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  • Stacy Lewis Ascends to No. 1 – Just What the LPGA Needed

    Stacy Lewis Ascends to No. 1 – Just What the LPGA Needed

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

    Say this about the RR Donnelley LPGA Founders Cup — it has produced some great champions in its brief history. But of those three winners, Stacy Lewis certainly delivered the most inspiring story at Wildfire Golf Club, overcoming what looked like a disastrous two-shot penalty Saturday and a seemingly invincible Ai Miyazato on Sunday.

    Stacy Lewis 2013 Founders Cup - Arizona Golf AuthorityIronically, the hole that gave Miyazato her big, four-shot lead going into the final round, the same hole where Lewis had been stung when a TV viewer called in the infraction on her caddie – the short, par-4 16th – turned out to be where the tide turned. Miyazato gave up a one-shot lead there with an uncharacteristic double-bogey 6 that resulted from an unplayable lie in the desert, and a subsequent 18-foot birdie by Lewis suddenly gave Stacy a two-shot lead.

    A birdie by Lewis at the 17th hole sealed the deal, and when the final tally added up to a three-shot victory behind a brilliant, 8-under-par 64, the Texan and former Arkansas All-American was the No. 1 player in the world. Oh, yes, and Travis Wilson, who had cost Lewis the two-shot penalty when he tested the sand with his foot (Rule 13-4) in the infamous bunker on the 16th fairway, was one relieved caddie.

    “All that happened yesterday, I wasn’t even mad at him, because he didn’t do anything on purpose,” said the 28-year-old Lewis after her seventh career victory, and second in two weeks.

    “I just felt really bad for him because all the stories were ‘Stacy Lewis’ caddie,’ ‘Stacy Lewis’ caddie,’ and the spotlight was on him and he never wants that. We were motivated today. I said in my interview (after the round), thank you to the viewer that called in because he gave me some more motivation. I didn’t really need it, but he gave me some more. Everything happens for a reason, and it just turned out to be a perfect day.”

    In the process, Lewis joined Hall of Famer Karrie Webb of Australia (2011) and Taiwan’s Yani Tseng (2012), the player Lewis unseated as No. 1, as past champs of the Founders Cup. It could end up being a very select group, at least when it comes to the tournament’s history in Phoenix.

    According to LPGA Commissioner Michael Whan, he has not been able to work out a new contract for the event beyond this year. The commissioner and RR Donnelley officials had met several times throughout this past week without reaching a renewal.

    “I’ve given (RR Donnelley) until this summer (to renew),” said Whan, noting that the international digital solutions company headquartered in Chicago has had some financial struggles in the past year.

    “But if they don’t (re-up), we’re confident that we can find another sponsor. Phoenix is a great market, and the LPGA needs to be in this market. And that isn’t taking anything away from RR Donnelley. They have been the best, and their business is on a nice comeback, so I remain very hopeful.”

    Few comebacks, however, could top what Lewis provided, as she became only the second American to be No. 1 in the world following Cristie Kerr, who held that spot for five weeks in 2010. Lewis replaces Tseng, who had been on the top of the women’s heap for the past 109 weeks.

    As shootouts go, this Founders Cup definitely was diversity in the desert. If the feisty Lewis is fire, the cool and calm Miyazato is ice. But no one was hotter on this day 80-degree than Lewis, who rolled in nine birdies to offset a lone bogey and shatter the 72-hole tournament record with a 23-under 261 total. Tseng had held the previous standard of 18 under that she established last year.

    Miyazato, somewhat surprisingly, closed with a 71 after posting a tournament record 63 in Round 1 followed by a pair of 67s. Another seven shots back in third place was Angela Stanford on the strength of a 68.

    At times on Sunday it seemed as if Miyazato was in full control, steadily keeping a cushion that fluctuated between two and four shots between herself and Lewis. But four birdies in a five-hole stretch beginning at the 13th hole got Lewis rolling, and when Miyazato pulled her short approach shot left of the green at the fateful 16th, it was all Lewis.

    That moved Lewis alongside Annika Sorenstam, Lorena Ochoa, Jiyai Shin, Miyazato, Tseng and Kerr as one of seven women to be No. 1.

    “It’s crazy,” Lewis said of being ranked Numero Uno. “That was my goal kind of like from the middle of last season, and I really didn’t think it would be possible this quick.”

    An amazing climb, for sure, considering Lewis spent seven years in a back brace after being diagnosed with scoliosis at age 11, something she made reference to in the aftermath. And the fact that it took her awhile to get going in professional golf, as six of her seven wins have come in the past 15 months.

    “It was just another roadblock in my career,” Lewis said when quizzed about how the two-shot penalty affected her on the final 18 holes. “But I felt like it was meant to be at the very end.”

    Lewis wasn’t being cocky, just passionately confident. With her aggressive attitude and repeating swing – an automatic move that resembles both Sorenstam’s and Ochoa’s – she could be No. 1 for a long time.

    The reality is Lewis is just what the LPGA needs – a highly visible American who is considered the best player in the women’s game. And that could trickle down to the RR Donnelley LPGA Founders Cup, which needs a little spark, and maybe a good break, if the tournament is to remain here.

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

    Then, before you tee it up, click Arizona Golf Course Reviews for an “insiders” playing review of every golf course in Arizona at http://s167282.gridserver.com/coursedirectory/.

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

  • LPGA Women Take Center Stage Starting with Symetra Tour – “Huff’s Stuff” Arizona Golf Blog by Bill Huffman

    LPGA Women Take Center Stage Starting with Symetra Tour – “Huff’s Stuff” Arizona Golf Blog by Bill Huffman

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

    If you like women’s golf, the next month in the Valley of the Sun is going to shine when it comes to the ladies’ game.

    Symetra Tour - Arizona Golf AuthorityFirst up is the VisitMesa.com Gateway Classic at Longbow Golf Club. They like to say that the road to the LPGA starts on the Symetra Tour, and for over 100 young women who’ve got game that is certainly true. Young up-and-comers like Tiffany Joh, Mallory Blackwelder and Tucson’s Sara Brown will be competing on what is the LPGA equivalent of the men’s Web.Com Tour. And the winner of the $100,000 event at Mesa’s Longbow Golf Club on Feb. 22-24 will get an exemption – the ultimate opportunity – at competing in the upcoming RR Donnelley LPGA Founders Cup.

    The Founders Cup, which takes place March 14-17 at Wildfire Golf Club in northeast Phoenix, is the showcase of the best women players on the planet. And we literally mean everywhere on Earth. The LPGA tournament, which is dominated by international stars, the largest foreign contingent being from Korea, sports a $1.5 million purse and is being held in the Valley for a third consecutive year at the course associated with the JW Marriott Desert Ridge Resort and Spa.

    LPGA Founders Cup - Arizona Golf AuthorityIn between the Symetra and the LPGA tournaments, fans of the female game also will have a chance to see some rising stars at a collegiate invitational known as the Clover Cup, which is being hosted by the University of Notre Dame in conjunction with Visit Mesa and also being held at Longbow on March 7-10. The 54-hole tournament, which tees off with a college am-am, features 16 schools including the Irish, Colorado, Illinois, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Northwestern, Oklahoma, Northwestern, Texas and SMU, to name a few. Just as cool, the nation’s No. 1 women’s college player who just happens to be a freshman at Notre Dame, Scottsdale’s Lindsey Weaver – “Little Ms. 59” – will be in the field.

    Such a flurry of female golf talent is unprecedented around these parts. And it comes none too soon, as along with juniors, the National Golf Foundation recently reported that the chief reason we’ve lost 5 million golfers in the last five years is that women and juniors are disappearing in record numbers –and that’s disturbing.

    For those not familiar with the Symetra Tour, it once was called the Futures Tour, but changed its name two years ago when it added the new sponsor. What’s special about the Symetra is that the top 10 money winners each year get to earn playing cards for the upcoming season of the LPGA. Last year, Scottsdale’s Esther Choe was the leading money winner, meaning Choe will be a rookie playing in three weeks at the Founders Cup.

    Of those playing the Symetra event at Longbow, Brown probably is the most well-known. Her claim to fame came on the Golf Channel’s “Big Break Sandal Resort,” where her bubbly personality made her a Big Break favorite. In fact, she had such a big smile that the Golf Channel invited her back for its series from the Dominican Republic. She was a rookie on the LPGA in 2011, did not keep her card – something that is extremely tough for LPGA rookies to do these days with such a limited schedule – and won an event on the Symetra Tour last year. Unfortunately, Brown finished in 12th place on the Symetra’s money list, and is back on the fledging tour after having married her long-time swing coach, Derek Radley, who is now the assistant women’s golf coach at the University of Arizona.

    Blackwelder, the daughter of former LPGA player Myra Blackwelder (1980-97). has played one season on the LPGA (2010) and is back on the Symetra after overcoming an elbow injury. She also might be best remembered for her role on the Golf Channel’s “Big Break Ireland,” and she, too, now calls Arizona home.

    There are others in the VisitMesa.Com Gateway field that fans of women’s golf will recognize, including Birdie Kim, the winner of the 2005 U.S. Women’s Open when it was played at famed Cherry Hills outside of Denver. Joh was a four-time All-American at UCLA who captured two U.S. Women’s Public Links Championships (2006, 2008). And Blair O’Neal, a former Arizona State player who almost won the Golf Channel’s “Big Break Prince Edward Island” series in 2010, although O’Neal might be better known for her several appearances on the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit calendar.

    As you might have noticed, two of these upcoming tournaments we’ve mentioned take place at Longbow, which has long been associated with women’s and junior golf. After all, one of Longbow’s biggest events every year is the AJGA Heather Farr Classic, which takes place at the East Mesa club on March 28-31.

    But it goes even deeper than that, as Longbow also will host the WAC Conference Championship for women in April and the Women’s National Junior College Championship in May. And in the past, Longbow has been the host for the Women’s NCAA Division II Championship.

    Asked why Longbow hosts so many women’s and kids’ events – it’s also a First Tee facility — the course’s owner, Bob McNichols, said it had a lot to do with the fact that “the people who play our golf course on a regular basis love to see these types of events, and they even volunteer to help us out with all of them.”

    McNichols also noted that his Longbow “regulars” actually draw comparisons to their own games from the women’s game.

    “The average guy, he probably can’t relate to the Phil Mickelsons and Tiger Woods and (Rory) McIlorys, who are driving it out there 350 yards. But he probably can relate to the women, who are watchable, approachable and are smooth and long with their swings.

    “Like the other day, when Martha Blackwelder was out here for a practice round with her caddie. Now she has a great swing to watch.”

    I’ve heard this before, and I can relate. Not just because my golf swing is only about 100 mph, but because the women are so much nicer and, as McNichols suggested, approachable when you play with them in pro-ams. That’s not to say that the guys are just ugly, surly, 800-pound gorillas. But if you’ve ever played in both types of pro-ams – with Tour guys or LPGA gals – you, too, probably know what we’re talking about.

    I can still remember the late Karsten Solheim explaining to me why PING supported four different LPGA tournaments once upon a time – one in Phoenix, one in Tucson, one in Portland and the Solheim Cup. As the PING founder put it, the women didn’t get the prize money that the men did. And then he added with his affable, straightforward approach to common sense, “And the women are just a lot more fun to play golf with than the men.”

    Exactly, and if you would like to find out for yourselves, play in the Symetra pro-am Feb. 21 or the Clover Cup college-am March 7 or the Founders Cup pro-am on March 13. It’s a guaranteed good time.

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

    Then, read an AZGA player’s review for each of Arizona’s 350 golf courses – click Arizona Golf Course Reviews for an “insiders” playing review of every golf course in Arizona at http://s167282.gridserver.com/coursedirectory/.

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

  • Mickelson Wins Third Waste Management Phoenix Open “Huffs Stuff” Arizona Golf Blog by Bill Huffman

    Mickelson Wins Third Waste Management Phoenix Open “Huffs Stuff” Arizona Golf Blog by Bill Huffman

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

    With his wire-to-wire win at the Waste Management Phoenix Open on Sunday, Phil Mickelson joined some famous names in the tournament’s history. But asked what it meant to move alongside legends like Arnold Palmer and Johnny Miller, Lefty took the more practical approach rather than the philosophical.

    Phil Mickleson WMPO 2013 Champion - Arizona Golf Authority“I’m sure later on I will think about it, but all I cared about was getting a win because I was nervous,” admitted Mickelson, who became the first player since Rory McIlroy in the 2009 U.S. Open to hold the lead after every round, and the first player since Steve Jones in 1997 to do so at the Phoenix Open.

    “I hadn’t won in a while, I hadn’t been in contention, and I know how guys – look what happened last year when guys were in the lead. It’s very easy to start to seeing what you don’t want the ball to do and hitting it there. Early on (Sunday), I hit a couple of shots like that.

    “So to be able to regain control of my thoughts, to see where I want the ball to go and direct it there and to hit the shots that I hit on the back side, which was enough to win the golf tournament, that’s what I take away from this tournament more than any of those records.”

    Yes, things did get “practical” during for the final round for Phil even though he never fell below a three-shot advantage over Brandt Snedeker at the TPC Scottsdale. And, yes, there were some records that were achieved along the way, although Lefty let a bunch slip away after his closing 4-under-par 67 left him in a tie with Mark Calcavecchia for the lowest total in tournament history – a 28-under 256.

    Not that the fans minded such an average performance from the Valley’s favorite son. Hey, you place Mickelson atop the leader board for four straight days in a dominating performance, add four consecutive days of good weather with temperatures around 70 degrees, and you’ve got the successful formula that was adhered to by the Thunderbirds for the tournament’s 78th edition.

    The only surprise that popped up on the final day was that the weekly attendance record wasn’t shattered after Saturday’s record throng of 179,022. But only 58,791 spectators turned out to witness Phil’s victory parade, which moved him alongside Palmer, Calcavecchia and Gene Littler as those who pulled off the Phoenix Open hat trick. Still, the total for the week was 525,281, or 12,075 short of the still-standing record of 538,356 who showed up in 2008.

    Maybe Mickelson’s six-stroke lead entering the final round over Snedeker was a gate crusher, or maybe the Super Bowl’s marquee of San Francisco vs. Baltimore kept people from coming out to see Phil’s victory parade, or maybe it was some gray skies that spit up a little rain from time to time. Whatever the reasons, it was pretty quiet for the final 18 holes after three raucous days.

    The only real drama came when Mickelson birdied the 17th to move to 28-under and into a tie with Calc, who set the 72-hole standard in 2001. Mickelson has had his problems on the 18th hole, including a double bogey there in Round 2 and a one-hole playoff loss to J.B. Holmes in 2008. But he made a routine par — after he got a free drop out of the hospitality area — to secure his share of tournament lore.

    Mickelson hadn’t won since the 2012 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, a span of a little over a year, and hadn’t been in contention after two outings this year. But as he has often done in the past, he went from nowhere to “da man” in just a few days, as he opened with a record-tying 60 that came within a lip-out of being 59, and then added rounds of 65 and 64. Asked how he does it – find his game quickly – he smiled big.

    “You can find something quickly,” he said of his drives that averaged 305 yards for the week and the fact he has now gone 96 holes without a three-putt.

    “I certainly found something from (instructor) Butch Harmon, who I saw earlier this week.”

    Mickelson said he had been “fractionally off” with his take-away. But you never would have known it as he boomed big drives down the middle of most every fairway but the 18th, and made a boatload of putts, especially when he had to turn back Snedeker, who was the runner-up for a second straight week following his second-place finish to Tiger Woods in San Diego.

    Most years, Snedeker’s 24-under score would have been good enough to win. And when you close with a 65, as Snedeker did, that will make up some ground. But not this time, a fact that Scott Piercy (61, 23 under) and Ryan Moore (65, 22 under) also discovered. Then again, who would have guessed that the TPC would play so easy, as the average score for the week was a record-breaking 68.5.

    “It was a ton of fun to be in the last group with Phil,” said Snedeker, who at No. 7 in the world was the highest ranked player in the field.

    “I’d have liked to have put a little more pressure on him, but Phil played unbelievable. Then again, I played great all four rounds, Phil just played better.”

    Not only did Mickelson get his third Phoenix Open win, but he also posted his sixth career victory in Arizona, which tied him with Miller. “The Desert Fox,” who was here doing his first Phoenix Open broadcast for NBC, had four victories in Tucson and two in Phoenix, while Mickelson has now won in each city three times.

    What were the keys for Lefty’s record-tying romp? Well, the opening 60 went a long way in establishing his third career wire-to-wire win. But he owned the par 3s, as he was 9 under on them for the week, or two strokes better than anybody had ever played them since the TPC opened in 1987. Of course, four of those 2s came during that 60, which happened to be a career best.

    If there was ever any doubt that this Phoenix Open was all about Mickelson, it came early on Sunday at the par-3 seventh hole, where Mickelson faced a roller-coaster putt from 56 feet. Forget about the fact it was a birdie putt; Mickelson’s putting line was boxed out to the cup and he had to take the putt onto the fringe and then back to the putting surface because of the narrow angle.

    Bam! Center of the cup for an unlikely birdie that got Mickelson to 25 under and held off Snedeker, who had just made a second birdie in a row. Lefty called the putt “crazy good,” and of the nine 2s on his scorecard for the week, that one had to be the best.

    “I had to putt 20 feet through the fringe. The challenge of that was to judge the speed where half the putt is through the fringe and half is on the green,” he said. “I got lucky to have made it, obviously.

    “I was just trying to two-putt it. With Brandt in there close, that was a big momentum change for us.”

    Mickelson said he never expected Snedeker to go away, and realized that even though he had never lost the lead since Day One that there would be challenges on Sunday.

    “The back nine, I needed to birdie 13, 15 and 17, because I’m planning on Brandt making birdie on those holes,” Mickelson said of his game plan. “I thought if I can do that and not give those shots away, I should be able to maintain the lead.

    “Hitting a good tee shot on 13 and on 15, and one on 17 that was marginal but got lucky (stayed out of the water), those were important birdies.”

    Mickelson also had some PGA Tour records in his sights, but those did not materialize. He did extend his current streak of 10 consecutive seasons with at least one victory, with the next-best player on that list being Dustin Johnson with six seasons in a row. Unbelievably, Mickelson has won at least once in 19 different seasons, with the only players to have done that more being Jack Nicklaus (24) and Sam Snead (21).

    And just to add a little more Tour trivia, Mickelson is only the second player in history to record 60 twice, joining Zach Johnson in that department. But giving him a little individuality, Mickelson is the only player to shoot 60 on the same course, as his other 11-under effort came in 2005, when he won his second Phoenix Open.

    The victory kept the 42-year-old Mickelson in ninth place on the all-time list with 41 wins, or four short of the 45 recorded by No. 8 Walter Hagen. Besides Tucson, he also has won the Masters three times, Pebble Beach three times and the Bell South Classic on three occasions.

    Asked to assess his game now that he’s getting a little past his prime, Mickelson never hesitated, thanking the technicians at Callaway for making “a driver that spins this low with this much loft for me,” and noting that now that he doesn’t have to tilt his shoulders for his driver, he’s hitting his irons better, too.

    “I don’t know if that’s why they call it Xtreme, because it’s such an extremely low-spinning driver or not, but it’s been months in the works,” Mickelson said. “When I hit it Tuesday, I saw an immediate difference.”

    “Now that I’m able to make the same swing with my irons as the driver and not to have two different ones, I feel that’s going to make a monumental difference in my game and that I could potentially play some of the best golf I’ve ever played.”

    How that all works out is anybody’s guess, because after all, he’s Phil, as in “What will Phil do next?” But all of his good fortune related to the Phoenix Open and Arizona once again brought up the question about Mickelson returning to the Valley, where he lived for 12 years before moving back to San Diego, where he grew up. And he didn’t necessarily nix the idea, although whether or not he would abandon California over its high tax rate, as he suggested recently, never was mentioned.

    “I’m not sure what we are going to do at the end of the year, but I really enjoy and miss the people and the friendships that we have here,” said Mickelson, who still has close working relationships with Grayhawk Golf Club, where the 19th hole is named Phil’s Grill, and Whisper Rock Golf Club, where he built the lower course and remains a member.

    “I have all these ties. Plus, my brother is now the golf coach at ASU. There is a lot of great things about his community that lure me, and certainly I come here three, four times a year to go to an ASU game, golf, see my friends and what have you. I don’t know what’s in the cards for that.”

    One thing we know for certain — if that’s possible when it comes to the popular Mickelson! — is that such a return to the desert would come with a hero’s welcome.

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

    Then, read an AZGA player’s review for each of the over 300 golf courses in Arizona. Just click Arizona Golf Course Reviews for an “insiders playing review” of every golf course in Arizona at www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory.

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

  • Arizona Golf – Ready or Not, Big Changes for 2013 “Huff’s Stuff” Arizona Golf Blog by Bill Huffman

    Arizona Golf – Ready or Not, Big Changes for 2013 “Huff’s Stuff” Arizona Golf Blog by Bill Huffman

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

    All four of Arizona’s survivors from PGA Tour qualifying school – Matt Jones, Jin Park, Chez Reavie and Aaron Watkins — get to start their seasons at this week’s SONY Hawaiian Open, meaning perhaps the 2013 season won’t be quite as ominous as first predicted — despite last weekend’s wacky weather at Maui’s highly acclaimed Kapalua Plantation!

    Still, many are referring to ’13 as “unlucky.” So many things are going on this year – a shortened season, a new season, an unpredictable season — it’s hard to get a grasp on all of the changes. The biggest, we guess, is trying to comprehend how the final event of the 2013 regular season will end in mid-August and the 2014 season will begin in early October. Yes, October of 2013!

    With seven tournaments eliminated from last year’s schedule in order to accommodate a new four-tournament, end-of-the-season playoff between the top 75 money winners from the Web.Com Tour and the lower echelon guys from the PGA Tour (Nos. 125 to 200 on the money list), 2013 had been predicted to be more of a mile run than a marathon.

    Guys like Watkins, a former Mesa Red Mountain High School standout who starred at Kansas State, and the ex-Arizona State trio of Jones, Park and Reavie, were expected to get into approximately 15 tournaments. Watkins told azgolf.org that Hawaii was a question mark along with much of the West Coast.

    But there he is along with other Valley residents like Ricky Barnes, Tim Clark, Pat Perez, Kevin Stadler and, Kevin Streelman, hoping to enjoy Hawaii. And just to prove that SONY’s 144-man field is a little more wide open than one might have originally believed, Web.Com graduate Doug LaBelle II of Phoenix also will get his first start, too.

    “Last time I was out on Tour (2009), I got to play in about 20 tournaments, and I think I missed the cut in eight of them by a single shot,” said the 30-year-old Watkins, who had has been to the finals of nine Q-Schools while earning his card twice.

    “This time around, I’ll probably only get into about 15 tournaments, which can make it tough to hold on to your Tour card. So it creates a different mentality in how you approach the season in that each opportunity becomes that much more valued.”

    Watkins said his confidence level is up considerably after playing the past three years on the Web.Com and Nationwide tours. And he’s doing a “lot more little things” he feels will help him make more cuts in the coming eight months.

    “Earning my card at the last Q-School of all-time, that was special,” said Watkins, who is paired in an all-Arizona threesome with Park and Watkins for his first two rounds of his 2013 debut.

    Yes, with no Q-School to gain direct entry into the PGA Tour at the end of this year, it’s another strange twist that everybody has been talking about. It’s a decision that has split the rank and file of the PGA Tour right down the middle. The playoffs between the Web.Com grads and the lower wage earners on the Tour has taken its place expect Q-School still lingers, but this time in the form of a venue to Web.com rather than the major league.

    There are other developments beyond the dastardly trick the weather played last week – postponing the 2013 season’s start for three consecutive days at the Hyundai Tournament of Champions, which led to an abbreviated, 54-hole tournament Monday and Tuesday won by Dustin Johnson. Even though everybody is talking about Rory McIlory, DJ could be a sneaky story this season. He’s young (27), extremely talented and playing the new TaylorMade RocketBaldez Tour irons, which he claims finally fit him to a “T.” And the horizon seems unlimited, according to Steve Stricker, the veteran Johnson beat by four strokes to win the T of C.

    “He’s very athletic and he’s just going to continue to get better. . . . He’s fun to watch (because) you never know what he’s going to do,” said Stricker of Johnson, who is second when it comes to active winning streaks on Tour to Phil Mickelson, who has gone nine consecutive seasons with at least one win a year.

    Still, it’s hard to look past McIlroy, who is expected to ink the 10-year, $200 million super-deal with Nike next week. Last year he was not only the POY on the PGA and European Tours, the Northern Irishman also won $11 million globally, or almost $4 million more than his next closest pursuer, Justin Rose.

    Of course, McIlroy, Luke Donald, Tiger Woods and Rose, currently the top four players in the world, were nowhere to be found in Hawaii these first two weeks. Nor were marquee players like Ernie Els, Sergio Garcia and Mickelson, who all could have played in the T of C if they had wanted to start their seasons “early.”

    Just imagine next year, when the traditional “season opener” comes three months into the season? Yeah, this once-proud event that has a history stretching back 48 years has fallen on seriously hard times.

    There are other stories that will play out in the next month and shortened year that will make for lots of headlines. Like next week, when McIlroy gets his new sticks and the European Tour is expected to name its captain that will to toe-to-toe with Tom Watson at the 2014 Ryder Cup. Hey, Watson was such an out-of-the-box pick by the PGA of America that the Euros, who have dominated these biennial matches by winning five of the last six (seven of the last nine), might go back to Colin Montgomerie rather than select a new pilot in Darren Clarke or Paul McGinley, as previously believed. And “Monty” is certainly out there.

    Still, there are other storylines developing, like how many times the word “cheater” will be screamed out by unruly fans that are taking note of the R&A and USGA’s proposed ban on anchoring the putter against the body, which doesn’t go into effect until 2016. And just to add some spice to the latest controversy over the anchoring/long putter issue, Carl Pettersson, Sweden’s best player ever, has called the proposed ban a “witch hunt” and talked about taking action (legal?) if golf’s ruling body takes his broom-handled device away after using it for 16 seasons.

    It makes you wonder what surprises lie ahead in the major championships, where Bubba Watson will defend his green jacket and serve who knows what for the Champions Dinner. (“When you show up for dinner Tuesday night, that’s when you’ll find out,” the Scottsdale resident said recently.)

    We’ve also got the U.S. Open at teeny-tiny Merion, a short (6,500 yards) but storied layout where Bobby Jones completed the game’s first-and-only Grand Slam in 1930. Merion also was the U.S. Open site in 1950 for Ben Hogan’s comeback from a head-on car wreck in Texas that nearly killed him.

    It also will be interesting to see what happens at the British Open when it returns to Muirfield, an all-male club that is certain to stir some debate. Now that the heat is off Augusta National for its two female members, Muirfield would seem like the next-most likely place for potential confrontation regarding women’s rights as they relate to the game. Then again, the R&A has been an all-male club since 1735.

    So ready or not, here we go with 2013, and lucky or unlucky, it will be entertaining. That includes your Waste Management Phoenix Open, which for the first time perhaps ever will not have any sponsor’s exemptions due to a PGA Tour edict for the shortened season. That decree requires the Thunderbirds to take players off the Web.Com/Q-School list until its field of 132 players is filled.

    Too bad, because this would have been a great year to give an invite to Scottsdale’s Tom Lehman, the 2000 Phoenix Open champ and the 2012 Champions Tour player of the year — the only guy ever to win Player of the Year awards on all three tours.

    But it won’t happen, and that’s a bit unlucky.

    Visit Bill Huffman’s complete “Huff’s Stuff” Arizona Golf Blog archive at the Arizona Golf Authority.

    Visit the Arizona Golf Authority Golf Course Reviews for an “insider’s look” at playing every golf  course in Arizona at http://s167282.gridserver.com/coursedirectory/.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

  • 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.

  • Arizona Golf – Chandler’s Kyung Kim Wins U.S. Women’s Publinks – Bill Huffman’s Golf Blog

    Arizona Golf – Chandler’s Kyung Kim Wins U.S. Women’s Publinks – Bill Huffman’s Golf Blog

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

    Kyung Kim wins U.S. Women’s Amateur Publinks Championship, Eyes U.S. Women’s Open

    Womens Amateur Publinks Champion Kyung Kim - Arizona Golf Authority
    U.S. Women's Publinks Champion Kyung Kim

    Kyung Kim only laughed when someone mispronounced her first name. She said she hears a lot of versions these days about how to pronounce “K-Young,’’ as it is correctly pronounced in Korea.

    “But I like the way you just pronounced it, too,’’ said the good-natured, 18-year-old Chandler resident as she continued to giggle.

    Kim was being kind, of course, which is what you might expect from someone whose first name means “honored’’ in Korean. And honored fits Kim perfectly after she captured last week’s U.S. Women’s Amateur Public Links Championship in a bit of a shocker.

    “What a wild week it was,’’ said Kim, who defeated Georgia’s Ashlan Ramsey, 4 and 2, in their 36-hole championship match Sunday at Neshanic Valley Golf Course in New Jersey.

    “First of all, I’ve never played so many rounds of golf in one week in my life (nine rounds). Looking back, it was a much bigger deal than I thought it would be, and much harder. But being a national champion, winning a national championship, I guess that’s the first really big thing I’ve won.’’

    As Kim said, it didn’t come easy. She had qualified comfortably for match play with scores of 71-73. But the first four rounds of woman vs. woman were nail-biters for Kim as she prevailed, 1-up, 2 and 1, 2 and 1, and 1-up before she moved into the finals with a 3-and-2 win.

    Even the 36-hole finale was a tightly contested duel, as Kim trailed Ramsey, 1-down, going into the ninth hole of the morning 18. But Kim caught fire with four straight birdies for a 2-up lead she never relinquished. For the day, Kim made 10 birdies to overcome Ramsey’s eight birdies, and only three bogeys for 34 holes.

    Asked when the last time was she had rolled in 10 birdies in a single day, Kim laughed again.

    “I wish! Truthfully, I had no idea that I had made that many. It never crossed my mind until they told me when I was finished,’’ she said. “But, hopefully, some day I’ll do it again because that was a lot of fun.’’

    Kim, whose nickname is “Radar’’ because she hits so many fairways and greens in regulation, follows such past champs of the Women’s Publinks as Michelle Wie, Yani Tseng, Jennifer Song and Tiffany Joh. And Kim is hoping that as a proven national champ she’ll now have some momentum going into next week’s U.S. Women’s Open (July 5-8) at Black Wolf Run in Kohler, Wis.

    Or at least better luck than last year, when she played in that national championship. To say there were extenuating circumstances at The Broadmoor in Colorado would be putting it mildly.

    “That was my first Women’s Open, and I had been the medalist in local qualifying so I had some big hopes going in there of maybe making the cut,’’ Kim recalled. “But I only got one hole of play in the first day before the thunderstorms came, and then ended up playing 35 holes the next day.

    “I remember being a few over par for my first 18, but the second round didn’t go too well and I shot in the 80s. I got pretty tired during the second 18 (holes), so this time maybe we’ll get better weather and I can just play 18 a day.’’

    For the record, Kyung carded rounds of 75-80 at The Broadmoor, but her game is a lot more polished these days after last week’s career-changing victory. Kim is among an Arizona contingent at the Women’s Open that includes professionals Amanda Blumenherst, Jimin Kang, Cristie Kerr and Anna Nordqvist, as well as amateurs Lindsey Weaver and Cheyene Woods.

    Believe it or not, Kim, Weaver and Woods are three of 25 amateurs playing in the Women’s Open. And Kim is one of six Kims among the field of 156 players.

    One thing is certain: Kim is on a roll after vaulting from No. 1,174 in the Women’s World Amateur Rankings two weeks ago all the way to No. 84 this week – 1,090 spots in a single bound. But to say she came out of nowhere to win the Women’s Publinks wouldn’t exactly be correct.

    Kim was born in Hawaii on the island of Maui in the small town of Kahului, where two courses – Maui Lani and Waiehu – were just a block away from her home. It was her dad who got Kyung started at the age of 8, and she was a proven champ by 9. After winning the biggest junior tournament on the Islands three straight times from ages 9 to 11, the family moved to Arizona in 2007 so Kim could face better competition year-round.

    For most of her junior career, Kim had shown promise. She claimed three American Junior Golf Association titles, the first being the Heather Farr Classic at Longbow in Mesa when she was just 13, and the last being two years ago when she added the PING Phoenix Junior at Moon Valley. But over the years she also had 16 top-fives in AJGA competition, and was once ranked as high as No. 10 in the Polo Rankings.

    At Hamilton High School in Chandler, Kim won the state title in 2010, the same year the Huskies won the team crown, and finished as the runner-up her senior season when Hamilton also took second.

    But after winning the Women’s Publinks and soon playing in her second Women’s Open, most everyone is in agreement that the USC-bound Kim has arrived.

    “I guess it’s been my hard work and patience,’’ Kim said of what’s lifted her to golf’s bigger stages. “My putting also has gotten a lot better, too, because I seem to be making a lot more of them.’’

    As for why she picked USC over Arizona State and Arizona, two schools that also offered her a scholarship, Kim cited several factors.

    “ASU and UA were still among my top choices (late in the recruiting process), but I took a second visit to USC and realized I liked everything about the school,’’ she said. “They have a great practice facility and campus, the coaches, the athletic department, just everything was really, really great, including the fact that they get to play at Trump National.’’

    Kim also is guaranteed of making a team that is always among the nation’s elite, as USC only has five golfers on scholarship. Asked what happens when a player gets hurt, she laughed again.

    “We play four . . . and every score counts,’’ said the witty Kim, who was a 4.0 honor student at Hamilton.

    But first there’s a U.S. Women’s Open calling her, and Kim said she’s a little apprehensive of the Pete Dye-designed Black Wolf Run that veteran Juli Inkster called “the toughest course I ever played in a Women’s Open,’’ and Inkster has played in 30 of them. And that was before Blackwolf Run was increased to 6,812 yards to make it the longest venue in Women’s Open history.

    “I hear it’s really hard and really long,’’ said Kim of the course where Se Ri Pak won the national championship in 1998 with a score of 6-over par.

    “To me, that’s a little scary because everybody I’ve talked to says it’s so much harder than The Broadmoor, and I thought The Broadmoor was really hard. Hopefully, I’ll be better prepared this time around.’’

    Chances are good that’s just what will happen after what’s gone on lately — even if “Radar’’ might not fly underneath it this time around.

    Click Huff’s Arizona Golf Blog for Bill Huffman’s “insider’s take” on local and national golf news in his complete blog post archive at the Arizona Golf Authority.

     

  • Arizona Golf Courses – Bill Huffman’s Golf Blog – Moon Valley Country Club Chooses Bankruptcy

    Arizona Golf Courses – Bill Huffman’s Golf Blog – Moon Valley Country Club Chooses Bankruptcy

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

    Over the last five years, the depressed economy has played havoc with private golf in Arizona. The latest episode involving members of a long-time Phoenix country club voting to give up ownership through a bankruptcy court.

    Arizona Golf Courses - Moon Valley Country Club - Arizona Golf Authority
    Moon Valley Country Club

    Call it crazy, and we’ve seen a bunch of that since things went south, but that’s basically the fate decided for Moon Valley Country Club. As soon as a bankruptcy court judge fills in the details later this month, Borders Golf, a management group based in Colorado will take over the club’s restructuring and ultimately its ownership without restriction.

    How could it have come to this for Moon Valley, once home to the LPGA back in the days when it was owned by PING founder Karsten Solheim? In a lot of ways, Moon Valley is a victim of the times, especially in the private world of golf where the numbers continue to trend downward. Of Arizona’s approximately 100 private clubs, about 15 to 20 have experienced BK or other financial troubles to varying degrees.

    Amazingly, no private club in Arizona has gone under — yet. That’s quite a bit better than the national numbers, where about 100 of the 4,400 private clubs have gone belly up, according to the National Golf Foundation. However, the fact that 400-plus – 10 percent — have opened their doors to the public in some capacity is a more telltale sign of their woes. In other words, change your playing policy and take in the public or go under.

    In Moon Valley’s case it was a double-whammy that led its members to opt for BK. Which came first is up for debate, but a water bill that climbed to nearly $1 million annually was compounded by a major exodus, as membership fell from a high of 440 full-time members a few years ago to 267 today. The combination kept Moon Valley from paying off a $6 million debt tied to the sale of the club and improvements made over the years.

    It gets worse. When the members missed a few payments and fell into arrears, the bank tried to call in the $6 million note. When the members balked at a settlement for 50 cents on the dollar, an outside investment company, Dimension Financial-REL of Phoenix, swept in and bought the note for $3 million. Suddenly, members weren’t dealing with the bank; they were dealing with Dimension Financial, a buyer of distressed properties that ultimately wanted to build four-story condos on the course.

    Bill Doyle, a lawyer who doubles as president of the Moon Valley board, put it this way: “The water bill went up, the membership went down, and we were stuck in the middle holding a pretty large debt.’’

    At that point, the Moon Valley membership hired MCA, a consulting firm that specializes in restructuring and reorganization. And along those lines, the membership raised an additional $300,000, which is what the bankruptcy will cost when all is said and done in court. But just to make sure everybody had “options,’’ four were put forth and offered up to the 267 remaining members.

    The first was to file bankruptcy and turn the club over to Borders, a golf management company that does business in Colorado at clubs like Catamount and Cordillera, as well as international retreats like Punta Lobos and TPC Cancun in Mexico, Las Olas in Panama, and Placencia in Belize. Borders also has managed dozens of clubs in the past, including SaddleBrooke in Tucson and Mt. Graham Golf Course in Safford. But the key, for Option One, was that Borders agreed to let the members keep their memberships. A call to Borders Golf for comment was not returned.

    The second option was sell Moon Valley to the M Club, the new private club concept being put together by PGA Tour star Phil Mickelson and his agent, Steve Loy. The hang-up with the M Club, according to several members of Moon Valley, was the M Club would then turn over about 15 acres of land at Moon Valley to Dimension Financial-REL to settle the $6 million debt. Again, members would keep their memberships and continue to pay the monthly, but the possibility of condos cluttering the course made this choice far less appealing.

    The third option was let Dimension Financial-REL take over the club for the $6 million note. But the members as well as the 1,200 residents in the Moon Valley neighborhood, didn’t like the idea of the 300-plus condos, which would have been built where Moon Valley’s maintenance facility sets in the middle of the golf course. Also taking a hit would have been the ninth and 10th fairways at Moon Valley, which border that facility. Chances are the re-zoning never would have survived the battle with the club and its neighbors, especially the “high-rise’’ factor of four stories.

    The last option was to close the doors on the club entirely, thus erasing the traditional tree-lined track founded by Bob Goldwater and built by noted architect Dick Wilson in 1960. According to several members, this never was going to happen.

    “The vote was unanimous for (option one): to give up the club to Borders with members keeping their memberships,’’ Doyle said of the vote that took place May 23.

    “The agreement is not complete until we get the particulars (from the bankruptcy judge) but we anticipate that Borders will take over when it’s done. Considering the alternative(s), we’re very happy.’’

    Still, the bankruptcy court’s decision won’t fix the water issue, which could cause a further retreat among the members. Doyle said to resolve that issue, a pipeline to carry canal water will eventually be built at a cost of several million dollars from a source near 19th Avenue and Dunlap. At the moment, Moon Valley remains on Phoenix city water, or very expensive “drinking water.’’

    That million-dollar water bill wasn’t always the case, noted Doyle. When members purchased Moon Valley from Solheim back in 1994, it seemed to be a bargain at $6 million – and the water bill was less than half what it is today. Plus, some of that debt was accrued when the club built a state-of-the-art Aquatic Center, tennis courts, a full gymnasium and fitness club along with remodeling the clubhouse.

    In every way, Moon Valley just kept getting better – or so it seemed. But the water bill just kept going up, up, up, and members kept leaving. It was a situation that hardly seemed fair when compared with other private clubs in the Valley. Even though Moon Valley irrigates 150 acres of grass, or about 60 acres more than is permitted today, they pay significantly more because of their location in northwest Phoenix and the year the club originated (1960). By comparison, Phoenix Country Club, which traces its roots to 1899 and uses canal water, is grandfathered into its water rights at a fraction of the cost. And Mesa Country Club, which was built in 1950 and also uses canal water, gets an even better deal with the city of Mesa due to grandfathered rights and the fact they pump their own water.

    Jim Frazier, a long-time member at Moon Valley, freely admits that his club uses more water than any other course in Arizona, “but we also conserve every drop of it.’’ Frazier added that the club would already have tied in to a cheaper source of water had the opportunity not fallen through due to money woes. Now, he said, the best hope is that Borders will be the club’s “white knight, and ride to the rescue.’’

    “It’s too bad it’s come to this, but as far as I’m concerned, I have no equity left in my membership,’’ said Frazier, who was one of those who originally paid $15,000 to $30,000 to belong to Moon Valley.

    “I guess you could say that there are times in life when things are just not fair, and this is one of them. The economy and the water bill have got us by the tail and their swinging us around and around.’’

    Yes, these are the worst of times for Moon Valley, which still looks in great shape despite the inner turmoil. A tragedy, really, for a club that once experienced the best of times, such as Laura Davies winning a record four LPGA titles there and Annika Sorenstam carding the one-and-only 59 in women’s golf. And Moon Valley had lots of proud traditions, like the annual MV3 Invitational, one of the better amateur events that are held throughout the Southwest.

    In fact, the recent MV3 just took place at Moon Valley with Arizona Golf Association standouts Michael Wog, Trey Martin and Adam Walicki beating a team led by Cameron Howell, the 2011 AGA player of the year. And Wog’s team did it in record fashion (24under par), something that was not lost on Wog, a junior member at Moon Valley.

    “I love the golf course, and I’m really concerned about the direction the club is going to take. It’s not a good situation, although keeping the club as much intact as possible and not building condos is the way to go,’’ Wog said. “Seriously, it makes me sad as hell.’’

    Frazier also feels the pain.

    “It was kind of like the perfect storm,’’ Frazier noted. “We got a great deal on the club from Karsten, tried to make it better by adding some wonderful amenities, got caught in a recession, and then the water bill finally took us down.

    “Last year, we thought we had it all figured out when Century Golf, which is owned by the Arnold Palmer Company, agreed to buy it and let us keep our memberships. Then the financing (for Century Golf) fell through and (Dimension Financial-REL) bought the note. So I guess (the bankruptcy) and the deal with Borders Golf is about as good as we can do in the end.’’

    Interestingly, this isn’t the first time the club has its collective backs to the wall. In 1984, a time when the economy was again on the brink, the members fell into a deep financial hole. But that was when Solheim came riding to the rescue. Whether Borders Golf can save Moon Valley Country Club remains to be seen.

    If not, there could be a fifth option that wasn’t in play the last time around: Open Moon Valley to the public and get rid of its private status. There already is precedent in Arizona, just ask the guys at Southern Dunes.

    Click Huff’s Stuff Arizona Golf Blog for Bill Huffman’s “insider’s take” on national golf news. It’s his complete blog post archive at the Arizona Golf Authority.

  • Arizona Golf Courses – Bill Huffman’s Golf Blog – Scottsdale’s Allen is “A Man on Fire”

    Arizona Golf Courses – Bill Huffman’s Golf Blog – Scottsdale’s Allen is “A Man on Fire”

    Last weekend, shortly after Michael Allen had pulled off back-to-back wins on the Champions Tour, the Golf Channel’s Curt Byrum put the rare double in perfect perspective.

    Courtesy of Champions Tour“Michael Allen is a man on fire,’’ Byrum said of his fellow Scottsdale resident. “He’s scorching the Champions Tour.’’

    In a way, what Allen is doing on the 50-and-over circuit compares to what Phillip Humber did recently. You know Humber, the guy that nobody knew before the Chicago White Sox journeyman pitched a perfect game against the Seattle Mariners.

    Allen is like that. While most people think of Fred Couples or Bernhard Langer or Tom Lehman when somebody asks who currently is the best player in senior golf, nobody thinks of Allen. But after 22 top-10 finishes in his last 42 starts, including the consecutive Ws in the Encompass Insurance Pro-Am of Tampa Bay and the Liberty Mutual Insurance Legends of Golf, Allen is literally running away from the Over the Hill Gang.

    “Yeah, I’m on a bit of a roll right now, and I’m loving it,’’ said the good-natured Allen, who at 53 has discovered the fountain of youth. “I guess the difference between then (his early career) and now (as a senior) is I’m comfortable with my game and my swing.

    “But if you asked me what is the secret to my success, I guess I’d have to tell you the truth: I’m 42.’’

    Allen likes to kid, but that impressive list of what he’s done lately is no joke starting with the money list, where he has piled up $891,782 this season for a $339,000 edge over No. 2 Bernhard Langer. He also has a 350-point lead in the Charles Schwab Cup standings, the senior perk that will earn you a $1 million annuity should you end up there at the end of the season.

    Comparatively speaking, if Allen was playing on the PGA Tour, he would be approaching $3 million and lead the FedEx Cup like Tiger Woods used to do.

    Allen also is the overall statistical leader on the Champions Tour, and early this season surpassed $10 million in career earnings. That last footnote might be the most tell-tale considering Allen never did win a PGA Tour event in 20 years of struggles. But he did record three runner-up finishes on the PGA, won the 1998 Nike Open along the way, and earned the title “King of Q-School’’ after successfully graduating a record nine times in 13 tries.

    Yes, Allen seemingly has had to grind it out forever, including a two-year, self-imposed hiatus from professional golf in the mid-90s, when he tried out jobs as an assistant club pro at Winged Foot, followed by a stint as a stock broker. When those detours didn’t pan out, he returned to golf and worked his way back up through the Nationwide Tour ranks, eventually rejoining the big leagues in 2002 at age 42.

    The second time around turned out to be sustainable, and then he hit pay dirt immediately after he turned 50, winning the Senior PGA in his Champions debut. Those next two victories didn’t come until recently, but every week for the last year and a half it seemed Allen was among the leaders, setting records in 2010 ($1.16 million) and 2011 ($1.19 million) for money won without winning a tournament. Along the way, he added another $800,000 in winnings playing part-time on the PGA Tour.

    These days, the dabbling on both tours is more infrequent, as Allen has only one thing on his mind, and that’s winning that Cup, a feat that would undoubtedly be the pinnacle of the savvy veteran ’s career. But even with his new-found success as a senior, Allen couldn’t resist taking time out earlier this year to play in the Mayakoba Classic in Mexico, where he recorded a ninth-place finish worth $99,900.

    Not that the coveted Cup would change Allen’s laidback personality for one minute, mind you.

    “I haven’t picked up a club since Sunday,’’ said Allen, who teamed up with partner and fellow oenophile (wine lover) David Frost to win the Legends on that day. “And I don’t plan on picking one up until Friday, when I’ll hit a few balls, and then maybe practice a little on Saturday and Sunday.’’

    How can such an easy-come, easy-go approach correlate into being the top dog?

    Simple, Allen pointed out.

    “I finally understand the relationship between my swing and my body, and now I can finally sleep without worrying about those two things. These days I just like to kick back when I’m home with the family. For me, it’s just a real good thing to get away from golf for awhile.’’

    Actually, Allen said he wanted to play in this week’s Zurich Classic of New Orleans but couldn’t get a sponsor’s exemption, and he tried. That happens when for most of your career you haven’t gotten a lot of respect, and Allen – the Rodney Dangerfield of Golf — understands that.

    “The only (sponsor’s exemption) I ever received in all those years, and I probably tried a hundred times, was the invite I got from the Senior PGA when I turned 50 (in 2009), and I ended up winning that,’’ he said with a laugh. “But, hey, I get it. People just don’t know me.

    “And let’s be real: this is the Champions Tour, and we don’t get a lot of coverage. And, well, winning the Senior PGA isn’t quite like winning the PGA Championship, so I understand it.’’

    The good news is, people are finally getting to know Allen. Like on tour, he is regarded as a quote-meister with the media, and his sponsors love him because of his loyalty and great sense of humor. Just as cool, Allen doesn’t dwell in the past, so there’s no hard feelings or offense taken when he constantly had to do everything the hard way.

    To be completely honest, Allen said, “I wasn’t very good when he played the regular tour.’’ And as he told pgatour.com recently: “Then as you get older in life and you just go through experiences, you just learn that somehow you’ll get by.’’

    But after never really understanding his swing in 10 years of working under former coach Hank Haney, Allen switched to Mike Mitchell in his later career. And Mitchell, who teaches out of The Hideaway in La Quinta, Calif., showed Allen how to unite his mind, body and swing – “biomechanical golf’’ – into perfect harmony.

    “I’m not trying to diss Hank, but Mike Mitchell changed everything,’’ Allen said. “Now my swing is centered and repeatable, and my body is in the best shape of my life.

    “I mean even when I don’t play golf, I usually work out. As a result, I no longer go to bed worrying about my game because I know it’s not always going to be perfect, but it’s going to be pretty close.’’

    The life-long odyssey from the bottom to the top of his profession has left Allen in a state of grace. Sure, he’d love to win the Schwab Cup – “my No. 1 goal’’ – but he still takes time to savor the breeze on his Harley as well as a good bottle of wine.

    “How is all this going to change me? Not one bit,’’ he said. “My favorite things still are picking my daughter up from school when I’m home and having lunch with my friends.’’

    Allen even downplayed a rumor that, with all the money he’s won lately, he’s going to join the Valley’s other touring pros that make up a sizable membership at Scottsdale’s most elite golf club, Whisper Rock.

    “Oh, I don’t have that kind of money,’’ chuckled Allen, who plays most of his golf at Mesa Country Club. “And like I said, I just don’t play that much golf when I’m home to probably justify (an expensive membership), although I do love it up there at the Whisper Rock when I get invited as a guest.’’

    Allen said he thinks the Rock rumor got started by his good buddy, John Jacobs, another Champions Tour player who blossomed late in life.

    “JJ’s always telling me I should join, but I think that’s mostly because he needs a partner when he gets a game with guys like Geoff Ogilvy and Paul Casey. That’s probably the real reason.’’

    Yeah, Michael Allen gets it. These days there is no reason to play against guys 20 years his junior (well, maybe once in awhile) when you are known by your peers as “A Man on Fire.’’