ARIZONA GOLF AUTHORITY

Tag: scottsdale golf courses

  • COOL CLUBS – Scottsdale AZ – Amateur Golf is Good; Visiting the Expert Club Fitters at Cool Clubs Makes it Even Better

    COOL CLUBS – Scottsdale AZ – Amateur Golf is Good; Visiting the Expert Club Fitters at Cool Clubs Makes it Even Better

    Cool Clubs Scottsdale, Arizona

    From the Excellent Arizona Golf Adventures at the Arizona Golf Authority

    SCOTTSDALE, Arizona — We can’t play golf every day, so what’s the best way to get better on your day off?

    A visit to Cool Clubs will give you the opportunity to play more enjoyable golf, immediately. Right now. The next time you tee it up – Now.

    We just watched it happen again, yesterday, although CEO Mark Timms and his professional staff have been working this magic in Scottsdale since 2000.

    After two days of recreational play to get loose, we delivered an avid 16-handicap sibling from Chicago to the Scottsdale studio and the compassionate care of Justin Nelson, National Director of Club Fitting for Cool Clubs.

    In under an hour, Mr. Nelson had our player hitting tee balls farther, in a tighter pattern, with less spin at launch and more roll-out in the fairway. Same player, same swing, but when armed with a proper tool for his move: Better golf shot!

    After only 20 minutes in the fitting studio, Mr. Nelson had assessed our player’s current equipment, swing characteristics and tee ball flight. He selected three drivers from Cool Club’s enormous inventory and put our man to work striking drives with each club.

    Twenty minutes later, the results of those shots produced a clear clubhead winner.

    Working with that clubhead, Mr. Nelson spent the next 15 minutes analyzing our player with three different shafts to find the optimal configuration for his golf swing. Once again, the shots produced a clear winner.

    And in less than one hour, Mr. Nelson tallied the results and presented our player with three options: good, better and best. The Best: PING G25 clubhead with a stock, stiff shaft.

    The other clubheads analyzed included the Callaway X-Hot, Taylor Made RBZ and Nike VRS-9 with various shaft combinations, but overall, the G25 performed best for our player.

    “It’s really quite simple,” shared Mr. Timms, “There’s an awful lot going on in a full-shot golf swing. To diagnose all that and ask an amateur, who doesn’t play every day, to commit the time necessary to fix their move is asking a lot.

    “It’s much more efficient to precisely match a clubhead and shaft to their unique swing and produce a better golf shot. It’s a whole lot quicker, too.”

    Cool Clubs has over 25,000 current club and shaft combinations available in their high-tech studio so there’s no chance the unique swing you show them will require something they don’t have in their toolbox.

    Cool Clubs - Scottsdale - Custom Putters“Putting is a little bit different,” TImms noted. “Because it’s such a short, low-impact stroke, we can make a small adjustment to a players’ technique that, together with a properly fit putter, results in more holed putts right away.”

    Cool Clubs’ putter fitting studio analyzes each putting stroke with 8 separate high-speed video cameras, so there’s no guesswork involved here, either. And everybody knows, professionals and amateurs alike, the quickest way to lower scores is holing more putts.

    Lee Trevino said it years ago, addressing his amateur playing partners, and it’s as true today as it’s ever been: “I have the skill to take any bag of clubs and manipulate the clubface to produce the ball flight I want; you don’t. It’s more important that your clubs fit you, than mine fit me.”

    On your next day off, schedule a visit to Cool Clubs and get fitted. You’ll play better, more enjoyable golf, right away, which is what an Excellent Arizona Golf Adventure is all about.

    Visit http://coolclubs.com or telephone 888-284-9292. Cool Clubs studios are also located in Dallas-Ft. Worth TX, Irvine CA, San Francisco CA, Stamford CT, and Tokyo, Japan.

  • 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/.

  • TRUE Linkswear Has a Double Win

    TRUE Linkswear Has a Double Win

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

     

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

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

    From the Arizona Golf Authority Golf News Desk

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Hugh Smith, Director, First Tee of Phoenix and Students

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    From the Arizona Golf Authority Golf News Desk

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

     

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

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

    From the Arizona Golf Authority Golf News Desk

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

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

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

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

     

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

    Play the TPC Stadium and Get Tickets for Three PGA Events

    From the Arizona Golf Authority Golf News Desk

    TUCSON, Arizona – PGA TOUR Intoduces All Arizona Golf Pack

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Total cost for the package: $399

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

  • Arizona Golf Trips Made Easy

    Arizona Golf Trips Made Easy

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

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

    Scottsdale Golf Resort Vacation

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

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

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

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

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

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

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