail Golf Club – #16 Echos of Time

    The 530-yard 16th plays from an elevated tee, which prominently displays an arroyo cutting across the far end of the fairway lying in the pristine meadow below. Players going for the green in two will carry the arroyo with their tee ball; on-in-regulation players play short.

    The small green complex is treacherous. It presents a deep, but narrow putting surface, elevated above the fairway and surrounded by a second arroyo that collects everything that is not precisely on target. It’s a lot easier to find this green with a wedge from short yardage than with a fairway metal from way out; your choice.

    The 510-yard par-5 17th, on the other hand, begs to be eagled. The putting surface is much larger here but is segmented into several different tiers. If you’re ‘gonna go for it in 2 anywhere, this is the place. Keep your tee ball in the right-hand side of the fairway and, on approach, avoid the bunker front-left of the green. The right side of the green is wide open so you can run it on if you need to. Skilled players can target the tier the pin is on, the rest of us just try to get it on and consider a putt for eagle, from anywhere on the green, accomplishment enough.

    Legend Trail Golf Club is a full service golf facility; practice facilities are state-of-the-art and the pro shop is always full of the latest in equipment and fashion trends.

    Legend Trail Golf Club

    The John Jacobs – Shelby Futch Golf Academy is located here and provides everything the student-golfer dreams of, from detailed video swing-analysis studios to private swing instruction, short game development to handle the subtleties of the Tif-Eagle surfaces and full playing lessons on the championship layout.

    The Hot Stix Golf Performance Center also calls Legend Trail home. As everyone who’s been through the Hot Stix club-fitting procedure knows, the matching of an avid player to both a club and a ball, custom tailored to their game, produces great rewards on the golf course.

    Legend Trail Golf Club showcases all the best Arizona golf has to offer, including some “good ’ole western style feudin.” And once you’ve played the 11th hole, you’ll be qualified to join the long-standing local debate. The 2 camps lay out this way: Do we leave the 440-yard par-4, the No. 2 handicap hole on the golf course, as it is, or should we keep the green complex, build new tees at the “corner” and convert it to a long, gorgeous downhill 3-par.

    Go play Legend Trail Golf Club, you’ll enjoy the day, and then let us know what you think about the 11th.

    Arizona Golf Authority AZGA “Local Hang” for Legend Trail Golf Club is the club’s own Cantina at Legend Trail. The patio offers the perfect spot to enjoy their full menu of refreshments and fare amid the tranquil desert surroundings, and offers the best view in town of Pinnacle Peak’s elegant north face. When you’re ready to two-step with the long-neck beer and cheeseburger crowd, head up the road a piece to Harold’s Cave Creek Corral, located just north of the club in Cave Creek, or the Horny Toad, just down the street from Harold’s, in Cave Creek as well.

    Click Arizona Golf Courses Guide List Reviews Directory and read the AZGA player Arizona golf course reviews for every golf course  in Arizona at www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory.

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

  • Arizona Golf Courses – Bill Huffman’s Huff’s Stuff Blog – The Masters

    Arizona Golf Courses – Bill Huffman’s Huff’s Stuff Blog – The Masters

    One of These 5 Guys Will Win Masters – Unlike other professional sports that take an entire season to build to a crescendo, golf’s big moment always comes prematurely with the annual showcase called the Masters.

    Alternate Text BoxOn the game’s biggest stage, Augusta National, contested between the best players in the world — most notably Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson in the modern era — golf’s magical moment occurs in early April rather than in the fall at the FedEx Cup, as the PGA Tour would have us believe.

    Proof of this comes in many forms, like recently when Golf Digest asked readers in an on-line survey this question: “You have a choice of watching only one of the following sporting events. Which one do you choose?’’

    The choices were Masters Sunday, the Super Bowl, U.S. Open Sunday, British Open Sunday, Game 7 of the Stanley Cup, Game 7 of the World Series, Game 7 of the NBA Finals, the Kentucky Derby, the Summer Olympics, Daytona 500 and Indianapolis 500, which is the exact order that all of the above finished. Not surprisingly, Masters Sunday was the runaway leader with 66.4 percent of the vote while the Super Bowl came in a distant second at 11.1 percent. The U.S. Open, generally regarded as the Masters only competition, got a 7.1 percent. (Yeah, it was that lop-sided!)

    On the other side of that “biggest moment’’ equation, Golf World asked 81 PGA Tour pros to fill out their ratings on the 52 courses they play annually over the past three years using a sliding scale of 1 (worst) to 10 (best). Not surprisingly, Augusta National was a runaway No. 1, meaning the guys who play for pay look forward to the Masters in the same way that the fans do.

    Why is this so besides obvious things like the Augusta National is the only golf course that hosts the same major championship every year, and traditions like its one-and-only green jacket?

    Actually, I think I can boil it down to one word — drama. That’s right, nobody gives us the never-ending theater quite like the annual chase through the dogwoods and azaleas.

    That is especially true in the modern era of the Masters, or ever since Jack Nicklaus captured his record sixth green jacket in 1986 with a charge over the back nine of that fabled golf course that even the Golden Bear labeled “my greatest victory ever.’’ And that’s saying something when you have 18 majors, or four more than the next-best guy on that list, Woods.

    But that’s the Masters, as those golden moments seem to just keep coming even without the Bear’s presence these days. Like last year, when Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy choked away a four-shot lead on the final day with a fat 80, while little known South African Charl Schwartzel became the first champion in 78 years to birdie the final four holes for the green jacket.

    Chances are McIlroy will bounce back this year, but who knows? As the old saying around Augusta National goes: “You don’t win the Masters; the Masters wins you.’’ Just ask Greg Norman, the poster boy for past Masters disasters, or as he came to be known, golf’s “Hamlet.’’ Nobody was more talented than Norman in the Australian’s younger years. Yet when it came to this major it was “not to be.’’

    Like in 1987, when the Shark tried to come back from his runner-up finish to the Bear the year prior only to be hypnotized by local hero Larry Mize, who chipped in for birdie on the second hole of sudden death to make him a bridesmaid for a second time. Oh, if only that was the end of Norman’s misery, but no. Ten years later, the Great White One took a six-shot lead into the final round of the 1996 Masters only to be beached by Nick Faldo, who picked up his third green jacket in the process.

    But that’s the thing about the Masters, nothing is ever a certainty no matter how certain it appears to be. Ask Ahwatukee’s Mark Calcavecchia, who in 1988 already was finished and tied with Sandy Lyle when the Scotsman hit his drive into the fairway bunker on the 18th hole. Now as everyone knows, it’s very difficult to save par from that ominous hazard that dots the last big challenge at Augusta National. But Lyle ended up making birdie when his 7-iron hit the green and spun 30 feet back down the hill to within eight feet of the cup.

    “I was in the (Butler) cabin getting ready for a playoff, but they had brought me in there with intentions of fitting me for a (green) jacket,’’ Calc recalled of his sudden change of Masters fate. “I remember there was a TV in there, and I happened to catch his shot out of the fairway bunker on 18.

    “Immediately, his eyeballs got three times their normal size, and I knew he had hit a career shot. . . . I had a feeling for some reason he was going to make it.’’

    Tom Lehman felt the pain on five occasions, when he finished as the runner-up twice to go with three thirds, a couple of those third-place finishes being even greater chances than the seconds. The Scottsdale pro’s view, in retrospect, was that he “should have putted better,’’ but it was as if that old adage about the Masters not winning him seemed to kick in every time.

    Unbelievably, Tom Weiskopf, another guy who lives in Scottsdale, holds the dubious distinction of being the runner-up for the green jacket a record-tying four times, or as Weiskopf spun it: “That put me in some pretty good company.’’ Yes, Weiskopf is correct, as he shares that record for “near misses’’ with Ben Hogan and Nicklaus.

    Certainly more drama is in store for this week with the plots and subplots seemingly everywhere. However, it says here that the correct answer to one of these five questions will most likely resolve this year’s Masters riddle.

    *Is Tiger really back on track?

    He certainly looked like it at the Arnold Palmer Invitational two weeks ago, where he won by five shots, the “W’’ being the first in two and a half years — or ever since he hit the fire hydrant. But remember, Tiger has two runners-up and four other top-six finishes in the past six years since he last won in 2005. So he is definitely a horse for a course.

    *Will McIlroy be able to bounce back for last year’s debacle?

    After watching his impressive win in last year’s U.S. Open parlayed with the fact he recently was No. 1 in the world, most observers say “yes.’’ He looked good at the WGC Match Play, where he finished second, and then won the following week at the Honda. But he hasn’t played in a month, so it’s not like he’s coming to town on a hot streak.

    *Can Phil equal Tiger with a fourth green jacket? Considering many of Augusta National’s fairways are the size of a football field (with no rough), and the greens are so gigantic you can hardly miss (even if you can hardly make), you can never write off the free-swinging Lefty. Hey, the Mickster didn’t roll up 11 top-10 finishes, including those three wins and three thirds, without bombing away. He is the “other” horse for this course.

    *If Luke Donald really is the No. 1 player on the planet, why can’t he win a major?

    It says here that Donald never will win a Masters, chiefly because Augusta National is just too long for the Englishman at 7,435 yards. But he’s way too accurate (and too good a putter) not to win a major. Then again, maybe the Masters will smile upon him like it did on Zach Johnson in 2007?

    *Or how about Lee Westwood, the No. 3 player in the world who has been the “best player not to win a major’’ for seemingly forever? In the past three years he’s finished T3, runner-up and T11 at Augusta National, so he’s either coming or going depending on the tournament’s fickle finger.

    *And, finally, can we finally believe in Hunter Mahan, the season’s only double winner, despite the fact that he’s never had a top-five finish in a major?

    If you’re looking for a “dark horse,’’ this could be the guy, although birdies are Mahan’s calling card and Augusta National hasn’t given them out in bunches since Tiger went on his red-numbered roll in 1997, somehow getting to 18-under par. Besides, Mahan won last week, which is a bad omen (along with being the winner of the Par 3 Contest) although Mickelson managed to pull off the back-to-back double in 2006, when he won his second green jacket.

    So stick around, as the golf season officially gets under way and then climaxes all in the same week. Chances are we’ll answer at least some of those aforementioned questions in dramatic fashion because no major mesmerizes us quite like the Masters.

    Click Huff’s Stuff Arizona Golf Blog for Bill Huffman’s complete Arizona Golf Authority archive; it’s “All Things Arizona Golf.”

    Click Arizona Golf Courses Directory List Reviews and read the AZGA player’s course review for every golf course in Arizona.

     

  • 2012 Winn Grips Heather Farr Classic at Longbow Golf Club

    2012 Winn Grips Heather Farr Classic at Longbow Golf Club

    Alternative Text BoxMESA, Arizona – With a field that boasts four of the event’s past champions and 19 Rolex Junior All-Americans, the 2012 Winn Grips Heather Farr Classic hosted by Longbow Golf Club promises to display the best junior golfers in the world over the Easter weekend, April 5-8.

    The 54-hole stroke play tournament will take place at Longbow Golf Club in Mesa, Ariz., for the eighth straight year. The 144-player field features juniors from 19 states, Canada, China, Mexico, South Africa, South Korea and Thailand, with 25 players representing the home state of Arizona. A total of 37 players in the tournament field have signed National Letters of Intent to play college golf in the fall of 2012.

    Past Champions

    Alternative Text Box
    2010 Champion Alison Lee

    The event garners one of the strongest fields in junior golf, as evidenced by its impressive list of past champions. In addition to Hunter Mahan, LPGA standout Paula Creamer was victorious in 2003 and 2004. Local players who have found themselves in the winner’s circle are Scottsdale natives Amanda Blumenherst (2002), Drew Kittleson (2005) and Philip Francis (2006). In 2011, Phoenix native Zach Wright and Moriya Jutanugarn of Thailand captured the Easter weekend titles.

    This year’s field will see four past champions return for their chance at etching their name on the trophy one final time before moving on to the collegiate ranks. Zachary Wright (2011), Alison Lee of Valencia, Calif. (2010), Trey Kaahanui of Tempe, Ariz. (2008), and Kyung Kim of Chandler, Ariz. (2008), are committed to play their final Easter weekend as a junior at Longbow Golf Club.

    Tournament Schedule
    The tournament practice round will be a 7:30 a.m. shotgun start on Thursday, April 5. First and second-round tee times will be off the Nos. 1 and 10 tees from 7 – 8:39 a.m. for the first wave and 11:30 a.m. – 1:09 p.m., Friday, April 6, and Saturday, April 7. After a 36-hole cut, the final round will go off the Nos. 1 and 10 tees, Sunday, April 8, from 7 – 8:57 a.m. An awards ceremony will immediately follow final-round play. Spectators are welcome and admission is free of charge.

    Your Chance to Help the AJGA

    Alternative Text Box
    2011 Champion Zachary Wright

    During the tournament week, some of the top juniors will also take part in the Junior-Am Fundraising Tournament Thursday, April 5. The Junior-Am will be a 12:30 p.m. shotgun start at Longbow Golf Club.  This Junior-Am is a great way to entertain clients, reward employees and support junior golf, as the proceeds will benefit the AJGA Foundation, The First Tee and the Junior Golf Association of Arizona help the AJGA, who will use the proceeds to make contribution to local junior golf charities in Arizona. If you’re interested, contact Jay Larcheid at 480.807.5400 or email him at jay1@longbowgolf.com

    About Heather Farr
    Tournament namesake Heather Farr started playing golf when she was 8 years old, and by the age of 13 won the first of her four Arizona Women’s Amateur titles. Heather was diagnosed with breast cancer in 1989, at the tender age of 24, and bravely battled the disease through November 20, 1993.

    Heather’s golf resume includes:

    Wins at the Polo Golf Junior Classic in 1979 and 1982 Rolex Tournament of Champions

    12 National Junior Tournament crowns

    Rolex Junior Player of the Year honors in 1980 and 1982 and Rolex Junior All-American five times

    Co-medalist at the 1981 Women’s Amateur and the low amateur at the U.S. Women’s Open in 1983

    Two-time All-American and three-time All-Conference performer at Arizona State University.

    Member of the 1984 Curtis Cup and World Amateur Teams

    Qualified for the LPGA Tour in October 1985 at the age of 20 (youngest to do so at the time).

    Six top-10 finishes on the LGPA Tour

    Click Longbow Golf Club to visit our Arizona Golf Course Guide List Directory and read the AZGA Player’s Review for every golf course in Arizona.

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

  • Summit Golf Brands Sponsors Gateway Pro Tour

    Summit Golf Brands Sponsors Gateway Pro Tour

    From the Arizona Golf Authority Golf News Desk

    Alternative Text BoxSCOTTSDALE, Arizona – Summit Golf Brands, the parent company behind three of the golf industry’s premium golf sportswear brands, including Zero Restriction, EP Pro, and Fairway & Greene has signed on as the newest sponsor of the Gateway Pro Tour. This partnership comes one month after the Tour announced Weitz Construction as a sponsor, so the Gateway Tour is on a roll!

    Sponsorship funds provide an essential resource for the Gateway Pro Tour and ensure its continued growth by covering expenditures for Tour expansion, increased purse sizes, Nationwide and PGA TOUR exemptions, Q-School bonuses, administration, tournament equipment and materials, charity golf tournaments, community involvement and enhanced membership benefits for the Tour’s players.

    Alternative Text HereEstablished in 2001, the Gateway Pro Tour was created to help aspiring PGA TOUR professionals fine-tune their skills in competitive golf tournaments. Throughout its 11-year history, the Tour has maintained a leading position as the premier developmental professional golf tour on the West Coast and has paid out more than $42.1 million to players over that period of time.

    The Gateway Tour has served more than 3,400 players, with 160 GPT alums currently playing on the Nationwide and PGA Tours. These players represent 21 PGA Tour wins and 71 Nationwide Tour wins. Today, Gateway Pro Tour continues to provide the ideal competitive environment as well as significant financial opportunities for aspiring PGA TOUR and Nationwide Tour professionals.

    For more information on sponsorship opportunities or membership information for the 2012 season, go to www.gatewayprotour.com.

    Click the Arizona Golf Authority, it’s “All Things Arizona Golf.” Our all Arizona Golf Courses Guide List and Reviews directory features an AZGA Player’s Arizona Golf Course review for every golf course in Arizona, click www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory.

  • PING Sponsors “Bubba and Friends Drive to a Million”

    PING Sponsors “Bubba and Friends Drive to a Million”

    Arizona Golf Courses List - Bubba’s PING G-20 Driver - Arizona Golf Authority
    PING G-20 Driver

    PHOENIX, Arizona – PING is an incredible Arizona-based golf company which built its reputation by producing innovative, quality golf equipment. What is often overlooked in all the publicity is their generous commitment to charitable causes.

    Ping’s latest fund raising partnership is with Bubba Watson and his “Bubba & Friends Drive to a Million” effort to raise $1 million for charities this PGA Tour season.

    “Bubba came to us with the idea for his charitable drive last year,” said PING Director of Communications Pete Samuels, “and we knew it was a natural fit.”

    Right around the same time, knowing Bubba’s love of all things pink, PING had been working on a new driver in a hotter, deeper shade of his favorite color. This new driver became the basis for how PING could support Bubba’s effort.

    In addition to a $10,000 upfront contribution, PING is supporting “Bubba & Friends Drive to a Million” by donating $300 for the first 300 drives Bubba launches over 300 yards in 2012. PING’s fundraising event is called, “Bubba Long in Pink. Driven by PING.” All funds raised will go to Phoenix-area charities, chosen by PING with Bubba’s support.

    So far, Bubba and his pink driver have had incredible results. With his trusty all-pink PING® G20™ driver, Bubba Watson is #1 on the PGA Tour in average driving distance at 315.5 yards.

    “On the season, nearly 62% of Watson’s drives have traveled 300-plus yards, the highest percentage on the PGA Tour,” said Samuels. “We’re estimating he will reach number 300 for 2012 as early as mid-May.”

    Arizona Golf Courses List - Bubba & Friends Drive to a Million - Arizona Golf Authority
    Bubba Watson and PING CEO John Solheim

    The really cool thing about this effort is that Bubba didn’t go the traditional route of forming a charitable foundation because he didn’t want administrative costs to consume any money collected. Instead, if you make a donation to your local American Society or sponsor someone during a charity walk, he wants you to go to his Facebook page and post the info.

    He’s set up a tracker on www.bubbawatsongolf.com to record the total donations. Our unofficial estimate of Ping’s contribution totals well over $52,000 through the WGC Cadillac event at Doral.

    “I couldn’t do it on my own,” Watson said. “I don’t have $1 million to give away. It’s my friends and sponsors, we’re all trying to team up and raise $1 million — and for a guy from Bagdad, Fla., named Bubba that’s a pretty big accomplishment. Even if we raise a half million this year, it’s still half a million.”

    Whether it turns out to be a half-million, a full-million or maybe more, we tip our golf hats to a laid-back, long-hitting lad from Florida, and a state-of-the-art company that always does things right. Ping founder Karsten Solheim always said the game should be enjoyable; watching the “Bubba Long in Pink. Driven by PING” tally rise will certainly be great fun.

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

    Their all Arizona Golf Course Guide List Directory features an AZGA Player’s Arizona Golf Course review for every golf course in Arizona, click www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory.

  • GolfLogix Has New Interactive GPS Golf App Features

    GolfLogix Has New Interactive GPS Golf App Features

    Arizona Golf Courses List - GolfLogix Interactive GPS Golf App - Arizona Golf Authority
    GolfLogix Interactive GPS Golf App Display

    SCOTTSDALE, Arizona – GolfLogix has introduced new Interactive GPS features providing Champion members additional tools to improve course management and play better golf. According to company president Pete Charleston, the new software was created based on feedback from the GolfLogix community of 1.5 million members.

    The new automatic update features for Champions members include:

    Club tracking – This patented system gives GolfLogix exclusive rights to accurately capture club distances and locations of logged clubs, overlying shots on hole imagery to produce a mapped history of every round

    Aerial flyover – Similar to what’s seen on TV, the flyover provides a birds-eye video tour of each hole from tee to green

    Pin position – Eliminates the need for lasers, allowing users to zoom in to get specific GPS distances to the pin or any other key points (hazards, landing zones) on any hole

    Digital yardage book notes – Allows users to create and save critical notes directly on hole imagery (ex: false front 12 yards from edge of green; fairway slopes right-to-left toward water 250 yards from tee box)

    Easily downloaded from www.GolfLogix.com or App Stores such as iTunes, Android Marketplace and BlackBerry App World, the software is compatible with more than 60 smartphone models.

    In addition to the upgraded Champion membership which costs less than $20 annually, the free GolfLogix app provides accurate distances to the center of the green, yardage book quality imagery, scorekeeping and in-round pro-level stat tracking for more than 30,000 courses worldwide. All existing Club members will get a free round credit to try all of the new 2012 Champion member features.

    And more enhancements are coming in mid-2012, when the GolfLogix app will feature instructional videos and tips from the Golf Digest teaching vault. As the software continuously captures a player’s stats during the round, personalized feedback, instant advice, tips and drills will be sent to his or her smartphone for review and comparison against previous rounds.

    All GolfLogix levels include access to the Member Clubhouse, the No. 1 online golf community where millions interact through social forums, offer challenges to fellow golfers and maintain an indexed handicap. Personal web pages for each user also store performance statistics, so every round can be analyzed by fairways hit, greens in regulation, putting, shot trends and more.

    For more information: www.GolfLogix.com, 877.977.0162.

    Click to visit our Arizona Golf Course Directory List 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.

  • Apache Stronghold Golf Club Debuts Signature Glove

    Apache Stronghold Golf Club Debuts Signature Glove

    Arizona Golf Courses LIst - Apache Stronghold Golf Club - Arizona Golf Authority
    Apache Stronghold Signature Glove by Easy Glove

    San Carlos, Arizona – In yet the next evolution of logo-wear, Apache Stronghold Golf Club in San Carlos, working with Easy Glove North America, has developed their own signature golf glove.

    Easy Glove utilizes a proprietary process that can place a digital image on up to 90 percent of the product’s surface area so the design options are limitless. “As soon as I saw the Easy Glove graphics I had to have it for our club” said Jim Lawrence, Director of Golf Operations. “You don’t see that many completely unique items in golf shops these days and this is definitely unique. I think it will be very popular with our customers and increase sales as an impulse item” added Lawrence.

    So if you are one of those players that has to have the latest new product, trek on out to Apache Stronghold. But before you do, check out our team’s course review.

    Click Apache Stronghold Golf Club to visit our Arizona Golf Course Directory List and read the AZGA Player’s Review for every golf course in Arizona.

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