Thursday, February 28, 2008

More Americans Are Giving Up Golf

HAUPPAUGE, N.Y. — The men gathered in a new golf clubhouse here a couple of weeks ago circled the problem from every angle, like caddies lining up a shot out of the rough.

“We have to change our mentality,” said Richard Rocchio, a public relations consultant.

“The problem is time,” offered Walter Hurney, a real estate developer. “There just isn’t enough time. Men won’t spend a whole day away from their family anymore.”

William A. Gatz, owner of the Long Island National Golf Club in Riverhead, said the problem was fundamental economics: too much supply, not enough demand.

The problem was not a game of golf. It was the game of golf itself.

Over the past decade, the leisure activity most closely associated with corporate success in America has been in a kind of recession.

The total number of people who play has declined or remained flat each year since 2000, dropping to about 26 million from 30 million, according to the National Golf Foundation and the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association.

More troubling to golf boosters, the number of people who play 25 times a year or more fell to 4.6 million in 2005 from 6.9 million in 2000, a loss of about a third.

The industry now counts its core players as those who golf eight or more times a year. That number, too, has fallen, but more slowly: to 15 million in 2006 from 17.7 million in 2000, according to the National Golf Foundation.

The five men who met here at the Wind Watch Golf Club a couple of weeks ago, golf aficionados all, wondered out loud about the reasons. Was it the economy? Changing family dynamics? A glut of golf courses? A surfeit of etiquette rules — like not letting people use their cellphones for the four hours it typically takes to play a round of 18 holes?

Or was it just the four hours?

Here on Long Island, where there are more than 100 private courses, golf course owners have tried various strategies: coupons and trial memberships, aggressive marketing for corporate and charity tournaments, and even some forays into the wedding business.

Over coffee with a representative of the National Golf Course Owners Association, the owners of four golf courses discussed forming an owners’ cooperative to market golf on Long Island and, perhaps, to purchase staples like golf carts and fertilizer more cheaply.

They strategized about marketing to women, who make up about 25 percent of golfers nationally; recruiting young players with a high school tournament; attracting families with special rates; realigning courses to 6-hole rounds, instead of 9 or 18; and seeking tax breaks, on the premise that golf courses, even private ones, provide publicly beneficial open space.

“When the ship is sinking, it’s time to get creative,” said Mr. Hurney, a principal owner of the Great Rock Golf Club in Wading River, which last summer erected a 4,000-square-foot tent for social events, including weddings, christenings and communions.

The disappearance of golfers over the past several years is part of a broader decline in outdoor activities — including tennis, swimming, hiking, biking and downhill skiing — according to a number of academic and recreation industry studies.

A 2006 study by the United States Tennis Association, which has battled the trend somewhat successfully with a forceful campaign to recruit young players, found that punishing hurricane seasons factored into the decline of play in the South, while the soaring popularity of electronic games and newer sports like skateboarding was diminishing the number of new tennis players everywhere.

Rodney B. Warnick, a professor of recreation studies and tourism at the University of Massachusetts, said that the aging population of the United States was probably a part of the problem, too, and that “there is a younger generation that is just not as active.”

But golf, a sport of long-term investors — both those who buy the expensive equipment and those who build the princely estates on which it is played — has always seemed to exist in a world above the fray of shifting demographics. Not anymore.

Jim Kass, the research director of the National Golf Foundation, an industry group, said the gradual but prolonged slump in golf has defied the adage, “Once a golfer, always a golfer.” About three million golfers quit playing each year, and slightly fewer than that have been picking it up. A two-year campaign by the foundation to bring new players into the game, he said, “hasn’t shown much in the way of results.”

“The man in the street will tell you that golf is booming because he sees Tiger Woods on TV,” Mr. Kass said. “But we track the reality. The reality is, while we haven’t exactly tanked, the numbers have been disappointing for some time.”

Surveys sponsored by the foundation have asked players what keeps them away. “The answer is usually economic,” Mr. Kass said. “No time. Two jobs. Real wages not going up. Pensions going away. Corporate cutbacks in country club memberships — all that doom and gloom stuff.”

In many parts of the country, high expectations for a golf bonanza paralleling baby boomer retirements led to what is now considered a vast overbuilding of golf courses.

Between 1990 and 2003, developers built more than 3,000 new golf courses in the United States, bringing the total to about 16,000. Several hundred have closed in the last few years, most of them in Arizona, Florida, Michigan and South Carolina, according to the foundation.

(Scores more courses are listed for sale on the Web site of the National Golf Course Owners Association, which lists, for example, a North Carolina property described as “two 18-hole championship courses, great mountain locations, profitable, $1.5 million revenues, Bermuda fairways, bent grass, nice clubhouses, one at $5.5 million, other at $2.5 million — possible some owner financing.”)

At the meeting here, there was a consensus that changing family dynamics have had a profound effect on the sport.

“Years ago, men thought nothing of spending the whole day playing golf — maybe Saturday and Sunday both,” said Mr. Rocchio, the public relations consultant, who is also the New York regional director of the National Golf Course Owners Association. “Today, he is driving his kids to their soccer games. Maybe he’s playing a round early in the morning. But he has to get back home in time for lunch.”

Mr. Hurney, the real estate developer, chimed in, “Which is why if we don’t repackage our facilities to a more family orientation, we’re dead.”

To help keep the Great Rock Golf Club afloat, owners erected their large climate-controlled tent near the 18th green last summer. It sat next to the restaurant, Blackwell’s, already operating there. By most accounts, it has been a boon to the club — though perhaps not a hole in one.

Residents of the surrounding neighborhood have complained about party noise, and last year more than 40 signed a petition asking the town of Riverhead to intervene. Town officials are reviewing whether the tent meets local zoning regulations, but have not issued any noise summonses. Mr. Hurney told them he had purchased a decibel meter and would try to hire quieter entertainment.

One neighbor, Dominique Mendez, whose home is about 600 feet from the 18th hole, said, “We bought our house here because we wanted to live in a quiet place, and we thought a golf course would be nice to see from the window. Instead, people have to turn up their air conditioners or wear earplugs at night because of the music thumping.”

During weddings, she said: “you can hear the D.J., ‘We’re gonna do the garter!’ It’s a little much.”

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Drake Women Women's Golf Team Seventh After 36 Holes At Baja Invitational

BAJA, CALIF. — The Drake women's golf team stood in seventh place after 36 holes of the Baja Invitational Monday, carding a 327-328=655.

Sophomore Olivia Lansing (Dellwood, Minn.) led the Bulldogs by posting a 76-82=158 over the par-72, 6,094 yard Bajamr Resort course.

Lansing was tied for 12th, 13 strokes behind leader Tyrette Metzendorf of Iowa who fired a 74-71=145.

Freshman Kaitlyn Mauk (West Des Moines, Iowa/Valley) was tied for 21st with an 81-80=161, while sophomore Elena Vukmir (Wauwatosa, Wis.) was 36th with an 83-85=168.

Sophomore Kelly Godwin (Centerville, Minn.) tied for 38th with an 87-83=170, while freshman Michelle Mathwick (Greenfield, Wis.) was tied for 42nd with a 90-83=173.

BAJA INVITATIONAL
At Baja, Mexico
Team Scoring (after 36 holes)

1. Iowa, 320 304=624 +48
2 Kennesaw State 319 306=625 +49
3 Southern Mississippi 316 315=631 +55
4 Bradley 320 314=634 +58
5 Southern Illinois 324 313=637 +61
6 North Texas, 327 319=646 +70
7 Drake 327 328=655 +79
8 USC Upstate 331 328=659 +83
9 Northern Illinois 340 349=689 +113

Leader - 1. Tyrette Metzendorf , Iowa, 74-71=145.

DRAKE RESULTS
T12 Olivia Lansing 76-82=158
T21 Kaitlyn Mauk 81-80 =161
36 Elena Vukmir 83-85=168
T38 Kelly Godwin 87-83=170
T42 Michelle Mathwick 90-83=173

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Best Iowa Golf Courses

RankGolf CourseLocation
1Hunters Ridge Golf Course - Hunters Ridge Course Marion, IA
2Saddleback Ridge Golf Course - Saddleback Ridge Course Solon, IA
3Wakonda Club - Wakonda Course Des Moines, IA
4Cedar Rapids Country Club - Cedar Rapids Course Cedar Rapids, IA
5Waveland Golf Course - Waveland Course Des Moines, IA
6Tournament Club of Iowa - Tournament Club Course Polk City, IA
7Glen Oaks Country Club - Glen Oaks Course West Des Moines, IA
8Pebble Creek Golf Course - Pebble Creek 1 Course Le Claire, IA
9Dodge Riverside Golf Club - Dodge Park Course Council Bluffs, IA
10Emeis Golf Course - Emeis Course Davenport, IA
11Wildcat Golf Course - Wildcat Course Shellsburg, IA
12The Legacy Golf Club - Legacy Course Norwalk, IA
13Amana Colonies Golf Course - Amana Colonies Course Amana, IA
14The Harvester - Harvester 1 Course Rhodes, IA
15Duck Creek Golf Course - Duck Creek Course Davenport, IA
16Fox Run Golf Course - Fox Run Course Council Bluffs, IA
17Grand View Golf Course - Grand View Course Des Moines, IA
18Otter Creek Golf Course - Otter Creek Course Ankeny, IA
19Spirit Hollow Golf Course - Spirit Hollow Course Burlington, IA
20Quail Creek Golf Course - Quail Creek Course North Liberty, IA
21Spencer Golf & Country Club - Spencer Course Spencer, IA
22Coldwater Golf Links - Coldwater Course Ames, IA
23Crow Valley Golf Club - Crow Valley Course Davenport, IA
24Deer Run Golf Club & DR - Deer Run Course Indianola, IA
25Hyperion Field Club - Hyperion Field Course Johnston, IA

UPPER IOWA GIRL RANKED--COLLEGE WOMEN'S RANKINGS VIRTUALLY UNCHANGED FROM NOVEMBER

NCAA Division I Women's Rankings

Golfweek/Sagarin (based on head-to-head competition)

Rank Name (Prev. Rank) High School College Rating (not scoring avg.)

371. Samantha Sommers, (369), St. Cloud Apollo -- Minnesota -- 76.64

404. Olivia Lansing (400), Mounds Park Academy -- Drake -- 76.00

449. Christine Herzog (449), Detroit Lakes -- Minnesota -- 77.44

480. Katie Detlefsen (478), Minnehaha Academy -- Central Fla. -- 77.64

496. Jeana Dahl (495), Fargo South -- Wisconsin -- 77.77

516. Sydney Liles (514), Phoenix (Desert Vista) -- Minnesota -- 77.99

574. Young Na Lee (572), Tamuning, Guam -- Minnesota --78.50

582. Hillary Gerster (576), Andover -- South Dakota State -- 78.53

623. Mary Narzisi (623), Omaha (Martin) -- Minnesota -- 78.91

635. Becky Quinby (636), Benilde-St. Margaret's -- Iowa -- 79.09

833. Paige Bromen (833), Stillwater -- Minnesota -- 80.60

868. Alyssa Williamson (869), Bemidji -- Montana -- 80.87

976. Holly Opatz (978), Bloom. Kennedy -- So. Dakota State -- 81.96

1040. Lauren Huhnerkoch (1040), Burnsville -- Rutgers -- 82.56

1046. Brittany Williamson (1045), Bemidji -- Montana -- 82.63

1131. Kelly Godwin (1132), Centennial -- Drake -- 83.50

1358. Maviann Schuler (1355), Breckenridge -- No. Dakota State -- 88.82

1416. Alyssa Klein (1413), Luverne -- NDSU -- 93.26

Supplemental list, for players who haven't played enough tournaments

89.* Katie Myos, Faribault -- Toledo -- 81.10

107.* Emily Brand, Alexandria -- Minnesota -- 82.08

183.* Chelsey Gannon, Eden Prairie -- Drake -- 87.89

240.* Kim Larson, Pequot Lakes -- NDSU -- 101.78

Golfstat.com Rankings

(These rankings are based on scores, and include some Division II and III players.)

Rank Name High School College Scoring avg. Relative to par

162. Rachael Schmidt Elk River Upper Iowa 75.75 +5.839

Monday, February 18, 2008

Improvements at Shoreline Golf Course Continue

Shoreline Golf sits on the shores of Carter Lake on the Nebraska-Iowa border near Omaha, and its owner/operator has begun a lengthy push to "shine the gem."
"These improvements should have been done 10, 15 years ago," said General Manager/Head Professional Rob Spomer. "Once Landscapes Golf Group took over full operations in 2004, we started to game-plan for the future. All of this construction is showing a commitment to the golf course. We plan to be in the market a long time, so we're trying to make it as good as it can be."
The upgrades and enhancements Spomer referred to at the 17-year-old course include:
• a new irrigation pond;

• practice-range tees that have been tripled in size;

• several improvements to the course design;

• lengthened cart paths, aiming toward a wall-to-wall system;

• a new cart-storage building; and

• the latest upgrade is a 2,000-square-foot addition to the clubhouse that more than doubled the dining area from 90 to 190 seats.
Mike Jenkins, president of Landscapes Golf Group which owns the course, said, "We really like the Omaha market. We operate five courses in the Omaha area, including Shoreline. It has a loyal following and has been a good performer for us."
Even though Shoreline GC is located just five minutes from downtown Omaha, Eppley Airfield and the Council Bluffs' casinos, Landscapes Golf Group (LGG) pushed ahead on the improvements to attract new golfers. Using the muscle of its owner, Landscapes Unlimited in Lincoln, the world's largest golf course builder, Shoreline has pumped several hundred thousand dollars into the facility, with plans to continue the effort.
Practice Range & Golf Course
The immediate project for LGG was the irrigation pond. Ironically, Shoreline was plagued by lack of water until Landscapes dug a half-acre pond and lined it. "Maybe the biggest improvement we made was shoring up our water source, which led to dramatically improved course conditions," said Tom Everett, director of operations for LGG. "Also, superintendent Bill Japp has been a tremendous addition."
Japp, the assistant superintendent at the Players Club at Deer Creek on Omaha for seven years, joined Shoreline two years ago and was on board during other major projects, including complete reconstruction of the practice range.

Work on the range tees began in the fall of 2006, and last June 2 golfers saw the result of the practice area that tripled in size to 42 stations, complete with new irrigation, re-grassed tees, mats to hit off during inclement weather, regraded range and new target greens.

"This is a terrific improvement over the old range," Spomer said, "and it will continue, with spring and fall overseeding to improve the mixture of low-grow bluegrass and ryegrass."

Out on the golf course, new tees have been built on the 6th and 12th holes, and the fairway has been reconstructed on the par-5, 515-yard dogleg-left 9th hole. "Drainage issues have been ongoing on that fairway since the course opened in 1990," Spomer said. "Landscapes crews came in and totally re-graded and rebuilt it, adding bunkers beside the landing area. It's now one of the better holes on the entire course."

As part of a three-year process, Shoreline has added cart paths to the 6th, 10th, 11th and 15th holes in the last year. Spomer, who has worked at Shoreline for nearly two years, said that in the next couple of years the cart path will be continual from the first hole to the last.

Vertical Structures

Meanwhile, construction of another type has enhanced both the clubhouse and cart storage. Shoreline unveiled a 2,000-square-foot addition to the clubhouse that included office and storage space as well as enhanced dining area for the full-service restaurant which offers breakfast, lunch, dinner and hors d'oeuvres buffets.

"Mostly, it is seating space for the dining area," Spomer said, adding that "it was for tournament business. We host business meetings, receptions and holiday parties, but basically the addition was for our tournaments, so golfers can play and eat here. At a big tournament in August, when it's 100 degrees out, people don't want to eat outside. With this, we will be able to keep those tournaments and add others as well."

So far, Spomer reports the word is out to the Omaha region. "Business is up 30 percent from when we started all these projects," he said. "Rounds have jumped by 5,000 a year. I attribute the increase to these changes."
For more information about Shoreline Golf Course, call 712/347-5173 or visit www.golfshoreline.com.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

UI Golfer Metzendorf Takes Big Ten Honor

University of Iowa junior Tyrette Metzendorf was named Big Ten Women's Golfer of the Week for the first time in her career after helping the Hawkeyes win the Baja Invitational earlier this week. Metzendorf was named individual champion for the Invite and finished eight-over-par (224).

"I'm extremely happy for Tyrette," Head Coach Kelly Crawford said. "She was a little nervous going into the final round Tuesday, but stayed with it. It's a great honor for her and for the team."

The Winter Haven, FL, native has finished in the top 20 in each of the six tournaments she has played in this year, including four finishes in the top 10. Metzendorf's win at the Baja Invitational is the second individual championship of her career. The last was in September 2006 when she won the Hawkeye Intercollegiate.

Earlier this season, Metzendorf broke a school-record for an 18-hole score by shooting a 68 at the Mary Fossum Invitational.

This is Iowa's first recipient of Golfer of the Week since M.C. Mullen in March 1999.


Saturday, February 16, 2008

ISU Golfers’ Open Season in Sunshine State

Senior Karly Pinder and the women's golf team will play Purdue and UCF this weekend in a match-play triangular

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AMES, Iowa – The Iowa State women’s golf team will get its anticipated spring season underway this weekend as the team travels to Orlando, Fla., to square off against Central Florida and Purdue in a triangular. The triangular will be in match-play format, so the scores will not count toward their official records for this spring. Each team will play 36 holes at the 6,150-yard North Shore Golf Club on Saturday.

This will be the second time this school year that the Cyclones have played against the Knights of Central Florida, while it will be the first against the Boilermakers. The first meeting between ISU and UCF came at the Lady Badger Invitational, when the Cyclones recorded a runner-up finish on Sept. 9-10.

The match-play triangular will be good tune-up for the regular season with ISU playing against two top-level Division I teams in Purdue and UCF. The Boilermakers head into spring action ranked by Golfweek as the No. 11 team in the nation. Iowa State’s head coach Christie Martens served as an assistant on Purdue’s staff from 2001-05. Martens helped lead the

Boilermakers to the NCAA Championship in each year of her tenure.

ISU will head into spring play led by its two seniors Karly Pinder and Kendra Hanson. The two seniors have played in more than 85 rounds during their Cyclone careers and look to close out their careers on a strong note. The duo has recorded six top-10 finishes at ISU.

Along with the two seniors, the Cyclones add freshman Victoria Stefansen to the mix this spring. Stefansen, a native of Roervig, Denmark, redshirted in the fall. She participated in the Nykredit Masters, a 2007 Ladies European Tour event in Helsingor, Denmark in September.