FR
EE
READ THE UK’S NO.1 GOLF PAPER ONLINE AT www.golfnews.co.uk
Twitter@golfnewsmag
Issue 220 | April 2013
PLUS+ Win a trip to the 2014 US Masters
DONALD HEADS WEST P32-33
We’ve revolutionised the putter. AgAin
INSIDE: MASTERS REVIEW PAUL WAY ADAM SCOTT INTERVIEW WIN TICKETS TO THE BMW PGA CHAMPS
TRUE ROLL INSERT
©2013 PING 82000 PhOENIx, AZ 85071
CAN LUKE MAKE IT A TREBLE AT WENTWORTH?
The Scottsdale® TR™ putter’s new insert has consistency down to a science. Its variable depth grooves, machined into an aerospace grade 6061 aluminium insert, create unmatched distance control. Whether you hit it dead centre or toward the heel or toe, your putts travel nearly the same distance. Add even more consistency with an adjustable shaft (optional) in one of 12 models. Visit a PING® Fitting Specialist or ping.com.
vAriABle depth grooves AdjustABle shAft length g25trputter_golfnews_262x80.indd 1
EWEN MURRAY’S MASTERS’ DIARY P40 | TOUR NEWS P48 | PRO SHOP P54 | GOLF BAGS P56 | ME & MY TRAVELS P63
11/04/2013 15:48
A SPECTACULAR WEEKEND OF GOLF, GLAMOUR & ENTERTAINMENT >> >> >> >>
Masterclasses and Pro Tips The World’s #1 Golf Brands Walk the Course with Pros and Stars Tickets start from just £15
>> CUSTOM FITTING Have you wanted to play with custom-fitted clubs but never had the chance? Now you can sign up to receive a 45-minute fitting session with any of the brands at Golf Live on the outdoor grass driving range.
>> MASTERCLASSES AND SKILLS THEATRES Pure entertainment from some of the world’s best players as they offer insight into the game and tips for the amateur golfer. Watch them show off their talent in our one-of-a-kind masterclasses and skills theatres.
>> COMPETITIONS Test your game against other visitors on some of the signature holes at Celtic Manor Resort in our ‘Nearest the Pin’ and ‘Straightest Drive’ competitions. Prizes to be won from Bushnell and GolfBreaks.com.
>> CLEVELAND GOLF/SRIXON SHORT GAME AREA The wedge and ball experts are giving hands-on advice about how their products can influence your game. Watch, learn and have a go yourself at bunker shots, chipping and wedge play.
£5 OFF TICKETS* ENTER CODE
GN25
FEATURING THE CELEBRITY CUP Celebrities from the world of sport and showbusiness compete for England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales
Book at www.thecelebritycup.co.uk or call 01633 410318 Book before 9th May and receive a 10% discount at the American Golf Shop on site *Ticket offer subject to availability. Only valid for adult tickets. Offer ends midnight Friday 9th May 2013
April 2013 / Issue 220
/5
Golf News, The Studio, 14 Deanway, Hove, East Sussex BN3 6DG. Tel: 01273 556377. email: info@golfnews.co.uk. Website: www.golfnews.co.uk Managing Director Matt Nicholson matt@golfnews.co.uk
For Advertising enquiries please call 01273 556377-07885 673258 or matt@golfnews.co.uk
Editor Nick Bayly editor@golfnews.co.uk
Design www.yotedesign.com
Advertising Production Kath Perry ads@golfnews.co.uk
Photography Kevin Murray (kevinmurraygolfphotography.com) Action Images, James Cheadle
Published by BlueGreen Media Contributors Paul Mahoney, Clive Agran, Ewen Murray, Denis Pugh, Alistair Tait
Follow us on: Twitter@golfnewsmag
~ Golf breaks from £169pp*~
© Copyright Golf News 2013. No part of this publication may be copied, photocopied or reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in anyway or means, either by recording or otherwise, without permission of the publishers in writing.
Editor’sview email: editor@golfnews.co.uk
Return of The Tiger
A
s fun as it has been to have three British golfers enjoying their time in the spotlight as World No.1 over the past three years, I make no apology for enjoying having Tiger back at the top of tree once more. Whatever I, and you, think about his well documented off-course affairs – in the most literally sense of the word – golf’s planetary axis was thrown out of kilter when ‘Clubgate’ brought about Woods’s personal meltdown in 2010. But with a new girlfriend in tow – I would just love
to see the small print in the pre-nuptial agreement if that relationship should ever go the distance – a new consistency in his swing, and a red-hot touch with the putter, Tiger is once again back in the hunt for golf’s biggest trophies. With six wins under his belt over the last 12 months, the only thing missing from a ridiculously impressive CV are majors 15 to 18. And while there are critics that argue that he can only be considered to be truly ‘back’ when he wins one of the big four again, it feels good to have a No.1
STAY AND PLAY
player who is actually winning tournaments rather than chalking up a succession of top-10 finishes. Woods has never been the kind of player to finish fourth with a closing 70. He leads from the front, and grinds his rivals into the dust during the final day. It’s all or nothing with Tiger, and that’s the way I like my golfers to play. Tiger doesn’t think about the place prize money, the FedEx points or the Ryder Cup money list, he’s thinking about the Ws. And that, my friends, is all that matters in this game.
With two outstanding courses and fantastic leisure facilities, East Sussex National is one of the best locations to stay and play in the South of England. Combining precision design with natural beauty, our challenging courses will test every aspect of your game. Call us on
01825 880256
• Up to 36 Holes of Golf • 4* Hotel Accommodation • 3 Course Dinner • Full English Breakfast • Complimentary use of gym, pool, sauna, steam & jacuzzi
Visit us online
www.eastsussexnational.co.uk
Hotel ~ Golf ~ Health Club & Spa ~ Conferences ~ Weddings East Sussex National, Little Horsted, Uckfield, East Sussex TN22 5ES United Kingdom
Follow us @ESNHotelResort
Find us on Facebook
*applicable to Sunday night stay in high season. T&C’s apply.
GOLF BREAKS FROM
£169pp*
6/
April 2013 / Issue 220
Unlimited Golf from £499 per annum
Discover the joy of Dewlands Rotherfield, East Sussex
• 15 minute tee times
• Golf lessons
• Complementary coffee
• Buggies from £6.25
• Membership packages from £50
• Twilight/off peak from £10
www.dewlandsmanorgolfcourse.co.uk 01892 852266
The finest downland course in Sussex... Bookings now being taken for our Dormy House, open throughout the summer until November Twin bed en-suite rooms with a five course dinner, bed & full english breakfast, including two rounds of golf from £95 to £145 per person per night GREEN FEE VISITORS CAN NOW BOOK ONLINE AT SPECIAL PRICES go to www.seafordgolfclub.co.uk and follow the visitor tee booking link For a brochure and more information call Sue on: 01323 892442, e-mail: sue@seafordgolfclub.co.uk or visit: www.seafordgolfclub.co.uk
S EAFORD G OLF C LUB SEAFORD GOLF CLUB, FIRLE ROAD, SEAFORD, EAST SUSSEX, BN25 2JD
ISPS chairman Dr Haruhisa Handa and LET CEO Ivan Khodabakhsh
Last year’s Masters’ winner Lydia Hall
Buckinghamshire to host Ladies European Masters Professional women’s golf is to return to Buckinghamshire Golf Club later this summer, when the Denham-based venue hosts the ISPS HANDA Ladies European Masters from July 26-28. The 54-hole stroke play tournament, which is part of the Ladies European Tour schedule, has been secured for a minimum of two years and will feature a full field of 126 competitors vying for a €300,000 prize fund. The tournament will feature a strong line up of past and future Solheim Cup competitors, as well as young and upcoming international talent, and will be the penultimate event to count towards qualification for Europe’s Solheim Cup team, which will be announced the following week at St Andrews. Some of the top stars in women’s golf will be teeing off at the headquarters of the Ladies European Tour, such as four-time major champion Laura Davies, Europe’s topranked player Suzann Pettersen, 2011 Ryder Cup heroine Melissa Reid, and rising stars Carly Booth and Charley Hull. “This is fantastic news for the Ladies European Tour and golf fans in general,” said the LET’s recently-appointed chief executive, Ivan Khodabakhsh. “We are excited to be able to invite the public to come and celebrate the sporting summer
at our home at Buckinghamshire Golf Club, and encourage anyone who enjoys the excitement of world class golf to come and enjoy a fun day out.” Laura Davies, who lives nearby in Surrey, said: “This tournament is extremely important to me, being played so close to home and on such a beautiful golf course. It is also being staged at a key time in the schedule, just before the Ricoh Women’s British Open and ahead of the qualification deadline for The 2013 Solheim Cup. I am thrilled to be playing in the tournament, and delighted to continue my support for ISPS as an ambassador, continuing their mission for golf to become a Paralympic sport.” The Buckinghamshire, which boasts a 6,880-yard champioship course designed by John Jacobs, has hosted a number of top amateur and professional tournaments in recent times, including last year’s Ladies British Masters, which was also backed by ISPS HANDA, and was won by 24-year-old Lydia Hall from Wales. The club’s Director of Golf, John O’Leary, said: “On behalf of everyone at Buckinghamshire Golf Club, we thank Dr Handa and ISPS for bringing the Ladies European Masters here to us. We look forward to welcoming the players, guests and spectators to a world class Ladies European Tour golf event in July.”
Mill Ride pro follows Leadbetter’s lead Mill Ride Golf Club professional Stuart Morgan is well on the way to following in the footsteps of his mentor, PGA Master Professional David Leadbetter. The 36-year-old from the Ascot-based club is among a number of PGA members whose achievements have been rewarded with PGA Advanced Professional status in the latest round of Accreditation for Professional Achievement and Learning awards. Morgan trained under the legendary Leadbetter and has since established a successful coaching career, as well as branching into commentary on Sky TV’s coverage of the PGA Europro Tour. In 2007 he established his own business coaching a host of professional golfers on the European Tour, Ladies European Tour, Asian, Challenge and Europro Tour. Among the other six pros honoured in the APAL awards were Daniel Field (East Herts) and Sean Clark (Royston).
Top coach Stuart Morgan
David Colclough, PGA head of member education, commented: “It is good to see there is continuing interest in APAL, with more and more members progressing their qualification status upwards to PGA Advanced and beyond. These awards are made on the basis of achievements obtained since qualifying, thereby proving their progress as a PGA professional.”
April 2013 / Issue 220
/7
Campaigners halt Cherkley development Dale Hill £120 Four-Ball at the Weekend!
The development of Cherkley Court is to go to a further judicial review
Development of a new golf resort in Surrey has been suspended after campaigners opposed to the plans secured a High Court injunction to halt construction work. The papers were received by developer Longshot, owner of Cherkley Court in Leatherhead, on March 26, just days after work had begun on some areas of the site. The injunction stops any further work taking place until a judicial review of the planning decision to allow a luxury hotel and golf course to be built is heard by the High Court, which is expected to take place later this month. Residents’ group The Cherkley Campaign, supported by the Surrey branch of the Campaign to Protect Rural England, applied to the High Court for the judicial review last September. “We were given assurances that they would not start in the spring, and that no work would be done before the judicial review comes to court,” said CPRE Surrey branch director Andy Smith. “The Cherkley Campaign has now got a court injunction, which stops them for working for now, and we will have to wait and see what their response is.”
Mole Valley District Council granted planning permission to Longshot to build on the historic estate in April last year. Company spokesman Nick Kilby said: “The legal steps taken on behalf of The Cherkley Campaign are misconceived and taken on a completely erroneous basis. The injunction was contrary to a previous court order, which expressly did not grant an interim injunction. Immediate steps are being taken by our legal team to rectify the position and damages will be sought against The Cherkley Campaign and its individual members for any temporary delay in the scheme proceeding in accordance with the planning permission which has been lawfully granted by the council.” Longshot Country Club Company bought the estate from the Beaverbrook Foundation in April last year for an estimated £20 million, and immediately announced plans to build a luxury hotel, spa and golf resort at the former home of Lord Beaverbrook. Respected course architect David Kidd, the designer of Bandon Dunes in Oregon and Machrihanish Dunes in Scotland, has been asked to design the golf course.
New Horsham course ready for play in 2014 The construction of a new 18-hole golf course at Horsham Golf & Fitness in West Sussex is well under way, with the developers on schedule to complete the first phase of project this year with limited play in 2014, despite the poor recent weather. The club’s existing 9-hole course is to be temporarily re-routed and slightly shortened, as the land currently occupied by the first and ninth holes is to be used in the new layout. The 9-hole course, which has recently installed wildlife fencing across several fairways as part of its commitment to protect the greater crested newt, is to be fully closed in July or August, when the construction of the 18-hole course begins in earnest. Neil Burke, Director of Horsham Leisure Limited, which owns the popular club on the west side of Horsham, said: “We remain committed to providing the best facilities we can during the coming year and thank all our
customers that have remained supportive throughout the process. We would like to have kept some holes open for play during the construction phase, but because of the bad weather last summer we are not as far ahead with the seeding as we would have hoped. However, I am confident that the first phase will ready for play in the Spring of next year. In the meantime, the driving range, the pro shop, Woodies café, and the fitness suite remain very much open for business.” Club members are to have their membership and their fees suspended during the period of the closure, with six games of golf being offered as an alternative at either Horne Park or Foxbridge golf clubs, both of which are under the same ownership as Horsham Golf & Fitness. The green fee for visitors is also to be reduced for the shortened 9-hole course as long as it remains open for play.
To book contact the Pro-Shop on 01580 201090. Subject to availability.
8/
April 2013 / Issue 220
News in Brief
Royal Ashdown celebrates 125 years
HEWSON WINS SCOTTISH U16S Hertfordshire’s Alice Hewson added a six-under par 66 to a first round 68 to claim a twoshot victory in the Scottish U16 open stroke play championship at Strathmore. The 15-yearold from from Berkhamsted had eight birdies in her final round and finished the 36-hole championship on five-under par, two clear of Sophie Madden, the English U15 champion from West Essex. Hewson also helped England to win the team trophy, combining with Madden and Lancashire’s Eloise Healey to finish eight shots ahead of Ireland.
DOUBLE TOP FOR BB&O YOUNGSTERS The first two events of the BB&O Nike Futures Tour season resulted in back-to-back wins for John Gough (Stoke Park) and Daniel Stafford (Castle Royle) in the U14s and U12s sections respectively. Gough fired a 73 to win by two from Stanley Lewis (Chartridge Park) in the second event held at Temple Golf Club, while Stafford pipped Conor Gough (John’s brother) into second place after an 81. Both earlier recorded wins in the first event at a snowy Ellesborough.
PARTRIDGE BAGS KENT TRIAL
Laura Davies launching one her trademark big drives in Dubai last year
DAVIES VOWS TO PLAY ON PAST 50 Laura Davies, England’s best female golfer, turns 50 in October, but the former World No.1 says she has no plans to hang up her spikes and believes she is capable of mixing it with golf’s elite for several more seasons. Davies has already played five tournaments in the 2013 campaign, with a best-placed finish of tied eighth at the Lalla Meryem Cup in Morocco. “I can really see myself going on into my mid-50s, especially on the European Tour,” the 49-yearold Briton said. “I think I’ve got another four or five good years left in America as well. I just love competing, love mixing with the youngsters and spending time with them. My whole life has been competitive sport and I don’t want to turn my back on it yet. I still think I am good
enough. I had five wins in 2010, so clearly I’m good enough.” Davies has accumulated 77 victories around the world, including 20 on the LPGA Tour, and has amassed almost €4million in prize money. She kept up a record of winning at least one trophy every season until 2005. Although her last win came at the Women’s Indian Open in 2010, Davies maintains that the enthusiasm she has for the game is as infectious as ever. “When you wake up in the morning and you’re no longer genuinely excited and nervous about the day ahead on the course, on the range or the practice green, that’s the day you want to hang up your spikes,” Davies said. “It happens to everyone some day, but so far it hasn’t happened to me. Being as stubborn and as competitive
Richard Partridge (Wildernesse) scored a magnificent 67 gross at Royal St. George’s to win the Kent Golf Union’s Seniors Trial. He finished four shots ahead of the Littlestone pair Ian Brooker and Chris Reynolds, who both had 71s.
SURREY BOYS BEAT THE GIRLS Surrey Boys U18 team beat the Surrey Girls U18 team 3.5-0.5 in a friendly match held at Roehampton on April 7. The eighta-side squads played four 4ball better ball matches.
The stunning healthland layout at Royal Ashdown
Royal Ashdown Forest Golf Club in East Sussex is hosting a number of special events this summer to celebrate its quasquicentennial (125th) anniversary. As well as hosting of a number of celebratory membersonly events, the Forest Row-based club is offering special anniversary packages for visitors to play both the historic Old Course – host to Open Championship qualifiers, international matches and the Ladies British Amateur Open – and the adjoining West Course, which was originally designed as a ladies’ course in 1889, but now provides a fine 18-hole challenge in the superb setting of the Ashdown Forest. The 36hole package, which also includes a two-course lunch, costs £89 and must be booked in advance with the club. Royal Ashdown is also staging seven Open events during the summer, including the Ladies Silver Open on June 12 and the Le Fleming Mixed Foursomes on August 17. Founded in 1888 as the Ashdown Forest and Tunbridge Wells Golf Club, the club was awarded its ‘royal’ status in 1890, during the reign of Queen Victoria. It was the home club of dual Amateur Champion and noted golf journalist Frank Pennink during the 1930s, and has the rare distinction of operating an artisans’ section – the Cantelupe Club – which was founded in 1892, and offers discounted membership rates in return for restricted access to the Old Course. For competition entry forms and bookings, contact David Holmes on 01342 822018 or visit www.royalashdown.co.uk.
Sussex elite gains Olympic insight at Goodwood
ROYER RESULT Emily Royer won the Kent Ladies County Match Play Championship after beating Marnie Barber 5&3 in the 36-hole final held at Kings Hill on April 10. Both players came through three earlier matches to make the final. The Seniors’ Match Play title was won by Jenny Brown, who beat Julie Ballard 3&2.
as I am, I can’t see it happening for a good four or five years or maybe more,” the four-times major winner added. “I wake up every day nervous and looking forward to it all.” One of the main events driving Davies’s ambition is the Solheim Cup, the latest renewal of which takes place in Colorado in August. Davies is bidding for a 13th appearance in the bi-annual event, and insists that if she misses out on qualification that she be chosen as a wildcard on merit, rather than on her past achievements. Davies made her debut in the Solheim Cup in 1990, and overhauled Annika Sorenstam’s all-time points scoring record of 24 during Europe’s victory at Killeen Castle in 2011. She has now won 22 of her 46 matches, with six halves.
Epsom offers wonderful views into London
Epsom reschedules Open Weekend Due to last month’s unexpected snow, Epsom Golf Club has rescheduled its Open Weekend to April 27-28, when local golfers are invited to play the course for free. Those interested in securing a tee time should book by calling the club pro shop on 01372 741867. Those taking up the offer will also get the chance to meet the club’s new director of golf, Stuart Walker, who was appointed to his new role at the popular Surrey-based venue on April 1. Formerly Epsom’s head professional, Stuart is now responsible for the general management of the club, as well as retaining his previous duties on the golf side of the business. One of his many new responsibilities will include helping to grow the membership, which has already seen 28 new recruits join in 2013.
The finest boy golfers in Sussex have just emerged from an intensive twoday training programme at Golf At Goodwood, in which heavy emphasis was placed on their physical abilities, as well as their golfing skills. This imaginative regime for the 12 players, whose ages range from 15 to 17, was devised by Goodwood professional Ryan Fenwick, in collaboration with Olympic conditioning coach Steve Gent. “The object of the exercise was to show the youngsters that physical strength and fitness are just as vital as shotmaking in terms of winning,” said Fenwick. “The highlight of the session was the talk by Steve, who spoke about the discipline, courage and
work that Olympic athletes go through to attain their goals.” The squad was also taken through a fundamental movement session, and gained an insight into the warm-down and stretching techniques that form a vital part of a top class athletic daily routine, and can also be applied successfully to maintain the strength and
The Sussex Boys’ squad
suppleness essential for the golf swing. Golf skills were not overlooked during the two-day session, with the boys competing on both the Downs and Park courses. The squad has been using the facilities at Goodwood throughout the winter in preparation for a busy competition season, which gets under way later this month.
WHICH
HYBRID
ARE YOU? Every ECCO HYBRID is engineered for traction, stability and comfort. In all conditions. For all types of players. Performance is a given. Style is up to you. ecco.com/golf
BIOM HYBRID
STREET HYBRID
TOUR HYBRID
ecco.com
10 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
News in Brief GREENHAM GOES FOR THREE-TIMER Sundridge Park is hosting the Kent Ladies Scratch Open Stroke Play Championship on May 13. The 36-hole tournament is played for the McCart Trophy over the club’s East Course. The defending champion is West Essex’s Ashleigh Greenham, who will be bidding for a third successive title next month following wins in 2011 and 2012.
OPTIMUS PRIMED FOR SUSSEX TITLE The Sussex County Inter Club Scratch Matchplay Championship has a new sponsor for the 2013 season. Optimus Exsisto, a Londonbased business consultancy, is to back the popular inter-club tournament, which was previously known at the PAV IT Trophy. The new title for the event will be The Optimus Trophy, with first round losing teams competing for the Optimus Plate. The first round of matches takes place on April 27. Worthing Golf Club are the defending champions.
SHEVCHENKO ON TARGET AT SUNNINGDALE Former international footballer Andriy Shevchenko (right) was among of handful of former sporting greats seen in action on the fairways last month during the 79th Sunningdale Foursomes. The 36-year-old retired Ukrainian striker, who played for Chelsea between 2006 and 2009, and won the UEFA Championship League with Milan in 2003, was part of an impressive field that also included former Wimbledon favourite Tim Henman, former Welsh rugby scrum-half Gareth Cooper, plus the usual eclectic mix of European Tour and Ladies European Tour players, club professionals and top male and female amateurs. The left-handed Shevchenko, who made his debut in the pairs’ event alongside host club professional Keith Maxwell, enjoyed an impressive run in the tournament, progressing through two rounds, before suffering
a 6&4 defeat at the hands of James Ruebotham and Mark Laskey from Brocket Hall, who
went on to reach the quarter-finals. Making the most of Maxwell’s knowledge of Sunningdale’s Old Course, they won their first round match 5&4 against Trevose duo Nick Gammon and Gary Lenaghan, and enjoyed a 2&1 victory over a pair representing Seddiner See Golf Club in Germany. The overall winners were former European Tour players Phil Archer and Sam Walker, who beat the Kent pairing of Steve Tiley (Royal Cinque Ports) and Robert Neil Jones (Rochester & Cobham) at the 19th hole following a closely-fought final. Other famous pairings included former European Open champion Andrew Murray and his son, Tom, who plays on the Challenge Tour; former Tour players Andrew Oldcorn and Andrew Sherbourne; 2004 Volvo PGA champion Scott Drummond and Jamega Tour player Nick Algate; and current English international Jamie Rutherford and coach Lee Scarbrow. The highest-ranked player in the
field was former European Tour winner Rhys Davies, who played twice in the Walker Cup and partnered fellow Welshman Cooper, who played 45 times for Wales and also toured New Zealand with the 2005 British and Irish Lions. All matches in the Sunningdale Foursomes are played under full difference of the combined handicaps., with male professionals, male amateurs, female professionals and female amateurs being allocated handicaps of plus 1, scratch, 2 and 4, respectively. The Sunningdale Foursomes began in 1934 and, but for a break for World War II and another in 1975, when the semi-finals and final were abandoned due to snow, they have been played ever since. Notable professional winners have included Peter Alliss, Peter Oosterhuis, Sam Torrance, Ronan Rafferty, Richard Boxall, Anthony Wall, Steve Webster and Ross Fisher, while Neil Coles has won three times with three different partners.
Free coaching at Chipstead Chipstead Golf Club in Surrey is offering free coaching for juniors and women over two weekends this summer. A free 30-minute lesson with a PGA professional, followed by a free 9-hole round of golf, is on offer to lady golfers of any age or
skill level over the weekend of May 25-26, while there will be free group lessons for boys and girls of all ages from June 8-9. Equipment will be provided for both coaching sessions. To book a lesson for either weekend, call 01737 555781.
Golfers can enjoy a free 9-hole round after their lesson
SeaSonal MeMberShip Any 4-10 consecutive months
• Available in midweek categories • Full year social membership • Other membership benefits
Further details: Tel: 01737 839090 www.surreydownsgc.co.uk feedback@surreydownsgc.co.uk
/ 11
April 2013 / Issue 220
Herne Bay course sold for housing development
An aerial view of Herne Bay which closed in 2011
The site occupied by Herne Bay Golf Course in Kent is set to be developed into a major housing and retail complex. The golf course was closed down two years ago, after the family-owned venue went into administration. The 116-year-old club was subsequently sold to a private buyer for £1.2million in 2011 for commercial development. Several property developers have expressed an interest in developing the 23-acre site, with Canterbury-based Quinn Estates’ plan to build up to 500 homes, as well as a
supermarket and four new sports pitches, looking the most likely to be given the go-ahead. Mark Quinn, managing director of Quinn Estates, said: “We want our scheme to help regenerate Herne Bay economically and socially. This is a once in a lifetime opportunity. We want to give Herne Bay something to be proud of, but if the local community want it, they will have to get behind it and support it. People complain that they have no facilities, and if this does not happen, they will only have themselves to blame.”
Bennett wins EuroPro Q School Former European Tour player Warren Bennett is plotting his way back into the upper echelons of the professional game after winning the EuroPro Tour’s Qualifying School at Frilford Heath. The 41-year-old shot a final round 69 on the par72 Blue Course at Frilford Heath to top leaderboard on 17 under par for 54 holes, following up earlier rounds of 67 and 63 on the Red Course. Bennett won by four shots from James Frazer, who carded a final-round
64, with former Walker Cup star Stiggy Hodgson and Spaniard Sebastian Garcia Grout tied third on 12 under. Bennett won the Scottish PGA Championship in 1999, but retired his European Tour card ten years later after a series of injuries. “I have the will to want to try and get back to the European Tour,” said Bennett, who is attached to Prince’s Golf Club in Kent. “When I stepped away from golf I missed it too much, so I decided last year to make a good plan to try and get back. It was a massive
Warren Bennett
News in Brief
disappointment not to get my card at European Tour Qualifying at the end of last year, so it has been a long winter, but I am on the right lines. I don’t have any routes towards the main tour, so this year my minimum aim is to get into the EuroPro Tour top five to earn my Challenge Tour card. He added: “I want to get as much competitive golf in as possible. My second round here was lovely, the ball striking, the putting, it felt really good, and it was the first time in 15 years I have really gone out there and performed. The final round was a bit scrappy, but I got the job done, and I am feeling really good so onward and upward, hopefully.” The top 30 at Qualifying School are awarded category three status on the 2013 PGA EuroPro Tour. The first event of the season is the Motocaddy Masters, which gets underway at Wensum Valley Hotel, Golf and Country Club on April 30.
MIX IT UP AT COLNE VALLEY Colne Valley Golf Club in Colchester is to host a new mixed pairs tournament on the Essex county schedule later this summer. The County Mixed Championship, which takes place on June 22, is a better ball Stableford with entry fees costing £60 per couple.
OH FERNANDO! Kane Fernando won the Sussex U14 Championship after shooting 42 points at Hollingbury Park in Brighton on April 3. The Pyecombe junior, who plays off 19, finished two points clear of the 32-strong field.
BOBBY DAZZLER England Boy international Bobby Keeble (Abridge) won the Keating Trophy qualifier held at Frinton Golf Club in Essex after shooting two rounds of 70. The top 16 players went through to the match play final, which will also be held at Frinton.
Links and Lodges Experience one of the UK’s most treasured links golf courses in all new Lodge accommodation. Overlooking the stunning 27 hole links golf course and the English Channel, The Lodge at Prince’s is the perfect option for golfers looking for a weekend getaway trip from the city. Don’t forget, Prince’s also offers great prices on your society golf day or Competitive Open events throughout the year, contact us today for our prices. Visit our website www.princesgolfclub.co.uk Text ‘Princes’ to 60006 to find out all our latest offers and prices Call 01304 898652 or email office@princesgolfclub.co.uk Princes Golf Club is managed by Troon Golf © the leader in upscale course management
Golf and Accommodation from £110.00 per person
Prince’s Golf Club, Sandwich Bay, Sandwich, Kent CT13 9QB
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 13
After celebrating his 50th birthday last month, former Ryder Cup player Paul Way is preparing to embark on the second phase of his career. Words by Alistair Tait Paul Way had high expectations when he turned professional in 1981. He’s a bit more realistic on the career mulligan he’s about to take advantage of. Way turned 50 on March 12, and is now looking forward to joining the European Senior Tour. Unlike 30 years ago, he is slightly more cautious about goals for his first season on the senior circuit. He’s also glad to be joining guys his own age, rather than playing against today’s young hot shots. The TP Tour has led him to that conclusion. The former Ryder Cup player has played a few events on the TP Tour to try to hone his game for senior golf. Those experiences have been a bit of an eye opener, and have shown him just how dramatically the game has changed since he last played the European Tour in the 1990s. “I can’t keep up with these young guys any more,” says Way. “These young lads are hitting it 70-80 yards past me sometimes. They’re hitting 5-irons 230 yards! They hit it miles.” Way shot a respectable 74 in a one-day TP Tour event at Walton Heath in March, but had to withdraw midway through the first round of a TP Tour event at Moor Park earlier this month because of back pain. However, that experience made him glad to be joining the round bellies and not the fit, young guys currently on the European Tour. “I played with Eddie Pepperell at Moor Park and he hit a drive and a sand iron to the second hole [a 418-yard par four]. And that’s when it’s freezing cold and the ball’s not running.” Pepperell is one of England’s brightest young prospects. So was Way at one time. The Kent man was extremely confident when he turned pro in 1981. He’d enjoyed a fantastic amateur career that included winning the 1981 Brabazon Trophy and Walker Cup honours. He played on the 1981 Great Britain & Ireland Walker Cup team along with Roger Chapman, Ronan Rafferty, Phillip Walton and Peter McEvoy. GB&I lost 15-9 to the United States, but Way acquitted himself well, with two wins and two losses. Way got his card for the 1982 European Tour and quickly established himself. He won the Dutch Open in his rookie year and finished 30th on the money list. Unsurprisingly, a Ryder Cup spot came the year after. The Englishman was part of the European team that travelled to Palm Beach Gardens in Florida. He was gifted a partnership with Seve Ballesteros. Together they won two and a half points out of four. Way then defeated Curtis Strange in singles play. Europe ultimately lost by a point, but Seve encouraged/ scolded his teammates to see it as a great victory. Two years later Way played his part in the famous European victory at The Belfry. This time he teamed with Ian Woosnam to win two points out of three. Way then defeated Ray Floyd in the singles. No wonder he stood on the roof of The Belfry spraying Champagne in celebration. Individual success followed hard on the heels of his Belfry performance. He defeated Sandy Lyle in a play-off to win the 1986 PGA Championship. A year later he won the European Open. After he’d won two of Europe’s biggest tournaments, many were looking to Way as the future of English golf. However, as quickly as Way’s career had taken off, it went into freefall just as fast. He finished outside the European Tour’s top 100 in 1989 and 1990. He rallied to finish 57th, 54th and 54th between 1991-93. By 1996, he had lost his card. He made four successive comeback attempts between 19961999 and then packed it in. He’s managed to make a living playing in Pro-Ams and doing company and corporate days ever since. Way doesn’t like to dwell on what he should have done differently during his career on the regular tour, except to say he might have paid more attention to the technical side of the game. “I’m not one for looking back,” he says. “There’s no mileage in that, but I wish maybe I’d known more about the golf swing.” He might not want to look back – but he’s certainly looking forward, at least at the next 12 months. Way gets a ticket to this season’s European Senior Tour as a past winner. “I was always going to take up my senior tour exemption. Why not?
Most sportsmen don’t get a second chance. We’re very lucky we do and I would be silly not to take the opportunity.” Roger Chapman’s renaissance as a senior tour player – he won two Senior majors last year – has been an incentive for many older players, including Way. Indeed, compare the two careers and Way’s trumps Chapman’s any day of the week. Although the Tonbridge man doesn’t see it that way. “Roger has done unbelievably well for himself and it’s great to see. It’s nice to measure yourself against someone you know. I won a couple of big tournaments and played in two Ryder Cups, but it’s all down to consistency. He’s been far more consistent than me.” Injuries played a part in Way’s struggles, and he still has to guard against that, especially at this stage of his life. “I’ve had loads of injuries throughout my career. Three years ago I nearly lost my arm. I had a blood clot. I still get numbness in it every once in a while, and have to take aspirin every morning. The game takes its toll.” Way’s comeback is set to take place in the ISPS Handa PGA Seniors Championship at Mottram Hall in Cheshire from June 6-9. He will travel there with no preconceptions. “It’s all bit new to me again, so I don’t know what to expect. I need to see how competitive I can be again. I’m just going to work hard and put as much effort into it as possible and see what happens. I know I’ve got to earn my way. That’s the way it is in this game. I’ll have to work hard to make an impression, but I’m going to enjoy it, give it 100 per cent and make the most of it.” You can’t ask for more than that.
THE WAY FORWARD
Champagne moment: Way shares a drink with Sam Torrance and Ian Woosnam after winning the Ryder Cup in 1985
14 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
Dawn illuminates the 6th green on the Griffin Course. Beyond, the 2nd green sits across the lake
RAISING THE BAR
READER OFFER TRIAL GOLF MEMBERSHIP
Golf News readers looking to sample what Cottesmore has to offer, without making a long-term commitment, can join for the club on a one-month trial basis for just £79. The membership offers full access to all of the facilities, and there are no restrictions on play. For all membership enquiries, tee time bookings, and golf break packages, call 01293 528256, email cottesmore@ crown-golf.co.uk or visit www.cottesmoregolf.co.uk.
Located just outside the village of Pease Pottage, close to the M23, Cottesmore has been part of the golfing furniture in this leafy corner of Sussex since opening in 1975. Built by a local farming family, the parkland setting is simply stunning, and the club rightly wins plaudits for its beautiful and tranquil surroundings, which were originally designed by the famous landscape architect Capability Brown. Now part of the Crown Golf group, which is the UK’s largest, Cottesmore has a 21-bedroom hotel and a modern health club (including a large swimming pool, a gym and two tennis courts), as well as 36 holes of golf. It is something of a boutique country club, and provides a relaxing environment for its 1000-plus Country Club members, as well as a large number of guests who enjoy stay-and-play packages and visitor green fees. Cottesmore members enjoy 36 holes of golf, with plenty of available tee times; free golf at 23 other Crown Golf Clubs in the south of England; a Country Club Membership for the price of local competitors’ 18-hole, golf-only memberships; plenty of competitive golf; and in many people’s opinion, a layout second to none in Sussex.
With two beautiful golf courses, a hotel, and a thriving health club, Cottesmore Hotel, Golf & Country Club has something for everyone
Golf-only memberships at Cottesmore start from just £441 annually, but visitors are genuinely treated like members for the day, being able to enjoy Cottesmore’s Health Club, Swimming Pool & Spa. The club is located conveniently just off J10 of the M23. Eighteen months ago professional golfer and former Open Championship competitor, Matthew Hazelden, became Cottesmore’s new general manager. A local boy, Hazelden twice won the club’s Fathers, Sons & Daughters medal – which is still very well supported at Cottesmore to this day. “The Griffin course at Cottesmore is a great layout which hosted The Sussex Open in 2006. Unlike many courses it challenges your skills in all departments of the game” says Hazelden. “When I arrived at Cottesmore I found a team of greenkeepers who were as passionate about the Club as I was, and we set about changing the way the course is presented. We knew course’s strengths, and also what at that time were our key weaknesses. I recruited a Master Green keeper, one of only a few dozen in the world, to help us understand our conditioning issues, and together we drew up a plan to produce medium-fast, smooth greens, dry in the winter and soft enough to take a well struck shot from the fairway in the summer. Our overall
aim was to challenge the local belief that Cottesmore was more than just a great layout, and to become known for excellent playing surfaces. I know it is difficult to change reputations, but I know we will succeed in time”. Although the weather was against them in 2012, Matt and his team worked tirelessly to ensure that The Griffin and The Phoenix were presented in the best possible condition. And while the spring growing season has meant that courses all over the country are weeks behind where they would normally be, Cottesmore is confident that when the temperatures warm up its courses will even exceed the quality surfaces which you see in these photographs, which were taken in late summer 2012. “My whole team, and indeed our members, cannot wait to see what levels of excellence we can achieve on the golf courses this year,” says Hazelden “There is a sense of real anticipation among Cottesmore golfers this season – it’s very exciting” Landscaped around two lakes, the Griffin requires shots over water on four of its holes, which only serve to add to the excitement of a round. The 2nd and 17th holes are both standout par threes, which will have the knees trembling as you stand on the tee, while the par-five 14th and 15th holes are equally challenging and hard to
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 15
The picturesque 2nd on the Griffin offers a 137-yard drop-shot from the back tee
The approach to the short par-four 6th on the Griffin is all-or-nothing
The Griffin’s par-five 18th offers a birdie chance in front of the clubhouse
par. With several elevated tees, forced carries and enticing doglegs, it’s a course that requires you to think off every tee, rather than blindly reaching for the driver every time. It gets better every time you play it. Cottesmore’s second course, The Phoenix, lacks the length of The Griffin, but is nevertheless an ideal course for those looking for a confidence booster, and appeals to a wide range of players. Youngsters and beginners, high-handicappers and lady golfers find the Phoenix an ideal alternative to the more challenging Griffin. Laid out in the same mature parkland, its tree-lined fairways call for straight-hitting and accurate approach play, and at just 5,550 yards, with fewer bunkers, it is very manageable for shorter hitters. It can also be played in just over three hours, which is a bonus for time-pressured golfers, and at just £10 for a round in off-peak hours represents a real bargain. There is, in fact, a separate membership category for those that want to just play the Phoenix course, starting at just £299, while adults can also join Head Professional Callum Callan’s ‘Get into Golf’ programme, which provides a clear pathway for beginners to become full members. The assorted buildings which contain the clubhouse, hotel and health club are based upon a French period farmhouse design, and provide
a welcoming home from home for members and visitors alike. With a reputation for good food, the club is a popular venue for private functions and hosts numerous weddings, business conferences and corporate events. It’s also the perfect venue for golf days and golf breaks, thanks to its on-site accommodation, with a variety of stay-and-play packages starting from £79 for B&B and two rounds of golf. With an active competition scene, including teams in all the county competitions, and a busy social calendar of events, Cottesmore’s members are looking forward to another new season, and, like all golfers, are praying that the weather plays ball, so that they can too!
“A new photo shoot has revealed the true beauty of Cottesmore’s spectacular Griffin golf course, which is now in a condition to match any course in the area.”
The 383-yard 13th on the Griffin dog-legs gently into a tree-lined cul-de-sac
16 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
Corbett adds star appeal to Addington centenary In partnership with Sherfield Oaks Golf Club A two 18-hole complex managed by Crown Golf, Europe’s largest golf operator
GoLf ASSeSSment Saturday 11 May 2013
Register now for September 2013 Entry at 11, 13 and 16 years of age Telephone: 01256 884800 Email: hmpa@gss.gemsedu.co.uk www.sherfieldschool.co.uk Sherfield School
Reading Road, Sherfield-on-Loddon, Hampshire, RG27 0HU Golf News 1/4pp Advert:Layout 1
22/1/13
14:39
Page 1
Burnham Beeches Golf Club
A charity golf tournament hosted by effervescent entertainer Ronnie Cobbett is to be one of the highlights of an action-packed calendar of events that has been planned to celebrate The Addington Golf Club’s centenary this year. The Ronnie Corbett Golf Classic takes place on June 13, when the co-star of the Two Ronnies will host a tournament to raise funds for Prostate Cancer UK. The event, which costs £495 to enter a team of four, will include 18 holes at The Addington, followed by a threecourse dinner, and a speech by Mr Corbett. The 82-year-old comic lives in a house that backs on to the course’s sixth green, and has been a member of the club for over 40 years. Other events to celebrate the club’s centenary include a Hickory Invitational on July 10, to mark the club’s official opening date in 1913, and a Centenary Pro-Am on July 12. The historic Croydon-based venue will also host a match against three other Surrey clubs enjoying centenaries in 2013, namely Camberley Heath, RAC and Bramley. The match is scheduled for September 21. The Addington was designed by renowned English architect John Abercromby, and a match against three other clubs that he created – Knole Park, Worplesdon and Coombe Hill – is being held at The Addington on June 1. Originally built on gravel hills, The Addington’s rugged landscape features have become heavily wooded over time, although the 6,282-yard heathland course has remained virtually unchanged since 1913, and was once compared to Augusta and Pine Valley by no less a sage than Henry Longhurst. A challenging course, despite its lack of length,
Ronnie Corbett
it is renowned for the numerous wooden bridges that cross the ravines that punctuate the layout, while the six par threes are also a quirk of this most quirky of courses. The founder, as well as the designer, Abercromby ran the club and course as a benevolent dictator for more than 20 years after it opened. When a visitor once had the audacity to ask where he could find the suggestion box, Abercromby famously replied: “I am the suggestion box.’ Abercromby died in 1935, and after being run by for years by the eccentric and muchloved Moira Fabes, the club has been in the ownership of Ron Noades’s Altonwood Group for the past six years, during which time the club has benefitted from significant investment to the clubhouse, the course, and the practice facilities. Last year it was ranked 71st in Golf World’s list of top 100 course in the UK, marking a significant rise from previous years. For more information on centenary events, or to enter a team for the Ronnie Corbett Golf Classic, contact Oliver Peel on 0208 777 1055 or email oliver.peel@addingtongolf.com.
Raise your game Birchwood Park
Over 100 Years of Quality and Tradition Looking for a new society venue – why not try Burnham Beeches Golf Club. Located adjacent to the historic Burnham Beeches ancient woodland our parkland course is laid out in a beautifully tranquil setting yet only 10 mins off the M4 (jct 7) and M40 (jct 2). We offer superb value golf day packages aimed at the discerning society golfer looking for a quality day out at a quality club. For more details please visit our website www.bbgc.co.uk or call 01628 661448.
Burnham Beeches Golf Club, Green Lane, Burnham, Bucks, SL1 8EG enquiries@bbgc.co.uk
Take your game to the next level with Burhill New golfers looking for a proper introduction to the game are being encouraged to sign up to a new coaching initiative being offered by golf group Burhill Golf & Leisure. BGL Golf owns and operates 10 clubs throughout the UK, including Hoebridge Golf Centre in Surrey, Wycombe Heights in High Wycombe, Birchwood Park in Kent, and Abbey Hill in Milton Keynes. The company has launched a unique coaching programme, ‘Learn Golf’, which will operate across nine of its venues. Ideally suited for older teenagers and adults that have never tried golf before, or have never had lessons, each session will be conducted by one of 50 PGA coaches involved in the scheme. The ‘Learn Golf’ programme consists of four stages, with the first being two onehour introductory sessions that will be completely free of charge and provide a
taste of what golf is all about. The next three stages are aimed at beginners, improvers and intermediate players, with each stage comprising four one-hour sessions, which will take golfers skills up to the next level. Golfers who stick with the programme from stage one, will be able to progress through the levels as their skills develop. The beginner stage also comes with £50 worth of giveaways, including a free round on a par-three course, refreshment vouchers, and free range balls. Equipment is provided free of charge at each session. Taught in small groups, with no more than eight players in each session, the Learn Golf programme offers a relaxed environment to learn the basics and allows players to meet other like-minded golfers, or even bring friends or family to learn with them. For registration, or to find the full list of participating venues, visit www.bglgolf. co.uk/learngolf.
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 17
David Peachey, Marina Bobeldijk, Steve Auty, Chart Hills GM David Colyer, Chart Hills Director of Golf James Cornish and ladies from the Tenterden Fundraising Team
Chart Hills’ captains help Pilgrims’ progress The captains of Chart Hills Golf Club in Kent helped raise a total of £27,000 during their year in office for their chosen charity, Pilgrims Hospices. David Peachey and Marina Bobeldijk handed over a cheque to the charity’s chief executive Steve Auty last month, although the final total is expected to be closer to £30,000 once the proceeds from a captain’s farewell dinner, which took place at the end of March, are taken into account. The tireless captains organised a number of well-supported fund-raising events throughout their year in office, including a
dance exhibition with Strictly Come Dancing stars Ola and James Jordan, and a charity golf day. Mr Peachey said: “Without the support and generosity of Chart Hills’ owners, Paul and Jennifer Gibbons, the members, management, and staff of Chart Hills, we would never have raised such a monumental amount to give to Pilgrims. This is a local Kent charity and everyone you speak to has some connection to their local hospice. It relies on the people of Kent to financially support the work it does, and I am extremely proud of how Chart Hills’ members have dug so deeply into their pockets to help.”
Manston offers free lessons Manston Golf Centre in Kent will be offering a programme of free golf lessons for the next six months, with the specific aim of introducing more people into the game of golf. The free sessions will run every week from now until the end of October, with sessions scheduled for Tuesdays from 6.30pm-7.30pm, Thursdays from 10am-11am and Saturdays from 1pm-2pm. Manston’s director of golf, Michael Humphries, said: “We recognise how important our role is in introducing new people to the game of golf, hence our hosting these free sessions. No booking is necessary, all the sessions will be run by fully-qualified PGA Professionals, and equipment and balls will be provided, so there really has never been a better time to get into golf. Our 24-bay driving range is also floodlit and covered, so we’re not at the mercy of the elements!” For more details, call 01843 590005 or email info@manstongolf.co.uk.
MEMBERSHIP & PLAYING OPTIONS There are a range of membership and Green Fee options at Lullingstone Park Golf Course and information can be found online at www.lullingstonegolfcourse.co.uk The Privilege Membership* at just £39 per annum is a fantastic way to save and enjoy your favourite activity with: • 20% off green fees • 20% off equipment hire • Exclusive special offers from the Pro-Shop • Exclusive Member Competitions Parkgate Road, Chelsfield Orpington, Kent BR6 7PX T: 01959 533793 E: lpgc@sencio.org.uk /LullingstoneGolfCourse @LullingstonePGC Terms & conditions apply, not in conjunction with any other offers. See website for details.
*
www.lullingstonegolfcourse.co.uk
Be Driven...
Summer golf days
DOWNSHIRE GOLF COMPLEX
NEWBURY CLUBS TO MERGE Newbury & Crookham Golf Club has agreed a merger with a nearby nine-hole course at Newbury racecourse that will result in significant benefits to both venues. The members at privately-owned Newbury & Crookham have approved its plans to operate the golfing facilities at the Newbury Racecourse Golf Club on a 10-year lease, and to merge the two clubs. “This is fantastic news for Newbury & Crookham and the golfing public of Newbury,” said Paul Wyatt, chairman of Newbury & Crookham. “As part of these plans, we will be creating a vastly improved 9-hole layout, as well as excellent practice facilities in the centre of the racecourse which will complement the great course we have at Newbury & Crookham. We have further exciting plans which we look forward to working on with The Racecourse and David Wilson Homes, and I would like
Newbury & Crookham
to thank the members of both clubs for supporting these plans.” The current golf facilities at the racecourse will continue in operation for the remainder of 2013, with the proposed improvements starting later in the year. Stephen Higgins, joint managing director of The Racecourse Newbury, was also pleased with the outcome. “The management team at Newbury & Crookham has shared our vision throughout this process, and we are delighted that their members have endorsed their plans,” he said. “We feel that this deal represents the best package for members of both golf clubs and secures the future of golf at The Racecourse Newbury, which will form an integral part of the lifestyle aspect of the new development.”
Summer golf days for 12 people or more starting from just £19.00 for seniors (over 60 years) and £27.00 for adults Organiser goes FREE with 20 people or more. Call the office on 01344 302030 for availability and prices. Downshire Golf Complex Easthampstead Park, Wokingham, Berkshire, RG40 3DH Tel: 01344 302030 Fax: 01344 301020 Email: downshiregc@bracknell-forest.gov.uk Web: www.bracknell-forest.gov.uk/downshiregolf Facebook: www.facebook.com/downshiregolf
Meet the family. Which SkyCaddie to buy? The pocket-size Aire and Voice; the handy Watch; the classic big-numbers handset look of Gimme and Breeze; or the world-beating SGX and wireless SGXW? They’re all pre-loaded with SkyCaddie’s ground-verified, professionally-mapped 30,000+ global course database – including over 99% of golf courses in Great Britain & Ireland. And because highly trained SkyCaddie mappers re-survey hundreds of golf courses each year, on foot, you can always be sure of accuracy. If it’s not a SkyCaddie, you can’t be certain. That’s why we’re trusted by more serious golfers than all other GPS rangefinders combined*, and why we’re Official Rangefinder for both England Golf and the PGA. In 2013, don’t buy something like a SkyCaddie. Buy a SkyCaddie. *Golf Datatech May 2011 “Golf Distance Measuring Devices” Report
A SKYCADDIE FOR EVERY GOLFER Accuracy you can afford
20 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
Refusing to rest on its laurels as one of the South East’s most popular public venues, Silvermere Golf & Leisure in Surrey is continuing to invest in all of its superb facilities
4-FOR-2 GOLF NEWS READER OFFER!
Golf News readers can enjoy a four-ball round at Silvermere for the price of a two-ball. Visit www. silvermere-golf.co.uk/golfnews for more details and download your exclusive green fee voucher today. The round must be played before May 31, 2013 and applies to midweek rounds only. To book your exclusive discounted round call 01932 584300. For online bookings and further details on the latest offers, society packages and other news, visit www.silvermeregolf.co.uk and follow on Twitter @silvermeregc
In these recessionary times, when golf club memberships are in danger of slipping from the shopping list marked ‘essential’ to the one marked ‘luxury’, all but the most coveted clubs are having to go the extra mile to attract new customers, let alone hold onto the ones they’ve got. One venue doing just that is Silvermere Golf & Leisure, which although operating as a pay-andplay facility, has a core membership of 300-plus, and offers a range and quality of services that many prestigious private clubs would envy. Occupying a leafy spot half way between Cobham and Byfleet, just a mile off the A3 and two miles from the M25, Silvermere has been part of the golfing scene in this corner of the country for almost three decades. Regardless of where you’re from, and what level of golfer you are, it prides itself on living up to the words written on its entrance sign – of being a place ‘where everyone is welcome’. I’d go so far as to say that if Silvermere was a bar, rather than a golf club, it would be called ‘Cheers’. And although they might not always know your name at the reception desk, the welcome will be equally warm. As we enter a new golfing season, there is a noticeable spring in the step at Silvermere, where the course is looking in great condition following some hard work by the club’s greenkeeping staff over the winter months. A sizeable investment by the owners has seen some significant improvements to the presentation of the 18-hole course, which sees in excess of 40,000 rounds played on it each year. Regulars will notice plenty of changes around the course, with the introduction of astroturf-covered wooden steps to elevated tees providing a welcome replacement for the untidy banks that preceded them. Several areas of fairway have also been re-turfed, and with some new pathways, and a major programme of tree clearance, not to mention fresh-painted tee furniture, it’s fair to say that the course has never looked in better condition. In fact, if the sun were out – which, sadly, is one thing you can’t guarantee in this country – you could be forgiven for thinking you had been transported to a golf resort in Florida, as you sit on the balcony of Silvermere’s Inn on the Lake, sipping a drink and watching a procession of golfers attempting to hit the semi-island green that provides the thrilling finale to all rounds here. If it’s been a while since you’ve played here, you’ll be surprised at
The course has never looked in better condition after months of hard work
Tight, tree-lined fairways are a feature of Silvermere’s challenging layout
how much the challenging layout has matured since Neil Coles and Brian Hugget first designed it over 30 years ago. Only a decade ago it could have been argued that the middle section – otherwise known as ‘over the road’ – lacked definition. However, the trees that were little more than a nuisance back then, are now extremely mature, and make for an altogether more testing challenge, so much so that several have had to be thinned out to maintain the pace of play. Set amongst both woodland and parkland, the first six holes are quite tough, as distance and accuracy off the tee are crucial, and although the fairways are quite generous, the rough and the rhododendrons are not quite so forgiving. As you cross the road, the holes open out a bit, but still require a good long game to score well, especially on the par fours, such as the 8th and the 10th, both of which are over 440 yards off the back tees. The two finishing holes at Silvermere are legendary. Both feature water, and both have the potential to make or break a round. The par-three 17th, which, at 175 yards off the whites, looks further than it is, while the notorious 18th requires little more than a mid-to-
long iron for placement, but it’s your approach shot that has to carry the water to the famous island green. Once the lake has been safely negotiated, you can breathe a sigh of relief and hope to two-putt for a well-deserved drink and a bite to eat in the highly recommended Inn on the Lake, Silvermere’s pub-cumclubhouse. With visitor green fees set at £28.50 during the week, and £40 at weekends, it’s not hard to see why the course is so popular – but price aside, it’s the quality of the service and the attention to detail that make Silvermere such an attractive destination. Away from the course, the practice facilities have always been top notch, with the floodlit range benefitting from shaped target greens, while bunkers, trees and fairways serve to provide range users with the feeling of being out on the course, rather than hitting balls aimlessly into a field. The latest addition to the facilities has been a nine-hole all-weather practice putting green, which has proved a big hit with members and visitors. No review of Silvermere can be complete without a mention of Doug McClelland’s Golf Superstore, which offers an incredible range of
Last but not least: Silvermere’s iconic 18th
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 21
SILVERMERE HITS THE GOLD STANDARD
green is a fitting end to an entertaining round
clothing, equipment and accessories at competitive prices. While Doug’s shop has never been short on quantity, it is the quality of the service and the unrivalled levels of expert advice on offer that make the buying experience such an enjoyable one for its loyal customers. Its custom-fitting facilities are also superb, ensuring that whatever you buy will help you get the best out of your game. Opposite the store, the Inn on the Lake offers the quality of food and service that you’d expect of a gastro pub, and with its variety of private function rooms – including the recently-renovated upstairs Windermere Suite – is the perfect spot for conferences, parties,
weddings and, of course, golf societies. Summer packages for groups of 12 or more start from just £32pp for coffee and bacon baguettes and 18 holes, while, for an extra £15, a two-course post-match lunch or dinner can also be enjoyed. If you want to make Silvermere your home club, the current range of membership packages remains extremely competitive. Seven-day membership costs £1,295, and offers unlimited golf and 21-day advance bookings, while there is a whole host of memberships available to suit how often and when you’d like to play. Those aged between 20-25 can enjoy full membership for £695, while those between 25 and 30 pay £995. There’s
“A sizeable investment by the owner has seen some significant improvements to the presentation of the 18-hole course” A watery grave awaits anything short on the par-3 16th
even a £99 associate membership, which provides an official handicap and offers access to competitions and advanced bookings. The club also operates a Privilege Card scheme, which offers a wide range of savings, including discounted range balls, exclusive offers for the Inn on the Lake, and points on purchases that build towards loyalty vouchers. Communication is the key to good customer relations, and the club produces a regular e-newsletter to keep golfers up-to-date with the latest offers and events, while an active Twitter feed ensures members and visitors always know what’s going on – especially when bad weather might interrupt play, or there is a special offer on. Even though Silvermere has always been easy to get to, the club’s management is clearly working hard to ensure that it is always worth a visit, whether to play the course, a browse around the shop, practice, or have a lesson on the driving range, take part in a demo day, or simply to meet up with friends for a meal. Whatever your reasons for visiting, you’re sure to keep coming back for more.
22 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
ELSON EASES BACK INTO LIFE ON TOUR A UNIQUE GOLFING EXPERIENCE Membership
Greenfee
£99 Trial Membership March-April 7 Day Course Access Includes Crown Golf Open play (26 Courses)
Greenfees from £25 per person.
hamptoncourtpalace-sales@ crown-golf.co.uk
Golf Day Golf Days starting from £35 pp with various offers throughout the year! Come and visit one of the most unique golfing locations you can imagine. hamptoncourtpalace-golfdays@ crown-golf.co.uk
EvEry GolfEr DUrInG APrIl GeTS enTereD InTO A PrIze DrAw TO
win the new Callaway Razr Extreme Driver PleASe bOOK yOUr TeeTIMe qUOTInG: GolfnEws
hamptoncourtpalace-pro@ crown-golf.co.uk
It has been an incredible 18 months for Surreybased European Tour professional Jamie Elson. Having dramatically secured his European Tour card with a 40-foot putt on the final hole at Qualifying School in 2011, Elson showed some excellent early season form in 2012, finishing runner-up in the Joburg Open, shooting a fantastic final day 63, behind one of the hottest players on the planet in 2012, South Africa’s Branden Grace. He almost forced a sensational play-off when his second shot shaved the hole at the par-5 18th, but despite holing the 20-foot return putt for an eagle, Elson was denied his first European Tour victory by a single stroke. For many, a runner-up spot on the European Tour would have been the year’s highlight, but for 31-year-old former Walker Cup player Elson and his wife, Hannah, first place was reserved for the birth of their first child, Arthur (pictured right), who has given his father renewed motivation to make the most of his professional career. Speaking to Golf
Hampton Court Palace Golf Club Home Park • Kingston Upon Thames • Surrey • KT1 4AD Tel: 020 8977 2423
Hampton Court Palace Golf Club A Unique Golfing Experience
BROOME PARK GOLF CLUB
News earlier this month, Elson, who previously last played on the European Tour in 2004, said: “My professional career has been something of a roller coaster to date, but last year was my best so far on Tour. Bringing Arthur into the world was a very proud moment for Hannah and I. The lifestyle change has The Elson family been dramatic, but has really helped me focus on what I want to achieve as a professional.” Among the biggest changes Elson has made is to move his practice base from Burhill Golf Club, where he his father, Pip Elson, is the director of golf, to nearby Bearwood Lakes. “I needed to make a few changes to my practice routines, and I am over the moon to be based at Bearwood Lakes now,” added Elson. “It is a wonderful golf course, with USGA specification greens, and has excellent practice facilities, including an indoor swing studio with video technology. It’s a real sanctuary to come and play and practise.” Due to the complex nature of the entry system on the European Tour, playing opportunities have been limited so far this year for Elson, but last month in Morocco he made his second appearance of the year, and comfortably made the cut after shooting a second-round 69. Two rounds totalling level par at the weekend ensured he collected his first notable cheque of the season, and he is now looking forward to the next event when the European Tour returns to Europe at the end of the month.
Torrance joins British Par 3 line-up SPRING – TEE TIME - SPECIALS From March to May 31st 2013
MONDAY TO FRIDAY (excluding Bank Holidays)
£80.00 per Tee Time (4 Balls only-max. 2 slots) SATURDAY/SUNDAY & BANK HOLIDAYS
Former Ryder Cup-winning captain Sam Torrance is to join the list of stars competing in this year’s Farmfoods British Par 3 Championship The 21-time European Tour winner will be appearing at the four-day event which is to be held at Nailcote Hall, Warwickshire from August 6-9. Torrance is the latest major name to join a stellar line-up for this year’s Championship, which earlier this month
announced it had doubled its prize fund to £100,000, with the winner now receiving a
Sam Torrance
cheque for £25,000. The Scotsman, who has featured in the Ryder Cup eight times as a player and non-playing captain, will join former team mates Ian Woosnam and Peter Baker, as well as his former Ryder Cup captain, and tournament host, Tony Jacklin. The field this year will also include Race to Dubai leader Scott Jamieson, Brian Barnes, Gary Wolstenholme, Marc Warren, Mark Mouland,
Graeme Storm, Oliver Fisher, Gary Boyd and Robert Rock, among many more. Last year saw the event attract over 8,000 spectators, and that number is expected to rise with the appearance of a cast list of sports stars in the playing line-up, including Sir Alex Ferguson, Matthew Hoggard, Peter Shilton, Len Goodman, Willie Thorne, and BBC Sport presenter Dan Walker.
(subject to availability)
£90.00 per Tee Time (4 Balls only-max. 2 slots) 7 DAYS IN ADVANCE OF PLAY TO BOOK PLEASE RING 01227 831126
SPRING SOCIETY PACKAGES From March to 31st May 2013
Includes Coffee & Bacon Baguette on arrival (minimum 12 Players)
£31.00 per person
Please contact Claire or Del on:
01227 830728 or for further details visit www.broomepark.co.uk
The Broome Park Estate, Barham, Nr Canterbury, Kent CT4 6QX www.broomepark.co.uk
Downshire joins 60 60 The Downshire Golf Complex in Berkshire has become the latest driving range to join the 60 60 Golf revolution. The popular Bracknell-based venue installed 60 60 Golf at the end of February, and local players are already flocking to try their hand at the game, which involves hitting shots to a series of marked targets. Golfers buy their buckets of balls in the normal fashion, and can then play many different games suited to their ability for free. Players earn points for hitting different targets, which makes for a fun game among friends, or simply to enjoyed when practicing on your own. Customers who visit Downshire will find it kitted out with targets and several bays equipped with iPads for scoring, while golfers with their own smartphones can download the
The targets make practice more fun as well as being a game
60 60 app and do their own scoring. “We’re delighted that Downshire Golf Complex is the latest range to install 60 60 Golf, and we know that it will prove popular with local players of all abilities.” said Craig Higgs, founder of 60 60 Golf.
master the manor this spring Ryder Cup Residential from ÂŁ139 per person Follow in the footsteps of your Ryder Cup heroes playing the renowned Twenty Ten course plus 18 holes on either Roman Road or The Montgomerie, topped off with an overnight stay and breakfast at our historic Manor House hotel.
Two Course Stay & Play from ÂŁ79 per person Experience first class championship golf with this great value package including 18 holes on both Roman Road and The Montgomerie, together with an overnight stay and breakfast at The Manor House.
For all golf offers visit celtic-manor.com or call 01633 410263 Terms and conditions apply. All offers are subject to availability. Residential package rates quoted are lowest available between May and September 2013, will vary depending on day and date booked, and may change at any time without notice.
24 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
Barham rises to the challenge at Cinque Ports In his first competitive event in the PGA South region’s schedule, Kent professional Benn Barham fired off a fabulous four-under-par 67 around Royal Cinque Ports to win the Kent Spring Classic Pro-Am by two shots.
SOCIETY PACKAGES 2013 Package prices from £29 per person
Bespoke packages on request To book please call Debbie or Lizzie on
01959 522944 www.dvgc.co.uk Darenth Valley Golf Course, Shoreham, Kent, TN14 7SA
After 12 years’ playing on other tours, Barham showed he’d lost none of his competitive edge, with five birdies and an eagle around the Open qualifying course on his way to the winner’s cheque. A delighted Barham said: “I got off to a great start with a birdie at the first, but then I three-putted the second and dropped another at the third, so at that point things weren’t exactly going to plan!” But I made a super birdie at the short fourth and an eagle at the fifth to get to two-under. A birdie on the par three
eighth meant I reached the turn in three-under-par, and my plan of making a score on the first 11 holes was taking shape, because from thereon it was a case of hanging on over those finishing holes!” Two more birdies by Barham followed at the 10th and 11th, with solid pars at the 12th and 13th. He added: “With the wind starting to blow hard from the left and a misty drizzle making things trickier, I made a great up and down from the left after a full blooded rescue club for my tee shot to make par at the 214-yard 14th.
Despite a bogey at the long par four 15th, I made great pars at each of the last three holes to shoot 67.” In second place with a 69, Rochester & Cobham assistant Jordan Godwin started from the 10th and went like a train over Deal’s dangerous back nine with four birdies. Despite dropping two shots on his back nine, Godwin managed to edge out local specialist Mark Belsham (Prince’s), who had played his first 10 holes in five-under-par. After announcing his retirement from the European
Tour just last month, Barham is settling into his new role at Kings Hill Golf Club, where he is now a member of the teaching staff. “I’m enjoying my new coaching position at King’s Hill with Ben Blackburn, and it’s nice to give amateur golfers the benefit of my tour experience as well,” he said. “After 12 years and a lot of flying around on the tour, I’m really looking forward to just getting in the car and playing in the regional events, so winning here is a wonderful way to open my account for the 2013 season.”
Sittingbourne signs new pro Sittingbourne & Milton Regis Golf Club in Kent has appointed Chris Weston as its new PGA Professional. The locally-born 35-year-old, who turned pro in 1998 and qualified as a PGA-trained professional in 2001, joined the club on April 1. Weston’s teaching career began at Lamberhurst Golf Club, where he learned his trade under the guidance of Brian Impett, spending six years there before moving on to Hemsted Forest, where he took up a head coaching position. After a spell at Whipsnade Park in Hertfordshire, where he fousced on coaching juniors, his most recent role was head assistant at London Golf Club, where he worked under Paul Stuart. Still an active player, Weston has notched up several professional victories, the most recent of which was the Kent PGA BetterBall Tournament at Kings Hill in February.
New Lane, Sutton Green, Nr Guildford, Surrey, GU4 7QF Tel: 01483 747898 email: admin@suttongreengc.co.uk
www.suttongreengc.co.uk
GREAT SOCIETY GOLF PACKAGES THAT TAKE A LOT OF BEATING
Willbphoto.com
THE PERFECT VENUE FOR SOCIETY & COMPANY GOLF DAYS Bacon Roll & Coffee, 18 holes, Golfers Special (One course meal) - £37.50 Bacon Roll & Coffee, 18 holes & 3 Course Meal - £49.50 Bacon Roll & Coffee, 18 or 36 holes, 2 Course Lunch & High Tea - £59.50 Bacon Roll & Coffee, 36 holes, Light Lunch & 3 Course Meal - £69.50 Chris Weston
Jack Singh-Brar with his trophy haul
Jack’s the lad at Berkhamsted Hampshire’s Jack Singh-Brar won the Berkhamsted Trophy on April 6 after coming through a three-man play-off. The teenager from Brokenhurst Manor, who won last year’s Faldo Series, fired rounds of 69 and 71 over the 6,605-yard course, but his five-under par score was also matched by Gary Oliver (Hainault Forest) and Luke Johnson (Kings Lynn), which forced the tournament into extra holes. The Berkhamsted Trophy was established in honour of Harold Rance, who celebrated his fiftieth win in major competitions at the Hertfordshire-based club in 1960. Previous winners of the title have included Luke Donald (1996) and Tom Lewis (2010).
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 25
Spoon joy for battling Byers
Winner Harvey Byers
Hospices to benefit from PGA programme sales
Francesco Molinari at the launch
Visitors to next month’s BMW PGA Championship who buy a tournament programme and daily drawsheet will be helping to raise money for two local children’s hospices. The programme, which used to be given away, will now be handed out for a suggested voluntary donation of £1. All the proceeds from sales will be given to Shooting Star CHASE, which runs hospices for children with lifeshortening illnesses in Hampton and Guildford, and currently helps over 600 families living in West London, Surrey and West Sussex. Earlier this month, Italian Ryder Cup star Francesco Molinari, representing the Tour Players’ Foundation, the charitable arm of The European Tour, took time off from his Masters preparation to meet some of the children and staff of the charity who will benefit from a series of fund-raising initiatives before and during the Tour’s flagship event at Wentworth Club from May 23-26. He said: “When I see the devastating illnesses afflicting so many young children and their families, it hits home just how fortunate I am to be playing professional golf for a living. I am delighted that Shooting Star CHASE is the official charity of the BMW PGA Championship this year, and we all hope that a large sum of money can be raised from the tournament initiatives to provide the care required for the sick children and their families.”
Surrey U14s talent Harvey Byers has won the Laddie Lucas Spoon after overcoming testing conditions at Prince’s Golf Club in Kent. The 13-year-old from Walton Heath battled through a 30mph wind and sub-zero temperatures to score a gross 26 points over
the 6,600-yard course. Byers secured his victory by four strokes with a fine back nine on the Dunes in a round that included two birdies. The runner-up was Prince’s junior Jack Holland on 24 points, with Foxhills youngster Aadam Syed taking third. Three players failed to
complete their rounds in the brutal conditions, which Prince’s Head Professional Anthony Tarchetti said were the most testing for the competition he could remember. This year was the 25th anniversary of the Laddie Lucas Spoon, which has
been won in past years by current tour players Justin Rose and Oliver Fisher. It is open to boys and girls aged between eight and 13. As part of his prize for winning, Byers will be invited to a golf day being hosted by Ryder Cup star Ian Poulter at Woburn later this year.
26 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
The view from behind the strategically-challenging 18th green
The 13th is the highest point on the course and offers views into London
RETURNING TO REDLIBBETS Nick Bayly visits Redlibbets Golf Club in Kent after a 16-year absence to find a venue that has matured nicely into a members’ club with a reputation for a warm welcome and a superbly presented course I have fond memories of Redlibbets. Sadly, it is nothing to do with holding the course record, or shooting anything resembling par, but it still holds a place in the deep recesses of mind, as it was here that I attended my first official duty in my role as editor of a golf magazine. The big day, which took place in the summer of 1997, saw the official opening of Redlibbets, which involved a four-hole challenge between European Tour players Jamie Spence, Wayne Westner, Peter Mitchell and Malcolm McKenzie. Another of my abiding memories from that day was what an intimidating tee shot the players were faced with on the first hole. Not only is it over water (well, it comes into play if you top it), but it’s one of the narrowest opening fairways in world golf, with trees on the left and a severely sloping bank on the right that has a nasty habit of not feeding the ball back down again once you hit it up there.
Admittedly, the green is only 304 yards away off the back tee, and the pros were somewhere adjacent to the putting surface after they played their tee shots, but it’s amazing how many amateurs walk off with a bogey here, having suffered from a bout of first tee nerves. My other memory – wow, they’re coming flooding back to me now – was of enjoying the glorious view from the balcony that runs almost the entire length of the clubhouse, which is dug into the side of the valley and commands a fortress-like view over almost the entire course. With a glass of Champagne in hand, and a barbeque sizzling away, it was an extremely pleasant place to spend an afternoon. Fast-forward 16-odd years, and that remains very much the case today, although I was offered a cup of coffee, rather than a glass of fizz, on my latest visit. By all accounts, Redlibbets is still ticking along nicely, with a healthy membership of 400-plus, and a course that has matured well over the intervening period.
Built around and through a picturesque valley amid the North Kent Downs, not far from Brands Hatch, Redlibbets is named after the ancient woodland on which the course is built. The somewhat unusual name is actually a corruption of the word ‘leveret’, an old-fashioned name for the young hare which features on the club’s logo. Owned by a local businessman, and run as a proprietary club, Redlibbets was a child of its time, born out of the need to meet the golfing demands of the public in the mid-90s, when people use to sleep in their cars in order to get a game on a Saturday morning. Built on 165 acres of farmland, the course was designed by Jonathan Gaunt, for whom Redlibbets was his first solo project. The 6,600-yard, 18-hole course is part-woodland, part-parkland, with many of its fairways lined by mature beech, oak and chestnut trees, which helped give it a maturity way beyond its years when it first opened. Its hilltop location also
Four fairway bunkers place an emphasis on accuracy off the tee at the 9th
FREE JUNIOR MEMBERSHIP!
Golfers under the age of 12 can apply for a free junior membership, which will offer unlimited access to the course at certain times, providing they are accompanied by an adult. Please call 01474 879190 quoting Golf News 2013.
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 27
“Many of the tees are set well above the green or fairway, which enhances the strategy of the layout and makes for exciting golf” embraces spectacular panoramic views across rolling Kentish farmland towards a distant, and an eerily silent City of London. Many of the tees are set well above the green or fairway, which enhances the strategy of the layout and makes for exciting golf. While the first hole offers the potential for birdie or bust, the second and third are equally challenging, with the 425-yard second often treated as a par-five by the members, thanks to the bunkers which protect the entrance to the green on this longish par four. The third, a 357-yard par four, offers a much under-employed split-fairway design, with golfers going left off the tee hitting blind over two bunkers to give themselves a straightforward approach to the longest part of the green, while those going right face a much longer, steeper approach, and the potential of finding the bunker that guards the elbow of the fairway. A new back tee is currently being constructed to further ramp up the challenge here, which I think will make it an ever better hole. The par-four dog-leg fifth is another fine example of course management skills required to score well here. Off the tee it offers the chance to cut off a chunk of the hole is you’re brave and long enough to hook one over the trees, while those that go straight will find themselves in one of two bunkers that guard the dog’s kneecap, so to speak. While the layout’s four short holes are somewhat similar in length – all are between 160-170 yards – the direction of the wind, which is quite often a factor in any round here, means that you’ll need to club up or down quite considerably in order to hit the ball the same distance. The feature hole is widely agreed to be the par-five 14th, a towering
OPEN DAY TUESDAY, JUNE 25
Redlibbets Golf Club is holding an Open Day on Tuesday, June 25, where potential members are being invited to enjoy the facilities, including a round on the 18-hole course, free of charge. Guests, who may bring a partner, must pre-book their attendance by calling 01474 879190 or by email at info@redlibbets.com. Please call 01474 872278 and quote ‘Golf News 2013’. Redlibbets Golf Club, Manor Lane, West Yoke, Ash, Nr Sevenoaks Kent, TN15 7HT
par five, which is notable, among other things, for the enormous grass bunker that protects the front of the green, which is the remnants of a World War II bomb crater. Players will certainly need to unleash a Howitzer of a tee shot on this 520-yard hole if they’re to reach the green in two, with most settling to bump one down the middle, avoiding the two bunkers that lie in wait at the bottom of the valley, before negotiating their way back up the hill to the green. The 402-yard par-four 18th is a suitably climatic hole, with a fairway that slopes severely from right to left. Leave it slightly right on the slope at your peril, as a lake runs all the way down the left of the green, making for a tough second shot to the two-tiered putting surface, where the pin is invariably placed quite close to the drink. With a full balcony watching the proceedings from above, it can make for a great finish to what is an immensely enjoyable round.
The par-four third hole features a split fairway to offer two very different routes to the green
The quality of the course is testament to the hard work put in by course manager – and club manager – Kevin Morris and his team. And despite horrendous weather over the last 18 months, they have done a great job in keeping the course open and in such good condition, with no temporary tees or greens, and much improved putting surfaces. Away from the course, the practice facilities include a 10-bay driving range, a practice bunker, chipping green and a separate putting green. There is a also a covered bay for teaching, and an indoor teaching studio with video analysis, with the club’s experienced PGA head professionals, Phil Beever and Peter Appleyard, and assistant pro Dave Harris, available for lessons. Harris also runs junior coaching sessions on weekend mornings, and with junior membership available for free for under 12s, Redlibbets is certainly playing an active role in inspiring the next generation. The pro shop, which was recently extended, offers an excellent choice of top-branded equipment and accessories, and provides a custom-fitting service using a state-of-the-art GC2 launch monitor to help fit Callaway, TaylorMade, Ping and Titleist clubs. Upstairs, the warm and welcoming clubhouse is well used by the members, and is a busy social hub, with regular themed events, including comedy spots, murder mystery evenings and curry nights. The main bar and restaurant area is capable of hosting sit-down dinners for up to 100 people, and is a popular venue for parties, wedding receptions and golf societies. On the catering front I can attest to the quality of the bacon baguettes, while a wide selection of tasty homemade food is available throughout the day. The club has membership opportunities across all categories, and with no joining fee, and payments able to be spread in monthly instalments, being a member has never been more affordable. As an added benefit, the club has recently taken back ownership of the 9-hole course at neighbouring Fawkham Valley, which will be available for members as part of their membership package. Society and green fee golfers are very welcome throughout the week, and after midday at weekends, and with packages starting from just £34pp during the summer months, and green fees from £27.50, it’s easy to see why Redlibbets is such a popular choice. But don’t just take my word for it, or my memory, try it for yourself.
28 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
NickBayly TOO MUCH, TOO YOUNG My jaw almost hit the floor last month when I heard that a 12-year-old Chinese boy had qualified for a European Tour event. Added to the appearance of 14-year-old Guanlang Tang at the Masters, I wondered if the Tour had been turned into a school while I wasn’t looking. If this trend for younger and younger players being allowed to compete in professional events continues, I think the Tours are going to have to seriously consider changing their approach to securing sponsors. With the new generation of tour pros too young to drive, and certainly too young to drink, they might consider ditching the luxury car manufacturers and Scottish whisky companies in favour of brands that better reflect their market. Anyone want to play in the Bugaboo Classic or the Tommee Tippee Memorial? Or how about The Open Championship brought to you by Pampers? Why not introduce crèches at tournament venues, not for the player’s children, but for the nappy-wearing pros who are waiting to tee off? Pros are used to being chauffeur-driven around tournaments these days, but some of these lads can’t even reach the pedals, let alone possess a driving license, so drivers – and nannies and teachers – are becoming part of the essential retinue of any self-respecting pre-teen tour star these days. Joking apart, golf is following a worrying trend in professional sport, where kids barely out of infant school are being launched into a dog-eat-dog world
whose adult competitors are not used to worrying about watching their language, or curbing their excesses, for fear of corrupting a child who should still be mucking around in the playground with his mates. It seems as if the old cliché of ‘if he’s good enough, he’s old enough’ has really taken hold. Child labour laws aside, it doesn’t wash with me, and it’s time that both the men’s and women’s professional tours set the age limit for competing in tournaments at 18, and let kids be kids, or risk creating a generation of young golfers who are burned out, gibbering wrecks before they’ve reached 21. Given that pro golfers can earn a good living well into their 50s, why the rush to play with the big boys and girls? Let’s give children back their childhoods.
GNeditor reveals what has caught his eye in the golfing headlines in recent weeks
When man’s best friend is a club’s worst enemy I must admit that I thought I’d come across an April Fool earlier this month when I read about a policewoman in Norfolk, who was suing the owner of a garage after she injured her leg tripping over a curb when searching the premises in response to a 999 call. After all, it was April 1, and it was a classic case of ‘Health and Safety gone mad’ – but it turns out it wasn’t a hoax. I had a similar response when I heard about a golfer who successfully sued Carnoustie Golf Links for half the cost of a vet’s bill, after his dog cut itself on piece of irrigation equipment that had accidently been left on a path used by greenkeepers. Given that the path was not used by golfers, and was nowhere near the fairway, I find it hard to believe that golf clubs owe a duty of care to any random animal that happens to find its way onto the course. Where will it all end? Rabbits issuing writs for loss of food supply when the fairways are cut? Ducks calling in the lawyers when the pond in front of the 18th green runs dry? What about toads who are unable to find a space in the members’ car park? I’ve never owned a dog to take on my rounds, but I have friends that do, and they tether them to their trolleys or, at the very least, keep them close at heel, rather than treating the course as a walk in the country, with all its inherent dangers. I can only hope that the owner of the dog in question gave the £70.80 that he received in compensation to the RSPCA. Oh, and while we’re on the subject of April Fool’s, I hope no-one tried to book a tee time at Augusta following our article in the March issue. Apologies, but one can but dream.
SPECIAL BMW PGA CHAMPIONSHIP 6-PAGE PREVIEW WENTWORTH CLUB, SURREY, 23-26 MAY 2013
STARS ON SHOW Don’t miss your chance to see the world’s best players battle it out for the BMW PGA CHAMPIONSHIP at Wentworth
INTERVIEW WITH LUKE DONALD TAKE A LOOK AT THE WEST COURSE TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE PARK & RIDE GREAT SAVINGS ON ADVANCED TICKETS
30 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
BMW PGA CHAMPIONSHIP
DONALD’S ON COURSE
FOR HISTORIC TREBLE
Wentworth Club provides a fitting stage for the European Tour’s showcase event, The BMW PGA Championship, which this year sees Luke Donald bidding for a remarkable third successive victory Luke Donald has his sights fixed firmly on earning a place in the European Tour’s record books next month by attempting to capture the BMW PGA Championship for a third consecutive year. The current World No.4 joined Colin Montgomerie and Sir Nick Faldo as the only players to have successfully defended the title in the history of the players’ flagship event when he won in considerable style in 2012. Now Donald is aiming to complete a glorious treble at Wentworth Club, a feat achieved only by eight-time European No.1 Montgomerie, who completed the previously unprecedented hat-trick in 1998, 1999 and 2000. Donald edged out Lee Westwood in a play-off in 2011 – and with it leapfrogged his compatriot into the World No.1 spot – before successfully defending the title last year, cruising to a four-stroke victory over Justin Rose and Paul Lawrie, which again returned him to the pinnacle of the Official World Golf Ranking. “The BMW PGA Championship is the European Tour’s flagship event, so to win it back-toback was very special,” says Donald, who also made history in 2011 by topping the European Tour’s Race to Dubai and the US money list in the same season. “It will be a great honour to come back and
try to do what Monty did. The West Course suits my game very well, and I’ll be going there with high expectations of trying to capture a third title.” Donald, now aged 35, grew up in nearby Buckinghamshire, and as a child would watch his idols grace Wentworth’s hallowed fairways, a memory which makes his victories all the more special. “When I was 12 or 13 years old I’d be running around the course watching some of the great players – Nick Faldo, Ernie (Els), Seve (Ballesteros), the top players in Europe,” he recalls. “Being just 30 minutes from home, it was a special event to me, and I always love coming back to Wentworth. As golfers we aspire to inspire the younger generation and hopefully my two victories there have inspired some younger kids to go out there and practise hard.” The victories in 2011 and 2012 were significant to the four-time Ryder Cup winner for different reasons, but the common theme was the magnificent level at which he played, displaying the shortgame masterclass that has become the hallmark of his game. “In 2011, in the play-off against Lee, it was special in that it was not only the tournament on the line, but the World No.1 spot as well,” reflects Donald. “That was the first time I went to Number One and it was a special moment. In 2012 it was more a case of trying to repeat my performance. It was the first time I’d defended a title and it felt fantastic. It’s always tough to lead from the front. I had a two-shot lead over Justin going into the last round and it’s always nice to go out and play really solid golf. To know that under extreme pressure I had what it took to pull off the victory was great.” Donald also played a key role in Europe’s
xxx
dramatic victory in last September’s Ryder Cup at Medinah, and this year’s BMW PGA Championship offers a rare opportunity to see all of the players from the winning team back in action on European soil for the very first time. Among their number will be World No.2 Rory McIlroy, as well as world ranked numbers three, 12 and 13, in the shape of Rose, Westwood and Ian Poulter. But this tournament isn’t just about the big name stars. The BMW PGA Championship also offers a chance of glory for a select group of 20 PGA club pros who have earned places through the PGA’s regional order of merit events. While none has so far gone on to win the title, just teeing it up in front of huge crowds and a worldwide TV audience is honour enough, while making the cut can lead to a lifechanging payday. Talking of pay days, thanks to the generous support of BMW, which is now in its ninth year as title sponsor, this year’s champion will take away the tidy sum of €791,660, which represents an increase over €40,000 on last year, while the total prize fund has grown by €250,00 to a
record total of €4.75million. Top courses have a tradition of revealing the top champions, and there’s no doubting the star of the show at Wentworth is the majestic West Course. Following its £6.5 million renovation in 2009, the historic layout has been transformed into one of the toughest inland courses in championship golf. And with further alterations having made over the last two years, the 2013 version of the West Course will provide an equally testing, yet fair challenge to Europe’s finest players. And while the course’s overall yardage remains at 7,302 yards, deep and strategically-positioned bunkers, tough pin positions, run-offs and undulating putting surfaces will ensure that whoever wins the coveted title will have to be at the very top of their game. Last year, over 26,000 fans packed the course on the final day’s action unfold, and that number looks set to be smashed as golf fans flock to see a golden generation of European golfers fight it out for the honour of being crowned PGA Champion. Who will emerge triumphant remains to be seen, but it’s guaranteed to be an enthralling contest.
April 2013 / Issue 220
BMW PGA CHAMPIONSHIP
/ 31
YOUR GUIDE
SPECTATOR INFORMATION
TO THE WEST COURSE
The stunning par-four 8th
ADVANCED TICKET SALES
Wentworth’s West Course is one of the most testing layouts on the European circuit. Here are some of the key holes that the pros will face at the 2013 BMW PGA Championship
Season Ticket (Thurs 23 – Sun 26 May) Adults £70 Seniors, Disabled & Unaccompanied Juniors £50 Weekend Ticket (Sat 25 – Sun 26 May) Adults £55 Senior Citizens, Disabled & Unaccompanied Juniors £35 Daily Ticket - Adult Tues, 21 May – Practice Day £7 Wed 22 May – Celebrity Pro-Am Day £12 Adult Single Day (Thurs 23 – Sun 26 May) £35 Seniors, Disabled & Unaccompanied Juniors £20 Grandstand Seating Saturday, May 25 (£15), Sunday, May 26 (£20) BOOK ONLINE AT WWW.EUROPEANTOUR.COM/TICKETS OR TELEPHONE 0800 023 2557
CORPORATE HOSPITALITY The Moet Brasserie package, which costs £160pp, includes admission and reserved on-site parking, coffee and bacon rolls on arrival, a glass of Champagne before for a two-course lunch at a reserved table, with half a bottle of wine per person. For bookings call on 01344 840483 or email tickets@europeantour.com.
TENTED VILLAGE As ever, there will be a strong automotive theme on offer to visitors to Wentworth’s tented village. Besides all the latest BMW models on display, there will be a range of driving simulators to try out, as well as remote-controlled cars for younger drivers. In addition, there will be a wide range of bars and catering facilities, plenty of seating in front of the big screen TV, and a hole-by-hole scoreboard for fans to keep up with all the action. There is also a merchandise tent, as well as driving bays and a golf school for juniors. START TIMES Play starts at 7am on May 23 and 24. Other times are subject to numbers making the cut. A souvenir programme, including a daily draw sheet, will be available on all tournament days. There will also be free grandstands at the 2nd, 14th, 16th and 18th holes on the opening two days. PARKING The parking arrangements have been changed to enable ease of access and improved traffic flow for all those travelling to Wentworth. A new Park & Ride system operating from Wednesday, May 22 between 6.30am and 8.30pm from two locations – one near Sunningdale, carrying traffic from the west (M3 and M4) and one at the Review Ground, Windsor Great Park, which is east of the tournament venue close to the M25. Both parks will operate a free shuttle bus service to Wentworth every five minutes, with the journey time taking around 10 minutes. Spectators without the correct car park passes will not be able to park on the Wentworth Estate or the surrounding areas. There will be no parking charge for BMW owners and official badge holders. TRAIN Virginia Water is served by regular trains from London Waterloo, which take 41 minutes. A free on-course bus shuttle service will be operating from the station during tournament days.
7,281 YARDS, PAR 72
The 18th green
1ST – 473 YARDS, PAR 4 The long opening hole requires an accurate tee shot between the fairway bunkers, allowing an iron shot over the valley to a green protected by deep bunkers at the front and on both sides. The green, which has been made slightly smaller in recent years, has many subtle borrows. 3RD – 465 YARDS, PAR 4 This long, uphill par four takes no prisoners. A straight drive between the four fairway bunkers is required, while the multi-tiered green will test the putting ability of any player if the second shot does not finish on the same level as the flag. 8TH – 391 YARDS, PAR 4 An accurate tee shot played to the right side of the fairway or over the bunker is needed at this demanding par four. Any approach shot coming up short will find the pond, which now extends so that the green sits on the waters edge. 9TH – 449 YARDS, PAR 4 A tough hole, with the railway line running down the left, it demands a long, straight drive. An under-hit shot may find one of the front bunkers and with swales
and a ditch to the right and out of bounds to the left, finding the green is the key to making a good score here. The green is tilted slightly towards the player. 12TH – 531 YARDS, PAR 5 This hole has been returned to a par five, and provides the opportunity for a welcome birdie, although bunkers on the right side of the fairway at 280 and 310 yards will swallow up anything leaked off the tee. The raised putting surface has a false front, which will see anything short spin back down the slope, while deep greenside bunkers will gather anything slightly off target. 15TH – 489 YARDS, PAR 4 A good tee shot down the lefthand side is essential for this tough par four, as it will give a clear view of the green and avoid the meandering ditch to the right-hand side of the fairway. An accurate iron shot is then required, as the flag on this sloping green is usually positioned on the right behind a deep bunker.
right, off a sloping fairway and away from neighbouring gardens. The green is virtually unreachable in two now, and with the entrance to the front being so tight, many choose to lay up and hope to one-putt to make their birdie. 18TH – 539 YARDS, PAR 5 A long sweeping dog-leg right that demands an accurate tee shot between the fairway bunkers. Last year the landing area was leveled to encourage players to take the green on in two shots. The smallest green on the course requires a high, soft landing shot from around 240-230 yards out to fly the brook and hold the green, so expect to see plenty of players lay up and hope to get up and down with a wedge for birdie.
17TH – 610 YARDS, PAR 5 The tee shot must be directed down the left, with the ball breaking to the
GOLFNEWS’ THREE-OFF-THE-TEE
THORBJØRN OLESEN
JUSTIN ROSE
PETER HANSON
This exciting young Danish talent, now in his third season on tour, could spring a surprise at a big price.
The world No.4 must go close after runner-up finishes in 2007 and 2012, and solid early season form in 2013.
A dual winner in 2012, the consistent Swede has an impressive record around Wentworth and is worth an e/w bet.
An aerial view of the par-four 15th
32 /
BMW PGA CHAMPIONSHIP
THE
DON Luke Donald reveals what he’s doing to regain the World No.1 spot and end his winless streak in the Majors
Coming off a long season last year, you’ve had a limited playing schedule so far this season. Is that all part of the plan to stay fresh for the big events? It’s obviously been a little bit of a late start for me this year. It’s something I did in 2011, and it worked very well for me then. There’s not much of an off-season these days, so it’s hard to find the time where you can work on your swing and make some improvements to your game. I took a decent amount of time off at the end of the season, but I now feel rested and ready to go. Were you worn out at the end of the season? Not really, although there was one health problem I had to deal with. I had some sinus issues I’ve struggled with for ten years, and I had surgery in December and I needed two or three weeks to recover from that. But I still could have started in January, no problem. I just wanted to have some time to work on my game outside of tournament golf. We play week-in, week-out, and it’s very hard to do any incremental changes in your swing when you only have a week or two off between tournaments. What kind of things did you work on? Any dramatic changes? I don’t really like to use the word changes. More like improvements. I’m constantly striving to get the club in a better position at the top, a bit more neutral, with maybe slightly more cup in the left wrist. And I’m always working on the downswing, trying to get my hands and arms more underneath me, so I flip left past impact. So I’ve been working on that, and continuing to be sharpen up my short game.
“I practised hard at the things I knew I was good at, and focused on trying to improve every part of my game by small amounts”
April 2013 / Issue 220
April 2013 / Issue 220
BMW PGA CHAMPIONSHIP
Yes, it’s always tough being at the top of any sport. Everyone looks up to the guy at No.1. They expect results. I expected results out of myself, too. You just feel like you need to perform, and that adds to the pressure that you put on yourself. Does your experience count for anything in the Majors, or do you see it as emotional baggage? Well, I think familiarity is really important. There is some baggage, of course, but I feel like I’ve had a lot of good opportunities, so I kind of remember the positives more than anything. It’s obviously a factor at the Masters, as its played there every year. It’s the major where I’ve probably felt the most confident, because I’ve experienced those shots before. I know how the greens react, and I know how most of the putts break. So I think that’s a good thing rather than a negative. Brandt Snedeker has recently spoken about how you gave people like him the blueprint of how to get to No.1 if you’re not a big hitter. Do you take that as a compliment? Yes, I probably do. But you know, I think not many people would have ever thought that a golfer like me
One man brand: Donald has always played Mizuno
in this day and age would have ever been able to get to No.1. But once I did, and I stayed there for a pretty good period of time, I think people took notice, and looked into how I did it. From my perspective, I just played to my strengths. I practised hard at the things I knew I was good at, and focused not just on trying to hit the ball further, but trying to improve every part of my game by small amounts.
Donald’s smooth iron play is only a part of his allround game
Did watching Tiger [Woods] and Phil [Mickelson] winning early this season make you anxious to get out there and play? Yes and no. I’ve been around the tours long enough to know that it’s a marathon, not a sprint. It’s about positioning yourself. With the new play-off system, it’s not about money lists as such, so you don’t have to be going in No.1 at the beginning of the play-offs to win it, so there’s less pressure to be out there racking up prize money. Obviously it’s nice to see Tiger and Phil playing well. Any time you have the great players playing well, it inspires you to work harder and try and catch them. Do you feel any less stress going into the majors this year without the expectations that come with being world No.1? Yes, I do. I think there are fewer people looking at me and less media attention and more focus on Tiger and Rory. I feel like I can go about my business a little bit more. Can you measure how that affected your performance in the Majors last year?
How important was developing your short game in going from being a good player to being No.1? I think the turning point came after my wrist surgery in 2008. A lot of the breakdown in my wrist came from trying to hit the ball too hard, getting into positions that put stress on that wrist. I wasn’t doing it the right way. So when I had to start practising again after surgery, all I could do was putt for a while, and then I could chip, and then I worked my way up through the clubs. That’s a good way to practise. I firmly believe that scoring happens from the hole back to the tee. I’m a living example of that. That period was kind of a wake-up call for me that I needed to really concentrate on what I could control. I don’t think I’m ever going to have the body or the athleticism to hit the ball 300 yards. There’s no magic driver that’s just going to give me that extra yardage. I just have to keep improving the things that I can control. After all that hard work, how did it feel when you got to the No.1 spot? It wasn’t really something I thought about. For most of my career Tiger was so far ahead that no-one thought he would ever be caught. Obviously things happened and when I won the World Match Play in 2011, I suddenly jumped from eighth to third in the world. At that point, then you start thinking, wow, I’ve only got a couple of spots to go, I can get there, and then it became a focus. It gave me have a different goal. I had a few chances to get there earlier and didn’t quite make it. I lost to Brandt Snedeker in a play-off at
/ 33
Hilton Head, and there was another situation where I just narrowly missed out. But I finally did it by winning at Wentworth in the BMW, beating Lee Westwood in a playoff, and, you know, there’s no greater feeling than knowing that your best golf is good enough to get to No.1 in the sport; to say you’re No.1 in the world is a pretty amazing feeling, and I enjoyed being there. You’ve always been known as being a consistent iron player. How have you managed that? Like with everything that I do, I’m always trying to concentrate on solid fundamentals. I think in iron play you’ve got to maintain a good posture, and that’s a thought that I keep when I’m swinging, and I think that will serve anyone. Most good iron players have good posture, and a consistent strike, and I think that’s one of the keys that I think of. Is that still the strongest part of your game? I would say my short game has been the strongest part of my game, certainly in the last few years. I’ve statistically been one of the best in the world inside 100 yards, and I think that’s been a huge part of my success. When I can put my long game together with that short game, that’s when I become dangerous. Having spent a lot of time being world No.1, and with everyone making such a big deal about Rory not playing as much, is the hardest part trying to balance staying fresh and staying sharp? It is a tricky thing, especially if, like Rory and I, you play both tours. You feel like you spread yourself a bit thin. He’s planning to play three or four or five events fewer this year than he did last year, and that thins him out even more. And when you get off to a slow start sometimes the best way to get out of a funk like that is just to play, and to get competitive rounds under your belt. I’m sure he juggled that in his mind a little bit, whether to add another event or something, just to do that. But at the same time, you also are planning your schedule around majors, and trying to be rested enough where you don’t feel like you’ve played a ton of golf leading up to them. That’s certainly my mindset when I set my schedule. I also want to play the events where I feel like I have a chance to win. But being rested and feeling like you’re not overdoing it is important, too. It’s a fine balance. Have you settled on a schedule that works for you? You know, I’ve always looked at trying to find patterns in success that I’ve had. It’s very hard to find. I think it just becomes, the fact that golf is a fickle game, and you’re going to have weeks where you struggle. Look at Tiger; he’s won three times, but he’s also missed the cut and finished 40th or something. It’s one of those games where you’re not going to be consistently churning out those results all the time. It’s hard to find out what works best for you. I’ve played the Masters not having played for three weeks before; I’ve tried to play the week before. And again, I haven’t really seen a pattern that works. I’ve set my schedule where I know I’m not playing a ton of events leading up to a major because I want to feel reasonably rested. But at the same time, you want to play enough to where you feel like you’re competitively sharp. You’ve lived in America for a long time, but do you have any thoughts on Rory’s and Lee’s move to Florida, and what the move did for your game? The main reason for playing the PGA Tour was predicated by how successful I was in college. I won 13 times, and won the NCAA. I felt like my game was very comfortable on American-style courses. Obviously meeting my wife, who is from Chicago, explains why I set up base there for a while. But Chicago is not very good in the winter, so I moved down to Florida during the winter months. It’s also a lot easier place to travel from. I still play probably 75 per cent of my events in the US, and it’s a great place to hone and play against some of the best players in the world on some great courses. I‘ve talked to Lee about his move, and it seems he just got fed up with the harsh winters in England. It was very tough to practice. It’s hard to be motivated to go outside when it’s cold and wet!
BMW Golfsport
bmw-golfsport.com
The Ultimate Driving Machine
LUKE WHO’S BACK. BMW PGA CHAMPIONSHIP 2013. 21 – 26 MAY. WENTWORTH CLUB, SURREY.
For advance ticket savings book before 19 May 2013. www.europeantour.com/tickets or 0800 023 25 57.
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 35
Storybehindthepic Tony Jacklin The Savoy Hotel, London, July, 1970
Sponsored by
E
“The Thames is almost 450 yards wide, so he was never in danger of hitting The South Bank, despite the advantage of a 125-foot elevation”
njoying his new-found celebrity status as a dual Major champion, following his victories in the Open at Royal Lytham in 1969 and the US Open a year later, Tony Jacklin was in hot demand for personal appearances. Fresh from his win at Hazeltine, one such stunt involved clambering on to the roof of The Savoy Hotel in London and attempting to drive a golf ball across The Thames. American legend Walter Hagen had attempted the same feat in 1928, following his Open win at Royal St George’s, and managed to drive the ball 300 yards, while Jack Nicklaus’s
attempt in 1963 yielded a 341-yard effort. Jacklin was naturally keen to break Jack’s record, and went so far as to warm up the golf balls in a silver tureen filled with warm water in order to improve their resiliency. Buoyed by a crowd of eager supporters – and a perhaps a following wind – he smashed his shot 356 yards, eclipsing Nicklaus’s effort by 15 yards. The Thames is almost 450 yards wide at this point, so he was never in danger of hitting The South Bank, despite the 125-foot elevation advantage. Jacklin was a regular at the Savoy during his heyday, with the players who took part in the World Golf Match
Play Championship at Wentworth often staying at the hotel during the tournament. Jacklin also enjoyed stays at The Dorchester, where he took up residence when asked to coach the Sultan of Brunei’s nephew, and also hosted a number of golf days for the Mayfair Hotel. Since those heady days, The Thames has been the scene of many golfing stunts, from the floating greens opposite Docklands’ Excel centre during the London Golf Show, to Sergio Garcia and Dustin Johnson’s appearance last year to celebrate golf’s inclusion in the 2016 Olympics, when the pair hit wedges to a green docked beside London Bridge.
SUMMER AT THE RIDGE NEW HALF PRICE 5 DAY MEMBERSHIP
First payment £78, thereafter £35 per month
HALF PRICE 7 DAY MEMBERSHIP
Only 50 Memberships available, first payment £85.75, thereafter £43.75 per month First payment includes admin fee & union fees
SUMMER GOLF SOCIETY DEALS 1 APRIL 2013 TO 31ST OCTOBER 2013 ST
Prices start from £26
SUNDAY 4 BALL - INC. BREAKFAST £100
GOLF SOCIETIES DIRECT SALES: 0800 024 8730 THE RIDGE GOLF CLUB, CHARTWAY STREET, SUTTON VALENCE, MAIDSTONE, ME17 3JB. TEL: 01622 844382. WEB: WWW.THERIDGEGOLFCLUB.CO.UK
36 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
CLUB CLASS If you want a peek at the modern face of golf in the 21st century, then I strongly advise you take a trip to Slinfold Golf & Country Club in West Sussex
The parkland layout enjoys a tranquil setting in the West Sussex countryside
Located in a village a few miles west of Horsham, Slinfold started out life some 20 years ago as a bog standard – in the nicest possible terms – golf club, which met the needs of an area that was seeing a sudden rise in population and a significant growth in golf participation. But over the intervening 20 years, a lot of other clubs opened up in the area, all offering a very similar product. And, as the supply/ demand curve shifted unerringly towards over supply, clubs like Slinfold have had to battle for a diminishing number of golfers. But rather than give in to a slow and inevitable decline, the club, which was bought by the Country Club Group in 1997, has been reborn and revitalised into a thriving leisure facility that attracts all sections of the community. A lot of clubs have gone down the ‘country club’ route in recent times, but very few live up to the name in anything more than words. But the Country Club Group – the clue is in the title – has fully embraced the concept, and invested huge sums into making its clubs (it also owns nearby Cranleigh Golf & Country Club) into leisure destinations, rather than just somewhere to play a few holes and then shuffle off home. Over £4 million has been spent at Slinfold over the last few years, and a lot more is in the process of being spent as the owner embarks on the
The challenging 18th provides a fitting end to an entertaining course
second phase of its redevelopment that will make it a truly ‘Club Class’ venue. Golf is still very much at the heart of what Slinfold has to offer, but the ‘country club’ tag reflects the broadening of the hospitality package, with a swimming pool, sauna, steam room, Jacuzzi, fullyequipped gym, fitness studios, spa, beauty salon, and a professionallystaffed crèche. With all these services and activities now on offer to members, you can see why calling it a ‘golf club’ would be selling it short by some margin. At a time when many clubs are hunkering down for the recession, cutting back on spending and
mothballing building projects, The Country Club Group has invested in facilities that has made Slinfold appeal to a wider cross-section of the local community, from young families with children, to active older couples looking for a social hub, while not forgetting golfers of all ages and abilities, who can play the 18-hole course. The country club vibe has also been translated into the clubhouse, with the upstairs Mess Bar & Club Lounge providing the social focal point for members. Offering stunning views over the golf course and a fabulous outdoor veranda, the Mess Bar offers an all-day food menu, which features a combination
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 37
The 20-metre heated pool is part of a range of superb leisure facilities available to the membership
of traditional golfer’s fare and healthy options for post-workout gym users, as well as a special kids’ menu. The lounge combines large sofas and deep-seated chairs with a slightly more formal, but equally comfortable, dining area. With free Wi-Fi, large screen TV, and a wide selection of newspapers and lifestyle magazines to read, it’s a light and relaxing space to enjoy, whatever your interests. Members also enjoy a busy social calendar, with events to suit a wide variety of interests, from quiz nights and comedy nights, to London theatre trips and live bands. Andy McNiven, General Manager said: “Slinfold is all about an experience for the whole family. Before we implemented the changes, the club attracted about 85% men, all of whom just played golf. But now it’s a much more even balance of genders and ages that reflects the local community. We’re saying that yes, you can play golf, but you can also come here for the whole health package. Members can use the gym, the pool, the yoga classes, and play on the golf courses. It’s all about promoting healthy lifestyles.” While this transformation has undoubtedly caused some diehard golfers to leave, that has been more than offset by those golfers who were looking for a venue that would appeal to all members of their family, and has given the club a much more welcoming and accessible feel to it. And the improvements haven’t
stopped yet. The club is currently in the throes of a major overhaul of its nine-hole course and its practice facilities. The former was a fun place to take a few clubs and have a hack around with your kids or a few friends, but it wasn’t ever presented to the same high standard as the 18-hole course. And as it’s the first thing you see when you drive into the club, it quite rightly needed attention. So the diggers are on site, and an architect has been employed to redesign the course and bring it up to a level fitting for a venue with Slinfold’s aspirations. The finished article, which is expected to re-open next summer, will offer members a welcome addition to the golfing challenge that will be ideal for beginners, juniors, ladies, in fact all level of golfers, as well as golf societies seeking a 27-hole challenge. The driving range, which was previously little more than a field with some yardage markers, is currently being transformed into a state-of-the-art academy, with the range being completely leveled and remodeled, with new targets, lighting, and all new facilities. Also due to open next summer, it will put the finishing touches to an allround product of which members
and management can be justifiably proud. The 6,424-yard golf course hasn’t been ignored during all the renovations, and while its 165-acre layout remains very much as it was when it first opened, it continues to offer a pleasant parkland experience for the club’s 400-plus members. An easy walking course, the challenges are more strategic at Slinfold, with water of some shape or form to contend with on almost half of the holes, while a smattering of doglegs and astutely-placed bunkers ensures that accuracy rather than brute force is required to secure a good score here. While Cranleigh has gone ‘members-only’, Slinfold is very much open to the public, and welcomes casual green fee visitors and societies throughout the week, although tees times are reserved for members at peak periods. Green fee vouchers can be printed from the club’s website to offer a variety of savings on golf-only and food-andgolf deals, while summer society packages are also extremely good value. As well as enjoying all the facilities available at Slinfold, adult golf members also enjoy 12 free rounds at nearby Rookwood, a popular
18-hole public course managed by the Country Club Group for the local council, as well as reciprocal playing rights at Cranleigh. There are a variety of memberships currently on offer, with three months’ free membership available for families, two months for couples and one month for individuals. Whichever category you fit into, there is a package that they will suit your needs, so whether you’re a golfer, a swimmer or a fitness fanatic, or perhaps a bit of all three, Slinfold really is the place to be.
READER OFFER TRY SLINFOLD FOR YOURSELF
If you’d like to see what it would be like to be a member of Slinfold Golf & Country Club for a day, register by calling 01403 792620 or email dan.turner@ccgclubs.com, quoting ‘Golf News Offer’. Guests will be offered a choice of weekdays to visit, where they can experience all of the facilities with a fellow guest, including 18 holes of golf. Pre-booking is essential. The closing date for bookings is May 17, 2013. For more general information visit www.ccgslinfold.com
“At a time when many clubs are cutting back on spending and mothballing building projects, The Country Club Group has invested in the facilities at Slinfold” Slinfold is continuing to invest in its facilities, with the construction of a new 9-hole course and new driving range under way
38 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
Play with the pros at top Southern venues SPRING SOCIETY OFFER AVAILABLE MARCH TO MAY
£33.50
per person (Available Monday to Friday and after 11am weekends)
Includes: Coffee and Bacon Baguettes on arrival, 18 holes (no temporary greens or tees). Followed by a sumptuous Chicken Supreme stuffed with Asparagus Mousse served with New Potatoes, Penny Onions, Green Beans and a Café au Lait sauce.
GOLF BREAKS
FROM
£72.50
per person
Includes: 2 rounds of golf 3 course dinner and bed & breakfast
VISITOR GREEN FEE
£15
all day Wednesdays
Maidstone Road, Headcorn, Kent TN27 9PT. Tel: 01622 890866. Email: proshop@weald-of-kent.co.uk www.weald-of-kent.co.uk
Open Weekend 27 & 28 April The only place to play your golf over the weekend of 27th and 28th April is at Chipstead Golf Club. For only £10.00 you will receive a round of golf, a FREE drink at the bar and a chance to win a FREE annual membership. Membership offers at Chipstead for this weekend. Partners’ Membership 50% off the second full or 5 day membership with fees set for the next two years.
Step One Flexi Membership Our first ever pay and play membership starting at £400.00.
Full 7 and 5 Day Memberships 15 months for the price of 12
Taster Membership
Amateur golfers looking to gain an insight into the technique and course management skills of top professionals are being encouraged to take part in the PGA South region Pro-Ams which are taking place at some of the top tracks in the Home Counties over the coming months. The South region schedule for 2013 offers over 50 Pro-Am events, and involves playing top courses throughout Surrey, Kent, Sussex, Hampshire, Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire in the company of talented PGA professionals while competing for fantastic prizes. Sam Smith, secretary of The PGA in England (South), highlighted the enjoyment many club golfers get from playing with PGA professionals. “We have got a lot of regulars who love coming to play in a Pro-Am, and we often see teams coming to play in several tournaments throughout the year,” he said. “The fact we’re holding them on some of the top courses in the south all adds to what I think is a very special day out on a golf course, at very competitive entry costs. It’s also a terrific way to entertain customers, and with teams of four including the PGA professional – it’s exciting as well as entertaining.” Among the high-profile courses on
West Hill is on the Pro-Am schedule
the pro-am schedule are Wentworth’s Edinburgh course, Gatton Manor, Foxhills, Tylney Park and Windlesham, plus traditional venues such as West Hill, Woking, Tandridge, The Addington, and Hankley Common. For links fans there is there is Royal Cinque Ports, Princes or Hayling, while in November, amateur and club golfers have the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to play in a Pro-Am at the world famous Valderrama, courtesy of Golf Escapes Andalusia Overseas Pro-Am. “There’s a lot to learn from watching a professional go round a course, but in this format you get first-hand experience by playing and talking with them,” added Smith. “You certainly get a much better idea of what course management really means, and just how good these guys really are.”
Luke’s bang on target at The London Club Tandridge professional Luke Bangerter provided more proof of his potential around The London Club’s International course, when he shot a sizzling six-under-par 66 to win the latest PGA in England (South) Winter Series event. As the leading assistant, Bangerter made it a winning double by taking the ball, glove and shoe contract on top of the winner’s cheque. His score of 66 edged out the 67s of Russell Buxton (Hassocks) and Craig Sutherland
(Cherry Lodge), leaving them tied for second place. Earlier in the day, Buxton’s five-under-par 67 made him the leader in the clubhouse, so when Bangerter teed off he knew what he had to do. Out in one-under-par, Bangerter found the inspiration he needed when he fired a four iron to 15 foot at the par-five 11th and holed the eagle putt to reach three-under. He made a good up and down at the next hole, and then stayed on target with a two putt
birdie at the par-five 13th and a birdie three at the 15th. Solid pars at the 16th and 17th set up one more birdie opportunity at the final hole, and Bangerter took it with both hands. “The greens were really good, and the course wasn’t playing overly long, so I just kept plotting my way round.” Bangerter said. “I drove well, and holed all my putts from inside six feet. I was absolutely delighted to manage to edge out Russell’s cracking score.”
Sussex gets into disc golf Fans of disc golf, a golf-style game played with Frisbees for balls and basketball hoops for holes, are hopeful that the first permanent course in Sussex will be in place within a year. About 20 disc golfers are known to
To 31 August for only £400.00
For further information on the Memberships or to book a start time for our Open Weekend please call Gary or Emma on 01737-555781 or Email office@chipsteadgolf.co.uk www.chipsteadgolf.co.uk Disc golf in action in Croydon
already play the sport in Sussex, setting up temporary courses in Wild Park in Brighton and Hampden Park in Eastbourne. The players are now in talks with both Brighton and Hove City Council and Eastbourne Borough Council about the possibility of setting-up the county’s first permanent course. Talks are currently in a more advanced state with Eastbourne, meaning that an 18hole course in Hampden Park or a five-hole course in Gildredge Park seem the most likely to take the title of the county’s first. There are a number of permanent courses elsewhere in the country, including Croydon, Colchester, Leamington Spa, Bristol and Beaminster in Dorset. It costs around £2,000 to build a permanent course. For more details visit www.bdga.org.uk.
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 39
COMPETITION
WIN
FIVE PAIRS OF SEASON TICKETS FOR THE 2013 BMW PGA CHAMPIONSHIP
2 night golf breaks at Patshull Park One of Shropshire’s premium resort courses from as little as £64.50 per person per night including golf, three course dinner, English breakfast, full use of hotel leisure club, and a friendly welcome. Golf News is delighted to offer five lucky readers the opportunity to win a pair of season tickets for this year’s BMW PGA Championship, played over the famous West Course at Wentworth Club, Surrey, on May 23-26. These season tickets are worth £142 a pair and the lucky winners will be able to attend all four days of the championship and the Pro-Am, as well as take advantage of the fantastic facilities available in the Tented Village, including a showcase of BMW’s latest models. With a prize fund in excess of €4.75million, the BMW PGA Championship is the flagship event on the European Tour and always attracts the cream of European golf. Last year saw former World No.1 Luke Donald bag a second consecutive title, and this year he will be bidding for an historic treble. For more information on this year’s BMW PGA Championship go to www.europeantour.com/tickets or telephone 0800 023 2557. To be in with a chance of winning a pair of tickets, all you need to do is answer the question below correctly, and email your answer to info@ golfnews.co.uk, with ‘BMW PGA Competition’ in the subject line.
Why not enquire about our golf society packages A great day of golf and refreshments from just £27.00 per person. Conveniently located off Junction 3 of the M54, in glorious countryside, less than an hour from Birmingham and 90 minutes from Manchester.
Patshull Park Hotel, Pattingham WV6 7HR Question: By how many shots did Luke Donald win the 2012 BMW PGA Championship? a) 1 b) 3 c) 4 Terms and Conditions The closing date for entries is May 6, 2013. The prize is non-transferable and no cash alternative is available. Entrants must be aged 18 years or over.
For more information on this year’s BMW PGA Championship go to www.europeantour.com/tickets or telephone 0800 023 2557
Visit our web site www.patshull-park.co.uk and call our experienced sales team on 01902 700100 email: sales@patshull-park.co.uk
40 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
EwenMurray
Sky Sport’s voice of golf speaks out on issues of the month
US MASTERS DIARY Error of judgment- Tiger Woods takes his second shot from the wrong spot on the 15h hole
TUESDAY, APRIL 9 My Masters journey began, as usual, at London Heathrow’s Terminal 5, where Colin Montgomerie and I met up with Newcastle United legend Alan Shearer and some of his friends. Alan is a huge golf fan and no mean player, and like many on our flight, was making the pilgrimage to Augusta. After a two-hour delay, we crossed the Altantic and landed at Hartsfield in Atlanta. A threehour drive followed and just on the stroke of midnight, the bed was a welcome sight and sleep came easy. On Tuesday, my first look – for this year, at least – at the immaculate grounds of Augusta National. It never fails to amaze me how beautiful this course is. They seem to be able to control nature, and every day every part of the course is impeccable. First things first, I made a beeline for the merchandising pavilion and purchased one or two souvenirs for some family and friends back home. That was followed by a few hours of preparation, a rehearsal, and a look at the video clips our talented team at Sky had spent many hours compiling. At 5pm, I walked from the TV compound down to Amen Corner. Nobody was there, yet the atmosphere was intense. The beauty of this area is breathtaking. It was the quietest half hour of my season, and such is its mystique I felt almost cleansed walking back. After dinner with Monty in downtown Augusta, the day came to an end.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10 Wednesday is the Par 3 contest, and we went on air at 2pm. Most of the coverage was centred around Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player – who have 13 Masters’ titles between them and 49 top-ten finishes. It was, of course, ceremonial golf, but thousands turned up to share some more time with The Big Three. Arnold may be 83, but he still hasn’t lost any of his magnetic charm. As Sky’s Kirsty Gallacher waited to interview him after his tee shot at the ninth, Arnie approached and said, “My, what a pretty girl!” Kirsty did not require any blusher for the rest of the afternoon! I would like to see the par three contest taken a little more seriously, as it’s a great spectacle, but the players enjoy
the few hours of relaxation, and the fans seem to love watching the sons and daughters, and the mums and dads take part. The atmosphere, however, changes immediately the contest concludes. For the record, Ted Potter Jnr won the event in a play-off – which duly ended his hopes of winning the main event.
THURSDAY, APRIL 11 ROUND 1 The first day of the Masters is unique. The buzz, the colour and electricity fills the air. No Australian has ever won the tournament and Marc Leishman from Down Under gets off to a flier. His 66 is matched by Sergio Garcia and a dozen players break 70. The round of the day came from the youngest player to compete at the Masters. Chinese sensation, 14-yearold Tianlang Guan skipped round in 73, playing the par fives in one under, level for the par 3s and, despite averaging just 250 yards off the tee, was only two over for the par 4s. He hit the shot of the day at the 10th, the hardest hole in the history of the tournament. A threewood to five feet and the putt drained. He also birdied the 18th to move just inside the cut mark, and the whole world would be hoping he would make the weekend. Thursday was also a most memorable day for me, as I was joined in the commentary box for an hour by the six-time Masters champion Jack Nicklaus. He took his green jacket off and put it over the back of the chair and said: “I’ve been looking forward to this for a while”. Arguably the finest golfer the game has seen, Jack has humour, humility and class. A great golfer for sure, but much more than that, a truly outstanding gentleman. I will remember that day for the rest of my life. There is obviously a lot of
pressure covering the Masters and as I trudged back to the hotel, my next memory was awaking on Friday morning.
FRIDAY, APRIL 12 ROUND 2 It was a cloudy start to the second round, and with following the good scoring of Thursday, the pin positions were tougher and the greens a good deal faster. However, it was the rules and not the
long period of time. They time slow groups, rather than target the main offender. Bernhard Langer, Padraig Harrington, Ben Crane, Keegan Bradley, Jason Day and others, have been serial offenders, yet none have received penalty shots. In fact, no player has received a penalty on the PGA Tour since 1995. Tianlang has grown up watching this era of tortoises, and kids are extremely efficient at imitation.
Caroline Wozniacki shows her boyfriend how to putt in the Par 3 contest
Jack Nicklaus joined me in the commentary booth on Thursday
Scott celebrates his birdie at the 18th before going on to win the play-off against Cabrera
Slow going- teenager Guan Tianlang became the first player to be given a penalty for slow play in Masters’ history
tournament that made the headlines at the end of an eventful day. First, Tianlang Guan received a one-shot penalty for slow play, the first time that has happened in the Masters. Secondly, Tiger Woods took an incorrect drop at the 15th hole, which led to a huge outcry. The slow play penalty is a result of the Tours across the world not doing their job over a
US Tour chief Tim Finchem was quoted as saying slow play is not really an issue. Well it is, and it’s high time the subject was addressed. I was sorry it happened to this gifted 14-year-old, but it will stand him in good stead in the years ahead. His habit will be nipped in the bud. The slow coaches had better change gear though, as the Masters’ committee has once again led the way forward. They also had the Tiger drop to contend with, and you will all have your thoughts on his two-shot penalty. Tiger, I think should have disqualified himself after saying “I went two yards back from where I hit the first pitch”. There was no way back from the words ‘two yards’. That means that no effort was made to drop the ball as close as possible to the place where the previous shot was played. A new rule, 33/7, enabled the
officials to impose a penalty, rather than disqualification, and Tiger had the right to keep playing, but it’s a decision that may haunt him in the future. Should Tiger have won this one, there would always have been question marks over his 15th major. Should he equal Jack’s record of 18 majors, or beat it with 19, the same doubts would have still been there.
SATURDAY, APRIL 13 ROUND 3 I don’t know if all of the hype surrounding the rules issues were the cause, or that the pin positions were too severe, or the greens too firm, but round three was a dull affair. I’m just going to leave it at that, except to say that after an unexceptional day’s play, a dozen or more players had a chance of winning the coveted title.
SUNDAY, APRIL 14 ROUND 4 The final round of the Masters is one of the top sporting days of the year, and the air was charged with tension, excitement and anticipation. Jason Day was first to make a move on the famous back
nine, before falling with bogeys at the 16th and 17th. Brandt Snedeker slipped earlier, and thankfully, in the best interests of everyone, Tiger didn’t win. He is, however, swinging the club as well as he has done for many years, and I have no doubt he will add to his 14 majors before too long. Angel Cabrera’s sportsmanship in losing was almost impressive as Adam Scotts performance in winning, and one of the images of the week was he and his son, Angel Jnr, making their way back to the clubhouse after the play-off. The amiable 43-yearold Argentinian came within a whisker of winning his third major. Teen sensation Tianlang joined the new champion in the Butler Cabin having completed four rounds without a double bogey and no sign of a three putt. His prize, the amateur medal, which will no doubt be the first of many awards, and I’m sure he will lead the new generation of golfers from his homeland. It was, as always, a busy afternoon, as well as an exciting one, and by the time the final putt was holed, darkness had descended on Augusta. Statistics kept by Augusta National since the inaugural tournament in 1934 show that the average age of the Master’s winner is 32. This year’s winner is 32. At last, Adam Scott has a major to his name, and finally Australia has a Masters’ champion to call its own.
Introducing COBRA AMP Cell with MyFly TM
ONE DRIVER. SIX SETTINGS. FOUR FRESH COLOURS.
IAN
RICKIE JESPER
JONAS
Amplify your distance and hit more fairways with MyFly’s easy-to-tune, six-setting loft and flight adjustment. Quickly adapt the club to any course, any condition and any swing–for the way you play. Whether you’re a Pro or a Regular Guy. That’s AMP CELL with MyFly. That’s choice. That’s smart distance.
CHOICE HAS NEVER GONE THIS FAR.
BLUE 10.5°D
RED 9.5°
SILVER 9.5° ORANGE 8.5°
#WhatsYourFly Download the Fit n Fly mobile app to calculate your fly. Available for iOS and Android at cobragolf.com/fitnfly
www.cobragolf.com
TM
42 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
SCOTT WINS THE Adam Scott laid some personal and national ghosts to rest with a thrilling victory at the Masters on a rainy night in Georgia Adam Scott clinched his maiden major title and became the first Australian winner of the Masters with victory against former champion Angel Cabrera in a sudden death play-off at Augusta. The 32-year-old from Adelaide holed a 15ft birdie putt in virtual darkness across the 10th green on the second extra hole to deprive Argentina’s 2009 winner, after both players birdied the 18th in regulation to reach nine under on a decidedly damp and drizzly final day in Georgia. It was sweet and almost immediate revenge for the man who squandered a four-shot lead with four holes to go to lose last year’s Open Championship, and was an overdue Major success for one of the game’s most consistent Major performers in recent seasons. “It fell my way today, there was some luck there, but it’s incredible to be in this position. I’m honoured,” said Scott. “This is the one thing in golf we hadn’t been able to achieve,” he added. “It’s amazing to be the first Australian to win the Masters.” Scott rolled in a stunning long birdie putt on the 72nd hole to snatch a one-shot lead over Cabrera, who was waiting back down the fairway in the final
Scott celebrates his first Major win with a Tiger-style roar
Sporting gesture: Scott and Cabrera hug after an emotionally-charged playoff
Europe’s largest golf travel company
WIN
A TRIP TO THE MASTERS 2014 « CELEBRATING «
« «
• SATURDAY AND SUNDAY TOURNAMENT PASSES
««««««
• DRINKS RECEPTIONS • TRANSFERS
We’ll even throw in two rounds of golf to complete this perfect week. For further details see golfbreaks.com.
Call us on 0800 279 7988 or visit www.golfbreaks.com
«
• ECONOMY FLIGHTS • ACCOMMODATION
«
One lucky booker will win a 5 day trip for four to Augusta National in April 2014. You will receive:
F GREAT CHOI CE SO ,V AR YE
D SERVICE « AN « UE « AL
Make a booking until the 31st May 2013 to be automatically entered into the prize draw.
15
5 DAYS • 4 PEOPLE - THE ULTIMATE GOLF BREAK
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 43
HEART OF A NATION group. The Argentine kept his focus, despite the roars from the green, and hit his approach to a few feet before making his own birdie for a final round 70 to join Scott. Both came up slightly short of the 18th green on the first extra hole and Cabrera, playing first, almost holed his chip and tapped in from a foot for a four. Scott left his chip three feet shy, but holed it and they went back down the 10th. They both hit good approaches to the heart of the green but Cabrera, who won a play-off against Chad Campbell and Kenny Perry three years ago, missed his putt before Scott made his. Cabrera, the joint overnight leader with Brandt Snedeker, held a two-shot lead at nine under during the first nine, but on the way home he shared the lead with Scott and Jason Day, who was two in front with three to play before bogeys at 16 and 17. Tiger Woods, still haunted by the illegal drop that had cost him two shots after the second round, struggled to ignite his traditional Sunday charge and carded a two-under par 70 for a seventh top four in
Teen Dream: 14-year-old Guan Tianlang enjoyed a stunning Masters debut
MASTERS LEADERBOARD -9 A Scott, A Cabrera -7 J Day - 5 T Woods, M Leishman - 4 T Olesen, B Snedeker - 3 S Garcia, M Kuchar, L Westwood -2 T Clark, J Huh Victory roll: Scott holes a 15-foot birdie putt amid the gloom of the 10th hole to seal a dramatic win
his last eight Masters. The 14-time Major champion ultimately went home empty handed, and with his reputation somewhat tarnished, after calls for him to disqualify himself were ignored. Among the might-have-beens and also-rains were American Brandt Snedeker, who playing alongside Cabrera in the final group, slumped to a 75, while 23-year-old Danish debutant Thorbjorn Olesen, who finished with a 68 to head a rather feeble European challenge, which once again failed to get in much of a blow at the season’s opening major. Lee Westwood lead the British charge, such as it was, but the 39-yearold was ultimately let down again by his putting, with a succession of mid-range efforts that went close, but not close enough. He may have managed to avoid three-putting for 72 holes, but there were nowhere near enough one-putts. But the day, and the tournament, belonged to Adam Scott, who laid several personal and national demons to rest with a nerveless display of golf, which included three rounds of 69. And while his timely victory no doubt sparked scenes of mass celebration – and was the cause of a few hangovers – Down Under, it will also has caused a massive headache for golf’s governing bodies, who are now waking up to a fourth major from the last six being won with a player using an anchored putter, and the first using a broomhandle. The ramifications of which may echo long after the cheers from Augusta have faded into the memory. See page 44 for Adam Scott interview.
Down and out: Woods finished fourth after failing to mount a final day charge
Not his day: Jason Day’s challenge faded over the closing three holes
Once again, more players trusted FJ shoes at the Masters than any other manufacturer. ®
TM
Explore footjoy.co.uk and sign up to The Comfort Zone, our free e-newsletter Source: Darrell Survey. Masters is a registered service mark of the Augusta National Golf Club.®
FJ. #1 SHOE AT THE MASTERS. MASTERS. ®
GolfNews_FJStripMasters13_262x90.indd 1
28/03/2013 15:08
44 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
Masters Champion Adam Scott reveals what it feels like to finally get the Major monkey off his back and bring home a long-awaited green jacket to Australia
AUSSIE RULES Adam Scott, Masters Champion. How does that sound? It’s a huge honour, but it’s hard to exactly put it all together in my mind at the moment. It’s incredible. Everything just seemed to fall into place for me, and I’m just so proud of myself, and everyone who has helped me get to this point. The ‘thank you’ list is going to be a long one. Winning the Masters is obviously a huge personal achievement, but can you tell us what it means for Australia? I guess I’ll find out when I get home. I’m a proud Australian and I hope this sits really well back at home, even in New Zealand. We had the kind of Trans-Tasman combo out there with Steve [Williams] on the bag. We’re a proud sporting country, and although golf may not be the biggest sport back home, it’s a sport that has been played by a long list of great players, and this was one thing in golf that we had not been able to achieve. So it’s amazing that it’s my destiny to be the first Aussie to win, just incredible. You use the word ‘destiny’. When your ball did not roll back into the pond at the 13th hole, and when you made the putt on the 72nd hole, at any point did you think that ‘today is my day’? I definitely didn’t think it think it on 13. There was so much golf still to play, and I had no momentum at that point. I was trying to get something to happen, but that was certainly a great break. But even going down 15, I really felt like it was far away still. Jason [Day] was looking very much in control, and I just was trying to go about my business. But on 18, for a split second, I let myself think I could have won. I might have showed that when it went in. But I got to see Angel [Cabrera] hit an incredible shot from where I was sat in the scorer’s area, and then it was a question of trying to get myself ready to play some more holes. You gave a huge roar when that putt went in on 18. What did you say? I said ‘Come on, Aussie’. It was a natural reaction. That’s from back in my cricket days probably. I don’t know if Steve appreciated me yelling that straight towards him, but whatever. Maybe that’s one time he won’t mind hearing that!
You had a putt for a play-off at Lytham last year that didn’t go in. How did you approach the two putts that went in on 18 and 10? Well, on 18, I reminded myself of the one Mark O’Meara holed a few years back to win. That might have been a bit longer, but that’s the one guys hole and I’ve seen the read. I just told myself to go with my instinct; just put it out there and hit it. Show everyone how much you want it. This is the one. But the putt on 10, I could hardly see the green in the darkness. I was really struggling to read it, so I gave Steve the call over. I don’t get him to read too many putts, but I said, “Do you think it’s just more than a cup?” He said, “It’s at least two cups, it’s going to break more than you think.” I said, “I’m good with that”. He was my eyes on that putt. It started on line and managed to hang in and go in the left half. It was an amazing feeling. How psychologically important has it been for you to come out and win so soon after your Open disappointment? Well, everything I said after the Open is how I felt, and I meant it. It did give me more belief that I could win a major. It proved to me that I could. You had a lot of support out there from the crowds. Were you aware of it? I had incredible support all week. I felt there were a lot of Australians out there, but I had incredible support from everyone. I really felt they were on my side coming down the last couple of holes. They wanted me to do something, and I didn’t want to disappoint them, either. Going down the 10th fairway during the play-off, it was almost deafening, and the crowd wasn’t that close. It was a great feeling, and I felt like they were really pulling for me. That’s a nice feeling to have when you’re trying to hit some shots. Can you sum up the inspiration provided to you by Greg Norman? I think it’s fair to say that he inspired a nation of golfers. For anyone near to my age, older and younger, he was the best player in the world and was an icon in Australia. It was incredible to have him as a role model. He’s devoted so much time to myself and other young Australian players who came after him. He’s given me so much inspiration and belief. I drew on that a lot today.
Have you thought about what you might say to Greg when you talk to him? No, I haven’t had time to think of anything. But hopefully at some point I’ll get to sit down with him and have a chat and go through it all. I’m sure he’s really happy. A phone conversation isn’t going to do it for us. We are really close, and I’d love to share a beer with him over this one. You father has also had a big influence on your career. Can you expand on that? I think that’s really fair that you say that, because although Greg was an inspiration to me as a hero, my dad was the one who was always there with me right from the beginning. He’s a professional golfer himself, and my mum is a good golfer, too. But Dad coached me until I was 19 years old. It was great to see him down by the 10th green during the play-off. He said, ‘It doesn’t get any better than this’, which is true. It’s a moment that I’ll never forget, being able to hug him there at the moment of victory. As I think back on it, Dad was a great role model for me as a kid, and the way he balanced everything for me so that I just made my own way a golfer. He did an incredible job of just letting me be who I am and letting my game develop. He didn’t stand in my way at times and pushed me when I needed to be pushed. He’s always been there for me, through the good times and the bad. He was at The Open last year, and he was as positive as anyone. I’m sure he was gutted inside, so it was nice that I was able to reward him with this one, because the Masters and the Open are the only two events he comes to. Do you have any thoughts on becoming the first player to win a major using a broomhandle putter? We are all waiting to hear what’s going to happen. I don’t know if this win is going to impact on any decisions at all. You know my feeling on it all; that it was inevitable that big tournaments would be won with this equipment, because you’re looking at the best players in the world who are practice for thousands of hours, and are going to get good with whatever they were using. It’s inevitable.
Adam Scott
2013 MASTERS速 CHAMPION STRIDING TO SUCCESS IN
FJ Sport
FJ StaSof速
Style #53255
速
footjoy.co.uk
46 /
News in Brief HURRAH FOR HARRY Meon Valley’s Harry Ellis won the Hampshire Junior Championship after overcoming Jack Singh Brar in a three-hole play-off. The two players tied on a two-under par score of 140 for the 36-hole tournament, which was played at Corhampton on April 8. Ryan Harmer (Freshwater Bay) finished third.
BELFRY JOINS DE VERE CLUB The Belfry has joined the De Vere Club, a pre-paid membership scheme that allows golfers to play at any of De Vere’s portfolio of 12 golf courses for £295 per year. For that price, members receive 100 points, which equates to four peak day rounds at The Belfry or 20 winter weekday games at Oulton Hall. The package also allows members to hold a handicap and play in competitions. Since the club was launched three years ago, it has attracted 13,000 members.
April 2013 / Issue 220
BACKLEY BACKS GET INTO GOLF CAMPAIGN A major campaign designed to get people all over England playing golf for the first time is currently under way. Comprising a series of regional golf weeks featuring free taster sessions, roadshows, open days and low-cost coaching, the campaign is being run by the England Golf Partnership, and takes place throughout April and May. The campaign started with Cornwall Golf Week, which ran from April 6-14, and is followed by counties all over England. East Region Golf Week, involving Norfolk, Suffolk, Beds, Cambs, Herts, Essex and Middlesex, takes place from April 22-28, while South East Region Golf Week, involving Berks, Bucks, Oxon, Kent, Sussex, Hants and Surrey, runs from May 27 to June 2. Keen golfer and former Olympian Steve Backley is ambassador for Get into
Steve Backley
Golf, and has said that the combination of golf’s return to the Olympics in 2016 and this campaign can help the sport reach out to a new generation of players. “Making golf accessible and for youngsters to be able reach out and touch the sport is imperative to the future of the game,” he said. “If you are sociable, enjoy competition and the open air, then it’s a no-brainer.” The former javelin world record holder, who is a member at the London Golf Club in Kent, and plays off six, said he became hooked
on golf as soon as he tried it. “I was in Los Angeles with my training partner Mick Hill. He took me to the Malibu club and it was heaven. I was hooked from day one. We played there and then I came down to earth with a bump when I came home and played on my local municipal in February. But I still enjoyed it. We are all failing golfers – so don’t be intimidated by it. Tee it up, give it a rip, and have some friendly banter while you go and find it!” For more details about Golf Week events in your area visit www.getintogolf.org.
HERTS GOLF WEEK The first Hertfordshire Golf Week tees off this month as part of the national drive to inspire more people to play the game. The week, which runs from April 22-28, sees clubs and driving ranges across the county offering free taster sessions for beginners of all ages. Chesfield Downs will be offering free taster sessions on April 22. For more details visit www.getintogolf.org.
PRE-PAY AT PANSHANGER Panshanger Golf Complex in Hertfordshire has introduced a new credit-based green fee system for casual golfers. Users are able to pre-pay for credits, which can be redeemed for rounds at the 18-hole course, which is based near Welwyn Garden City. Credit packages start from £85 for 30 rounds, which can used seven days a week.
NEW PGA CAPTAIN PGA Professional Neil Selwyn-Smith has succeeded Eddie Bullock to the role of PGA Captain. The 67-yearold Birmingham-born professional has enjoyed a 50-year career in the golf industry. He is currently a PGA Tutor and also lectures on the Applied Golf Management Studies degree at the University of Birmingham. He is also secretary of the Warwickshire PGA.
Adam Scott with Virgin crew
Pick a pro to win a Swingers’ prize! Flying Club Swingers, Virgin Atlantic’s innovative loyalty golf programme, is already proving that its tenth anniversary season is not just about playing good golf and winning a place in the Gleneagles Final. During the season, members get the opportunity to predict the winner of nine of the biggest tournaments on the US and European PGA Tours, including all four majors. They can follow which players are proving the most popular amongst other members and change their votes right up until the start each tournament, so tactics definitely come into play. Only two months into the season, and three members have already walked away with superb prizes from sponsors Serengeti and Bushnell for their predictions, and there are still six more tournaments to predict. First to win was European Swinger Keith Parker, who predicted Hunter Mahan for the WWGC Accenture Match Play Championship. Of course, Hunter finished runner-up to Matt Kuchar, but as no one had predicted Kuchar for the win, the prize was taken by Keith. Speaking after his win, Keith said: “I took a chance on Hunter Mahan because he seems to be an early season player. He won this tournament last year and obviously likes
matchplay. You only have to look at weekly scores to see that even the world’s best players don’t knock it low every day. So in 18 holes of match play, and early in the season, it is quite possible for the top-ranked players to under perform. It only takes one poor round in this format and you’re on your way home.” Not surprisingly, there were a few members who predicted Tiger Woods to win the Cadillac Championship at Doral last month, and so a draw was held to decide the winner. First out of the hat was American Swinger John Moran. Another lucky Swinger will be celebrating following the US Masters, and next up is The Players Championship at Sawgrass. Backing your hunches with the Flying Club Swingers is the safest way to bet. There’s no charge to take part, and if you win you might win the prize outright if you’ve chosen an outsider – or if you’ve chosen a favourite, you’ll be entered into a draw for the prize. Register now at www.flyingclubgolfleague. com and make your predictions for The Players Championship. Before registering you will be asked to join as a Flying Club member, which is free of charge. As media partner, Golf News will be featuring monthly updates on Flying Club Swingers.
Juniors on ‘right track’ with new partnership A sponsorship deal between the Mike Yorke Golf Academy and a Sussex-based recruitment firm is set to grow junior golf at the grass roots level across the regions of Sussex and Surrey. The endorsement will see Horsham-based Right Track Recruitment invest £7,500 over three years into the academy operation which already delivers an network of breakfast, lunch and after-school classes to over 20 schools across the region. The new partnership will mean the academy can now access to schools during normal school hours, while also supporting a range of community events. Mike Yorke, Director of the MYGA, said: “The commitment that Right Track Recruitment has shown is tremendously exciting, and will allow us to put in place sustainable coaching programmes within many local schools and our centres. Through their funding we can now start to access far more children than ever before, while building stronger pathways back from school to club in the form of fullyfunded coaching back at our clubs. In my experience it is this pathway back
Mike Yorke & Ashley Alinia
to the club that is so important and leads to greater participation.” Ashley Alinia, director of Right Track Recruitment, said: “I am thrilled to be able to support Mike and his team over the next three years, and hopefully many more to come. Golf is widely recognised as a game that represents a healthy, active lifestyle, while promoting so many positive life skills, and this is very much what Right Track Recruitment stands for. The chance to offer the game to young people in our community is tremendously exciting, and I know the benefits first hand both as a parent and as a keen golfer myself.” The Mike Yorke Golf Academy operates at three local clubs in the region, comprising Horne Park in Godstone, Horsham Golf & Fitness, and Foxbridge near Billingshurst.
YGT backs Four Nations Challenge The fortunes of the Four Nations Golf Challenge, which has captured the imagination of the golfing public since being launched, are set to rise further following the signing of a new sponsorship partnership. The event’s organiser, Golf Plus Direct, has secured a deal for golf holiday business Your Golf Travel to be the competition’s new title sponsor for 2013/14 as they look to build on their success of the first two years. The Four Nations Golf Challenge offers club members the chance to experience the thrill of
representing their country – England, Scotland, Wales or Ireland – in a Ryder Cup-style tournament. The tournament is for pairs, with each country being represented by six pairs. Regional qualifying events begin in July, with the grand final taking place in May next year. Pairs will have to win a minimum of four knockout matches to make it through the final. The closing date for entries is June 23, with entry to the qualifying bracket set at £50 a pair. For more information visit www. fournationsgolfchallenge. co.uk.
Qualifiers for The Four Nations Challenge Final begin in July
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 47
IAN RICHARDS
Casey looks to revive career in Europe
Comedian & After Dinner Speaker Specialising in Golf Dinners, Corporate Golf Days, Hosting Charity Golf Events Past Captain of The Comedians Golfing Society
30 years professional experience, totally reliable with an act tailored to suit any audience.
BOOK DIRECT 01582 662736 07711 668548 MOBILE ian@ianrichards.co.uk E MAIL WEBSITE www.ianrichards.co.uk
A
SLICE OF GOLFING HISTORY The old: Try the course that has tested 4 Open Champions.
Former Ryder Cup star Paul Casey is set to become a regular face on the European Tour after losing his PGA Tour card at the end of last season. The 35-year-old, who has devoted most of his schedule in America in recent years, suffered a serious dip in form following a snowboarding injury in 2012, and now languishes at 143rd in the world rankings. After losing his playing rights on the PGA Tour, Casey is now looking to revive his fortunes with a return to the European Tour, although he has no plans move back to England. The star of the 2006 Ryder Cup was absent from this month’s US Masters, and is going to have to work his way back up the rankings if he is to
feature in any of the season’s remaining three majors. The last of his 11 professional victories came at the Volvo Champions tournament in Bahrain in 2010. “My game has gone through a bit of a rough patch, and injuries have certainly knocked my confidence,” Casey told the BBC last month. “But I feel really happy about where I sit right now. The past year or so has been a learning curve, but I am really enjoying my golf now. The light bulb has really gone on about how I always played my best golf, and I think I was unaware of that. I think I was freewheeling for such a long time, I have had to learn and understand how I play golf.” As one of the game’s most naturally-gifted players, Casey says that he has been unable
to practise his way out of his slump or reach out for quick fixes. “I’ve gone through a period of trying to figure it out scientifically and I’ve realised that’s not me. That’s not the way I do it. I’m someone who is more artistic, who goes out there and just plays. I’m one of those players who can react to things, and be creative. “I’ve stood there for quite a while now trying to be correct, trying to set up correct, trying to make a perfect golf swing, and getting results that are less than satisfactory. It’s amazing how you can become so blinded and not realise that you are getting in your own way.” Despite his dip in form, Casey remains a big draw among golf fans and
Bearwood gets better Bearwood Lakes Golf Club in Berkshire has undergone significant improvements during the winter months to prepare for a redesigned course in the 2013 season. Only 16 years old, Bearwood Lakes began a multi-million pound improvement programme at the end of 2011. With three new water hazards and many scenic additions, Bearwood Lakes is shaping into a fantastic challenge. Taking advantage of the unseasonable autumn weather, the club installed floodlights providing for around-the-clock construction on the course. In addition to a new pond at the 10th hole, railway sleepers were also installed along one of the course’s
new water hazards. At the 12th hole, the club removed and recycled pine trees behind the green to open up the area, allowing air to flow around the green. Workers are also installing
a new koi pond adjacent to the clubhouse. Replacing the two silver birch trees that blocked the panoramic view from the building, the new pond offers a scenic view and a feature waterfall.
tournament promoters, and will have no problem in gaining invitations to play in tournaments in Europe. He has also played in three PGA Tour events on invitations this year, which have resulted in two missed cuts and a tied 77th in the Puerto Rico Open. Speaking about his chances of re-igniting his career in Europe, Casey, who will be back to challenge for the BMW PGA Championship that he won in 2009, added: “Having a lot of the top-ranked European players based in the US, and not playing full-time in Europe, certainly opens the door to playing in Europe, but there are lots of stars and lots of great young players there. My focus isn’t on taking that spotlight, it is just on winning tournaments.”
AZR FIT LS R Y A W CALLA X HOT MODE E& ’S, EXTREM OCK & DEMO ’S IN ST CK & DEMO O OLD ST OST!!!!!! T A C
Many Society packages available: Example: The Braid Tea/Coffee & Full English Breakfast 18 holes of Golf £31.50. Many special offers such as the above on Mondays: Just £16.50.
With so many newer golf courses of a similar style why not try a golf course with 125 years of history and 18 very unique and testing holes for your next golfing occasion?
The new: the course has been lengthened but retains many classic features.
Call us to ask about our many packages for Golf Societies and visitors including weekends and add some unique ‘Heritage’ to your golf day. Some categories of Golf Membership are open including the 3-month ‘Pathway - please call for details. Mention ’Heritage Ad ’ when you book and get a free 2-ball voucher 01372 741867
Strike it Rite! ®
EPSOM
GOLF CLUB www.epsomgolfclub.co.uk
DEM PING G25 in O CENTR E st Titleis ock & d e t 913 m & dem in stock o’s a o avai lable
CUSTOM FITTING CENTRE FOR GOLFSMITH, GOLFWORKS, CALLAWAY, SNAKE EYES, PING, MALTBY, ACER & POWER PLAY.
COMPONENT CLUB MAKING AT REALISTIC PRICES !
Mens, ladies and juniors left and right handed made to measure or ex stock RE-GRIPPING WHILE-U-WAIT!
PING, CALLAWAY, YONEX, GOLFPRIDE, LAMKIN, AVON, TOUR MATCH – STOCKED – FROM £3.00 NEW SHAFTS FITTED IN 24 HOURS ! FROM £12
Honest and unbiased expert advice call now on:
01689 890077
The new pond at the 10th hole
C.T. Golf, 1 Stanley Way, St. Mary’s Cray, Orpington, Kent BR5 2HE website: www.ctgolf.co.uk email: enquiries@ctgolf.co.uk
48 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
Watson limits his captain’s picks
Tiger’s on top of the world Tiger Woods reclaimed his world No.1 spot for the first time in 125 weeks following his victory in the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill. Woods posted a final round 70 at the storm-delayed tournament to beat Justin Rose by two shots and Rickie Fowler by five. In bagging a recordequalling eighth win at Bay Hill, and his third win of the season, Woods deposed Rory McIlroy as the world’s topranked player for the first time since October 2010.
In a week of extraordinary golf, the 14-time major winner made 19 of 28 putts from between seven and 20 feet and finished at 13-under par. “I have turned some of the weaknesses that I had last year into strengths,” Woods said. “At the beginning of the year I was excited because my short game came around, I thought my swing was getting better, my short irons got better, and lo and behold, I’ve won a few tournaments this year.” When asked if he would have to win one of the majors finally to appease any doubters, Woods was more
typically forthright. “It’s up to them. I’m very pleased with the way I’m playing,” he said. Woods spent a record 623 weeks at No.1 between 2005 and 2010, but everything changed in November 2009 when he crashed his Cadillac into a fire hydrant in the Florida gated village where he lived with his then wife Elin and two children. Such was Woods’s dominance that it still took the best part of a year for any of his rivals to overtake him, with Lee Westwood finally taking the No.1 spot in October 2010.
Woods admitted his battle to re-establish himself among the world’s elite had been a tough journey. “It was a byproduct of hard work, patience and getting back to playing golf tournaments,” he said.
US Ryder Cup captain Tom Watson has changed the qualification rules for next year’s Ryder Cup by reducing his number of captain’s picks from four to three players. Watson will make his choices next September, prior to the 40th Ryder Cup, which begins at Gleneagles on
September 26. The United States points system, which began on April 14, will determine the top nine players. “Giving our players one more opportunity to earn a spot on merit is the right thing to do,” said Watson. “I will use all possible resources in choosing these three captain’s choices to complete the best possible team in order to win the Cup back for the United States.”
Five minutes with…
Cheyenne Woods Tiger Woods’s niece talks about her first year on Tour and growing up in her uncle’s shadow When did you start playing golf? I started playing when I was around five. I’m now 22. I got started in my grandfather’s garage. He gave me an old club and I started swinging, and from then he guided me through junior golf. When you say ‘grandfather’, you mean Tiger Woods’s father, don’t you? Yes. My father is Tiger’s half-brother. They have the same father, but different mothers, so Earl was my grandfather. How do you cope with the pressure of having the Woods name? It’s not that difficult for me, as I’ve grown up with it and always had the media attention. But there is added expectation as a professional, so I’m still trying to adjust to that. But overall I’m pretty used to the attention that the Woods’ name brings. What is your relationship with Tiger like? I see him a few times a year. He keeps up with what I’m doing and how I’m playing. He’s always someone I can go to for advice so it’s definitely a good relationship there and I’m thankful to have that. What kind of advice has he offered you? The only thing he has ever said to me was that he’s proud of how far I’ve come in my career. What expectations do you have for your first full season as a pro? I’ve played in a few European Tour events in Australia, but I’ll be playing on the LPGA Tour for the majority of the year, and I just hope to use it as an experience and really grow my game. My goal is to play Q School at the end of the year and hopefully earn my tour card. What is your proudest achievement so far? I would say either my junior year in college, when I won the ACC Championship, or last summer when I qualified for the US Women’s Open. What’s your lowest ever round? A 65 at Forsyth Country Club in North Carolina.
High performance 460cc full pear-shaped driver with exceptional forgiveness and control.
High performance 445cc classic pear-shaped driver with forgiveness and Tour-inspired workability.
Who is your favourite female golfer? Annika Sorenstam. What’s in your bag? Putter to driver all Nike and ball, glove, hat, shirt. I always have a bag of beef jerky, snacks, my phone and that’s about it! GolfNews_Titleist913_DPS.indd 1
07/11/2012 10:5
52
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 49
LEWIS IS THE LEADING LADY The LPGA Tour has a new number one after America’s Stacy Lewis won the LPGA Founders Cup. A final round 64, which included nine birdies, catapulted Lewis to a second consecutive win and saw her overtake Yani Tseng at the top of the Rolex World Rankings after a 109-week reign at the top. Lewis’s rapid rise was helped by six wins in the last 12 months, and she becomes only the seventh player to hold the top spot since the Rolex rankings were first introduced. In addition to Tseng, the previous holders were Annika Sorenstam, Lorena Ochoa, Jiyai Shin, Ai Miyazato
and Cristie Kerr. Lewis admitted to being surprised at the speed of her elevation to the top. “It has been my goal since the middle of last year, but I really didn’t think it
would be possible to do it this quickly,” she said. “I’m having a blast on the golf course, and to be No.1 in the world, it’s what everybody is working for, and to be that person is amazing.”
It’s also a feather in the cap of Lewis’s equipment sponsor, Mizuno, which has supported her since her amateur days. David Matthews, the company’s European marketing manager, said: “Stacy has been with Mizuno since the day she turned pro, which makes this achievement so much more satisfying. Mizuno’s approach is to work with players over the longer term. We think it says a lot more about our equipment than if we were to buy in players after they become successful. It’s an approach which has worked for us with Luke Donald, and now with Stacy.”
INTRODUCING THE NEW TITLEIST 913 DRIVERS. To get the most out of your game, you need to get the most out of your equipment. The new Titleist 913 drivers, with innovations to the face insert, rear weight and lower CG location, deliver more speed and more distance. Titleist 913 drivers also provide more performance and forgiveness, with uncompromising looks, sound and feel. And our patented, industry-leading SureFit™ Tour hosel technology allows loft and lie to be adjusted independently to provide all serious golfers with the most precise fit for their game. To learn more, visit titleist.co.uk and see how far Titleist driver technology can take your game.
Ben Crane is one of the slowest players on Tour
Tour to examine pace of play The pace of play, or rather, the lack of it, is to be the subject of a year-long study on this year’s PGA Tour. The study will focus on the overall pace of play in golf, not just among professionals, and coincides with a USGA initiative that was announced earlier this year. Tyler Dennis, the PGA Tour’s vice president of competition, will oversee the study, which will also examine the policy on fines and penalty strokes, as well as the effect pace of play has on the game at college and amateur level. The Tour’s pace of play policy, which began in the 1990s and was last overhauled in 2008, will be studied through the use of ShotLink, the data-driven programme that tracks Tour players during rounds to provide a snapshot of a particular player’s pace, as well as other indicators. The Tour policy is based on timings, both individually and in groups, and is cumulative. For example, a second ‘bad time’, which occurs when a player takes more than the allotted time (40 to 60 seconds) to play a shot when they have been placed on the clock, in a single season, results in a $5,000 fine. Two ‘bad times’ in a single round result in a stroke penalty – but the Tour has not issued a stroke penalty for a pace-of-play violation in nearly two decades. “If you ask a player, pace of play is always an issue,” said Paul Goydos, one of four player directors on the Policy Board. “I don’t know there is a lot they can do. It’s not specifically a Tour problem, but an overall problem that is hurting the growth of the game.”
Car crash leaves Creamer in pain
High-speed, forged face insert provides more speed over a larger area of the face.
Rear weight and improved CG location provide optimum launch with reduced spin for longer distance.
Industry-leading SureFit Tour hosel technology is like having a “Tour Van in a hosel.” It delivers independent loft and lie adjustment for the most precise fit available.
Join Team Titleist at titleist.co.uk
GolfNews_Titleist913_DPS.indd 2
07/11/2012 10:54
Former US Open winner Paula Creamer sustained minor injuries in a car accident in Thailand last month, when she was involved in a five-car pile-up on their way to Bangkok airport after the Honda LPGA Thailand event. Creamer’s caddy and Japanese player Ai Miyazato were also was in the car, while Suzann Pettersen and her mother were in a separate car that narrowly missed the accident. Creamer, who was sitting in the front seat, sustained injuries to her neck and shoulder. She and Miyazato visited a hospital in Singapore after their flight landed. Creamer was able to play in the follow week’s tournament, the HSBC Champions, where she finished third, but has said that she feels scared every time to gets into a car, and is still feeling sore. “My shoulder still hurts on cold mornings, and my neck is not 100 per cent, but it’s not affecting my game,” Creamer said. “However, I’m a nightmare in the car now. I have to drive or I have to be in the back seat where I can’t see. It’s getting better, but still I get a lot of anxiety before I even get into the car. I have to just sit there and I put my music on and I just close my eyes.”
50 /
News in Brief THE GEAR EFFECT What was in the bags of last month’s winners THOMAS AITKEN Avantha Masters DRIVER: Cleveland Classic 290 (7.5°) FAIRWAY: Nike SQ 3-wood (15°) IRONS: Callaway X-Forged (2), Nike VR Pro (3-9) WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design (48°, 54°, 60°) PUTTER: TaylorMade Ghost DA-62 BALL: Titleist Pro V1x KIRADECH APHIBARNRAT Malaysian Open
April 2013 / Issue 220
Mickelson puts ‘Phrankenwood’ into play In a bid to keep his golf ball in play, and give him a few more alternative shots from the tee and the fairway, Phil Mickelson has put a new wood into play, the likes of which has never been seen before. The World No.9’s equipment sponsor, Callaway Golf, created a prototype club, which it called the Phrankenwood, which is essentially a lower-lofted fairway wood from the
DRIVER: Titleist 913D3 (7.5°) FAIRWAY: Callaway RAZR Fit 3 (15°) IRONS: Titleist CB (4-PW) WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM4 (52°, 60°) PUTTER: Odyssey WhiteHot XG #7 BALL: Titleist Pro V1x
DRIVER: Nike VR Tour (8.5°) FAIRWAY: Nike VR Pro 3 (15°), Nike VR_S Covert 5 (19°) IRONS: Nike VR Pro Blades (3-PW) WEDGES: Nike VR Pro (56°, 60°) PUTTER: Nike Method 001 BALL: Nike One Tour D MARCEL SIEM Trophée Hassan II, Morocco
DA POINTS Shell Houston Open DRIVER: TaylorMade R11S 9° FAIRWAY: TaylorMade Burner (13°) HYBRIDS: TaylorMade R11 Rescue (18°) IRONS: Ping i5 (4-PW) WEDGES: Ping Tour (52°, 58°) PUTTER: Ping Anser BALL: Titleist Pro V1x INBEE PARK Kraft Nabisco Championship DRIVER: Srixon XXIO7 FAIRWAY: TaylorMade RBZ (14.5) HYBRIDS: TaylorMade Rescue 11 (16), TaylorMade Rescue TP FCT (22) IRONS: Srixon XXIO Forged (5-9) WEDGES: Srixon XXIO Forged (PW) Cleveland TA 588 TZG (47, 51, 57) PUTTER: Odyssey White Ice Sabertooth BALL: Srixon Z-Star MARTIN LAIRD Valero Texas Open DRIVER: TaylorMade RBZ Stage 2 Tour (9) FAIRWAY: TaylorMade RBZ Stage 2 Tour HL (16.5), TaylorMade R9 (19) IRONS: TaylorMade TP 3-4, TaylorMade TP MC (5-PW) WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM4 ((54, 56) PUTTER: TaylorMade Ghost Tour DA-12 BALL: TaylorMade Lethal
company’s new X Hot range, with some significant design tweaks. The prototype club has a head volume of just 250cc, but has a loft of 8.5 degrees (the same loft as Mickelson’s standard 460cc driver). Like other X Hot fairway woods, the Phrankenwood has a
stainless steel construction with a Speed Frame Face Cup, and an ultra-thin cast stainless steel body. The club allows Mickelson to hit the ball as far as his driver, but with a flatter ball flight, greater control of the leftto-right shot shape, and a much lower spin rate. Speaking after a practice
the same requirements as Mickelson’s prototype. The face is 10% taller than the standard X Hot 3-wood, which helps to keep spin rates down for a penetrating ball flight and longer distance, while still maintaining workability. Featuring the same forged speed frame face as the X Hot, the 3Deep features a Warbird-style sole, which makes it ideal for using off the deck, as well as from the tee. It is available in 13- and 14.5-degree models, and comes with a lightweight Project X Velocity shaft as standard. It will cost £189.
Ryder Cup points and Major championships are on the line, I need to be able to trust the numbers that my laser gives me when I’m making my preparations for tournaments. There’s no doubt in my mind that Nikon produces the most accurate distance measuring device available today.” Unlike most other
rangefinders, Nikon’s Coolshot AS, which costs £399, takes into account the height of the target, so that it takes the guesswork out of playing shots from raised tees, or to elevated greens, and vice versa. The digital display provides both the actual horizontal and slopeadjusted distances within a range of 10 to 600 yards.
POULTER ON TARGET WITH NIKON DEAL
TIGER WOODS Arnold Palmer Invitational
DRIVER: TaylorMade RBZ Tour (8°) FAIRWAY: TaylorMade RBZ Tour (13°) IRONS: Mizuno MP-69 (3-PW) WEDGES: Mizuno MP T-11 (50°, 54°) Titleist Vokey SM4 (58°) PUTTER: Odyssey Tank BALL: Titleist Pro V1x
Mickelson used the Phrankenwood at the Masters
round at this month’s Masters Tournament at Augusta, Mickelson said: “It’s a driver, but it just looks like a 3-wood, because drivers are so big now. But this one is smaller, because it’s an enhanced 3-wood. If you watch, you’ll see a lot of the shots that I hit off the tee have a lot more scoot on them. The ball comes off fast, with low spin, so it’s running, which is exactly what I wanted.” While the Phrankenwood won’t be sold to the public, Callaway is launching a stronger-lofted fairway wood called the 3Deep, which essentially meets
Ian Poulter and his caddy Terry Mundy in action with the new Nikon Coolshot
Ryder Cup star Ian Poulter has signed a deal to become an ambassador for laser range finder brand Nikon. The 35-year-old world No.10, and his caddy, Terry Mundy, will be using the company’s new Coolshot AS Laser Rangefinder when making their weekly tournament preparations on and off the course until 2015. As part of the association,
Mundy will have the Nikon logo on his headwear. On signing the deal, Poulter said: “I’ve always made sure that everything I do in my preparations for any golf tournament is of the highest standard, and that mentality goes into any products that I use. Nikon’s laser rangefinders are the best around, and you won’t get a more accurate reading with any other laser. When
Lynx signs its first Tour pro Lynx Golf has signed its first tour professional under its new ownership, Ladies European Tour star Lydia Hall. The 25-year-old Welsh player earned her Tour card in 2007, and has progressed every year, with the highlight being her maiden win at the British Ladies Masters at The Buckinghamshire last year. As an amateur, she was a key member of the Welsh Junior team, progressing through the U21s to be a Silver Medalist in the European U21 team in 2004. Lynx’s chief executive Steve Elford is delighted with the brand’s new signing, who first played with Lynx equipment when she was starting at in the game aged eleven. “Lydia is, in the nicest possible way, a grafter,” he said. “She works enormously hard and sets her sights high, and we are very proud to have her as part of our team at Lynx. She’s already loving the Boom Boom 2 driver, and we will be working with her over the coming months to provide her with the best equipment to ensure she
Lydia Hall with her new Lynx kit
squeezes the most out of every shot.” Hall, who finished 16th on the LET’s money list in 2012, said: “I’m absolutely thrilled to be joining Lynx and playing their clubs on Tour this year. Not only is all the Lynx equipment of a fantastic quality, I love the fact that the company recognises the importance of the women’s Tour and is prepared to throw its support behind young British golfers.”
Lynx has four sets of woods and irons for women in its current range, including the new Elegance clubs, featuring white shafts and heads with sapphire-coloured insets in the irons; the Crystal clubs with holographic purple-headed woods and matching shafts; and the high-performing Tigress range. There are also women’s versions of the Boom Boom 2 driver, fairway woods and rescue clubs.
Bubba’s no fool with hover buggy! PGA Tour player Bubba Watson is rather unconventional at the best of times, but the former Masters champion left his fans and a good number of golfers around the world dumbstruck earlier this month, when he appeared on a video clip on YouTube which showed him enjoying a round of golf in a buggy that had been converted into a hovercraft. While the clip went viral in a matter of hours, and drew three million hits and plenty of jealous responses from viewers, it soon became clear that although the hover buggy was real, it was made as part of an April Fool’s PR stunt by eyewear and clothing brand Oakley, which sponsors the 2012 Masters champion. “It takes you everywhere you want to go, through sand traps, through waters, shortcuts, into the woods, out of the woods,” Watson said of his upgrade from the
Bubba on board the buggy
standard four-wheeled cart. Nathan Strange, Oakley’s head of global marketing for golf, said: “We brainstormed a bunch of ideas, and we ended up with creating the world’s first golf cart hovercraft. Bubba was out of his mind, as this is the kind of stuff he loves. He was like a kid getting his first toy.” The buggy was built by Neoteric Hovercraft in Indiana, which modified one of its $20,000 base models for duty on the links. After the video went up, Neoteric got a call from a man in Australia who wanted to buy 100 of them, while the company has received over 500 phone calls relating to the hover buggy, although as yet, there are no plans to make them available for the public to buy.
PACHESHAM GOLF CENTRE
s r e t s a M e h t l l a o d t Wha ? n o m m o c n i e v a h s n o i p m a h
c
They all play custom fitted clubs.
We cant make you a masters champion, but we can help you master your game! Golf equipment has changed beyond all recognition over the last few years, so has the way we buy our golf clubs. With all the different types of shafts and heads on the market today, just taking a few demo clubs out to try will not give you the answer you are looking for! To ensure you don’t make a costly mistake we recommend you get custom fitted for you next club or set of irons, this is the only way to guarantee that you will get the club that will improve your game.
Using FlightScope technology we have helped hundreds of golfers make the right choice in equipment, they have all seen their ball striking and game improve. Flightscope is only a tool, the real skill in custom fitting is the person doing the fitting, all our custom fitters at Pachesham are PGA professionals who are all passionate about the game of golf and custom fitting, receiving up to date training from all the companies we are in partnership with to ensure you receive the best fitting possible.
Bring this voucher and
get 50% off your fitting
Valid until 19th May 2013
We offer the best service in custom club fitting and best prices. To see why so many golfers feel that Pachesham Custom Fit Centre is the best in the South East please give us a call: 01372 843453
We take pride in the level of service we deliver, so if you are looking for a driver to hit it straighter and further down the fairway, or that set of irons to help you hit more greens, don’t get it wrong, a fitting usually costs about 5-10% of the total value of your purchase, hundreds of satisfied customers feel this was a price well worth paying to get it right!
Once you decided to make a purchase we will price match the top three leading internet companies.
For further information and to book your fitting please contact Andrea Timms on andreatimms@pacheshamgolf.co.uk or 01372 843453 PACHESHAM GOLF CENTRE OAKLAWN ROAD LEATHERHEAD, SURREY KT22 OBP
ADVERTISING PROMOTION
52 /
t r a p g n i k a t e h t t o n It’s
g n i n n i w e h It’s t year after year after year after year
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
*SPORTS MARKETING SURVEYS INC & GOLF DATATECH RETAIL AUDITS
At Srixon, we’re all about the winning. So much so that winning golfers have made us the UK’s top-selling 2-piece ball brand for the last six years in a row*. If the ball you’re currently using isn’t a Srixon, then quite simply you’ve yet to find the winning choice for you. Go to www.srixon.co.uk today to find the right ball for your game!
_030NN_CRE00379 2 Piece Half Page Ad 128.5x360 AW.indd 1
April 2013 / Issue 220
SAVE SHOTS FROM THE SAND
WITH SOREN
1 Soren Kjeldsen has been a mainstay on the European Tour for over a decade, notching up four wins over that period, and close to €10 million in prize money. The 37-year-old Dane’s most recent wins were the prestigious Volvo Masters in 2008 and the Open de Andalucia in 2009. A feature of his performances on tour over the years has been his consistent bunker play, so here he shares his two top tips for achieving success from the sand.
TIP 1: THE ONE-HANDED DRILL One of the easiest ways to improve your bunker play is to practise hitting shots with one hand. I do this drill all the time, as it really helps to achieve consistent ball striking. By using only your right hand, if you get the leading edge going into the sand, you’ll create zero power, and you won’t get the ball out of the bunker. This will help to highlight any faults in your technique. To create the power you need with one hand, you have to release the club through the ball, using the bounce of the wedge. When you start doing this effectively, your levels of consistency from bunkers will increase.
“You cannot become a great golfer without a great short game,” says Soren. “Even the best player’s long game comes and goes, but a sound short game you can have most of the time. I need to shoot decent scores when my long game feels off, therefore my short game has top priority and I spend 70% of my practice time working on it – and that includes a lot of time working in bunkers.” 1/4/13 4:27 PM
ADVERTISING PROMOTION
April 2013 / Issue 220
Cleveland Golf and Srixon staff player Soren Kjeldsen, one of finest short game exponents on the European Tour, offers some useful tips on how to get out of bunkers with the minimum of fuss
THE NEW FACE OF SPIN • • •
Cleveland Golf, the leaders in wedge innovation, introduce the new 588 RTX Rotex Wedges: 16% larger grooves for increased contact and friction at impact Enhanced laser-milling for improved durability and surface roughness Unique directionally-optimized Rotex face pattern for maximum spin
588 RTX Blade
TIP 2: LISTEN TO THE SOUND OF YOUR SOLE! Another great bunker practice drill I often do focuses on getting the right feel from your wedge when it hits the sand. This drill is really simple and doesn’t even require a ball. All you are doing here is practising getting the right feel from the bounce of your wedge when it interacts with the sand. The ‘bounce’ is the angle between the sole of the club and the ground, and this has an important role in how the club moves through the sand. By practising without hitting any balls, and just feeling the sole of the club hitting the sand and jumping out again, you’ll notice the club makes a distinctive sound. Once you have this sound locked into your memory, you can hit a few balls trying to repeat what you’ve just practised. Taking away the ball allows you to concentrate on the mechanics of playing from the bunker, rather than the execution of the shot itself. Practising this drill will embed the right sound into your mind and mean when you get out on the course you should find that you achieve more consistency in your ball striking and hopefully help you make more sand saves when you get into trouble.
/ 53
588 RTX CB Cavity Back
2 GET FIT FOR BOUNCE To use the bounce of your wedge effectively, you need to make sure you are using the right set up for your game. Cleveland Golf has produced the new series of 588 RTX wedges for 2013, which offer the most options for bounce and loft in the industry. Until June 30, golfers can save £25 on any new Cleveland wedge, thanks to its exclusive wedge trade-in promotion. By trading in old wedges, golfers can receive £25 off each new wedge, regardless of the make, model or age of the wedge traded in, potentially saving up to £75 of the cost of a new wedge set up.
To find out more about the bounce options available, and locate your nearest Cleveland custom-fitting centre, visit www.clevelandgolf588.co.uk
Trade in any old wedge for any brand new 588 Wedge and get
£25 off
*
A maximum of three wedges can be traded in saving you £75 off three new 588 Wedges
Offer closes 30/06/13 – for terms and conditions, go to www.clevelandgolf588.eu
*Available in participating stores only.
54 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
Honma Tour World irons RRP: £1,275 (5-PW) Contact: honma.co.uk High-end Japanese equipment brand Honma’s World Tour iron range features three sets, all of which can be custom-built by a local fitter or ordered as finished sets directly from the manufacturer. The TW717 irons come in three designs, each offering clean, classic lines that will be enjoyed by better players. The ‘M’ blade is for low handicappers, with a more forgiving ‘P’ cavity back and thicker top edge, and a ‘V’ model which sits somewhere in between. As with all Honma equipment, buyers can upgrade the specification to the brand’s 5-Star level, which involves gold plating.
Chervò Abissinia Polo RRP: £75 Contact: chervo.it The spring/summer collection from leading Italian golf and sports fashion brand Chervò includes the Comfort by Chervò range, which assures maximum freedom of movement. The apparel also features built-in UV protection technology, while the double-faced structure of the fabric promotes the faster drying of perspiration. Chervò’s Dry-Matic sportswear is created with micro-fibre textiles that have been treated to provide quick-drying properties, and ensure lasting freshness and protection against light showers. The Abissinia striped) polo is made from a nylon/elastane mix and is available in nine different colours, in sizes 36-48.
SHOP
Titleist Travel cover RRP: £140 Contact: titleist.co.uk The next time you travel abroad for a golf holiday don’t be tempted to sling your clubs in a stand bag and expect either the bag or the clubs to come out onto the carousel in one piece. Instead, invest in a padded travel cover, which will ensure that your holiday gets off to the best possible start. Titleist’s two-wheeler has room to carry a 9.5-inch golf bag (that’s the circumference of the top of the bag, not the length) and also features internal pockets for shoes and internal padded straps to protect the clubs when thrown by an EasyJet baggage handler. Made from durable woven polyester with vinyl panels around the bottom, the cover features two in-line skate wheels to help ease your way through the terminal and features Titleist embroidery on the side.
Crocs Golf Shoes RRP: £79-£119 Contact: crocs.com The Crocs range of brightly-coloured rubbery clogs are an iconic product in the world of footwear. Practical and comfortable, over 200 million pairs have been sold since the brand was launched in 2000. Naturally, the company has sought to broaden its market by introducing new ranges, the latest of which is a golf-inspired collection that has been designed with the help of Tiger Woods’s former coach, Hank Haney. According to Haney, the first lesson in golf is to be comfortable, so you can expect the range of five shoes to tick that particular box. From a technical standpoint, they offer a one-piece moulded sole and insole, which reduces weight and increases stability, while traction comes from a multi-cleat spikeless sole. With a mixture of leather and textile mesh uppers, they are also breathable and come with a one-year waterproof guarantee. Men can choose from the Karlson (£119.99), Tyne (£109.99), Preston (£79.99) or Drayden (£79.99) models, while women have the Bradyn (£79.99), which comes with interchangeable coloured leather kilties.
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 55
Mizuno Genem Elite RRP: £159 Contact: mizunoeurope.com Mizuno’s new premium golf shoe combines the feel of a fine grain leather upper with the powerful, stable swing base of Mizuno’s Infinity Wave plate and IG4 spikes. The Infinity Wave plate is borrowed from Mizuno’s renowned running technology, producing the stable, durable cushioning needed to avoid foot fatigue on long rounds. It has the added advantage of inbuilt lateral stability, creating a powerful platform, which is aided by an additional lateral rib structure and forefoot stabilisers. A new rounded heel support lifts and cradles the foot, while thicker forefoot padding reduces pressure to the areas most pressured through the swing. On sale in May, they are available in white in sizes 6-11, including half sizes.
Loudmouth Golf apparel RRP: £40-£75 Contact: loudmouthgolf.com Loudmouth Golf’s new Spring/Summer collection features eight new limited-edition patterns that are guaranteed to turn heads – and perhaps a few stomachs – on the fairways of the UK. Offering a range of argyle, tropical prints and variegated patterns, and made from a cotton/ spandex mix, the unique designs feature on a variety of garments, including trousers (£75), shorts (£55), skorts (£50) and mini-shorts £40), with names like Shagadelic Pink, Bubblegum and Cupcakes offering a good idea of the sort of colours you can expect. In addition to the stocked sizes, Loudmouth also offers a made-to-measure service, which allows golfers to customise the waist size and length for a perfect fit.
Golf Pride Niion grips RRP: £19.99 Contact: golfpride.com Grips have got a good deal funkier over the years, and Golf Pride, one of the most established grip brands in the game, has kept pace in this respect, while also delivering huigh performance. The new Niion line features five vibrant colour combinations (Blue/Neon Yellow, Bright Orange/White, Lime Green/White, White/Neon Green and Bright Yellow/Blue) all constructed from a firm, tacky rubber compound grip to deliver superb traction and control in all weathers. The grip features a hexagon pattern for increased stability and torsion control throughout the swing, which Golf Pride claims makes it one of the most responsive grips in its expansive range (see page 57).
Premiership Golf Accessories Contact: premier-licensing.com Premier Licensing, the leading supplier of licensed golf accessories in Europe, has launched a range of golfing accessories designed to enable football fans to show their colours on the golf course. The range includes golf bags (£89.99), towels, umbrellas (£24.95), ball markers (£4.99), headcovers and a variety of gift sets. The headcovers are available in driver (£16.99), fairway wood (£15.99) and hybrid (£14.99) sizes, and are currently available for Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester United, Liverpool, Newcastle, Celtic and Spurs.
TRIED &
TESTED Callaway X Hot driver Rating: RRP: £249 Contact: callawaygolf.com While Callaway’s tour staff will mostly be playing the new Xtreme driver, those of us who need all the help we can get to launch the ball out there might well prefer the X Hot driver, which is also a good deal more affordable. Part of a comprehensive reshuffle of the entire Callaway line-up for 2013, the X Hot range is aimed at golfers looking for out-and-out distance coupled with bags of forgiveness. The driving force, quite literally, behind the X Hot is a new titanium Speed Frame Face design that combines Callaway’s VFT and Hyperbolic technologies to create a face that is thinner around the perimeter and thicker in the centre. This expands the sweet spot and helps the club maintain ball speed on off-centre hits more effectively. In performance terms, this translates into a face that almost hugs the ball briefly before it explodes off as though it has been shot out of a cannon. There’s a real zip to shots off the centre, while those slightly off the sweet spot also fly long and straight. Available in two versions, the regular 460cc model features a longer, lighter shaft (46 inches and sub-60g) with built-in draw bias, while the Pro version features a more compact 435cc head with a shorter, heavier shaft. With the longer-shafted model, smooth swings are rewarded with some serious yardage gains, and the built-in progressive draw bias helps control fades and prevents them from becoming big slices. Both models feature threeway face angle adjustability, with the standard version able to be opened up by 2.5 degrees and closed to -1.5. The Pro’s three face angles are a half-degree more open than the standard version. The crown is matt silver with subtle graphics and a chevron alignment aid, which instills confidence at address, while more businesslike Pro version has no markings and will appeal to players who prefer a less fussy look. All in all, the X Hot is a welcome addition to the Callaway line-up and deserves to win back golfers who may have drifted away from the brand in recent years.
Power Of Golf Balance Ball RRP: £14.99 Contact: powerofgolf.co.uk Endorsed by tour coach Peter Cowen, the Balance Ball is one of a range of ingenious inflatable products from Power of Golf that are designed to get you swinging correctly and powerfully. Every good golf swing begins from the ground up, and the Power of Golf’s Balance Ball allows you to feel how the Tour Pros use leg action to create perfect balance and effortless power. If your golf swing feels more like powerless effort, then your leg action must be leaking power. By learning the feeling of creating a powerful base, you can begin to feel how coil and power created in the backswing delivers maximum club head speed to the ball. Tour Players spend hours in the gym to create an athletic base, and the Balance Ball is your short cut to that same power source. The inflatable ball sits between the knees, and with slight inward pressure creates a stable, grounded platform from which to move through the phases of the swing, while preventing the excessive lateral knee movements that release the coil in the torso. To see a demonstration video of the balance ball in action, visit www. powerofgolf.co.uk.
56 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
1. Callaway X Series Tri-Brid RRP: £149 Contact: callwaygolf.com 4.5lbs • 9.5-inch, 4-way top with integrated handle • 4 full-length dividers • padded double strap • 7 pockets • Foam hip pad • leg lock stand mechanism • rain hood • umbrella cord • Colours: black/green/silver, black/silver.
2. Mizuno Aerolite X
RRP: £140 Contact: nikegolfeurope.com 9.5-inch oval top • 14-way full-length divider system • double strap system • 11 pockets (8 zippered) • Matching rain hood • zip-off ball pocket • Colours: blackened blue, red/silver, grey/white/silver, sail/grey.
3
4. Cobra GT
RRP: £109 Contact: golf.mizunoeurope.com 4.5lbs • 8.5-inch, 8-way ‘divide and slide’ top • pre-curved padded dual shoulder strap • hip pad • rain hood • limited edition colours: bleeding heart, mad caddies, mosaic, security.
RRP: £119 Contact: cobragolf.co.uk 6.5lbs • 8.5-inch collar mesh top • 7 full-length club dividers • Pedal-activated stand mechanism • molded handle • 8 pockets • padded shoulder straps• umbrella strap • carabiner clip • rain hood • Colours: Grey, Navy, Black & White, Plaid.
4
STANDS THAT DELIVER
1
2
6
3. Nike Performance Hybrid
The very best carry bags
5
5. Cleveland CG Tour RRP: £140 Contact: clevelandgolf.com 5.6lbs • 10-inch, 5-way top • full-length club dividers • 10 pockets • molded hip pad • ergonomic grab handle • rubber foot pads • leg retainer straps • umbrella holder • rain hood • Colours: white/navy.
6. Ping Hoofer
8. Titleist Lightweight
RRP: £139 Contact: ping.com
RRP: £153 Contact: titleist.co.uk
5lbs • 5-way top •2 full length dividers • 8 pockets • adjustable sliding dual strap • reinforced bracket with leg stop • leg retention strap • rain hood • Colours: white/black, black, black/red, black/blue, red/charcoal, electric blue.
5.5lbs • oval top cuff with integrated handle • 14-way fulllength dividers • 7 pockets • hip pad • EZ-Fit padded dual strap system • automatic stand with rubber feet • Velcro leg lock strap • Colours: black, black/red/white.
7. TaylorMade PureLite RRP: £139 Contact: taylormadegolf.eu
7
5lbs • 9.5-inch, 5-way top with full-length dividers • 7 pockets • removable ball pocket • padded dual shoulder straps • Built-in legs with anti-split technology • Umbrella cord & towel loop • bottom handle • Colours: black, white/ black/red, white/black/orange.
8
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 57
PICK A GRIP Take your pick from Golf Pride’s range of new grips for 2013
Niion The Niion range features five colour combos, all of which are constructed from a firm, tacky rubber compound to deliver superb traction in all weathers. The grip also features a hexagon pattern that provides increased stability and torsion control throughout the swing.
Tour Wrap 2G A one-piece simulated wrap grip which features enhanced tackiness and a soft feel. It combines the look and feel of luxury leather with the durability and performance of high-tack rubber. It is available in black, red, dark blue and white.
They’re your first point of contact with your equipment, yet the last thing on most golfers’ minds. Golf News tells you everything you need to know about grips, and the signs to look out for when it’s time to get new ones
P I R G GET A E M A G R U ON YO
New Decade Multi Compound Whiteout An extension of the New Decade range of hbrid grips, the Whiteout comes in green, yellow and white, and is constructed from high performance rubber designed to provide responsiveness to the lower hand and brushed cotton cord for improved traction for the upper hand.
Tour Velvet BCT Cord The most widely used cord grip on Tour, the Tour Velvet comes standard with Brushed Cotton Technology, a tighter-weave cotton twill fibre that delivers great traction and allweather performance. Now available in a new, white material constructed with a black cotton fibre.
Z Grip Specifically designed to reduce twisting at impact, the Z Grip is the firmest cord grip Golf Pride has ever produced. It features a deep Z-shaped texture pattern that winds vertically around the grip to aid control and moisture management and to maximise responsiveness.
Players Wrap The Players putter grip combines style and touch with its smart look and innovative design. The arched-pistol shape pairs a smooth paddle front and a half wrap back in a simulated leather wrap, providing added comfort and touch on the greens. For more information about Golf Pride grips visit www.golfpride.com.
Why do I need to regrip my clubs? The grip is one of the most important components of a golf club and the only part of the club that you actually touch. Grips are made of materials that age and wear as a function of time and use. Ozone, heat, dirt and oils from your hands all age your grips and cause the natural degradation of the grip. The traction that a fresh grip provides lets you hold the club lightly, without the subconscious fear of losing the club during your swing., while a worn grip causes you to grasp the club tighter, causing arm tension that inhibits proper swing mechanics and leads to a loss of power and control. A fresh set of grips is an inexpensive and fast way to bring a noticeable change to your game. How often should I get my clubs regripped? As a rule of thumb, you should re-grip once every year or every 40 rounds. Regardless of how often you play, ozone, heat, dirt and oils are constantly at work breaking down the materials that make up your grips. Keep in mind that grips lose a significant amount of their original feel long before they become hard and slick. Because it happens slowly over time, most golfers fail to notice it. That’s important to remember, because just a tiny, imperceptible slip at contact will be magnified to many yards by the time the ball reaches its target. Many people find that getting in the routine of re-gripping every Spring, as the golf season officially begins is the easiest way to remember. How can I make grips last longer? Golf grips get a great deal of physical abuse. They are handled round after round, swing after swing – often season after season. They are exposed to ultraviolet light from the sun; intense heat in the boot of the car; ozone from the atmosphere; and dirt, oil and perspiration from human skin. In most cases they are seldom washed or cared for in any way. Grips are meant to last, but they are not made of steel. You can prolong the life of your grips with regular cleaning. Most grips can be cleaned with a mild detergent. For rubber grips (including cord) a soft abrasive pad or brush may be used. For non-buffed
grips, a washcloth should be used instead of an abrasive pad or brush. In either case, after scrubbing, the grip should be rinsed in warm water to remove all soap residue. The grip then may be air or towel dried. Can new grips really improve my game? By themselves, fresh grips can only allow you to approach your potential as a golfer. They can’t overcome a bad swing, or poor alignment, or any of the other faults that bedevil even the best golfers. But a survey of golfers showed that 66% of those who had clubs re-gripped showed an average drop of three to four strokes per round. How do I know the proper sized grip? Grip size is a critical element in club fitting and performance. While standard sized grips are adequate for the vast majority of golfers, many players can benefit from oversized or undersized grips. Conventional wisdom holds that a proper sized grip permits the fingers in a golfers top hand to barely touch the palm. Unfortunately this rule of thumb does not address many other grip and swing issues, and the only sure-fire way to learn proper grip size is to seek the advice of a PGA professional or a custom-fitting expert, who can make a recommendation based on your personal hand size, swing technique, and shot pattern In the past, golf grips came in only a few sizes. Any size not offered had to be achieved through build-up tape. Now, grips are made in a wide variety of sizes: junior, undersize, standard, midsize, and jumbo. How can i get an in-between size grip? Grip size can have a visible effect upon your shot pattern and shaping, so proper grip size is very important. Mixing grip core size with shaft size can customize grips, while they can also be built up by adding wraps of tape to the shaft – one wrap will increase grip size by 1/64th of an inch, two wraps 1/32, etc. How do I know the right grip for me? There is no one grip that is right for all golfers, and grip selection varies widely with individual preferences. Once you’ve narrowed your choices, check out the grip selection at your pro shop and seek the advice of a professional.
What’s the best grip for wet conditions? Cord grips have always been referred to as all-weather grips, and for good reason. For most golfers cord material that wicks moisture away from the grip surface provides the best possible grip in wet conditions, or when hands perspire excessively. It must be noted, however, that no grip is waterproof. Will lightweight grips help my game? New lightweight grips are designed as replacement grips for drivers and fairway woods that utilise light grips, shafts, and composite club heads as components. They can also take weight out of the grip and shaft portion of a standard weighted club, to help reduce static weight and retain swing weight. They can be very beneficial when using new lightweight shafts, and for golfers looking for a way to lower club balancepoint nearer the club head, and preserve or increase swing weight. Do putter grips matter? Putter grips are the most used and most overlooked piece of equipment in the bag. Because putter grips are used once, twice, and unfortunately sometimes three or four times per green, they deserve far more attention and care than they typically get. That’s why you need to select a putter size, shape, and material that perform best for you. And once you’ve made your selection, you need to clean the putter grip just as you do all other grips in the bag, to maintain that original tacky feel. How do I get my clubs regripped? There are several ways to have new grips put on your clubs. Your local golf retailer, oncourse shop or qualified club fitter can regrip your clubs. More than likely you’ll have your clubs back in a day or so – sometimes in only a few hours. Another way to re-grip your clubs that’s growing in popularity is to do it yourself. You can purchase a Golf Pride grip kit complete with easy to follow installation instructions at your local golf retailer or order one online. How much will it cost to regrip my clubs? Expect to pay anywhere from £50-£90 for your entire set of clubs, depending on the grip you choose.
58 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
Pack yourself off to Patshull! With petrol prices and travel costs breaking all records, it is not surprising that many holidaying golfers are now looking closer to home for their breaks and away days. Patshull Park Hotel, Golf & Country Club, which is set in glorious south Shropshire countryside, in the West Midlands, has long been a favourite for golf and leisure breaks, and its convenient location is just 10 minutes from Junction 3 of the M54, 20 minutes from Junction 10a of the M6, and only two hours from the M25, makes it easy to reach from all corners of the country. The beautifully mature
par 72 parkland course is an enjoyable challenge that will test the best, as it winds it way through majestic old oaks, elms and Lebanese cedars. Designed by John Jacobs, the layout is not long, but it’s relatively tight, especially on the heavily treelined holes around the turn. Elsewhere, elevation changes, and a few ponds, ditches and well-placed bunkers, ensure golfers have to keep their concentration at all times, while the true greens are a pleasure to putt on. After a round, players can relax in clubhouse before retiring to one of the hotel’s 49 well-appointed
Patshull Park Hotel, Golf & Country Club,
CORNISH CREAM
bedrooms, all of which tastefully furnished, with many commanding stunning views over the golf course or the lake, which are well worth upgrading to when making a booking. In addition to the golf course, there are numerous other health and fitness facilities, including a large indoor pool, Jacuzzi, steam rooms, saunas, solarium, beauty treatments and a wellequipped gym. Diners are spoilt for choice, with the Lakeside Restaurant offering panoramic views over the trout lake and serving imaginative dishes made from fresh local produce with an excellent choice of wines. Less formal meals are available throughout the day in Earl’s Brasserie, where guests can choose from a range of tasty snacks and bar meals. To book a golf break call 01902 700100 or visit www. patshull-park.co.uk.
exclusivegolfbreaks.com
2 NIGHTS B&B at St Mellion or Trevose 3 ROUNDS St Mellion, Perranporth & Trevose
ONLY £225 pp Dinner option: £20pp per night extra
ENGLISH RIVERA DEVON
HAMPSHIRE & SURREY CLASSICS
MID WALES
NORTH WALES
WOODHALL GOLF BREAKS
2 NIGHTS B&B at Toorak Hotel, Torquay 3 ROUNDS Churston, Torquay & Teignmouth
2 NIGHTS B&B at either: Marriott Portsmouth or Lythe Hill Hotel & Spa, Haslemere
2 NIGHTS B&B at The Metropole Hotel DAY 1 Cradoc G.C 18 holes DAY 2 Llandrindod Wells G.C 18 holes DAY 3 Builth Wells G.C 18 holes
2 NIGHTS B&B at The Royal Sportsman DAY 1 Porthmadog G.C 18 holes DAY 2 Nefyn & District G.C 18 holes DAY 3 Royal St Davids G.C 18 holes
2 NIGHTS B&B at Woodhall Spa Hotel 3 DAYS 1 x Hotchkin Course*
ONLY £199 pp
ONLY £225 pp
ONLY £249 pp
3 ROUNDS at any of these courses:
Hindhead, Stoneham, Hayling or Liphook
ONLY £199 pp
Dinner Option: £10pp per night extra
ONLY £249 pp
Weekend supplement: £10pp extra
Weekend supplement: £15pp extra
1 x Bracken Course* 1 x Seacroft GC
* Located at Woodhall
Weekend supplement: £17pp extra
To discuss your exclusive golf package call 01822 618181
We have over 15 years experience of organising golf breaks throughout the UK and Europe
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 59
Dorset hits the gold standard again! The Dorset Golf & Country Club has achieved its fourth consecutive 5-star Gold Award from Visit Britain in recognition of the high quality of services that it provides to guests. The popular Bere Regisbased resort, which offers 27 holes of golf, 12 luxury lodges, a hotel, and a wide range of leisure facilities, scooped the industry gong once again after being assessed for the quality of its accommodation, catering and customer service. The five-star award is only given to a handful of venues in the UK each year, and Dorset Golf & Country Club is the only five-star resort in the county. The resort has now become recognised as one of the must-visits in the South of England, attracting such guests as Welsh rugby star Justin Tipuric, and Kirsty Fletcher, winner of Mrs Galaxy 2013, who kindly presented the resort with its 5 Star Gold Award certificates during a recent visit. She said: “As always, we all had a fantastic time in the Dorchester Lodge, or ‘Lolly Lodge’ as we call it, and we can’t wait to return in October!” Speaking about the award,
The resort offers two superb parkland layouts
The lodges’ luxury interior
Marc Windust, the resort’s corporate manager, said: “To be acknowledged as a 5-star holiday destination again is a massive honour, but to achieve the highest marks possible and receive the Gold Award for the fourth year is very special. We all feel so proud, as so much hard work goes in to running the resort and we are all very dedicated to continue to achieve high standards.” In addition to the sport and leisure facilities on offer, the stars of the show are the 12 fairytale Scandinavian-style houses that are located in a wooded glade opposite the clubhouse. Available to
rent from two days to four weeks, the lodges are made entirely from trees grown in the forests of Finland, making them not only unique, but also extremely environmentallyfriendly. Capable of sleeping up to eight people, each lodge boasts a fully-fitted kitchen, a large lounge with a wood burning stove, a sauna, a veranda, and even an integral shed for golfers to securely store their clubs and trolleys. The latest addition to the accommodation offering is the Woodland Cottage, a £500,000 property which has become the most rented house at the resort, thanks to its ability to comfortably sleep 10 people, making it ideal for large families and groups of friends. The club also offers two excellent golf courses, with The Lakeland and the Woodland. The former was designed by renowned
architect Martin Hawtree, and is on record as being the longest in Dorset. It measures over 7,000 yards off the back tees, but that is reduced to a more manageable 6,580 yards off the whites. Among the notable features of the course are a series of connected water features and lots of strategically-placed bunkers. The par-66 Woodland Course is shorter – being just 5,032 yards long – but is equally demanding – while layouts have benefitted from significant investment in recent months, with a lot of work having taken place over the winter, which has resulted in improved irrigation, the construction of new pathways, and numerous cosmetic enhancements that have taken the courses to a new level and ensured the courses stayed open for play during the recent cold and wet spells. Stay-and-Play packages start from £61.95 pp/pn, based on four people sharing a house, with dinner, breakfast and all golf included. Three-night packages, with three rounds of golf, cost from £175 per person. For bookings call 01929 472244 or visit www. dorsetgolfresort.com.
Awarded 5 Star Gold Award by British Tourist Board
Please visit our new website
27 holes of fantastic golf
www.dorsetgolfresort.com The DorseT Golf hoTel anD luxury loG homes for renT FREE GOLF Air-conditioned clubhouse facilities l Restaurant offering an extensive menu l On site accommodation in the Dorset Golf Hotel 16 twin rooms l From £67.95 pppn including Dinner, B&B and FREE GOLF l l
MAY SocietY SpeciAl offer Coffee & Bacon Baguettes on arrival 18 Holes of Championship Golf, l Lunch from the menu l l
ONLY £38.00pp! (min 8 players)
DorseT’s Premier GolfinG venue noT To be misseD!
TelePhone no: 01929 472244
Golfbreaks launches magical Masters’ prize Golf break specialist Golfbreaks.com is marking its 15th birthday by offering one lucky group of golfers the chance to win the trip of a lifetime to watch next year’s Masters at Augusta. All customers booking a break of any value or duration between April 1 and May 31 (with the holiday taken in 2013) will be entered into the prize draw. One fortunate four-ball will then win a five-day trip to Augusta in April 2014, including flights, accommodation and weekend passes to watch the season’s first Major. The prize also includes two rounds of golf to complete this perfect week. The closing date for the promotion marks exactly 15 years since Golfbreaks. com’s chief executive Andrew Stanley started trading from a back bedroom. “Reaching 15 years is a significant milestone and something we are very proud of,” said Mr Stanley. “What better way to celebrate and reward our customers than by giving one lucky group the opportunity to enjoy their own landmark moment at the 2014 Masters? We’ve come a long way in 15 years, but we’ve never lost sight of what’s important. That means doing the simple
things well – offering our loyal customers personal service, expert help, great value and a wide choice. Hopefully this is just the beginning and we look forward to helping them
fulfil their golfing dreams for another 15 years and beyond.” Golfbreaks.com currently works with more than 2,000 resorts across the world. For the latest offers call 0800 279 7988 or visitgolfbreaks.com.
FREE GOLF At The Ashbury Golf Hotel The UK’s Largest Golf Resort
Set in the foothills of Dartmoor National Park, Devon. The Ashbury Golf Hotel is the ideal venue for your golf break.
Oakwood 16th 172 yards, Par 3
You could be watching the Masters in person next year Ashbury 6th 410 yards, Par 4
7 x 18 hole course options all on one site! KiGBeARe PineS FoReST AShBuRy BeeCheS oAKWood WiLLoWS
Par 72 Par 72 Par 71 Par 69 Par 69 Par 68 Par 54
6528 6400 6140 5804 5765 5502 1939
Forest 8th 442 yards, Par 4
Kigbeare 15th 382 yards, Par 4
Summer Specials 01/7/13 - 01/9/13 • FREE UNLIMITED GOLF • FREE BUGGIES • DRIVING RANGE TOKENS
June Midweek Bargain Breaks from £50 per person, per night!* Sports Bowls Table Tennis 5-A-Side Basketball
Additional Facilities FREE to residents of our hotels Racket Sports Leisure Family Tennis Swimming Funhouse Badminton Spa & Sauna Gamezone Squash Snooker Waterslides Short Tennis Ten-Pin Play Area
Ranges Archery Air Pistols Air Rifles Laser Clays
PLUS unique Craft Centre featuring 17 tutored crafts, including Pottery & Woodwork
0800 389 9892 ashburygolfhotel.com All rooms en-suite • Full board • Child rates • Party discounts *£50pppn applies to midweek breaks of 4 nights or more. 3 nights available at £55pppn.
60 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
More golf for less in Mauritius
Heritage Golf Club
The leading Mauritius-based golf course, Heritage Golf Club, situated in the stunning Domaine de Bel Ombre, is offering unlimited green fees to guests staying at any of the three Heritage Resort’s properties - Awali, Le Telfair and The Villas.
Twice winner of the prestigious World Travel Awards accolade of Best Golf Resort In Mauritius, Heritage Awali is the first, and only, five star all-inclusive golf resort on Mauritius, and is flanked by panoramic views of crystal clear lagoons to one side of the course, and rugged mountains
to the other, making for a truly remarkable golfing experience. The Peter Matkovichdesigned 18-hole course covers over 100 acres of tropical terrain, with natural ponds, lakes and palm trees dominating the fairways. The course has been considerately planned
to provide a challenge to low handicappers, while still being a pleasure to play for mid-to-high handicap golfers. Off the course, the clubhouse features a pro shop, changing rooms, bar and restaurant. The Heritage Golf Club Academy is served by its own certified PGA
professional, Matthieu Millet, a former coach at one of the renowned David Leadbetter Academies in his native France. To experience this majestic course and enjoy a holiday in stunning Mauritius, take advantage of Chaka Travel’s twoweek, all-inclusive stay at
Heritage Awali Golf & Spa Resort with unlimited green fees. This offer starts from £1,750 per person, including return flights, 12 nights’ allinclusive accommodation in a deluxe room and airport transfers. For more information and bookings, visit www. chakatravel.com.
Norfolk’s jewel in the crown
Royal Westmoreland
Bag a break at batsman’s boutique Barbados villa! Golfers looking to bag themselves a luxury golf break at the ultra-exclusive Royal Westmoreland Resort in Barbados, can now stay at one of a number of private villas owned by a range of global sports stars. Overlooking the famed West Coast of Barbados, Royal Westmoreland, with its renowned championship golf course and luxurious villa lifestyle, has long been the destination of choice for celebrities and some of the world’s leading sporting names. The award-winning golf and spa resort is now offering guests the opportunity to take a holiday in the villas owned by some of these sporting icons. Over 30 international stars, including Joe Calzaghe, Wayne
Rooney, Andrew Flintoff, Ian Woosnam, Steve McClaren and Lee Westwood, have purchased homes on the estate. One example of a villa available to rent is the stunning four-bedroom home of former England cricket captain Michael Vaughan. The villa, which is called The Pavillion, offers unrivalled access to a private collection of rare and unique sporting memorabilia, such as autographed photos and signed cricket bats, displayed for guests to enjoy. The customdesigned villa features a private pool and terrace, open plan kitchen and living areas, four large bedrooms with en-suite bathrooms, mature landscaped gardens, and a large patio with several verandas.
During their stay, guests will have unrestricted access to the estate’s extensive leisure facilities, which include three 25-metre pools, a children’s pool, a fully-equipped gym, the championship golf course, clubhouse restaurant, tennis with floodlit courts, the island’s only Elemis spa and Mullins Beach Club - a magnificent stretch of secluded coast just minutes away from the estate. Vaughan’s villa can be rented from £715 per night for up to eight people, which is £90 per person per night, including 10 rounds of free golf. The price based on stays between May 1 and November 30 and is subject to availability. For enquiries call 01524 782 503 or visit www. royalwestmoreland.com.
Barnham Broom is a name that is familiar with many golfers; a rural escape for a mid-week or weekend golf trip, nestled in the heart of the beautiful Norfolk countryside. But recently it has had a stunning £1.5m makeover of its bedrooms and lounge areas so that it now offers a stylish and contemporary destination to match its two well renowned golf courses. The Championship standard courses, The Hill and The Valley, provide golfers of all abilities with an exciting challenge. The par 72 Valley Course, designed by Frank Pennink, has an abundance of water features, blending into the delightful natural landscape. And the par 71 Hill Course, designed by Donald Steele, offers a real links flavour. And, as you’d expect at such courses, they are marshalled to ensure there’s no unnecessary slow play as
Barnham Broom
well as a refreshment buggy that tours the holes serving up drinks and snacks. The courses are complemented by superb practice facilities including three full length academy holes, a dedicated short game area and an open air grass range. You can also book PGA Professional tuition and there’s a superbly-stocked Pro shop with a great choice of men’s and ladies’ golf wear, including the stylish Poulter range. Barnham Broom is a great choice for a society’s or company’s golf event as it offers more than just top quality golf. The hotel has a choice of eateries – the award-winning two rosette restaurant and the more informal Sports Bar. It also has a fully equipped health and fitness centre and a luxury spa that offers a variety of treatments from holisitic massages to pedicures, facials to body scrubs, using
top quality ESPA products. And for larger groups, there is always the purpose-built banqueting suite which can be used for private dining. Richard Lennox, spokesperson for Barnham Broom said: “We are delighted with the work that has been carried out on our bedrooms and lounge areas. The level of luxury they offer perfectly complements the fantastic standard of golf that is available here. We are determined to make Barnham Broom the best golf destination in the East of England and would encourage those golfers who haven’t stayed and played here recently to come and visit us soon.” Further investment is planned this year to develop other parts of the hotel and grounds to ensure that Barnham Broom continues to be a golfer’s delight. For more information and bookings, visit www. barnham-broom.co.uk
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 61
Pelz opens scoring school in Catalunya
An INN on York Street S AIRE’ N O I MILL GOLF
7-DAY SPECIAL FOR ONLY £349 The short game area at PGA Catalunya
World-renowned putting and short game coach Dave Pelz has selected PGA Catalunya Resort as the home for his new Spanish Golf School. The Barcelona-based resort is one of only four European destinations – and Spain’s first– to be chosen by Pelz to host his Three-Day Scoring Game School, a tailored programme focusing on golfers’ short game and putting techniques. With a dedicated 2,000-square metre approach-play practice area, PGA Catalunya offers the country’s largest putting and chipping green. It features bent, bermuda, paspalum and poa grass types and different sand bunkers, including Augusta National supersand, St Andrews links, Hawaii volcanic, Pebble Beach and PGA Catalunya Stadium Course sand, enabling golfers to replicate shots from iconic courses around the world. “As the only venue in Europe to provide such a unique
practice area, the decision to bring our Golf School curriculum to PGA Catalunya was obvious,” said Pelz. “When we expanded our Scoring Game Schools into Europe a few years ago, I had no idea of the incredible calibre of resorts that could host our programmes. I design practice facilities, and Catalunya has one of the best in the world.” The resort has heavily invested in its practice facilities, coaching staff and infrastructure in recent months. Last year, it also opened the
world’s first Sergio Garcia Junior Academy, the Spanish golfer’s first teaching centre aimed at coaching the best young golfing talent of the future, as well as introducing the sport to children with physical and learning disabilities. PGA Catalunya will be hosting Pelz’s Three-Day Scoring Game School from May 24-26 and September 2729. The packages, which cost €1,400 per person, can be booked by visiting www. pelzgolf.com.
Enjoy 7 nights B&B including 3 rounds of golf for just £349 each + a second consecutive week for just £300 (based on 2 people sharing and assuming rate of £1 to $1.55)
N UNDI EW & SC AN IN OVERED LAND MYRT LE BEA CH
Stay in a historic Southern Plantation, English run B&B Never more than 4 pampered couples Play leisurely golf on fabulously conditioned courses Experience the slow pace and charm of small-town mid America Relax and unwind after golf by the pool by sipping "Mint Juleps" Luxury en-suite rooms with gourmet breakfasts and concierge services Golf booked and arranged to your liking Choice of more than 20 courses within a 35-minute drive Just a 50-minute drive south of Charlotte Airport Check out our guest reviews on www.tripadvisor.co.uk or www.destinationnexus.com
An INN on York Street 164 York Street, Chester, SC 29706 Tel: 001- 803- 581- 8681 E: info@innonyorkstreet.com W: www.innonyorkstreet.com
Dave Pelz is one the foremost short game coaches in the world
We’re the golfing holiday experts.
MAURITIUS
Stay and play in style under sunny Sicilian skies Donnafugata Golf Resort & Spa has made quite an impression in a short space of time and golfers can experience one of the new rising stars of the Italian game, with a range of great-value golf breaks to Sicily this year. Launched in 2010, the resort has quickly established itself as one of the most sought-after golfing destinations in Europe, and guests can enjoy some fantastic deals under cloudless skies on the resort’s two championship courses – with prices starting from €132 per
from £1,595 PP
5* Belle Mare Plage
Donnafugata
person per night. A four-night break with two rounds of golf costs just €585pp, and also includes daily breakfast, two threecourse dinners, one light lunch and four entry vouchers to the spa and wellness centre, as well as full access to the resort’s extensive golf practice facilities. Alternatively, a seven-night package with five rounds of golf is available for €990pp, including breakfast, three dinners, two lunches, free use of the practice area and seven
entries to the spa. Prices are based on two people sharing a twin or double standard room. Located 90 minutes’ drive from Catania airport, Donnafugata boasts two 18-hole championship golf courses – the Links Course and the Gary Player-designed Parkland Course – with the latter being used to stage the 2011 Sicilian Open. For further information, or to book a stay, call 0039 0932 914 200 or visit www. donnafugatagolfresort.com.
MEXICO
from £1,895 PP
5* Moon Palace Resort
12 nights half board
unlimited golf on 2 championship courses incl. flights, transfers
2 weeks all inclusive
unlimited golf on 2 courses incl. flights, transfers
SOUTH AFRICA
from £1,695 PP 2 weeks Garden Route & Cape Town 12 nights b&b 6 rounds golf on 6 different courses incl. flights, golf & car hire
from £1,925 PP THAILAND 5* Cape Nidhra Hua Hin 12 nights b&b with skypool suite 6 rounds golf on 6 different courses incl. flights, transfers
from £1,199 PP ABU DHABI 4* Crowne Plaza Yas Island 7 nights b&b 5 rounds golf incl. flights, airport & golf transfers
ITALY
CALL OUR SPECIALISTS
028 9023 2112
from £675 PP 5* Argentario Resort Golf & Spa 7 nights b&b unlimited golf incl. car hire, excl. flights
www.chakatravel.com
enquiries@chakatravel.com
62 /
April 2013 / Issue 220
Stay & play brought to you by
For bookings please contact Your Golf Travel.com: Call Free: 0800 193 6612 Email: info@yourgolftravel.com Web: www.yourgolftravel.com
Get away from it all with a relaxing break to a selection of stunning UK golf resorts, including the stylish Shendish Manor and the magnificent Manor of Groves Country retreat, urban escape, quiet getaway – descriptions like these are thrown around with abandon these days, often with scant regard for accuracy or quality. And it’s no different from a golfing perspective, with masses of golf hotels and resorts laying claim to be the ideal weekend option for the weary city dweller. Fortunately, we’re in a good position to bring some objectivity to debates of this nature, having visited the vast majority of the golf resorts to be found within a hundred miles of the capital. And one of our favourite options is not one, but a pair of Hertfordshire hotels that between them tick almost any box you can think of: Shendish Manor and Manor of Groves. Whichever manor you choose for your weekend of Lordship, you can’t go far wrong… Let’s take Manor of Groves first. This is a well-established, picturesque 80-bedroom hotel, welcoming guests for golf, leisure and even business to an environment where comfort and impeccable service are notable hallmarks. Its Sawbridgeworth location means access is straightforward from the M11, and, once onsite, guests have the opportunity to get stuck into the resort’s impressive championship standard golf course. The par-71 layout reaches 6,237 yards, and recent investment has only improved a playing experience best characterised by two nine-hole loops of distinctly differing character. The first weaves in and around the Manor gardens, while the closing stretch follows a set of sweeping parkland fairways. Away from the golf course, Manor of Groves makes all the right noises too. From the grandiose entrance driveway to the quality of the room specification, the hotel is a treat.
Shendish Manor great course, great views
HERTFORDSHIRE’S BEST – IN A MANOR OF SPEAKING
Both Shendish Manor and Manor of Groves boast great parkland layouts
Grand surroundings at Shendish Manor
What’s more, there is a state-of-the-art leisure complex, including a 20-metre swimming pool, steam room, spa, sauna, solarium, aerobic studio and a fantastic three-tiered gym, which is fitted with the cutting edge Technogym key system. For those wishing to be pampered, there is also a good range of Dermalogica health and beauty treatments on offer. Head a few junctions westward around the M25 to Apsley, near Hemel Hempstead, and you’ll reach the sister hotel and golf club of the impressive Manor of Groves. And it’s not looking too shabby here, either. Shendish Manor is a visually-stunning Victorian property that has been tastefully updated for 21st century expectations. The 70 guest bedrooms are split, with the old manor house and a modern
wing boasting 18 and 52 rooms respectively, and are complemented wonderfully by the Orangery Restaurant and its terrace, leading out to the lovely Dutch Gardens. From the charming hotel entrance, the first tee is just a few short steps away. Despite its location within easy striking distance of the capital, Shendish Manor represents the chance to enjoy a truly tranquil round. The par-70 course presents an appealing blend of hazards, routed through both parkland and woodland copses, providing a rewarding game regardless of ability. Although not long, Shendish Manor’s much-loved layout is positively packed with character, particularly from the eighth onwards, when it begins to traverse the more undulating, wooded areas of the estate. Both of these two magnificent golf hotels can legitimately claim to be ideal weekend retreats, urban escapes or whatever you may wish to dub your next golf break around London. They’re relaxing and well equipped, scoring high wine and dine marks, and you’re assured a warm welcome. From a golfing standpoint, expect a varied and entertaining challenge, and in terms of access, it’s a breeze. So all that’s left is to choose your favourite, jump in the car, and enjoy one of the best golfing getaways out there.
EXCLUSIVE READER OFFER 1 Night, Dinner, Bed & Breakfast, 2 Rounds of Golf FROM
£80 PER PERSON
2 Nights, Dinner, Bed & Breakfast, 3 Rounds of Golf FROM
£160 PER PERSON
Exclusive reader offer: 1 Free Place in 16! Quote “Golfnews” at time of booking All offers subject to availability
April 2013 / Issue 220
/ 63
Me&MyTravels with Jon Callard - The former Bath and England full back has fond memories of bashing it around the Belfry with Paul Broadhust and of Nigel Redman’s magical colour-changing balls My most recent golf trip was to… Zimbali in Durban with the England squad last summer. I played in a fourball with throwing coach Simon Hardy, team physio Dan Lewingdon, both of whom play off four, and team analyst Daz Lockyear. It was 200 rand in the pot each for a team score and another competition, which was to get the yellow ball round. We lost the yellow ball on the 5th hole and we came last in the team event. We were always going to be up against it, as most of the first team players are bandits. I kept their scorecards, which makes for great reading! If I had to play one course for the rest of my life, it would be… Harrogate Golf Club in Yorkshire, where I am a member. There are many great courses around the world, but I am no happier than when I’m playing Harrogate. When I’m home in the summer, with the light evenings, there’s nothing better than playing a few holes with my youngest daughter for company. She
gobstopper – as it changed colour when it got wet! My favourite golf club abroad is… Durban Country Club in South Africa.
Durban Country Club
wants to be a sports commentator, and when I top one down the fairway, she’s not very forgiving. My dream four ball would include…Gary Player, Rory McIlroy and Seve Ballesteros. My usual fourball includes…Terry Crystal, Gaz Irvine and Stu Mculloch at Harrogate, and Terry Crystal, Doug Campbell and Rob Purnell at Alwoodley Golf Club. Doug and Rob are internationally-respected hand surgeons, thus our matches are always termed ‘Hands v Feet’. Terry and I have had some real battles against Doug and Rob over the years.
My most memorable ever round was… in a Pro-Am at The Belfry with former Ryder Cup player Paul Broadhurst. He was a huge Leicester Tigers fan. I did not play my best, but he was brilliant company. The funniest moment on a golf course… involved one of my former Bath colleagues Nigel Redman. We were playing together at Castle Combe in a team competition, during which he lost 18 balls. On the last hole he hit a white ball into the bushes, and the one he played out miraculously turned into a yellow ball. When subsequently questioned about it, he claimed it was like a
The best hotel I’ve ever stayed at was… Palace of the Lost City in Sun City, South Africa. I stayed there after qualifying for the semi-final of the World Cup in 1995. It didn’t prove the best preparation, as we got a mauling by the All Blacks the following weekend in Cape Town. My worst holiday experience was in… Menorca. The less said the better.
Sun City
My favourite city in the world is…Bath, so many great memories of my rugby days there. My golfing hero is… Ian Poulter. Brilliant in the Ryder Cup and a true team player. I’ve modelled my swing on… no-one in particular, but I do like Graeme McDowell and the way he plays the game. No-nonsense and just gets on with it. My best gross score is… a three-over par 75 at Orchardleigh Golf Club in Somerset. It was just one of those rounds when everything went my way. I’m planning a golf trip to… somewhere nice! My wife has just given me a card promising an all-expenses paid golfing weekend to a venue of my choice, as long as it has a spa. I’ve not decided where yet, so would welcome some recommendations!
A CLUB FOR EVERY SHOT IN YOUR BAG
THE NEW G25 SERIES
Unlocking new keys to distance, control and accuracy through performance engineering, introducing the G25™ driver (adjustable), irons, fairway woods and hybrids. When we design a club, we always start with the golfer. That’s why every PING club has been scientifically engineered to get the most out of your game. Visit a PING Fitting Specialist or ping.com
©2013 PING P.O. Box 82000 Phoenix, AZ 85071