AT THE TOP OF HER GAME
KIMBERLY DINH
2023 U.S. WOMEN’S MID-AMATEUR WINNER IS FINDING SUCCESS ON AND OFF THE GOLF COURSE
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COURSES ••• TOURNAMENTS ••• NEWS
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The luxe resort now features a new championship 18-hole golf course, short course, and putting course — creating the ultimate golf entertainment venue
By Scott Kramer
This spring, SaintJohn’sResort, Detroit’s leading destination resort, debuts its highly anticipated new championship golf course in Plymouth. It’s the region’s first high-end public golf development of its kind in more than 20 years. The resort also added a sevenhole short course and a new 2-acre putting course that’s all part of a three-year, $50 million resort transformation under the property’s new ownership group, the nonprofit PulteFamilyCharitableFoundation
Last fall, I had an opportunity to get a sneak peek at The Cardinal, the new course designed by golf course architect Raymond Hearn. It did not disappoint. There are 18 brandnew holes on this 27-hole site located on a former 1940s seminary, and each is unique. You get a great variety of scenery with golf holes being routed in all directions factoring in elevation, wind, and terrain so that no two holes play similarly. And that keeps things fresh from your opening drive right down to your last putt.
All along the way, there’s a surprising amount of terrain and elevation — much more than you’d expect to find in Southeast Michigan. There are a few water holes sprinkled in as well. It’s all challenging yet player friendly — the way great golf courses are. And most of all, it’s memorable. As it should be for the latest Motown hit. The only things Hearn included from the old layout were beautiful 100-year-old trees on the property that he was able to incorporate into the new routing along fairways and around greens.
“Going from 27 to 18 holes, we were able to create wider and more playable fairways and corridors,” Hearn says. “I kept no tees, no greens, no bunkers, and no fairways. We blew up everything and started over. This project also allowed me to draw on my inspiration from previous Donald Ross, Tom Bendelow, and Willie Park Jr. projects as well as one of my favorite courses, the Old Course at Sunningdale by Park Jr. Our goal was to create a fun golf experience, and I believe we have achieved that and then some.”
The facility also has a brand-new 18-hole putting course that’s simply a blast to play on. Its inspiration came from great putting course experiences at St. Andrews and Pinehurst. There’s also The Little Cardinal, a Hearn-designed par-3 course with famous template greens inspired by some of golf’s most famous green complexes around the world, as well as a state-of-the-art short-game area. This multipurpose golf entertainment venue wraps around the resort’s driving range and Carl’s Golfland, one of America’s top golf retail stores.
Metro Detroiters and golfers across Michigan will surely make The Cardinal and this new golf complex part of their regular rotation. For more information on Saint John’s Resort, visit saintjohnsresort.com
Scott Kramer is a Detroit native and national golf writer who contributes to Forbes, PGA Magazine, and other publications.
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See the story on page 52.
23
38For the Good of the Game
Hosting a GAM tournament benefits everyone involved.
44
46
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Plus:
editor & publisher Mary-Jo Green mjgreen@GAM.org
associate publisher Edward J. Peabody epeabody@hour-media.com
managing editor Emily Doran edoran@hour-media.com
Meet the GAM’s New President Judy Lazzaro is fired up to lead.
GAM Benefits
Explore the advantages of membership.
Sponsors
Check out the companies and organizations that support the GAM.
GAM Champions and Players
of the Year The GAM recognizes outstanding Michigan golfers.
Michigan Am, Women’s Am
Get ready for the 2024 championships.
Awards
The GAM gives out its annual honors, and the Hall of Fame grows by three.
USGA Updates
The USGA rolls out handicapping and course rating changes and a new tee recommendation system.
Aspire Higher
The caddie program is teeing up students for success.
Turf
An endowed research position will honor MSU scientist Joe Vargas. GAM
share why they give. Youth on
The
junior golfers.
art director Kevin Martin kmartin@hour-media.com
copy editor Olivia Sedlacek
associate editor
Jordan Jewell
production director
Jenine Knox
senior production artist
Stephanie Daniel
production artist
Jonathan Boedecker
graphic designer
Elizabeth Kowalik
contributing writers
Ryan Czachorski
Janina Parrott Jacobs
Greg Johnson
Tom Lang
Terry Moore
Paula Pasche
Tony Paul
Tom Rademacher
John Retzer
Helene St. James
Renée T. Walker
contributing photographer
Greg Johnson
address editorial comments to Mary-Jo Green — Golf Association of Michigan 39255 Country Club Drive, Suite B40 Farmington Hills, MI 48331
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Fax: 248.478.5536
for advertising, please call advertising director Jason Hosko jhosko@hour-media.com
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Phone: 248.691.1800 Fax: 248.691.4531
cial publication of the golf association of michigan
offi
Foundation Donors
Course
program makes
Last Word GAM Executive Director
Whitten on the power of collaboration. 16 18 20 Directory: 84Course Listings Detailed entries for GAM member clubs, plus other Michigan courses at a glance.
the game more accessible to
The
Chris
Features:
GAM members come from all walks of life and share a love of the game.
Faces of the GAM
U.S. Junior Am
Hills will host the tournament
the
year.
Oakland
for
first time this
Dynamic Duo
USGA and the GAM have a productive relationship.
The
A Team Effort Volunteers power the GAM’s service.
Super Dogs Furry friends are “on staff” at golf courses around Michigan.
Renovations Upgrades at golf courses around the state mix the old with the new. ON THE COVER: 2023 U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur winner Kimberly Dinh poses with her trophy at Midland Country Club. Photo by Greg Johnson 48 34 ON THE COVER: At the Top of Her Game 2023 U.S. WOMEN’S MID-AMATEUR WINNER KIMBERLY DINH IS FINDING SUCCESS ON AND OFF THE GOLF COURSE. 30 66 40 112 67 OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE GOLF ASSOCIATION OF MICHIGAN AS A BENEFIT TO ITS OVER 90,000 MEMBERS $10.00 COURSE DIRECTORY GAM.ORG Official Publication of the GolfAssociationofMichigan MEMBER BENEFIT OF THE GOLF ASSOCIATION OF MICHIGAN MICHIGAN LINKS COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 2024 COURSE DIRECTORY COURSES TOURNAMENTS NEWS AT TOPTHEOF HER GAME 2023U.S. MID-AMATEURWOMEN’SWINNER ISFINDINGSUCCESS ONANDOFFTHE GOLFCOURSE 68 70 12 MICHIGAN LINKS | WWW.GAM.ORG Contents
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Golf Association of Michigan
39255 Country Club Drive, Suite B40 | Farmington Hills, MI 48331
Phone: (248) 478-9242 Fax: (248) 478-5536 | GAM.org
OFFICERS
President Judy Lazzaro
1st Vice President Richard Aginian
STAFF
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Chris Whitten
2nd Vice President Dan Longeway
3rd Vice President Robert Ofoli
Secretary Barry Babbitt
Treasurer Tom Roehl
President Emeritus Jay Hults
GENERAL COUNSEL
Harrison C. Stackpole
PRESIDENTS EMERITI
Tom Anderson
Chris Angott
Fritz Balmer
John Barbour
Tom Bollinger
Steve Braun
Mark Bultema
David C. Devendorf
Rondal Gaines
Jay Hults
J. Lee Juett
James R. Kohl
Mark McAlpine
Jeanne Myers
John F. O’Donovan
John Schulte
John D. Standish
SENIOR DIRECTOR OF COMMUNICATIONS AND OPERATIONS
Mary-Jo Green
SENIOR DIRECTOR OF COMPETITIONS AND USGA SERVICES
Ken Hartmann
DIRECTOR OF TOURNAMENT ADMINISTRATION
Ted Newton
DIRECTOR OF TOURNAMENT OPERATIONS
Alex Clark
TOURNAMENT COORDINATOR
Colin Staub
DIRECTOR OF MEMBER SERVICES
Drew Yntema
DIRECTOR OF COURSE RATING Hunter Koch
MEMBER SERVICES AND COURSE RATING MANAGER
Elizabeth Stidham
MEMBER SERVICES MANAGER
Cynthia Pinkard
STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP MANAGER
Inez Bridges
SENIOR DIRECTOR OF FINANCE
Jan Qualtiere
James H. Stevens
Sara Wold
William F. Wright
Arlene Alessi
Tony Barra
John Beecroft
Gregg Bonamici
Mark Bond
Mike Brady
LeRoy Bray Sr.
Elizabeth Cantu
Mike Church
Jean Constantini
Ashley Dewling
Jeff Drury
Frank Ervin
Joan Garety
Ross Green
JJ Henn
Gary Adelman
John W. Allen
Bill Anton
David Baughman
Inez Bridges
James Champion
Pat DeMaire
Jim Evanoff
A.J. Galsterer
OFFICE MANAGER
Loretta Larkin
DIRECTOR OF GAM FOUNDATION
Laura Bavaird
MEDIA CONSULTANT
Greg Johnson
GOLF DAYS COORDINATOR Dan Kunert
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
Thomas J. Hicks
Doug Hoey
John Holden
Janina Jacobs
Cathy Kalahar
Kevin Klemet
Roger Kuhl
Holly Little
Maureen MacDougall
Patrick McGurk
JJ Modell
Terry Moore
Karen Peek
Francine Pegues
Dee Piccard
Keith Potter
HONORARY GOVERNORS
Peter Green
William Hermann
Doug Hinton
Mick Kildea
James Koepke
Linda Lester
William Lindhout
Timothy Moore
Jean Murray
David Price
Laurie Puscas
Steve Renton
John Rowlands
Randy Seber
Harrison C. Stackpole
Brent Wehner
Chris Werner
James Wlosinski
Deb Wolfe
Betty Woods
Darrell Zavitz
Chris Ziegler
Robert Nowikowski
Cynthia Pinkard
Craig Reading
Betty Richart
Lynn Saunders
David Simon
Marv Weinstein
Michigan Links is the official publication of the Golf Association of Michigan, a not-for-profit organization serving all golfers in Michigan. The text, opinions and views expressed within this publication do not necessarily reflect the opinions or the official policies of the Golf Association of Michigan, editor and publisher. No part of this magazine is intended as an endorsement of any equipment, publication, videotape, website, golf course or other entity. No part of this magazine may be reproduced for any reason without prior written approval from the GAM. The association does not sell, rent or otherwise release its mailing list of GAM Individual and Club Members. We welcome all editorial submissions, but assume no responsibility for the loss or damage of any unsolicited material. They will not be returned unless accompanied by a selfaddressed, stamped envelope.
Michigan Links ISSN 1531-1732 (U.S.P.S. No. 018-935) is published annually by the Golf Association of Michigan. Postage paid at Farmington Hills, MI 48331 and additional mailing offices.
Postmaster: Send address changes to: Michigan Links, 39255 Country Club Drive, Suite B40, Farmington Hills, MI 48331, 248-478-9242. All GAM members should receive Michigan Links
Copyright © 2024, Golf Association of Michigan. Products and services mentioned in this publication may be trademarks of their respective companies.
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Fired Up to Lead
Judy Lazzaro is ready to reach more new golfers in her role as GAM president
/ BY TERRY MOORE
From the day she first played golf at age 10, Golf Association of Michigan President Judy Lazzaro has loved the game. With her Patty Berg set of junior clubs, she played the public courses with her mother and friends in the hills of southwestern Pennsylvania.
“I was taken by golf at the outset,” says Lazzaro, who became a GAM governor in 2013. “But I didn’t get serious about it until I played on a college club team at Indiana University of Pennsylvania,” where she earned a bachelor’s degree before going to graduate school at Michigan State. Later, Lazzaro earned a law degree and specialized in commercial and corporate law in Detroit and her hometown of Troy.
Today, Lazzaro — who’s been married 40 years to physician James McQuiston, both proud parents of sons Michael and Jimmy — is an accomplished amateur competitor who has won her women’s club championship at Oakland University several times and holds a single-digit handicap index.
Her first GAM tournament was a GAM Women’s MidAmateur Championship at Plum Hollow Country Club. “I had the usual butterflies, but what I remember most was being uncomfortable with how to handle some rules issues with another player,” Lazzaro says. “The experience prompted me to go to a three-day USGA rules school so that I would have more confidence during competitive play. At the time, it never occurred to me to become a rules official.”
Now, having attended four such schools, she’s a regular tournament official not only for the GAM but also for the Michigan High School Athletic Association and the NCAA. “Volunteering at these events allows me to give back to the game that I love,” Lazzaro says.
She credits Sara Wold, a past GAM president, for encouraging her to become a governor and a GAM officer. “Through tournaments, I knew and respected Sara and also [honorary governor] Jean Murray and [President Emerita] Jeanne Myers,” Lazzaro says. “They became my friends and mentors and have broken barriers for women in sports.”
and affordable for juniors, it really fired me up,” Lazzaro says. “I immediately asked to be involved.”
She felt the same enthusiasm for the DE&I Committee, which she co-chairs with fellow officer Robert Ofoli. “As with YOC,” she says, “the committee aims to introduce a new generation of golfers to the game, especially those in underserved populations and communities.”
“We want to engage more with potential new members and courses on how the GAM can benefit them.”
—Judy Lazzaro, GAM president
As governor, she was initially interested in improving her skills as an official, and she gives credit to the other officials for their support. Later, she was inspired by new GAM initiatives such as Youth on Course and the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Committee.
“When I first heard the presentation about Youth on Course, and the need to find a way to make golf more accessible
As president, she’s eager to see the GAM’s strategic plan come to fruition. “We want to engage more with potential new members and courses on how the GAM can benefit them,” Lazzaro says. She hopes her fellow governors will take up the challenge of personally contacting and visiting nonmember courses to develop relationships and serve as a connection to the GAM staff.
Contemplating whether she feels any of those old competitive butterflies as she embarks on leading the GAM, Lazzaro repeats — with a laugh — one of her favorite sayings voiced often by tennis great Billie Jean King: “Pressure is a privilege.”
COURTESY PHOTO 16 MICHIGAN LINKS | WWW.GAM.ORG
President
2024 GAM President Judy Lazzaro
GAM
Privileges of Membership Use Your GAM Membership Card to Access Discounts and Other Benefits
The Benefits of Membership >>>
• Track your game with an official Handicap Index® authorized by the USGA® — including GHIN® Mobile App score posting. Get access to the GHIN Mobile App, which includes easy score posting, GPS, and stat tracking capabilities, plus other tools to make your golf experience more enjoyable.
• GAM events and tournaments for all ages and skill levels.
• Swing & Save: Show your GAM Membership Card or your GHIN Mobile App and receive discounts at 100-plus Michigan courses, including a large bucket for the price of a medium at Carl’s Golfland.
• GAM Golf Days: Play some of the state’s top private and public clubs and resorts starting at $60.
• Annual Michigan Links Course Directory magazine.
• One-year subscription to Golf Digest magazine.
• Biweekly Michigan E-Links newsletter to keep you updated on everything GAM!
• Get 10% off regular prices at Dunham’s Sports when you show your GAM Membership Card, plus special offers for GAM members throughout the year.
• Win FREE prizes at GAM.org and through our various social media — GAM members can enter various online contests to win free golf and much more!
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GAM Benefits MEMBERSHIP DOLLARS GO A LONG WAY!
When you join the Golf Association of Michigan, your dues help support the GAM’s mission to promote, preserve, and serve amateur golf in Michigan. As a member, you receive an official Handicap Index® authorized by the USGA® with easy online and mobile score posting. Membership is also your ticket to a host of perks, including access to events, discounts on merchandise, and more. For a Michigan golfer, it’s the best way to go.
• Recognition for those who make a hole-in-one on GAM.org.
• Travel, retail, and restaurant discounts from Access.
• Special offers on golf travel from Sullivan Golf & Travel.
• Special offers from Imperial Headwear with the code GAM2024.
• $25 gift card at RocketTour. com. Use GAMGIFT24 to redeem. Minimum purchase $70. For 25% off Rocket Tour items, use code GAM24
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HOW TO BECOME A GAM MEMBER
If you’re enjoying this Michigan Links Course Directory and you’re not already a GAM member, or if you’re a member wanting to help your friends JOIN THE GAM, there are three ways to do it:
• Visit GAM.org and click on the “Join/ Renew” button in the upper-right corner.
• Call the GAM’s Membership Department at (248) 478-9242.
• Email membership@GAM.org.
COURSE DIRECTORY 2023 19
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 19
GAM MEMBER SIGNATURE X GAM Membership Card Show this card to Swing & Save at participating locations! 248-478-9242 / GAM.org 2023 gam member signature
MEMBERSHIP DOLLARS GO A LONG WAY! GAM Benefits
2024 PARTNERS
With the support of these leading organizations, the Golf Association of Michigan is able to offer outstanding championships, value to members and member clubs, and programs that are important to golfers, all while making golf accessible to the widest audience possible. Please support them! Interested in a partnership? Contact Executive Director Chris Whitten at (248) 478-9242, ext. 115, or cwhitten@GAM.org.
Absopure
Thirsty? Enjoy the taste of Michigan natural spring water, bottled by Absopure. Absopure, a legacy brand founded in 1908, provides an assortment of bottled water to retailers across the country and delivers to homes and offices throughout the Midwest. For a hole-in-one hydration experience, try Absopure Plus with electrolytes. Find Absopure at a retailer near you. Visit absopure.com
The Ally Challenge Presented by McLaren
Seventy-eight PGA Tour Champions professionals will compete for a $2 million purse at historic Warwick Hills Golf & Country Club in Grand Blanc on Aug. 22-25, 2024. This 54-hole stroke play professional golf tournament also includes the annual Community Concert presented by Ally and the popular Celebrity Challenge that will take place Saturday, Aug. 24. The tournament supports charities in the greater Genesee County and Flint areas and beyond and has raised over $6.2 million in favor of that mission since its inception in 2018. For more information, visit theallychallenge.com
BOYNE Golf
Ten spectacular courses, including The Heather, the site of the 113th Michigan Amateur in June. This Robert Trent Jones Sr. classic was the 2019 National Golf Course Owners Association National Course of the Year. With Arthur Hills-designed courses listed in Golf Digest ’s 100 Greatest Public Courses and Golfweek ’s Top 200 Resort Courses, BOYNE Golf was named one of Forbes’s Best Golf Resorts in America. Visit boynegolf.com or call (866) 506-2922 for tee times and lodging reservations.
Carl’s Golfland
Show your GAM Membership Card and get a large bucket of balls for the price of a medium at Carl’s in Bloomfield Hills or Saint John’s Resort in Plymouth (one discount per member per day), featuring TrackMan Range. Visit Michigan’s premier golf store — 66 years of one customer at a time. For details or to shop online, visit carlsgolfland.com. Free shipping on orders over $70 and free returns.
Crystal Mountain
A family-owned, four-season resort featuring two championship golf courses rated four stars by Golf Digest. The Mountain Ridge course, home to the Michigan Women’s Open, presents panoramic vistas from tee to green. The Betsie Valley course is now more playable than ever after recent renovations but will still challenge the most talented golfer. GAM members receive 10% off regular green fees. Visit crystalmountain.com/golf or call (855) 9163937 for tee times and lodging reservations.
Dunham’s Sports
Dunham’s Sports, with 70 locations in Michigan, offers GAM members a 10% discount* on all regularly priced merchandise when they show their 2024 GAM Membership Card. Visit dunhamssports.com. *Some restrictions apply.
Golf Digest Magazine
Golf Digest is the worldwide authority on how to play, what to play, and where to play golf. A one-year subscription to Golf Digest magazine is included in GAM annual dues. Existing subscribers receive a one-year extension.
Grand Hotel
The Jewel at Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island is one of the most unique golf courses in the country, featuring spectacular views of the Straits of Mackinac and a horsedrawn carriage ride between the nines. Located in northern Michigan, Grand Hotel welcomes you to a bygone era of oldworld hospitality and charm. Experience endless activities, elegant meals, and timeless traditions and connect in new ways with family and friends. Visit grandhotel.com
20 MICHIGAN LINKS | WWW.GAM.ORG
®
Imperial Headwear
Imperial is all about the finer things in life. We consider expert craftsmanship to be a tradition. We pay close attention to every detail and stitch on everything we make. Classic with a twist is what we aim for, and we’ve been doing it since 1916. imperialsports.com
2024 KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship
The KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship returns to Harbor Shores for the last time on May 23-26. Watch fan favorites including defending champion Steve Stricker (Ryder Cup captain), Pádraig Harrington (Ryder Cup captain), and Ernie Els. The popular Makers Trail 19th Hole, a covered pavilion overlooking the 17th green, features local craft beverages. Visit the KitchenAid Fairway Club for live cooking demonstrations from local and celebrity chefs. For ticket information and kids and military policies, visit srpga.com. Don’t miss it!
MI Golf Journal
The monthly MI Golf Journal provides golf news and stories from across Michigan. Topics include travel, course reviews, junior golf, personalities, tournament results, course designers, military in golf, women’s golf topics, and more. migolfjournal.com
Michigan Golf Live
Saint John’s Resort
Saint John’s Resort is a premier resort destination just 20 minutes outside of Detroit. The property features 200 acres that include luxurious hotel accommodations, expansive meeting and event spaces, and world-class cuisine at the dining locations, such as the full-service restaurant and the wine bar. The resort is part of the Pulte Family Charitable Foundation, and 100% of the net profits from the resort are donated to initiatives from metro Detroit and around the globe.
Shanty Creek Resort
Not just bigger — better. With five championship courses, including the recently acquired and much celebrated Hawk’s Eye GC paired with Weiskopf’s Cedar River GC and Palmer’s The Legend GC, it’s no wonder Shanty Creek has been named among the top golf resorts in the world. It’s time to discover northern Michigan’s new golf mecca in Bellaire and online at shantycreek.com. Book your stay-and-play package or make a tee time by calling (866) 695-5010.
Stifel
The state’s leading golf program celebrates its 25th season with MGL TV every Saturday and Sunday at 9:30 a.m. on Bally Sports Detroit and MGL Radio Saturdays across the state and Sundays at 7 p.m. on WJR in Detroit. Visit mgltv. com for more information and to listen/watch on demand.
Preferred Data Systems
PDS is the GAM’s primary information technology provider. Concerned about data security? Time to upgrade? Contact our technology advisers now for a free consultation at (248) 522-4445 or sales@ pdsnetworking.com pdsnetworking.com
Rocket Mortgage Classic
The annual Rocket Mortgage Classic is back in its sixth year at Detroit Golf Club June 24-30, 2024, featuring 156 of the world’s top players. Over the years, the tournament has raised more than $8.4 million for local charitable organizations, including more than $4.3 million through its landmark Changing the Course initiative to connect Detroit residents to high-speed internet, digital devices, and digital training. Find more information at rocketmortgageclassic.com and on social media @RocketClassic.
Rocket Tour
Rocket Tour founder Helena Stanton has been designing bold yet classic knit headcovers for avid and competitive golfers since 2004. The Rocket Tour signature striped pom-pom and tassel headcovers can be spotted on 300-plus collegiate golf teams and golf enthusiasts worldwide. Whether you want to sport your school spirit or just have fun styling your golf bag, we have you covered. GAM members, be sure to use your member benefit 25% discount code, valid on all Rocket Tour headcovers, no exclusion. Visit rockettour.com
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Sullivan Golf Travel
Since 2007, Sullivan Golf Travel has been the dedicated travel partner for the GAM, delivering golf experiences to Ireland, Scotland, England, Spain, and Portugal. Preferred rates are provided to all members of the GAM. Visit our website at sullivangolftravel.com
Summit Golf Brands
Summit Golf Brands include EP, Fairway & Greene, and Zero Restriction. We’ve combined the very best in men’s and ladies’ fashion for on and off the course, along with the best technical outerwear in the world. With a large percentage of our product manufactured in the USA, all of our embroidery completed in-house, and a minimum of 95% of our business done in green grass golf shops, we are truly a great American golf company. Contact Kelli Marquette (kellimarquette@ gmail.com) to find a golf shop near you carrying Summit Golf Brands.
West Michigan Golf Show
The West Michigan Golf Show in Grand Rapids is an extraordinary gathering of Michigan’s golf industry, with 12,000 golf enthusiasts and 150 exhibitors. Supporting the golf industry for over 35 years — come be a part of it! For information to exhibit or attend, call (616) 447-2860 or visit westmichigangolfshow.com
Whistling Straits & Blackwolf Run
Destination Kohler’s four championship courses at Whistling Straits and Blackwolf Run offer an unparalleled golf experience on the shores of Lake Michigan in Wisconsin. Ranked as one of the best golf destinations in the United States by leading golf publications, the courses were designed by famous architect Pete Dye and have hosted six majors and most recently the Ryder Cup. 2024 golf packages are selling fast, so book now for the best availability and rates.
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 21
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Cultivating Community
Meg Watt, aka Meg the Golfer on Instagram, is on a mission to make
the game more inclusive
BY JANINA PARROTT JACOBS
Not so long ago, young Black women were rarely taught to play golf, and certainly not by anyone as revered as a World War II hero. But that’s how Meg Watt — known on Instagram as Meg the Golfer (@megthegolfer) — came to love golf.
“It all started with my great-uncle Richard, an original Tuskegee Airman, who got me into the swing of things with lessons at the tender age of 11,” says Watt, an information technology professional in the health care industry who also runs her own Detroit-based company, Soul Heal Sound. “After a hundred swings or so, I finally made contact, and from that moment on, I was hooked.”
Today, Watt uses social media to share her experiences and
encourage more people of color to play the game.
“I’ve been cultivating a community of like-minded golf enthusiasts, with a particular focus on minority representation and women,” she says.
in a modest set for $200, which faithfully accompanied me for over a decade,” says Watt, who has a master’s degree in genetics.
A stressful corporate job and personal issues soon took a physical toll on Watt, who developed chronic pain. When you watch this “Detroit Lefty’s” powerfully fluid swing on camera produce long, straight drives, it’s difficult to believe she was incapacitated about a decade ago, in her late 20s.
Watt’s journey to becoming Meg the Golfer was anything but straightforward. She played in high school but didn’t get a college golf scholarship. At Howard University, she played softball instead.
“My trusty clubs had to take a back seat, and it wasn’t until grad school [that] I reinvested
“At one point, the pain was so severe I found myself relying on a wheelchair,” she says. “It was a gradual journey of rehabilitation, progressing to a walker and finally a cane, … until I found my way back to the golf course.”
In 2021, Watt felt a new calling while scrolling through social media. “I noticed the underrepresentation of minorities and felt a compelling need to pave the way for more Black and young golfers,”
“I noticed the underrepresentation of minorities and felt a compelling need to pave the way for more Black and young golfers. I decided to take matters into my own hands, fostering a more inclusive and vibrant golfing community.”
—Meg Watt, aka Meg the Golfer
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she says. “I decided to take matters into my own hands, fostering a more inclusive and vibrant golfing community.”
Watt initially created her Meg the Golfer page as a personal sanctuary where she could share her thoughts with people who would understand her passion. It also served as a place to post videos of her swing for self-analysis.
In the bigger picture, her profile has also been an instrument for pointing out areas where she sees a need for improvement in the golf community. Watt has some concerns and a few pet peeves: “Feeling like you’re not welcome at courses. Also, the misogyny and patriarchy of this sport.
Playing Golf ‘All Summer Long’
Musician Marlon Young enjoys a different kind of challenge on the links
BY JORDAN JEWELL
When he gets a break from playing sold-out shows alongside Kid Rock, Pontiac native and lead guitarist Marlon Young finds himself on the golf course.
“I started golfing in my mid-30s,” Young says. “I grew up in Pontiac, and not a lot of kids were golfing. Once I did get out on the course and I saw the setting, I just fell in love with it.”
In the earlier days of touring with Kid Rock’s Twisted Brown Trucker Band, Young and the group played a lot of golf on the road. Now that the band flies between shows instead of traveling via tour bus, Young has more time to play on his own. His home course is Washtenaw Golf Club.
“I joined the Golf Association of Michigan about 15 years ago, right around the time I became a member at the club,” he says. “Being a member has really inspired me to get lessons and improve my game. They put on these tournaments and do a wonderful job, so I’m excited to play in those more.”
Young has been touring with Kid Rock for more than 15 years now, performing hits like “All Summer Long,” a personal favorite of his. “That is always fun,” he says. “People sing along. It reminds you of growing up in Michigan and loving that time of year.”
Unsolicited advice and people who assume you’re playing from the forward tees. As a good woman golfer, I like proving so many people wrong. … And how come there aren’t nonmeat, nondairy food options? Or USB ports on all golf carts? Why are golf skirts so short?”
Watt, who has over 1,700 Instagram followers, has no immediate plans to expand her platform; for now, she’s focused on continuing to share her story authentically.
In 2023, she competed in her first GAM event, the Women’s Mid-Amateur Championship. “It was wonderful,” she says. “There were about five women of
During his time on the road, Young has played on plenty of courses outside of Michigan, and his favorite is a no-brainer: Augusta. “It’s breathtaking,” he says of the iconic course in Georgia. “I know [lots] of golfers would love to play there, and I feel a little guilty because I’m not a great golfer. Our booking agent is a member, and I just remember how amazing it was to pull down Magnolia Lane.”
A competitive nature is what keeps Young coming back to the game, which has proved to be a refreshing outlet for the musician.
“When you learn a chord on the guitar, you know that you’ll always hit that chord,” he says. “With golf, even great players can have an off day. It’s almost impossible to completely master the game, and I’ve always thought that was such a great challenge.”
Reminiscing about his favorite experiences on the golf course, Young recalls a particular match between him,
color out of over 70 golfers. I happened to know one of the Black golfers who played, and she was an awesome warm welcome. The ladies I played with were nice, too.”
Currently completing more than 70 rounds of golf annually, Watt often wins long-drive contests. She has no golf idols but gathers takeaways from many professionals.
“I can watch Rory [McIlroy]’s swing a hundred times in a row,” she says. “I’ve seen Tiger [Woods] play with others, and he’s super encouraging and positive. I just like positivity on the course.”
“When you learn a chord on the guitar, you know that you’ll always hit that chord. With golf, even great players can have an off day. It’s almost impossible to completely master the game, and I’ve always thought that was such a great challenge.”
—Marlon Young, guitarist
Kid Rock, and Live Nation executives Rick Franks and Dave Clark.
“We were playing at Indianwood [in Lake Orion] and had a bunch of bets on the line,” Young says. “I made eagle on the last par 5, and I holed it out to beat them. Rick teased me at the time and said, ‘I don’t see many 10 handicaps making eagle.’”
Learning to play the game in his 30s gave Young insight into what makes a good player.
“My advice to anyone interested in playing is to go see Patrick Wilkes-Krier at the Kendall Academy,” he says. Wilkes-Krier has been a coach at the Kendall Academy in Ypsilanti since 2015, and he played eight years of professional golf prior to that. “The thing that set me back was the bad habits that I gained before going to see him,” Young says. “When you want to play on a serious level, you have to spend a ton of time trying to unlearn those skills.”
Faces of the GAM 24 MICHIGAN LINKS | WWW.GAM.ORG
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Marlon Young (right) on the course with his coach, Patrick Wilkes-Krier.
Like Father, Like Daughter
Coached by her dad, junior golfer Lyla Hampton has spent most of her life on the links
BY JORDAN JEWELL
At just 5 years old, Grosse Pointe native Lyla Hampton picked up her first golf club. Ten years later, the game of golf has become an integral part of her daily life.
Hampton, who has played in competitions such as the 2023 Drive, Chip and Putt Championship, has spent the past decade honing her craft with instruction from her coach — who also happens to be her dad — Shaun Hampton. He’s the head coach for girls’ golf at Grosse Pointe South High School.
“My dad signed me and my siblings up for the junior league at our local golf club as soon as we were old enough to play,” she says. “I’ve played my whole life, but I got more serious about the game around 12.”
In addition to placing sixth in the DCP National Championship, winning the Lochmoor Club Junior Golf Championship has been a highlight of Hampton’s early career. Working with her dad and his assistant coaches has prepared her for these competitions.
“My dad pushes me to be my best and is really supportive.”
—Lyla Hampton
“My dad pushes me to be my best and is really supportive,” Hampton says.
Her father adds that while he is her coach, he believes in surrounding himself with people who are better at golf than he is.
“I have two assistant coaches; one is a scratch golfer, and one spent a year in LPGA and has Epson status,” he says. “I’ve positioned Lyla to build and develop relationships with people who are smarter and better than I am.”
Both Hampton and her father attribute a lot of her success to her mentality.
“You have to have a positive mindset and not let one bad hole affect your entire game,” she says. “It’s good to just forget about it and focus on your next one.”
As a coach, Shaun Hampton also notes that his daughter’s positive mentality is one of her best attributes. “She doesn’t let any
Lyla Hampton
negativity seep in,” he says. “It’s all just water off a duck’s back. She just goes about her business. Good or bad, she acts the same.”
This optimistic attitude helped Hampton work through a major injury in August of 2020. After breaking her tibia and fibula, she wore a cast from toe to hip for about six weeks, followed by a boot for another two months. The injury inevitably affected her golf game.
“I couldn’t play for months,” Hampton says. “I had to go to physical therapy because my leg was so weak. After that, I had a lot of trouble putting weight on my leg in the follow-through of my swing.”
“From a skill perspective, her ability to drive the ball ... is one of her biggest strengths. She’s honing her ability to aim. She’s able to execute the shots that she wants to execute by focusing and taking the time. As a coach and a parent, it makes me happy to see that she is going through her process.”
—Shaun Hampton
Hampton made a full recovery and was able to beat the mental block that was hindering her swing.
“From a skill perspective, her ability to drive the ball … is one of her biggest strengths,” her dad says. “She’s honing her ability to aim. She’s able to execute the shots that she wants to execute by focusing and taking the time. As a coach and a parent, it makes me happy to see that she is going through her process.”
Part of that process involves a handy trick for soothing tournament nerves.
“It sounds weird, but I sing songs in my head to help calm myself down,” Hampton says. “It really works.”
Faces of the GAM COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 25 PHOTO COURTESY OF DRIVE, CHIP AND PUTT/AUGUSTA NATIONAL
Biagioli
Faces of the GAM
Overcome and Adapt
25 years after a life-changing accident, Bryan Biagioli is making a difference on the golf course
BY JANINA PARROTT JACOBS
Life was going well for Bryan Biagioli. He had moved to Michigan from Texas, was newly married, and had landed a great job at Detroit-based Rock Financial.
“I was on cloud nine,” he says, “and in the blink of an eye, I rolled my truck and I’m on a helicopter to the hospital to save my life.
“The incredible flight crew and doctors kept me alive, and after several days and surgeries, we decided to amputate my leg due to the severity of the break and infection.”
Amputations are life-changing for anyone, and potentially extra challenging for an athlete. Still, the injury only temporarily stalled Biagioli, who returned to work at Dan Gilbert’s company for another 23 years and is now president of the Michigan Amputee Golf Association as well as an orthotics and prosthetics account manager with Wright & Filippis.
“I grew up an athlete and went on to play baseball at Sam Houston State University,” Biagioli says. “The thought of not being able to play sports or possibly
walk again was devastating. Being an athlete and growing up in Texas allowed me to overcome and adapt. My positive mindset and determination took over.”
Biagioli looks back 25 years later and is thankful for his success, crediting a higher power: “God works in mysterious ways. He gave me a second chance at life, and that motivated me to work harder and smarter every day for a better tomorrow. I could’ve been gone.
… Every day truly is a gift. I hunt, fish, work out, ride bikes, work in the yard and at our property Up North, coach my kids’ sports, and play golf.”
sional elements. Terry Kildea, one of our best rules officials, had been working with the Amputee Association for a few years, and we recruited Holly Little, another outstanding referee from West Michigan, to cover the competition. We also offered Golf Genius scoring to help turn results around quickly and ease administration for course staff. Overall, we were so pleased to meet the adaptive players and help in a small way.”
There’s increased focus in the golf world on adaptive golf, especially on veterans and military members with lingering injuries and PTSD. Biagioli never served, but people often assume that. In Florida, an anonymous individual saw his leg and covered the family’s dinner, a common “thank you” from a wellmeaning stranger.
“It was a generous gesture and opened my eyes to pay it forward,” Biagioli says. “I volunteer locally with adaptive golf clinics, which spreads awareness and gets participants off the couch and on the course. Golf is addicting, so the more we expose people to it, the better off they will be.”
Biagioli’s son McCoy has embraced his father’s work ethic and positivity. Like Dad, he excelled at multiple sports but eventually chose to focus on golf. He’s played in GAM junior competitions, and he was on the Ferris State golf team in fall
“I volunteer locally with adaptive golf clinics, which spreads awareness and gets participants off the couch and on the course. Golf is addicting, so the more we expose people to it, the better off they will be.”
After the accident, Biagioli eventually dedicated his efforts to golf and has never played better. He’s won the Michigan Adaptive Golf Championship (which dates back to 1956) three times, first in 2006 and then in 2021 and 2023.
—Bryan Biagioli, president of the Michigan Amputee Golf Association
2023 as a freshman.
Last year, the Golf Association of Michigan and Biagioli joined forces.
“The Michigan Amputee Golf Association has been serving players for nearly 70 years, and GAM felt it was very important to reach out to their community of golfers,” says GAM Executive Director Chris Whitten. “Their championship in Three Rivers was already well established, and Bryan felt we could add a few profes-
Biagioli wants those who are having a hard time to know that the camaraderie of the adaptive community is like no other. “You are not alone,” he says. “I’ve met some incredible people who have dealt with real adversity and tragedy and come out stronger.
“For me, preparing for a day of golf is nothing out of the ordinary: pop the leg on — it’s like slipping on a shoe — hit the range, and off to the tee. As the old saying goes, no matter how bad you think you have it, someone else out there is dealing with something worse.”
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PHOTO BY STEVE SWEITZER/THE LASCO PRESS
From the Ice to the Links
Detroit homecoming has led to more golf on Michigan’s “gem” courses for Red Wing Andrew Copp
BY HELENE ST. JAMES
When Andrew Copp joined his hometown NHL team, he started spending more time on a favorite non-ice terrain of his: the links.
Copp signed a five-year contract with the Detroit Red Wings in July 2022 as part of general manager Steve Yzerman’s plan to turn the team back into a contender. It was an easy sell for Copp, who grew up in Ann Arbor, where his mother was a figure skating coach for the Michigan Wolverines and his father coached youth hockey. When he wasn’t at a rink, Copp came to enjoy being on a golf course.
“I started swinging a club when I was around 8 years old, but I wasn’t a reasonably good player until I was around 16 or 17,” he says.
Today, he finds golf to be a natural complement to hockey.
“For hockey players, all of our training on and off the ice is done indoors,” he says. “In the summertime, when it is nice outside, you want to find ways to be outside and be in the sun. Our sport is so intense, you’re not necessarily going to want to run around outside, so golf is a nice way to spend time outside and do something somewhat athletic and with your buddies.”
Copp is a member of the Golf Association of Michigan through Barton Hills Country Club in Ann Arbor.
“I grew up in Ann Arbor, I lived in Ann Arbor, so joining Barton Hills was an easy decision for me,” Copp says. “The community out there is fantastic. I have a lot of close friends that I’ve had from growing up, and close friends that are new members. Between playing with my mom and dad or
Above: Andrew Copp (left) with his parents and his brother, Tyler, who won the 2020 Michigan Amateur.
Left: Andrew Copp on the ice during the Detroit Red Wings’ 2023-24 season.
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 27
COURTESY PHOTO; BOTTOM PHOTO BY
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ALLISON FARRAND/DETROIT
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my fiancée or brother or buddies, it’s just a great way to be outside and spend quality time together.”
Before joining the Red Wings as a free agent, Copp, 29, played for the Winnipeg Jets, who drafted him at No. 104 in 2013; he signed his contract after his third year playing for the Wolverines. Copp spent the better part of eight seasons with the Jets, until he was traded to the New York Rangers in March 2022. He played in two seven-game series that spring with the Rangers, who advanced to the Eastern Conference Final.
Now that he is living in metro Detroit year-round, Copp is able to spend more time at the many courses he loves around the state.
“I really like American Dunes,” he says. “Both Arcadias are fantastic. Bay Harbor Golf Club is great. Pilgrim’s Run is actually kind of a sneaky gem. I’ve played a decent amount of golf all over the state, and Michigan really is a gem for golfers.”
Copp deemed himself and Dylan Larkin the best golfers on the Wings until a new arrival in the summer of 2023: “I think Christian Fischer is the new king; he took it over from me and Larks.”
“I’ve played a decent amount of golf all over the state, and Michigan really is a gem for golfers.”
—Red Wing Andrew Copp
As much as Copp enjoys golfing with his teammates, he also often enjoys hitting the links with his own family. His brother, Tyler, won the 2020 Michigan Amateur Championship and turned pro.
“I can go out and play with my mom, and we can have a great time just the two of us,” Copp says. “Or I can go play with my brother, who is a pro golfer, and it’s the same amount of fun, and I love listening to what he is working on.”
When he’s asked to build his dream golfing foursome from current Detroit pro athletes and coaches, excluding his own teammates, Copp’s answer takes him across Woodward Avenue to Ford Field and Comerica Park.
“I’d pick Dan Campbell, Miggy [Miguel Cabrera], and Aidan Hutchinson,” he says.
Despite how much Copp enjoys Michigan’s golf courses, he does have a goal to spend less time on them in the summer, for a very good reason: “When you don’t make the playoffs, you play more golf, so I will say I really enjoy not playing more golf in the summer.”
Neil Nelson
More Than a Game
Golf has been a lifesaver for GAM ambassador Neil
Nelson
BY JORDAN JEWELL
Often referred to as “The Mayor” by his fellow Golf Association of Michigan members because of his sociability and leadership qualities, Clarkston resident Neil Nelson says the game of golf is more than a hobby to him — it’s a lifesaver. Nelson was a self-professed workaholic when he was diagnosed with oral cancer at the age of 35. The president of his own consulting firm, Clarkston Consulting, and a part-time capstone professor at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business, he was described by many as a “nervous Nellie” at the time of his diagnosis.
“I wasn’t a heavy smoker or drinker, two of the common causes of this type of cancer,” Nelson says. “When they evaluated me psychologically, they found I had really negative mental health, really high stress levels. They started me in counseling, and I needed to find an outlet
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that let me escape my professional life. I had always liked playing golf.”
He first began playing golf as a teenager working at Pine Knob Music Theatre, which treated the staff to free or discounted play at neighboring Pine Knob Golf Club once a week.
Picking the game back up following his cancer diagnosis, Nelson began playing regularly. He hoped to become a competitive golfer in his 50s.
“Golfing took me from a ‘glass-halfempty’ to a ‘glass-half-full’ kind of guy,” Nelson says. “I knew that I couldn’t give up my professional life so early; I still needed to make a living. The idea of being able to play at a competitive level once I turned 55 gave me something to work towards, a dream and a goal to keep me motivated and help me balance my work life with my interest.”
“The idea of being able to play at a competitive level once I turned 55 gave me something to work towards, a dream and a goal to keep me motivated and help me balance my work life with my interest.”
—Neil Nelson, co-founder of Clarkston Consulting
Now 58, Nelson has retired from his professor position and only works part time at his consulting company. In addition to playing in GAM championships (he and his teammate, Jeffrey Talcott, won the GAM Net Chapman in 2019), he also volunteers as a rules referee.
“The game of golf gave me something so positive and so meaningful, and it’s so important to give back as much as you get,” he says. “When I volunteer, my goal is to be out in the game. I want to watch people play, help people learn the rules.”
During his time as a member of the GAM and while volunteering as a referee, Nelson has made invaluable friendships. “You meet amazing people from all walks of life, people I never would have gotten to meet in the circles
I was in before,” he says. “One of my closest friends is Dustin Ross, who is a military veteran that served for the U.S. Army in the Iraq War. Another guy I golf with is a nurse practitioner who couldn’t play much golf during COVID because he was busy saving lives.”
As “The Mayor,” Nelson encourages anyone interested in golf to take up the game.
“My best advice for amateur golfers is to get the right training and development support,” he says. “There are plenty of pros out there who are available and want to make you better. Things like proper swing mechanics are important for your game but also for the health of your body.”
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 29
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Meekhof makes Michigan golf history with double-win summer
/ BY GREG JOHNSON
August Meekhof added his name to two of the most storied trophies in Michigan golf history in 2023.
He became just the 10th golfer in a span of more than 100 years to win the Michigan Amateur Championship and the Staghorn Trophy and also the GAM Championship and the K.T. Keller Trophy in the same season.
“It felt great in the moment when I came from behind and won the GAM this summer,” says the Michigan State golfer from Eastmanville near Grand Rapids, acknowledging that he “didn’t have the greatest start.”
Both wins were particularly significant to him.
“The Am is something I wanted to win for a long time, so doing that was such a great feeling, and then to win the GAM again was also pretty special,” says Meekhof, who was named the GAM’s 2023 Men’s Player of the Year. “You are playing against the best guys in the state in both of those tournaments. It’s not easy to win when
there are so many good players.”
In June, he held off University of Michigan golfer Will Anderson of Portage 2 and 1 in the final match of the 112th Michigan Amateur hosted on the North Course at Oakland Hills Country Club.
“It’s starting to sink in that my name is going on there,” he said afterward while holding the Staghorn Trophy. “Being part of that elite group is special to me.”
On Aug. 1, Meekhof joined another elite group with his second consecutive GAM Championship win, in the 102nd edition of that tournament. He bested the field at Travis Pointe Country Club by two shots to become just the 13th golfer to win back-to-back GAM titles, and the first in 39 years. Michigan Golf Hall of Fame member John Morgan, who won the 1983 and ’84 titles, had been the most recent to defend the GAM title with another victory.
“That’s awesome,” Meekhof says of the historical significance of his win. “It means a lot. These events are always so hard to win.”
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 31
GAM Champions
COURTESY PHOTOS
GAM Champions
15-AND-UNDER BOYS
COOPER REITSMA
Cooper Reitsma, now 16, from Ada, accumulated 1,212.5 points to be named the GAM 15-and-under Junior Boys’ Player of the Year for the second time in a row. The Cascade Hills Country Club member had a strong season, winning the 15-andunder division of the GAM Junior Stroke Play Championship and the 15-and-under Michigan Junior State Amateur stroke play title.
Finalists: Troy Nguyen, Macomb; Julian Sinishtaj, Macomb; Jack Whitmore, Northville; JP Levan, Grand Rapids
JUNIOR BOYS
LORENZO PINILI
Lorenzo Pinili, 19, of Rochester Hills, capped off an impressive junior golf career by securing the title of GAM Junior Boys’ Player of the Year for 2023. The Warwick Hills Golf & Country Club member topped the points list with 1,130. Pinili’s achievements include winning the stroke play title at the Michigan Junior State Amateur, reaching the quarterfinals in the Michigan Amateur, and clinching the Michigan High School Athletic Association’s Division 2 individual state championship.
Finalists: Will Preston, Grand Rapids; Drew Miller, East Lansing; Julian Menser, South Lyon; Peter Roehl, Rochester Hills
SENIOR MEN
GREG DAVIES
Greg Davies of West Bloomfield, who is a member at Orchard Lake Country Club, clinched the 2023 GAM Senior Men’s Player of the Year title. The 56-year-old Michigan Golf Hall of Fame member made it to the top of the points list with 595 after winning the GAM Senior Championship and making his 11th “Sweet 16” appearance in the Michigan Amateur.
Finalists: David LeVan, Ann Arbor; Steve Maddalena, Jackson; Jerry Gunthorpe, Ovid; Tom Gieselman, Commerce Township
SUPER SENIOR JOHN MORGAN
John Morgan of Novi, the GAM Player of the Decade for the 1980s and a member of the Michigan Golf Hall of Fame, made a triumphant return to competitive golf, winning both the super senior division at the GAM Senior Match Play Championship and the GAM Super Senior Championship. The 67-year-old, who is a member of the Detroit Golf Club, was named the 2023 GAM Super Senior Player of the Year with 225 points.
Finalists: Ian Harris, Bloomfield Hills; John Barbour, Grand Rapids; Stephen Jeske, Birmingham; Ron Perrine, Holt; Mike
GAM CHAMPIONSHIP WINNERS 2023
Raymond, Jackson
COURTESY PHOTOS
GAM PLAYERS OF THE YEAR 2023 — GAM HONOR ROLL SPONSORED BY
Katie Chipman Michigan Women’s Amateur Championship Spring Lake CC
Bridget Boczar GAM Women’s Championship Washtenaw GC
Matt Zerbel GAM Mid-Amateur Championship Boyne Resorts
Kimberly Dinh GAM Women’s Mid-Amateur Championship Saginaw CC
Greg Davies GAM Senior Championship Orchard Lake CC
Stacy Slobodnik-Stoll GAM Women’s Senior Championship Harbor Point GC
Will Preston Michigan Junior State Amateur Championship A-Ga-Ming Resort
32 MICHIGAN LINKS | WWW.GAM.ORG
Lauren Timpf Michigan Girls’ Junior State Amateur Championship Forest Akers GC West
GAM Champions
GAM PLAYERS OF THE YEAR 2023 — GAM HONOR ROLL SPONSORED BY CARL’S GOLFLAND
15-AND-UNDER GIRLS
SAISHA PATIL
Saisha Patil of Okemos, at just 12, secured the title of GAM 15-and-under Junior Girls’ Player of the Year. She is the youngest Player of the Year award winner in the seven years this age division has been included in the lineup. After an exceptional summer in which she won three GAM tournaments — the 15-andunder stroke play at the Michigan Girls’ Junior State Amateur, the 15-and-under GAM Junior Stroke Play Championship, and the 14-andunder GAM Match Play Championship — Patil totaled 1,350 points to clinch the top spot.
Finalists: Esther Zhang, Ann Arbor; Alena Li, Okemos; Madilyn Sheerin, Grand Blanc; Tula Puzzuoli, Washington Township
JUNIOR GIRLS
ALENA LI
Alena Li, 16, from Okemos, has been named the 2023 GAM Junior Girls’ Player of the Year. During her impressive season, she won the overall girls’ title in the GAM Junior Stroke Play Championship and reached the semifinals in match play at the Michigan Girls’ Junior State Amateur. She totaled 1,100 points.
Finalists: Lauren Timpf, Macomb; Elise Fennell, Caledonia; Mia Melendez, Ann Arbor; Jessica Jolly, Rockford
GAM CHAMPIONSHIP WINNERS 2023
WOMEN KIMBERLY DINH
Kimberly Dinh, 31, of Midland was named the GAM Women’s Player of the Year for the third consecutive time after a remarkable season highlighted by her victory at the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur. Her triumph, coupled with her win in the GAM Women’s MidAmateur and her Michigan Women’s Amateur semifinal appearance, helped her earn 1,090 points. She is a member at Midland Country Club.
Finalists: Chelsea Collura, Wyandotte; Anika Dy, Traverse City; Bridget Boczar, Canton; Katie Chipman, Canton
SENIOR WOMEN
STACY SLOBODNIK-STOLL
Stacy Slobodnik-Stoll of Haslett, the Michigan State women’s golf coach, emerged as the 2023 GAM Senior Women’s Player of the Year. The 52-yearold, who won the 2023 GAM Women’s Senior Championship and reached the round of 16 in the U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur, totaled 550 points. The Country Club of Lansing member is the winningest GAM golfer in history with 18 individual titles and is a member of the Michigan Golf Hall of Fame.
Finalists: Julie Massa, Pentwater; Shelly Weiss, Southfield; Lori Schlicher, Lewiston; Joan Garety, Ada
COURTESY PHOTOS
Peter Farner
GAM Men’s Tournament of Champions Oakhurst G&CC
Chelsea Collura
GAM Women’s Tournament of Champions Oakhurst G&CC
Tom Gieselman
GAM Senior Men’s Tournament of Champions Oakhurst G&CC
Donna Tepper
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 33
GAM Senior Women’s Tournament of Champions Oakhurst G&CC
Give Them Five
The Heather is hosting the Michigan Amateur once again
/ BY GREG JOHNSON
The Michigan Amateur Championship returns in June for the fifth time to The Heather (part of The Highlands at Harbor Springs), the famed first golf course in Boyne Resorts’ 10-course collection in Michigan.
Casey Powers, the director of golf for Boyne Resorts, says being a host of the state championship fits with Boyne’s mission, which includes setting the standard for promoting golf in the state.
“We get excited about hosting this kind of championship,” he says. “It’s a torch we like to carry.”
The Heather, credited with launching the resort golf industry in northern Michigan and designed by legendary golf course architect Robert Trent Jones Sr., will host the state’s best players for the 113th edition of the championship.
Ken Hartmann, senior director of competitions and USGA services for the Golf Association of Michigan, calls Boyne a tremendous supporter of amateur golf.
“Boyne gets it,” he says. “They are great partners for the GAM, and they have great courses, like The Heather, where [we have] great tournaments every time we play there. Just look at the champions and the final matches of the Amateurs there.”
The previous four state championships played at The Heather have produced memorable golf and notable champions and runners-up.
• In 1998, Shawn Koch of Howell beat Stephen Polanski of Livonia 2 and 1 in the final match. Koch, who also won the GAM Championship that summer, went on to an award-winning PGA professional teaching career in Georgia. He is currently the director of instruction at the Atlanta Athletic Club.
• In 2006, Greg Davies of West Bloomfield beat Ryan Brehm of Mount Pleasant 5 and 4 in the final match. Davies, the GAM senior champion
in 2023, is a member of the Michigan Golf Hall of Fame. Brehm, the 2007 Amateur champion, played on the PGA Tour in 2023.
• In 2011, Willie Mack III of Flint beat defending champion Joey Garber of Petoskey 4 and 3 in the final match. Mack, the first African American winner of the Amateur, played on the PGA’s Korn Ferry Tour — and in two PGA Tour tournaments — in 2023, as did Garber, who has also played on the PGA Tour in recent years.
• In 2020, Tyler Copp of Ann Arbor beat James Piot of Canton 2 and 1 in the final match. Copp has since turned professional and played mini-tour golf in 2023, including finishing fourth in last year’s Hall Financial Michigan Open. Piot, a two-time GAM champion, went on to win the U.S. Amateur Championship in 2021 and in 2023 played on the LIV Golf tour.
“It seems like the best players from our tournaments on The Heather have all gone on to do something more at another level,” Hartmann says. “It shows that over the week of a championship with the best players, The Heather proves who has the allaround game.”
Powers agrees.
“The golf course makes you hit every shot,” he says. “It has multiple dogleg holes. There are times where you can hit driver and other times where you have to gear down and keep it in play.
“It becomes the ultimate test: You have to hit great irons, and with the big, tilted
PHOTOS BY EVAN SCHILLER, COURTESY OF THE COURSE Championships
greens, you have to putt well.”
Hartmann says players must have a plan for The Heather.
“We get excited about hosting this kind of championship. It’s a torch we like to carry.”
“The scoring side is on the back,” he says. “It’s a little more open, but that doesn’t mean you can just bomb it, especially on the last few holes, and 18 with the second shot over the pond makes for great drama and viewing.
—Casey Powers, director of golf for Boyne Resorts
“The first six, seven holes through the woods on the front side are difficult. You have to control your golf ball or you will be in the penalty areas. The Heather is a great test of golf.”
More than 800 golfers are expected to try to qualify for one of the spots in the start-
ing field via qualifiers that will be presented by the GAM beginning in May. Entrants have an extra incentive to compete this year: The USGA will award an exemption into the 2024 U.S. Amateur to the Michigan Amateur champion for the first time.
Boyne Golf features three resorts in Michigan, including The Highlands. Golf joined skiing in Boyne’s recreational offerings starting with The Heather 58 years ago. That’s when the late Michigan Golf Hall of
Famer Everett Kircher, in large part to keep his ski resort employees around and working during the snowless summer months, decided to get into the golf business. He sought out Jones, one of the most popular and successful architects of that era, and commissioned him to design a course. It opened in 1966.
Named in 2018 the Michigan Golf Course of the Year by the Michigan Golf Course Association and in 2019 the National Course of the Year by the National Golf Course Owners Association, The Heather plays at a maximum of 7,118 yards. It is consistently ranked among the best golf courses in Michigan by various outlets.
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 35
Championships
Renovated and Ready
Plum Hollow is set to host the 108th Michigan Women’s Amateur
/ BY GREG JOHNSON
Barry Babbitt, a member of Plum Hollow Country Club and the championship chair for the Golf Association of Michigan, has witnessed several exhilarating championships in recent years.
Simultaneously, he has watched his home golf course undergo renovations that have only improved what was already a legendary course.
“It seemed to me that our wonderfully improved golf course and the incredible golf played by GAM members could be showcased together,” he says.
The membership at Plum Hollow recognized and shared his vision, and now the
historical Southfield club is set to host many of the state’s top golfers in the 108th Michigan Women’s Amateur Championship in June.
“It was a great golf course before, but the renovations have enhanced it, made it more of a challenge, harder — let’s say a better test,” Babbitt says. “What has been done with the tees and greens offers a variety of setup options for the tournament team at the GAM, and in this case, the women I know at the club, including my wife [Fran], love the changes and enjoy playing the course even more than before. It all fits.”
The Plum Hollow course, founded in 1921, is an original design by C.H. Alison of the legendary (H.S.) Colt and Alison
partnership, whose work includes several highly regarded courses around the world.
After the membership approved a remodel in 2020, architect Drew Rogers from Toledo, Ohio, completed a renovation that honors the original design. The renovation included changes to bunkers and tees, the creation of more shot options on several holes, and improved drainage and turf.
“There is a master plan, and a few other projects ahead, but all of it so far has turned out great,” Babbitt says. “The golfers who have played before won’t notice a lot of changes on the front side, though they will find some different shots to play around the greens on seven and eight. On the back nine, the placement of bunkers has changed significantly, and that’s where the added challenges and strategy come into play.”
Ken Hartmann, senior director of competitions and USGA services for the GAM, agrees that Plum Hollow has become a tougher course for some players.
36 MICHIGAN LINKS | WWW.GAM.ORG
PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE COURSE Championships
Investing in Championship Host Sites
USGA Green Section visits Plum Hollow and The Heather to prepare for Amateurs Plum Hollow Country Club in Southfield received a visit from the USGA Green Section agronomists in the fall of 2023 to help prepare for hosting the Michigan Women’s Amateur Championship in June.
The visit to Plum Hollow was one of four visits by the USGA experts that the GAM purchased for member clubs in 2023. The Green Section’s goal is to help produce great playing conditions through research, course consulting services, education and outreach, and support for championship agronomy.
“The GAM decided to make this investment [for] the host sites of the men’s and women’s Michigan Amateur Championships,” says GAM Executive Director Chris Whitten. (The Michigan Amateur will be held at The Heather, one of the courses at The Highlands at Harbor Springs.)
“We also had the Green Section visit Rackham Golf Course [in Huntington Woods] and Flint Golf Club,” Whitten says. “It gets the staff of the USGA in the state, it makes introductions to what the USGA can offer golf courses in turfgrass management, and it helps the Green Section grow its business and extend their reach.”
David Makulski, the director of agronomy at Plum Hollow, says he was grateful for the visit from trained professional agronomists.
“They see several courses a year, see a lot of things, and gain a wealth of knowledge,” he says. “If there is an issue, there is a good chance they have some experience with it, and that shortens the learning curve and helps you combat the problem.”
At Plum Hollow, the Green Section’s visit affirmed Makulski’s current practices.
“When your employers or board at your club hear what the USGA has to say, that gives you an extra level of credibility,” he says. “It’s a positive experience. We all want the championship to be successful.”
For more information about the USGA Green Section, visit USGA.org.
Greg Johnson
Championships
“The premium is even more on shotmak ing,” he says. “Like all the classic courses, you don’t want to have your golf ball above the hole on the greens. You have to drive it well, and the par-5s require [that] more golfers lay up with second shots. They have modernized the golf course.”
An added element to this year’s Michigan Women’s Amateur is the winner’s receiving an exemption into the 2024 U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship. The USGA recently added the winners of selected state championships to the exemptions lists for its national championships.
“It’s based on the quality of our fields over three years of the World Amateur Golf Rankings,” Hartmann says. “Our Michigan state champions for women, men, junior girls, and junior boys all are part of those exemptions for 2024.”
Plum Hollow is a part of the Michigan Women’s Amateur’s history. The club will be hosting this state championship for a sixth time; it hosted what was then known as the Women’s Michigan Golf Association Championship in 1937, 1942, 1948, 1958, and 1970. That last year, Bonnie Lauer, who later was a standout LPGA player and was inducted into the Michigan Golf Hall of Fame, won. The championship has been under the direction of the GAM since 2005, and winners have their names added to the Patti Shook Boice Trophy.
Plum Hollow’s history includes a host of other championships, including a major golf championship. The club hosted the top players in the world in the 1947 PGA Championship. Jim Ferrier of Australia beat Michigan Golf Hall of Famer Melvin “Chick” Harbert 2 and 1 in what was then a 36-hole match play final.
In 1957, the Western Open, once regarded as one of the PGA Tour’s major championships, was played at Plum Hollow. Doug Ford won, and Sam Snead’s 10 that he carded on No. 4 is part of the club’s lore. Jimmy Demaret, a three-time Masters Tournament winner who once served as a pro at Plum Hollow, also played that weekend.
The Michigan PGA Professional Championship was hosted by the club four times from 1929 to 1940, and more recently, the club hosted the 2022 GAM Championship won by August Meekhof of Eastmanville and the 2015 Michigan Amateur Championship won by Ryan Johnson of Bloomfield Hills, as well as various USGA and GAM qualifiers.
“It’s a very supportive club with a classic course,” Hartmann says. “Jay Hults [GAM president in 2023-24], Chris Angott [GAM president emeritus], and Barry have had the membership behind them in supporting amateur golf. We’ve had great tournaments there working with their staff and club members.”
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 37
For the Good of the Game
Hosting a GAM tournament benefits everyone involved
/ BY TERRY MOORE
An oft-heard phrase in the past 20 years is “grow the game.”
It’s commonly used when golf enthusiasts discuss ways to get young golfers more involved through, for example, First Tee, Youth on Course, or the PGA Jr. League.
More recently, another phrase has taken root in discussions about courses or clubs hosting a Golf Association of Michigan tournament, qualifier, or GAM Golf Day: “good for the game.”
Brian Bach, the general manager of Edgewood Country Club in Commerce Township, voiced that opinion when asked why his private club regularly hosts GAM tournaments. “Our membership sees the value of holding outside tournaments as their way to support amateur golf in our state,” he says. “In addition to lending exposure to our club, it’s important to give back to the game.”
On a personal note, Bach admits his loyalty to GAM events and tournaments may be traced back to his first GAM tournament, the Michigan Junior State Amateur Cham-
pionship, in 1985. “It was at Verona Hills Golf Club in Bad Axe,” he says. “When I see players in a tournament or qualifier here at Edgewood, I recall fond memories of my first junior tournament.”
This past year, Edgewood hosted a one-day qualifier for the Michigan Amateur Championship, a GAM Golf Day where GAM members could play the well-conditioned course for only $60, and the GAM Parent-Child Championship.
Ken Hartmann, the GAM’s senior director of competitions and USGA services, is most grateful for clubs like Edgewood that step up regularly to host a tournament. “It’s always a challenge to identify enough courses to fill out our competitive calendar,” he says.
When Hartmann joined the organization in 2002, there were 44 GAM tournament days. That number has grown to 115. “We’re constantly on the lookout for courses,” Hartmann says. “Sometimes courses come to us, and other times we approach them. We have to keep our ear to the ground.”
A Win-Win Partnership
If a venue does decide to host a tournament or a qualifier, it can be confident the GAM will handle all the details in concert with the staff at the course.
Barry Babbitt, the GAM governor who chairs the Championship Committee, has seen first-
hand how the GAM and the venue successfully work together. In 2015 as a member of Plum Hollow Country Club, he was in charge of volunteers when the club hosted the Michigan Amateur. “I wasn’t yet involved with the GAM,” he says, “but I quickly found out how Ken and his staff worked cooperatively with all aspects of Plum Hollow to make the Amateur run smoothly.”
Ben Rabourn, the clubhouse manager at Kaufman Golf Course in Wyoming (widely regarded as one of the best municipal courses in Michigan), echoes that sentiment. “We regularly host Michigan Amateur and Michigan Junior qualifiers and know the GAM will put on a top-notch tournament,” he says. “We open our doors and let the GAM staff and volunteers do their thing.”
The GAM and its membership aren’t the only ones who benefit. “When we hold a qualifier,” Rabourn says, “we have players from all over the state, so it’s good exposure for us. And we love hearing the compliments about the course.”
Rabourn says his fellow daily-fee operators shouldn’t be overly concerned about giving
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Championships
PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE COURSES
Edgewood Country Club
Franklin Hills Country Club
“When we hold a qualifier, we have players from all over the state, so it’s good exposure for us. And we love hearing the compliments about the course.”
—Ben Rabourn, clubhouse manager at Kaufman Golf Course
up their course for the day and losing revenue. “Don’t fret about losing a few dollars,” he says. “You’ll make it up in the long run in terms of promotion and goodwill.”
The GAM does have a budget to help offset some of the costs associated with a venue hosting a tournament. For two-day tournaments, the GAM will reimburse the course for carts, practice balls, and lunch for players. “We do as much as we can to provide some revenue back to the course,” Babbitt says.
Josh Richter, Boyne Resorts’ senior vice president of golf operations, says revenue is not a key factor in deciding to host a GAM tournament. “We feel a responsibility to the game to give up our course and stage a championship,” he says. “It’s also an opportunity to showcase our facility.
ship,” he says. “And our members — who largely make up our volunteer contingent — love being part of it.”
Hartmann says it’s a misconception that only courses like those at Boyne or Oakland
“We have a very strong partnership with the GAM.”
Part of Golf History
This summer, Boyne will host its fifth Michigan Amateur, a point of pride for Richter and his staff. “We get motivated by the Amateur and are energized in having the champion-
Hills Country Club are long enough to host a GAM championship. “A course doesn’t have to tip out at 7,200 yards to be a good test,” he says. “For example, Muskegon Country Club is not long, but its greens and pin locations give players plenty of challenge.”
In setting up a course for a tournament, several factors must be weighed in addition to hole yardages.
“For some of our major championships,
Kaufman Golf Course
there may be 156 players, so you must get those players around the course without backups and delays,” Hartmann says. “That’s why we’re careful not to get the greens too fast or the pin locations too difficult. We don’t want six-hour rounds. We work with the pro and the superintendent and discuss these elements ahead of the tournament.”
Finally, there’s another benefit of hosting a GAM tournament or USGA qualifier: the opportunity to be a part of golf history. In 2021, Egypt Valley Country Club in Ada hosted a 36-hole qualifier for the U.S. Amateur, and Canton’s James Piot was one of the two qualifiers. The following month, Piot was hoisting the trophy at Oakmont Country Club as Michigan’s first U.S. Amateur champion.
“Egypt Valley had a part of Piot’s journey in winning the Amateur,” Hartmann says. “The same could be said for Franklin Hills Country Club, which hosted the GAM Championship the week before Oakmont and [was] won by Piot.”
Admittedly, that scenario may be rare, but it starts with a course or club reaching out and making its facility available for a tournament. It starts with doing it for the good of the game.
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 39
Championships
Boyne Highlands
Awards
2023–24 GAM AWARDS
MAJOR MILESTONE
Six Michigan golf clubs and courses are celebrating their centennial in 2024: Verona Hills Golf Club in Bad Axe, Grayling Country Club, Sauganash Country Club in Three Rivers, Elk Rapids Golf Club, Gaylord Golf Club, and the North Course at Oakland Hills Country Club in Bloomfield Hills. Cheers to 100 years!
GAM COURSE RATER OF THE YEAR: MARK ERICKSON OF OWOSSO
Mark Erickson of Owosso, a 66-year-old retired educator who started volunteering with the Golf Association of Michigan in 2017, was named the GAM Course Rater of the Year for 2023. He has been a team leader since his second year, and he coordinates and leads ratings in the central part of the state. The award is presented annually to a rater who demonstrates outstanding proficiency with the Course Rating System™ and is committed to helping grow and develop the GAM Course Rating Program.
“This is a huge honor,” Erickson says. “There are so many incredible, dedicated raters in the state, and any number of them are worthy of this honor. I hope they will work with us for a long time and we have the opportunity to recognize all of them. They are truly great people who give back.”
Erickson says he grew up playing and loving golf. His younger brother, Mike, is a PGA professional and the director of golf instruction at Meadowbrook Country Club in Northville. Erickson’s wife, Kathy, volunteers as a course rater, too.
Karen Peek
Mark Erickson
GAM CHAMPION OF DIVERSITY, EQUITY, AND INCLUSION: GOLF DETROIT’S KAREN PEEK
Karen Peek, the director of operations for Golf Detroit and Signet Golf Associates, who is charged with running Detroit’s three municipal golf courses, was named the GAM Champion of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion for 2024.
The 69-year-old Detroit native and University of Michigan graduate feels she has shaped her life and career with a demonstration of promoting diversity, equity, and inclusion. She was the only Black Class A member of the LPGA Teacher and Club Pro Division when she
first joined, and she was honored at the 1993 national Women in Golf Summit as one of the key women in golf, sharing the stage with notable golf leaders like Nancy Lopez.
“That was the coolest award before this,” she says. “My experience in golf where I was the first woman of color — the only woman, often — has certainly helped shape me. I may not have recognized it at the time, but I was a pioneer of sorts, and I’m grateful I had the opportunity to open the door for others, people of color, people of all ages.”
COURTESY PHOTOS 40 MICHIGAN LINKS | WWW.GAM.ORG
Awards
GAM CLUB SERVICES REPRESENTATIVE OF THE YEAR:
DENNIS ‘MARTY’ JOY OF BELVEDERE
Belvedere Golf Club’s head golf professional, Dennis “Marty” Joy, concentrates on treating everybody the same.
“We have a national membership from out of state that is here for three months in the summer; then we have season-ticket holders, mostly our local people who play in the spring and fall; and then we have guests of the club, and we try to help them and treat them all like they are special,” he says.
Joy, 53, a professional at Belvedere since 1999 and the head golf professional
since 2008, was named the 2024 GAM Club Services Representative of the Year.
A group of four Belvedere and GAM members nominated Joy for the award.
Tom Rex, a Charlevoix resident and one of the nominating members, says Joy is an ambassador for Belvedere and a leading fundraiser for junior golf in Charlevoix.
“That’s just one of the things he does to keep golf growing,” Rex says. “He’s always helping the high school kids, the Evans Scholars. All sorts of good things happen with Marty around.”
GAM SUPERINTENDENT AWARD OF MERIT: DAN LUCAS OF HIGH POINTE GOLF CLUB
Dan Lucas, 62 and the superintendent for the comeback/renovation at High Pointe Golf Club near Traverse City, was named the GAM Superintendent Award of Merit winner for 2024.
“I guess it’s recognition for the 40 years I’ve been in this business, the four different construction projects I’ve been involved in here in Michigan, and leading the wave at Kingsley Golf Club with the change to fescue grassing,” he says. “Or I could just go with the old line that I’ve been around so long they had to give me something.”
The annual award, presented since 2011, is bestowed upon a superintendent who has demonstrated leadership, professionalism, good character, and high standards of conduct through pursuits associated with golf course grounds maintenance and care.
“Dan is a slam dunk on all those things: leadership, professionalism, everything,” says Adam Ikamas, the executive director of the Michigan Golf Course Superintendents Association, which helps select the honoree. “On top of that, he’s just a down-to-earth good guy, very welcoming, and the list of superintendents he has influenced and worked with keeps growing.”
GAM DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD: POSTHUMOUSLY TO BOB BUCKLEY OF PORT AUSTIN
The late Bob Buckley of Port Austin, a GAM governor and Junior Golf Committee member, loved the game for all the right reasons, says David Devendorf of Port Huron, his friend in life and golf.
Buckley, who died of pulmonary fibrosis in September 2023 at the age of 76, was posthumously named the GAM Distinguished Service Award winner for 2024.
“My only regret in all of this is that I didn’t nominate him for this award sooner so he could receive
it while he was alive,” says Devendorf, a president emeritus of the GAM. “He would have been absolutely thrilled.”
Buckley, a member of the GAM board of governors for 17 years and a longtime member and past president of Verona Hills Golf Club in Bad Axe, was best known in his native Thumb area of Michigan for his dedication to junior golf. Starting in 1986 at Verona Hills, he spearheaded a circuit of junior tournaments known as the “Buckley Opens” involving six local courses and 400 young golfers.
COURTESY PHOTOS COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 41
Bob Buckley
Dan Lucas
Dennis “Marty” Joy (center) poses with Ross Hays (left) and Jerry Esselman (right), his U.S. team members for The Hickory Grail.
Michigan Golf HOF Grows by 3
A superintendent, a PGA Tour player, and a high school coach are inducted
/ BY GREG JOHNSON
Three new players were inducted into the Michigan Golf Hall of Fame’s legendary ranks this past fall: the late Gerald “Jerry” Faubel, Doug LaBelle II, and Jean Murray.
Faubel, who passed away at home in Arcadia in December 2022 at the age of 81, was a native of Iowa who came to Michigan for the superintendent’s job at Saginaw Country Club in 1969. He held that role for more than 35 years. He was the first president of the Mid-Michigan Turf Association and was a board member for seven years with the Golf Course Superintendents Association of America. Faubel also traveled around the world to promote turfgrass studies and research, served with USGA committees in multiple roles, helped found Executive Golf Search Inc. to aid superintendents in job placement, and worked with legendary golf course architect Robert Trent Jones to create a scholarship endowment fund.
“He would be so pleased,” said Sally, his wife, at the induction. “Growing up, he wanted to be a farmer, but he ended up being in golf and turfgrass, and Saginaw Country Club and its members were so great to him and supportive of the things he did.”
LaBelle, a 48-year-old real estate broker in Mount Pleasant, played tour golf for 16 years, including four on the PGA Tour and eight on what is now the PGA’s Korn Ferry Tour. He collected 96 PGA Tour starts, including a pair of U.S. Opens and a British Open, and he played in 150 Korn Ferry tournaments. He won over $2.4 million combined and collected two Korn Ferry wins. At the University of New Mexico, he was a two-time All-American and won three individual titles. In 1998, he was a prestigious Palmer Cup selection for Team USA. While growing up, he
won multiple junior golf titles, was an allstate selection in high school, and was the runner-up to legend Pete Green in the 1996 Michigan Amateur Championship.
“I’m humbled to be part of this incredible group of golf people in Michigan,” LaBelle said at the induction. “When you play, you don’t think of things like this — at least I didn’t. I just kept trying to work on what I could do [to] be better and to reach the next level.”
Murray, 85 and a former GAM governor and now an honorary governor who continues to volunteer, won the inaugural GAM Senior Women’s Championship in 1997 and was in the top 10 on the GAM Honor Roll four times. She has won multiple
Michigan Women’s Golf Association titles and the Mount Pleasant Country Club championship 22 times. In 2009, at age 71, after two hip replacements, she won the prestigious Spring Lake Invitational. She also coached the girls’ golf team at Mount Pleasant High for 10 years, winning a state title in 1978 and leading four state runner-up teams. She has also served in the Mid-Michigan District Women’s Golf Association and the Saginaw Valley Women’s Golf Association.
“This means so much because I can share it with the team — my great friends I’ve met being involved in golf all these years,” Murray said at the induction. “I grew up on a farm, a long way from any neighbors. I was by myself a lot, wanted to get a tan, so I used my dad’s clubs and started hitting golf balls around the fields.”
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COURTESY PHOTO
Awards
The Michigan Golf Hall of Fame’s class of 2023, from left: Sally Faubel holding the plaque of her late husband, Gerald “Jerry” Faubel; Doug LaBelle II; and Jean Murray.
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‘A Great Place to Start’
Oakland Hills will host the U.S. Junior Amateur this year for the first time, kicking off an eight-tournament agreement with the USGA
/ BY RYAN CZACHORSKI
When bringing up a place like Oakland Hills Country Club — a site that has hosted six U.S. Opens, three PGA Championships, and a Ryder Cup — it would be natural to assume that golf fans around the world know it inside and out.
But in 2024, when Oakland Hills hosts the 264-player U.S. Junior Amateur Championship, the club’s South Course will debut a new look.
The South Course has been restored to its original Donald Ross design, with some modifications. The renovations were finished in 2021, but the last USGA championship held at Oakland Hills was the 2016 U.S. Amateur, so the golf world at large hasn’t seen the new-and-improved course yet.
“This is the perfect introduction of the
South Course at Oakland Hills back into major championship hosts,” says Phil Cuffare, Oakland Hills’ director of agronomy. “I don’t think there’s a better tournament to kick this off with than the boys’ junior. The South that the world is going to see in 2024 has really … never been seen on TV in its current state.”
The U.S. Junior Amateur, which has never been held at the club before, will kick off an eight-tournament agreement between the USGA and Oakland Hills. Two U.S. Opens will be coming to the club, in 2034 and 2051, along with two U.S. Women’s Opens (’31, ’42), the 2029 U.S. Women’s Amateur, the 2038 U.S. Girls’ Junior Amateur, and the 2047 U.S. Amateur.
“It’s part of the club’s legacy to host major championships and also give back to the
game, and junior golf is essentially where it all begins,” says Steve Brady, Oakland Hills’ head golf professional. “To try to fill out our championship résumé, junior golf would be a great place to start.”
The tournament will be held from July 22 to July 27, with two days of stroke play and the low 64 advancing to match play. The tournament culminates in a 36-hole match play championship. There are multiple ways for players to get into the tournament: local qualifiers, other tournament play, or their World Amateur Golf Ranking.
While Oakland Hills is no stranger to high-level championship golf, the environment for the 2024 U.S. Junior Amateur will be special for the course and for the fans who come to the event.
“This championship is a rare opportu-
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PHOTOS COPYRIGHT USGA/BILL HORNSTEIN, COURTESY OF THE COURSE USGA
“This is the perfect introduction of the South Course at Oakland Hills back into major championship hosts. I don’t think there’s a better tournament to kick this off with than the boys’ junior. The South that the world is going to see in 2024 has really … never been seen on TV in its current state.”
—Phil Cuffare, Oakland Hills’ director of agronomy
nity to witness the future of elite golf on our renowned courses,” says Jeff Judge, Oakland Hills’ general chairperson of the 2024 U.S. Junior Amateur. “These teenage players possess the driving distance, ball striking, and short-game talents which rival those seen on professional tours. Adding to the experience will be the rare ‘minimal ropes’
experience, where fans can closely follow players from tee to green.”
In terms of the courses, Cuffare says the rough will be grown out to 4.5 inches, but he prides himself on the course being ready for high-level tournament golf every day of the week. The North Course has smaller greens with more subtle undulations, he says, while
the newly restored South Course is large in scale with wide fairways and big bunkers.
“We want to let Oakland Hills be Oakland Hills,” says Rob Doone, championship director for the U.S. Junior Amateur. “The course layouts, green complexes, and overall length already make for a complete test of golf. It will be extremely exciting to see these players compete on a U.S. Open golf course with a U.S. Open setup in terms of length, rough height, and hole locations.”
The tournament expanded to 264 players in 2021. Oakland Hills’ accommodations and history make it a perfect fit for the bigger playing field.
“Another bonus that really stood out to us, in particular for the Junior Amateur, is the ability to utilize two world-class golf courses in both the South and the North Course,” says Mark Hill, managing director of championships for the USGA. “Since we now have a 264-player field and the need for two courses, it felt like a perfect fit and an opportune time to bring the Junior Am to Oakland Hills for the first time.”
The U.S. Junior Amateur is only the beginning.
“When you look at the player’s journey through USGA championships, it starts with the boys’ junior,” Cuffare says. “And then hopefully in 2034, the champion of the boys’ junior in 2024 comes back and makes a run at the U.S. Open in 2034, which is the ultimate complement.”
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 45 USGA
Oakland Hills’ South Course has been restored to its original Donald Ross design, with some modifications.
The USGA and the GAM have a collaborative relationship that extends to qualifiers, handicapping, and more.
Dynamic Duo
The USGA and the GAM have a productive relationship
/ BY TONY PAUL
The United States Golf Association runs some of the biggest tournaments in the game, including the U.S. Open.
While the organization has its eventmanagement process down pat, it couldn’t do everything it does without a rock-solid foundation, and that all starts with 58 allied golf associations around the country, including the Golf Association of Michigan.
“AGAs are the glue in their region, unifying golfers and golf courses, volunteers, and regional golf industry leaders in one cohesive community,” says Mike Whan, CEO of the USGA. “They are the experts on local golf and drive more people to play, compete, and love the game for a lifetime. We couldn’t grow this game and make it strong for our kids, and [our] kids’ kids, without them.”
The USGA and the GAM, as well as the other allied golf associations, are collaborative partners that communicate regularly during peak playing seasons.
For instance, the GAM, a nonprofit like the USGA, runs about 30 of its own championships annually, but it also oversees about 16 local qualifiers for USGA championships every year. In 2023, those championships included the U.S. Open, U.S. Senior Open, U.S. Amateur, U.S. Women’s Amateur, U.S. Senior Amateur, U.S. Junior Amateur, U.S. Girls’ Junior, U.S. Mid-Amateur, U.S. Women’s MidAmateur, U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur, and U.S. Amateur Four-Ball.
“It’s possible a player that wins the U.S. Open [or another USGA event] started at a local qualifier that the GAM operated,” says Chris Whitten, executive director of the GAM. “They [the USGA] are the mother ship, and they set the direction for where golf is headed, and we follow up on that on the local level.”
The state of Michigan has had a nice run of success in USGA tournaments in recent years. In 2021, Michigan State’s James Piot of Canton qualified for the U.S. Amateur at Egypt Valley
Country Club in West Michigan and then went on to win the U.S. Amateur at Oakmont Country Club in Pennsylvania. In 2022, Western Michigan women’s golf coach Kim Moore of Portage won the inaugural U.S. Adaptive Open at Pinehurst in North Carolina. And in 2023, Midland’s Kimberly Dinh (see page 52) won the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur at Stonewall in Elverson, Pennsylvania.
Handicapping Partnership
Allied golf associations are responsible for managing the handicaps — through the Golf Handicap & Information Network®, or GHIN, software — of their members. Most golfers at public facilities register their membership — which includes a Handicap Index — at GAM. org. Members of private clubs are registered by staff at their clubs.
The GAM is the fastest-growing allied golf association in the country (by membership percentage), which tracks with the state’s major uptick in rounds played during the COVID-19 pandemic. The GAM’s No. 1 ranking is reflective of the association’s ability to build on those pandemic-era numbers, even as golf stats in most other states have begun to level off the last two years.
“The GAM is one of the biggest, best state regional golf associations all around,” says Bryan Lewis, a former member of the GAM
USGA
Mike Whan
TOP PHOTO BY JEFF HAYNES/USGA; COURTESY PHOTOS
“They [the USGA] are the mother ship, and they set the direction for where golf is headed, and we follow up on that on the local level.”
—Chris Whitten, GAM executive director
board of governors who now serves on the USGA’s executive committee. In 2023, he served on the USGA’s Amateur Status, Audit, and Rules of Golf committees.
“They [the GAM] would be a model of state regional golf associations,” Lewis says. “It’s not like they report to the USGA, but they’re kind of like the foot sol diers, if you will. It’s a great relationship.”
The GAM now has over 90,000 members, which is up from 58,000 in 2018.
In 2022, the USGA put its technology and broad marketing reach behind the AGAs’ efforts to grow and register new golfers for a Handicap Index. Paid ads and scripted reads during the U.S. Open and other national championships encouraged golfers who did not affiliate with their regional AGA to get a Handicap Index directly from USGA.org, which would then use the golfers’ ZIP codes to affiliate them with the proper state association. More than 3 million golfers in the United States have a Handicap Index, and more than 240,000 — including 8,000
in Michigan — signed up through the new USGA portal.
“The GAM is highly focused on growth and expanding our community,” Whitten says. “But what we’ve learned is that many golfers in Michigan — primarily players at public and municipal courses — still don’t know about the GAM or what we provide. However, these golfers know the USGA, and many of them have connected with their appeal. Now these players are part of our GAM community and help to spread the word to their golfing friends.”
Course Rating and Other Collabs
The GAM also is responsible for rating the state’s courses, which is important for when golfers are entering scores on the GHIN app.
The GAM counts more than 450 of the state’s courses as members, and it aims to rate about 70 courses a year. Re-rating happens about every 10 years or so because courses change over time with tree removals, new bunkers and greens, and other updates.
The GAM uses a team of volunteers to rate the courses under the World Handicap System (see page 48). The association also relies on an outreach network to get more courses on board for the nominal fee of $100 a year, plus $400 for the first rating of the course.
Proper course ratings lead to proper handicaps, which lead to fair competition among amateur golfers, good, bad, and everywhere in between. Courses that haven’t been rated aren’t available on the GHIN app.
“The last couple years, we’ve added more and more member golf courses,” Whitten says. “We do have some courses call us. Many times at nonmember courses, a golfer tries to post their score, finds they can’t, then goes to the course administrator and encourages them to reach out to the GAM to get rated. A major long-term GAM goal is to rate every single course in the state.”
The GAM also is the point organization for the state’s golfers who have questions about the rules.
On top of that, the GAM is available to help out the USGA when it hosts championships in the state — as it’s set to do at Oakland Hills Country Club in Bloomfield Hills in the coming decades. Oakland Hills recently was awarded two U.S. Opens, two U.S. Women’s Opens, and four other amateur championships put on by the USGA (see page 44).
Whitten says the USGA is self-sufficient when it comes to its own tournaments, but it still likes to get the allied golf associations involved in its marquee events through volunteer opportunities.
“The AGA network provides our boots on the ground for so many critical services,” Whan says, adding that there’s been an increased focus in recent years, for both partners, on getting more women and youth involved in golf. “We need each golf association in the network to remain strong, and we recognize that we can do more together than any of us can do alone. By sharing resources, every golfer and every golf course benefits.
“Michigan is an energetic golf state with more than [800] courses to play and … [an] avid golfer base. ... The state is also taking advantage of the national growth and interest in the game, which we hope will only continue.”
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 47 USGA
3
KEY CHANGES
T2024 World Handicap System™:
he USGA and R&A launched the World Handicap System in 2020 to unify the game and bring a standard measure of playing ability to the game of golf. Now golfers across 125 countries are able to use their Handicap Index® to compete against anyone on any course. After gathering feedback from around the world, the USGA and R&A are ready to give you the first update to the World Handicap System. Here are three key WHS concepts the GAM wants you to remember!
1.Course Rating and Shorter Courses: Courses as short as 750 yards for nine holes and 1,500 yards for 18 holes are eligible for a Course RatingTM and Slope RatingTM — enhancing the portability of a Handicap Index to make the system more accommodating for all players. (Turn to page 50 to get more in-depth information on updated course ratings.)
2.10-17-Hole Scores: Use of expected Score DifferentialTM applies when 10-17 holes are played, introducing more flexibility to score posting. In this scenario, you’re asked to post your score hole by hole.
3.Nine-Hole Scores: No more waiting on ninehole scores to combine, as they will count toward your Handicap Index the very next day. A premium is placed on the holes you played and combined with an expected Score Differential for consistency and fairness.
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LEFT ILLUSTRATIONS COURTESY OF THE USGA USGA
Going the (Right) Distance
The USGA’s new tee recommendation system is meant to help golfers have a better time on the links
T/ BY EMILY DORAN
o have a good experience on the golf course, you need (among other things) a Goldilocks starting position. That is, you need to play from tees that are the right length for your ability, neither too long nor too short.
Easier said than done. According to 92% of 742 surveyed PGA and LPGA pros, it is either “extremely common” or “somewhat common” for golfers to play from tees that are set too far back for their ability. A USGA score posting analysis and a survey of 20,000 golfers support this notion as well. Per the USGA analysis, 75% of female golfers and 50% of male golfers consistently play from tees that are too long. Fifty-seven percent of the surveyed golfers said that courses “sometimes” or “often” seemed too long for their abilities.
Using golfer performance data and surveyed preferences, the USGA, in collaboration with other golf organizations and industry partners, has landed on recommended tee lengths for the average golfer, relying on a 7-iron as a reference club:
The USGA wants to change that. The national golf organization has launched a new, research-backed “Best Tees” system to help golfers determine where, exactly, they should tee off. During 2023, the system was tested at more than 60 courses across the country. The USGA will consider feedback from this initial launch to improve and then distribute the system more widely.
Underlying the “Best Tees” system is the determination that a well-fitted set of tees allows a golfer to reach the fairway comfortably on par-4 and par-5 holes, reach the area of most greens in regulation, and use multiple clubs on approach shots.
The system relies on current course rating data to be customizable for any course, and more-nuanced adjustments to factor in elevation changes, doglegs, and the like might be available down the road.
The USGA hopes the “Best Tees” system will enable golf course staff to help golfers find their best tees and enjoy a better experience on the links.
To learn more about the “Best Tees” system, visit USGA.org.
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 49 USGA
Average 7-Iron Distance Reasonable Par-3 Distance Reasonable Par-4 Distance Reasonable Par-5 Distance “Best Tees” Recommended Par-72 Course Length 138 152 359 476 6,100 100 109 259 353 4,437 Average Male Golfer (Yards) Average Female Golfer (Yards)
The Ratings Are In
Score posting is now available at these short courses
/ BY EMILY DORAN
Michigan golfers who like to post their scores now have more options for doing just that.
New this spring, four short courses in the state have been rated, meaning members of the Golf Association of Michigan will be able to post their scores when they play them.
Ratings at short courses are possible because of a 2024 revision to the USGA’s Rules of Handicapping. Before, a golf course needed to be at least 1,500 yards per nine holes to be eligible for rating. Now, the minimum length for a golf course to get rated is 750 yards per nine holes.
This change is a boon to the USGA’s and the GAM’s efforts to make golf more inclusive.
“As the game continues to diversify
As of April 1, GAM members will be able to post their scores at these short courses:
• Threetops at Treetops Resort in Gaylord
• Green Course at Bay Meadows Family Golf Course in Traverse City
• Little Myth at Myth Golf Course in Oakland Township
• Bootlegger at Forest Dunes in Roscommon
and grow, the integration of shorter golf courses is instrumental in building the game for beginning golfers, juniors, seniors, or those who just don’t have the time to always play a traditional-length golf course,” says Hunter Koch, director of course rating for the GAM.
For the past two years, the GAM has coordinated with the USGA to lay the groundwork for incorporating short courses into the World Handicap System.
The data collected, Koch says, “showed … that these additional courses, as much as any other golf course, provide reputable evidence of a player’s demonstrated ability for handicapping purposes.”
This year and beyond, the GAM will be working to rate several other newly eligible courses, both short ones at existing member clubs and ones at independent clubs that are now able to join the GAM for the first time.
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PHOTO COURTESY OF THE COURSE
Threetops at Treetops Resort in Gaylord
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“I was determined to come back to amateur golf [after my injury] and play well. I didn’t think I would win something of this magnitude so quickly, but I always had the faith and confidence in my skills even beforehand and played well the last couple years to do it.”
—Kimberly Dinh, 2023 U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur champion
AT THETOP OF HER GAME
2023 U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur winner Kimberly Dinh is finding success on and off the golf course
/ BY PAULA PASCHE
Mental toughness, dedication, and balance are the keys to Kimberly Dinh’s success on and off the golf course.
Even with her work as an associate research scientist at Dow, she has found time to hone her golf game to the point where she has been named the Golf Association of Michigan’s Women’s Player of the Year for three years running.
When 31-year-old Dinh won the 2023 U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur Championship in September, she had to reconfigure this summer’s schedule, adding the 2024 U.S. Women’s Open at Lancaster Country Club in Pennsylvania and the U.S. Women’s Amateur at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Both are exemptions that came along with the victory.
Her win also opened the door to the next 10 U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateurs and the 2025 U.S. Women’s Amateur. Then there are other tournaments to squeeze in, along with her wedding this summer.
Playing in the U.S. Women’s Open was at the top of her bucket list, but she’s also excited to play in the U.S. Women’s Amateur.
“I want to see how I’ll stack up against some of the best women amateurs in the world — a lot of college players who are playing at the top of their games right now,” says Dinh, who never tried to qualify for the U.S. Women’s Amateur when she played with the Wisconsin Badgers.
DRAMATIC WIN
To Dinh, 2023’s success was a bit more surprising since she broke her ankle in January and was in a cast for six weeks and then a boot for six weeks.
“I was determined to come back to amateur golf and play well,” she says. “I didn’t think I would win something of this magnitude so quickly, but I always had the faith and confidence in my skills even beforehand and played well the last couple years to do it.”
She won the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur in dramatic fashion, coming back from a 3-down deficit and winning six of the last seven holes at Stonewall in Elverson, Pennsylvania. She was the first player from Michigan ever to win the event, and it was the first time since 2003 that a competitor came back from a deficit as large as 3 in the championship match.
“I play pretty steady golf; I don’t make a whole lot of mistakes,” Dinh says. “I’m pretty solid on short putts. So I just plod my way around a golf course, just stay steady — don’t get too high or too low. That’s a strength of match play, and I enjoy that.”
Her ability to stay focused on the course is one of her strengths, says her coach, Kyle Martin, who is the head golf professional at The Fortress Golf Course in Frankenmuth. He’s worked with Dinh for almost four years.
“Honestly, the biggest strength is her commitment to her shot,” he says. “She drives the ball well, she chips the ball well, and she’s really improved her putting this year.
PHOTO BY GREG JOHNSON
52 MICHIGAN LINKS | WWW.GAM.ORG Cover Story
Life is a balancing act for Kimberly Dinh, winner of the 2023 U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur, who plays top-level competitive golf while working as a scientist and enjoying other hobbies.
But her commitment to every shot — her mental strength — is impressive, to say the least.”
While Martin sometimes caddies for her, he couldn’t be with her at the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur, but he was watching the scoreboard and knew when she was 3 down that she still had a chance to win.
“She’s tough,” he says. “She’s not going to back down from anybody, and she does it with such a kind demeanor.”
He thinks her commitment to every shot comes from her background and her career involving statistical analysis.
“There’s nothing that she goes into that is by chance,” he says. “She records every competitive shot she hits every season. At the end of each season, I’ll get a 15-page report on her shots gained in certain areas, her shots lost in certain areas — all the data.
“She puts her findings together. I put my findings together. Then we get together and we put together a plan of how we’re going to work on the areas that need to improve.”
That strategy appears to be working. Dinh says her scoring average in the last few years has gone down a stroke or a stroke and a half, which is significant at her level.
“A lot of it has been a refining process to hit the ball a little better, chase a little bit more distance, adding more distance to my game,” she says. “But [I’m] continuing to refine everything — short game, putting, pretty much everything we’ve worked on in terms of the golf game.”
“The biggest strength is her commitment to her shot. She drives the ball well, she chips the ball well, and she’s really improved her putting this year. But her commitment to every shot — her mental strength — is impressive, to say the least.”
—Kyle Martin, Kimberly Dinh’s coach
SUCCESSFUL SEASON
Dinh has come a long way since first picking up a golf club at age 7, when she played with her dad and one of her brothers at Currie, a Midland municipal golf course. She played golf at Herbert Henry Dow High School and was a preferred walk-on at Wisconsin. After redshirting her freshman year, she played her way into the lineup for four years.
That background experience sowed the seeds for her most successful season yet.
She made the cut at the LPGA’s Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitational (now called the Dow Championship) in 2023, her second year playing in the event, which was held at Midland Country Club, where she is a member.
“It was my first LPGA event last year [2022], so a lot of nerves,” Dinh says. “You just don’t know where your game will stack up against some of the best players in the world. But it gave me a lot of confidence that, ‘Hey, we can compete out here. We weren’t as sharp as they were; that is their job.’”
She was much more comfortable in 2023.
“That whole experience has given me a lot of confidence that I can compete week in and week out,” she says, “and even through all of it, maybe I don’t always have the sharpest game, but [I] can still go out and play.”
Playing at her home club, she had the support of family and friends.
“You never get a home game in golf, or very rarely,” she says. “It provides a little comfort, adds a little bit of pressure and stress for me because you want to play well for everybody.”
Her family and her fiancé, Tony Sisouphane, are her biggest fans.
“It’s easy for her to have that balance between her professional life, her golf career, and her family because they’re such a great support system,” Martin says. “For as long as I’ve known her family, I have never heard anything negative come out of any of their mouths when it comes to her golf career and ability to play.”
Winning the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur was icing on the cake for her successful 2023 season. She also won the GAM Women’s MidAmateur at Saginaw Country Club in May, and she was a semifinalist at the Michigan Women’s Amateur in August at Spring Lake Country Club.
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PHOTO BY JEFF HAYNES, COURTESY OF THE USGA
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Dinh’s success leading up to 2023 included reaching the quarterfinals of the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur in 2022; winning the Michigan Women’s Amateur at Saginaw Country Club in 2021; finishing second at the GAM Women’s Mid-Amateur at Oakhurst Golf and Country Club in Clarkston in 2021; and reaching the round of 16 at the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur in 2021. Dinh also won the 2020 GAM Women’s Mid-Amateur at the Country Club of Lansing.
FINDING HER BALANCE
Living in Michigan makes playing golf yearround impossible, but that’s fine with Dinh. She puts her clubs away for the winter to take a break and “explore other interests.” She took downhill skiing off her list after she broke her ankle on the slopes last year and instead took up the relatively safe sport of curling. She doesn’t stay away from golf for too long, though.
“I’ll start practicing a little bit in midJanuary, hit some golf balls, work on a couple of swing changes,” she says, adding that “by the time it’s actually a little nicer here in Michigan, golf is exciting and fresh. It’s something I want to do again.”
While she’s had recent success, she did have about five years where she didn’t play serious, competitive golf. After getting her undergraduate degree at Wisconsin, she studied at MIT, earning her master’s degree and a Ph.D. in chemical engineering. During that stretch, she played golf only sporadically on a club team.
“I was ready to explore something new and take a break and didn’t have that desire to
“Playing golf competitively at this point in time is a balance, and you enjoy other things, too.”
—Kimberly Dinh, 2023 U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur champion
compete at a high level at that point anyway,” Dinh says. “I was focused on my graduate work, so it wasn’t the priority at the time.”
Her goal wasn’t necessarily to return to Midland to start her career, but Dow came up with a competitive offer and checked all the boxes. She planned to travel to Asia and Europe in the summer of 2020 before she started her new job, but the COVID-19 pandemic got in the way. Playing golf, though, was still an option.
Left: Kimberly Dinh at work. Below: Dinh (center) with some of her family. From left, cousin Christina Le, mother Mai Nguyen, father Paul Dinh, and cousin Teresa Le.
“I signed up for the Michigan Mid-Am that year … on a lark and won, which surprised me,” Dinh says. “I played in the Michigan Am that year and the GAM Championship [and] enjoyed the competition again. It’s fun coming
back and playing against the college kids to see where my game stacks up. That got me back into competitive golf.”
Today, Dinh is maintaining a careful worklife balance, which her employer supports. She takes vacation days to compete in events and can occasionally work remotely.
“With balancing it, I can’t play in everything I would want to play in, so I have to choose the tournaments that I do want to play in,” she says. “I certainly will never play a full schedule. [That’s] not something I would be interested in at this point.”
While she often plays against younger golfers, she’s up to the task.
“I don’t get to practice as much as they do,” she says. “You balance and you prioritize and you figure out how you can still be efficient to stay sharp. Playing golf competitively at this point in time is a balance, and you enjoy other things, too.”
56 MICHIGAN LINKS | WWW.GAM.ORG Cover Story
Kimberly Dinh and her coach, Kyle Martin.
TOP PHOTO BY CREATIVE ELEMENT STUDIO; OTHER TWO PHOTOS BY GREG JOHNSON.
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 57 OFFICIAL PARTNER GOLF ASSOCIATION OF MICHIGAN #ABOVEPAR HY DRATION ABSOPURE.COM Supporting the Golf Industry for over 35 years. West Michigan G LF SHOW TM
AA Team Effort
Volunteers power the GAM’s service
/ BY GREG JOHNSON
financial planner, a supply chain manager, an auditor, and an engineer, each sporting Golf Association of Michigan logos on their apparel, walk into a golf facility.
It’s not an opening scene to set up a punch line. It’s the GAM.
The GAM is powered by volunteers who help the staff conduct the work of the association and fill major decision-making roles.
Ken Hartmann, senior director of competitions and USGA services for the GAM, says the structure works because the volunteers love golf.
“The board of governors and the executive committee, they are volunteers, too, and then you have the staff for the tournaments and services,” he says. “As staff, you don’t have to be [pushy] with them. They are there to help, they love the game, and in the end they know and you know they are needed to come back and do it again another day.”
Jay Hults, the GAM president in 2023, says inspiration flows between the staff and the volunteers.
“This last year showed me the GAM has a very talented and devoted staff,” he says. “Chris Whitten is tremendous as our executive director, and down the line you have people like Ken Hartmann and the other staffers who work countless hours. They don’t ask volunteers to do anything they wouldn’t do, and the volunteers realize that. It works.”
Founded in 1919, the GAM is a nonprofit organization — and an allied golf association collaborating with the USGA — whose mission is to represent, promote, preserve, and serve amateur golf in Michigan. The core offerings and services are amateur championships, handicapping, and course rating. Volunteers power the championships and course rating, and member clubs and courses make it possible for the over 90,000 mem-
“One of the best things about our volunteers is they are not looking for credit. They have had many great professional and golf experiences, and now they have time to give back, and they have chosen our association as the way to share their time and energy.”
—Chris Whitten, GAM executive director
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Volunteers
COURTESY PHOTOS
GAM volunteers do it all: rating courses, helping at tournaments, and steering the association.
“It makes me feel good to help others, and the GAM is another way to do that.”
—Dan Adamini, course rating volunteer
ber golfers of all ages and abilities to have a Handicap Index.
The GAM runs 30 championships each year for adults and kids and also administers 15 to 20 qualifiers for national championships. Volunteers are a vital part of the teams that keep these tournaments running smoothly.
As a USGA ally, the GAM is responsible for determining official course ratings as well, and the work of volunteers is once again crucial. Volunteers rate 50 to 70 courses annually, and thanks to their efforts, golfers interested in maintaining a Handicap Index as part of the World Handicap System can post their scores at courses that have been rated.
At least 250 people can call themselves active GAM volunteers, and several serve in multiple ways. Roughly 100 individuals volunteer at tournaments, another 100 do course ratings, and about 50 others are officers, board members, governors, committee
members, and more.
“One of the best things about our volunteers is they are not looking for credit,” says Chris Whitten, who has been the GAM’s executive director since 2019. “They have had many great professional and golf experiences, and now they have time to give back, and they have chosen our association as the way to share their time and energy.
“We are lucky. They are more than strong rules officials and more than just people who understand the complexities of course rating. They are professional folks who have been very successful. They have tremendous backgrounds in business, in law, in
Dan Adamini
customer relations, and so many other areas. They offer help, suggestions, and ideas, and they make great GAM ambassadors.”
Meet a financial planner, a supply chain manager, an auditor, and an engineer, a sampling of the volunteers who power the GAM.
The Yooper Who Loves Everything About Golf
Dan Adamini of Marquette describes himself as mostly retired from a career as a financial planner. He also plays guitar at church and performs at nursing homes and other places.
“It makes me feel good to help others, and
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 59
Dan Adamini (center), a GAM course rater, in his natural habitat.
Volunteers
the GAM is another way to do that,” he says. “Golf is kind of in my blood. I credit my dad. He thought it was always great to have a match, even if you just played for a penny, and to make it fair, for years he would give me two strokes a hole. Before he passed away, I was giving him two strokes a hole. I was taught early the concept of making it fair.”
Making it fair is how he sees his volunteer work for the GAM as a course rater.
“I wanted to understand course ratings and started reading up on it,” he says. “Eventually, I reached out to the GAM.”
Hunter Koch, director of course rating for the GAM, answered the call when Adamini reached out, and he was elated to add a volunteer in an underserved part of the state. Adamini is one of two raters for the GAM who reside in the Upper Peninsula.
“Dan is a productive member of the team we are happy to have work with us,” Koch says. “With the limited work Dan gets in his area, and the travel if he wants to be involved in other rates, it’s a great thing that he remains committed.”
A native of Chicago, Adamini, 63, followed his father, a U.P. native, north when he retired and then decided to stay.
“I love golf,” he says. “I also love winter.”
He was a GAM member through Marquette Golf Club for 30 years, and he currently works three days a week in the summer for the maintenance crew of the club’s two courses. He calls the playing part of being a course rater (rating work followed by a round of golf) a nice side benefit but says the numbers keep him involved.
“Numbers were my life in financial planning, and I love the complexity in rating a course,” he says. “Plus, the GAM is like a family. I like to inject a sense of humor into things, and I’ve met some wonderful people doing this. It’s funny: Others ask me if I get paid. I tell them, ‘No, it costs, but if you enjoy it, that is irrelevant. Also, if we get a chance to play, my course rating knowledge will help you understand exactly why you are losing your money to me.’”
James Wlosinski, a GAM rules official affec tionately known as J.W. or J-Dub, at a golf outing. J.W. is a GAM volunteer who helps Hartmann recruit, and he and Caylen were in the same foursome.
“I had just retired from my career [in supply chain management for KLA Corp.] at the end of April [2022] and was volunteering for the University of Michigan Athletic Department,” Caylen says. “James noticed my Michigan visor, and he told me he would be working the next week as a pace-of-play official at an [NCAA tournament at the university]. It sounded interesting, and I asked a million questions.”
you why so you understand.”
Caylen, 67 and a mother of two, comes from a family where everybody plays golf. Last year, she took a weeklong USGA class on the rules, and she plans to take the USGA rules test once she balances returning to work part time for KLA, volunteering, and playing in two golf leagues.
“This year [2023], I worked about 50 tournament days. I love being on very nice golf courses, meeting golfers, watching phenomenal golf being played, and every time I’m out there I learn.”
—Laurie Caylen, tournament volunteer
Soon after, she signed up to volunteer for a GAM tournament as Wlosinski helped her through the process at GAM.org.
“I worked that first one, loved it, and signed up for more,” she says. “This year [2023], I worked about 50 tournament days. I love being on very nice golf courses,
“I told KLA that work was interfering with my golf life, so this year I’m just going to work until March and this summer focus on the GAM stuff and playing more golf,” she says.
Hartmann describes Caylen as dedicated.
“You figure out quickly what kind of volunteer you have on bad weather days,” he says. “She sticks it out every time. She will be out there from sunup to sundown for you and isn’t afraid of any job we ask of her. She also has a great attitude.”
Caylen says she can’t wait for golf season and summer to roll around.
“Then I get to do it again,” she says.
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Laurie Caylen
COURTESY PHOTO
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Volunteers
“I like to stay busy. I like to be around golf. I like numbers. It all fits for me.”
—Matt Witzke, course rating volunteer
The Arizona Auditor Who Retired and Returned to Michigan
Matt Witzke of Comins grew up in Bay City, went to Ferris State, and then spent 40 years in Arizona, where he was the state auditor.
Now, he is 67, retired, back in his home state, and volunteering as an experienced course rater for the GAM. He rated courses for the Arizona Golf Association for 20 years prior to coming home in the summer of 2022.
“The chief of course rating in Arizona contacted Hunter [Koch] here, and the GAM put me to work,” he says. “I’m new to the GAM but not new to course rating.”
Koch says the transition for Witzke was easy because the structure of course rating is similar between the golf associations.
“Matt came with ample experience and was able to help right away, and he also had a different perspective,” Koch says. “He shared things with us through a different lens. It helps our team overall to gain from his experience and perspective. He is a really good rater and fits in well with the group.”
Witzke enjoys rating courses just as much as he enjoys playing golf.
“I’ve always been a numbers guy, so I’m comfortable doing ratings and enjoy being out on the course, and I’ve always enjoyed playing golf — though I don’t play as well as I used to play,” he says. “I guess my game isn’t as good as it used to be with age, but my course rating skills are still up there.”
The differences between the courses in Arizona and Michigan are dramatic as far as landforms and vegetation, Witzke says, but the USGA rating system is well established.
“You just have different things to rate, different codes, but all of that has been easy to pick up,” he says. “I also grew up on Michigan golf courses. I knew what was coming.”
Witzke says being a course rater is just one of the ways he stays active in his retirement. In addition to volunteering for the GAM, he works part time on the golf service staff at Garland Lodge & Golf Resort in Lewiston and officiates high school football and basketball.
“I like to stay busy,” he says. “I like to be around golf. I like numbers. It all fits for me.”
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Matt Witzke
COURTESY PHOTOS
From left: Kerry Glaesmer, Darrell Zavitz, and Matt Witzke work on a 2023 course rating.
The GAM Foundation operates Youth on Course Michigan, providing junior golfers access to play golf at participating public golf courses for $5 or less.
Your donation supports financial subsidies to our public course partners and makes the affordable rate possible for juniors.
Make a tax-deductible gift today by visiting:
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 63
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Fenton
Farms Golf-QRT-MI
GAM.org/Foundation
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Volunteers
“I like helping the golfers with the rules and watching golf. I don’t mind traveling around; [it] gets me out. Being a volunteer for the GAM is fun for me.”
—Greg Zeug, tournament volunteer
The Automotive Engineer Who Wanted Something to Do Greg Zeug of Shelby Township was looking for something to do with his time in 2022 after retiring as a mechanical engineer for ZF Group.
“My wife [Kim] had passed away in 2020 after fighting breast cancer for a long time, and then I retired in 2022,” he says. “Our sons live near Seattle, and I go to North Carolina in the winter. I played golf but was looking for more. As a GAM member, I was on the website and saw they were looking for volunteer rules officials.”
Zeug, 63, filled out the volunteer form at GAM.org and was contacted by Wlosinski and then Hartmann, and soon after, he was at tournaments chipping in with whatever was needed.
“I really enjoyed it,” he says. “I went from volunteering for the GAM to doing high school [tournaments] with Mick Kildea [honorary GAM governor and rules official] and helping with college events.
When I first started this whole thing, I did not plan to get that deep into it, but as I learned more, it became this very interesting thing to do.”
In the early part of 2023, Hartmann approached Zeug about a USGA rules seminar and perhaps taking the rules test.
“The GAM offered some support to do the seminar and take the test,” Zeug says. “I had never thought about that before, but there I was two hours a night for five nights online with instructors. I decided after that to take the 80-question test to see how I might do. I studied on the USGA website, looked at their videos, and took practice tests.”
His hard work paid off: In June, he scored a perfect 80 out of 80 and earned his advanced rating. Two months later, he took the 100-question test and scored 95 out of 100 to get his expert rating.
“Greg is great at the rules and dedicated,” Hartmann says. “He’s a volunteer that sticks it out, too. He is a beast, works all day, knows his stuff. He does his job. You don’t have to worry about him. You have to make sure he comes in and grabs lunch. He puts the golf tournament first.”
Golf has been in Zeug’s life since he was a teen, when his father, a caddie in his youth, started playing again and inspired him to give it a try. Zeug went on to play high school golf and then spent two years on a junior college team.
“I love to play and I like being at golf courses,” he says. “I like helping the golfers with the rules and watching golf. I don’t mind traveling around; [it] gets me out. Being a volunteer for the GAM is fun for me.”
64 MICHIGAN LINKS | WWW.GAM.ORG
COURTESY PHOTOS
Greg Zeug
GAM Volunteers
The GAM is grateful to our over 200 dedicated volunteers who love the game and help us support amateur golf in the state.
Come Join Us.
the state.
The GAM is grateful to our over 200 dedicated volunteers who love the game and help us support amateur golf in
If you are interested in becoming a volunteer with the GAM, please visit GAM.org. Thank you! Join Us.
GAM volunteers during the 2023 season (left to right, top to bottom): GAM course rating volunteers Amy Schubert, Marty Score, and Dee Piccard at a rate; GAM President Emeritus Lee Juett presents the Staghorn Trophy to August Meekhof after Meekhof won the Michigan Amateur Championship; GAM volunteer Lou Sutfin makes sure players are keeping pace of play; GAM volunteer Laurie Caylen and Championship Committee Chair Barry Babbitt discuss a ruling on the course; GAM officials at Legislative Day at the Capitol; GAM Honorary Gov. Craig Reading shakes Greg Davies’s hand after a match; GAM Gov. Holly Little and Chris Whitten go over the rules for the final match of the Michigan Women’s Amateur Championship with Katie Chipman and Olivia Hemmila; and GAM Gov. Frank Ervin is all smiles on the course.
If you are interested in becoming a volunteer with the GAM, please visit GAM.org. COURSE DIRECTORY 2023 29
GAM volunteers during the 2022 season (left to right, top to bottom): GAM governor LeRoy Bray gives a ruling, GAM Presidents Emeriti Tom Anderson and Tom Bollinger go over a decision, Mick Kildea congratulates Michigan Girls’ Junior State Amateur Champion Grace Wang after her win, the GAM course rating team at White Pine National, GAM Vice President Judy Lazzaro puts in the paces, and volunteer Holly Little greets competitors on the first tee during a match at the Michigan Amateur Championship.
029_MLinks_Volunteers 2023.indd 29 3/13/23 4:52 PM COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 65 Volunteers
Aspire Higher
Teeing Up Students for Success
Aspire Higher youth caddie program is introducing high schoolers to golf
/ BY RENÉE T. WALKER
Ayouth caddie program in metro Detroit is introducing academically focused high schoolers to the game of golf and helping them build valuable life skills and earn an opportunity to compete for an Evans Scholarship.
Aspire Higher is the passion project of Scott Wilson, Kimberly Shapiro, and Jack Lintol, who established the program four years ago at Oakland Hills Country Club. The trio bootstrapped Aspire Higher until two years ago, when they officially launched it with resources provided by the Western Golf Association and its Evans Scholars Foundation. The program also received funding to provide students with golf clothes and busing to and from their caddying assignments.
Through its partnerships with three Pontiac schools — International Technology Academy, Pontiac High School, and Notre Dame Preparatory School — the Aspire
Higher team works with school counselors to identify, interview, and select students for the three-year program. In 2023, 35 student caddies participated in the program.
“Through Aspire Higher, we are not only introducing a diverse group of students to a sport they may not have had access to before, but we are also providing them with valuable life skills and opportunities that can change the course of their lives,” Wilson says. “It’s truly inspiring to see the growth and transformation in the students as they learn and develop into confident, capable leaders. It also reinforces the importance of our mission.”
and a year-end banquet, and they spend a day at the Royal Oak Golf Center, where they get lessons taught by PGA professionals and play a round of minigolf.
Each year, Aspire Higher participants are mentored and engage in enrichment activities, including campus tours at Michigan State University, the University of Michigan, and their respective Evans Scholars chapter houses. Students also attend the Rocket Mortgage Classic
In 2023, the caddying program expanded to the Country Club of Detroit, and it reached a significant milestone when its first six Aspire Higher students — then seniors — competed for the Evans Scholarship, which covers college tuition and housing for accomplished caddies with limited financial means. Since its inception, Aspire Higher has been transforming lives through the development of valuable skills such as leadership, perseverance, and interpersonal communication. For more information about the Aspire Hire program or the Evans Scholars Foundation, visit wgaesf.org.
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The Aspire Higher program introduces academically focused high schoolers to the game of golf.
The Grass Is Greener (When You Fund It)
Endowed research position will honor legendary MSU scientist Joe Vargas
/ BY TOM LANG
Scientific turf research conducted by university professors in the Department of Plant, Soil and Microbial Sciences at Michigan State might go over the heads of most golfers, but they inevitably enjoy its positive impact on the grass beneath their feet.
Much of the improvement in golf course conditions over the past few decades is arguably attributable to Joe Vargas, who has a doctorate in plant pathology, and his team of Spartan academic colleagues who make up the “turf team.” As Vargas nears retirement, he is being honored with the creation of the Joe Vargas Chair in Turfgrass Pathology, an endowed position for an innovative turf researcher. The chair funding will also help ensure that MSU’s turfgrass program thrives in perpetuity.
“[Because of Dr. Joe Vargas,] golf courses went from being good golf courses to becoming great golf courses in all kinds of extreme conditions.”
Vargas has worked at MSU since 1968; to say he’s impacted the turfgrass program there and the world of turf at large in the past 56 years would be an understatement. According to a 2016 article from MSU’s College of Agriculture and Natural Resources recognizing Vargas’s pending inclusion in the Michigan Golf Hall of Fame, he has done turf-related work on every continent save Antarctica.
—Carey Mitchelson, executive director of the Michigan Turfgrass Foundation
“Dr. Vargas has put MSU on the map,” says Carey Mitchelson, executive director of the Michigan Turfgrass Foundation, which donated $1 million to kick off the funding of the Joe Vargas Chair. “MSU’s turf program has always been well respected, but his travels and innovative investigations and discovery of diseases that were unknown at the time brought world-
wide attention to his work. He’s certainly the face of turf pathology.”
Closer to home, he’s “personally and positively assisted every golf course in Michigan,” according to an article published this summer by the Michigan Turfgrass Foundation that quotes Brian Horgan, Ph.D., the chair of MSU’s Department of Plant, Soil and Microbial Sciences.
Many people assume turf health issues boil down to irrigation and insects, Mitchelson says, but ground diseases are the main culprit.
“It was Dr. Vargas who put a microscope in as a valuable tool and his discovery of disease and the proper cure for them that turned the turf world, and particularly the golf course industry, into a new dimension in the ’80s and ’90s,” Mitchelson says. “Golf courses went from being good golf courses to becoming great golf courses in all kinds of extreme conditions.”
As the game of golf surges in the postpandemic era, maintaining excellent turf — and supporting the research behind it — should be of primary importance to the golf course industry. Clubs and individuals interested in donating to the Joe Vargas Chair can visit canr.msu.edu/turfgrass/joe-vargasendowed-chair-in-turfgrass-pathology to learn more. The endowment goal is $5 million.
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 67 Turf
Joe Vargas
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“I’ve played golf for over five decades, and giving to the GAM Foundation is my way of giving back to the game. It’s a way to support young people to learn the game, to play the game, to become better people through the game.”
—Cathy Kalahar, GAM Foundation vice president
‘Why I Give’
Sharing the joys and lessons of golf is a key reason donors support the GAM Foundation
/ BY HELENE ST. JAMES
The moment it really hit Cathy Kalahar that this is why I give was when a young single mother called the Golf Association of Michigan Foundation and raved about a vacation she and her children had just taken in the Upper Peninsula. Thanks to Youth on Course, all of them were able to include golfing among their experiences.
“They went camping and were able to play golf together as a family,” says Kalahar, the vice president of the GAM Foundation. “It was really special. Her son was already a golfer, but the two daughters took up the game, and they went on to fall in love with the game and join their high school team. That is just so rewarding, to get that kind of feedback.
“I’ve played golf for over five decades, and giving to the GAM Foundation is my way of giving back to the game. It’s a way to support young people to learn the game, to play the game, to become better people through the game. It seems to be a springboard to success for the kids that really fall in love with the game of golf.”
Youth on Course, a program that enables young people ages 6 to 18 to play on a course for $5 or less, is the prime beneficiary of the GAM Foundation. That held major appeal
for Tim Moore, who is among the foundation’s top donors.
“I like to contribute to charities where I think I am making a difference in people’s lives,” Moore says. “I have been blessed financially and I am able to give. [Through the GAM Foundation and Youth on Course,] you’re able to introduce underprivileged
Cathy Kalahar Tim Moore
children to golf. … Normally, golf is expensive, clubs are expensive, to play is expensive. Golf has traditionally been an area where underprivileged people haven’t had the opportunity that privileged people have had to play the game.
“I played high school golf, I played college golf, I’ve been around caddying all my
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COURTESY
life. I believe golf can make a difference in an individual’s life.”
“Our donors know how important the game of golf is to them and want to make sure that junior golfers can play as much as they’d like for an affordable rate.”
The foundation classifies Moore as a “double eagle” giver, a category that spans $20,000 to $49,999 for lifetime giving. Another name in that grouping is the Edward F. Redies Foundation, which in 2023 donated $15,000 to Washtenaw County golf courses that participated in Youth on Course.
—Laura Bavaird, GAM Foundation director
It isn’t just big givers who help; every dollar adds up to broaden accessibility to golf.
“Our donors know how important the game of golf is to them and want to make sure that junior golfers can play as much as they’d like for an affordable rate,” says Laura Bavaird, the director of the GAM Foundation.
“Donors like Cathy and Tim are trailblazers for the GAM Foundation, and we are very fortunate to have their synergy and far-sightedness within our fundraising efforts. It takes special people like Cathy and
Tim to be visionaries and create opportunities for more people to join in on their passion for philanthropy.”
Youth on Course set record numbers in 2020, when golf courses beckoned as a welcoming and available distraction from restrictions on indoor gatherings. As the world adjusted, golf retained its appeal — and then some. In 2023, Michigan had more than 9,000 Youth on Course members.
“These kids h ave played more than 30,000 rounds, and that beats everything that happened in 2020, which were our highest numbers to date,” Bavaird says. “We’ve surpassed that this year, and we are thinking the trajectory is only going to go up from here.”
The appeal is easy to understand: For individuals who otherwise might not have been able to afford golf, Youth on Course opens up the possibility (1) to try it
and (2) to keep playing. The overriding sentiment among those who give is a desire to share the game they love and to open it up to children and families.
Kalahar has the foundation listed as a beneficiary precisely because she wants to give to others what she herself has enjoyed so much.
“Golf provides so many wonderful opportunities — to be outside, to learn a game that requires concentration,” she says. “When you get the joy of hitting a pure shot, it’s so cool that it kind of pulls at you, gives you a sense of mastery.
“Golf teaches you about learning rules and learning how to handle your emotions. You go from joy to disappointment and recovering and adapting, pulling yourself together, and moving forward. I was a psychologist and worked with children and families, and golf is such a great sport to learn to get mastery of your emotions, to enjoy your successes but also to handle disappointments.”
Best of all for those who give is the knowledge that they are opening pathways for others to discover what they have gained from playing. “Lifelong friendships,” Kalahar says, “are made on the golf course.”
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 69
GAM Foundation
Copelin O’Krangley
C‘An Investment in Our Youth’
/ BY TOM RADEMACHER
opelin O’Krangley is still a teen, but she’s savvy enough to realize that the golf courses that go the extra mile to make it affordable for her to hit the links will be the ones she’s more likely to patronize as she plays the game into adulthood.
Enter YOC, short for Youth on Course, a nationwide initiative that’s fast gaining ground in Michigan. Courses aligned with YOC charge $5 or less for juniors ages 6 through 18 to play a round, taking advantage of subsidies provided by the Golf Association of Michigan Foundation.
Youth on Course makes the game more accessible to junior golfers
over 9,000 juniors to play more than 32,000 rounds throughout the state,” says Laura Bavaird, GAM Foundation director. “The bottom line is that it stretches a family’s budget to allow them to play more golf.”
“This past year, we’ve paid back more than $169,000 to nearly 90 courses that allowed
That’s especially true for the O’Krangleys — dad Josh; mom Becky; and sisters Copelin, 17, and Codie, 15, both of whom are standouts on the varsity girls’ golf team at Caledonia High School. Both parents work — Josh as a drywall contractor and Becky as a nanny — and their
daughters earn money babysitting. They’re all aware of the value of a dollar.
“To say that Youth on Course is a pretty big deal is an understatement,” Josh says. “Without YOC, it can cost the four of us $200 to play. So over a single season, the savings to us are absolutely tremendous.”
Not Just About the Money
The savings from a YOC membership certainly add up for someone who plays regularly, but the advantages of the program go beyond the fiscal, Bavaird says: “When you play more golf, you learn more about yourself as a person and as a competitor. You’re likely to make more friends. You get paired with adults you
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—Josh O’Krangley, YOC parent
might otherwise not meet. So it’s all about opportunities, and not just saving money.
“You just never know where YOC might lead you.”
Not bad for a program that in Michigan is only entering its seventh year. It’s an extension of the first YOC chapter founded in 2006 in Monterey, California. The Michigan chapter has experienced significant growth during its short life; Bavaird notes that more and more courses sign up to participate in the program every year.
“To say that Youth on Course is a pretty big deal is an understatement. Without YOC, it can cost the four of us $200 to play. So over a single season, the savings to us are absolutely tremendous.”
Josh O’Krangley doesn’t mince words when it comes to testifying about YOC’s value: “YOC helps kids get out on the course and … realize that this isn’t just an old white guys’ sport. Golf needs the exposure, and more courses need to understand that becoming a participating member of YOC is a win-win for the golfers and the courses.”
sider that only 17% of YOC individual members are female and that even with marketing and public relations strategies in place, not everyone is aware of the program. Josh O’Krangley, for instance, was talking up YOC to a well-known West Michigan high school golf coach earlier this year and was stunned when the coach interrupted him to ask, “What’s that?”
2023 Michigan YOC Numbers
$169,000+ reimbursed by the GAM Foundation
The only up-front cost for juniors is a $20 annual fee, which makes them eligible for discounts at qualifying courses and also provides them access to GAM-sponsored tournaments. The $5 or less covers either nine or 18 walking holes, depending on the course.
87 participating courses
Still Growing
Adds daughter Copelin, “The juniors getting into the game are golf’s future.”
“People always want to know what the catch is with YOC,” Bavaird says. “There isn’t one. It’s simply a wonderful way for juniors to play more golf and to keep them interested. It’s all about retention. If they enjoy playing, let’s do what we can to keep them playing and nurture the great feelings they have, and hopefully will continue to have, for this great game.
While YOC sports healthy numbers in Michigan, it’s always seeking infusions of new blood. Con-
“YOC is an investment in our youth, and for the game of golf itself.”
9,000+ YOC golfers
32,000+ rounds of golf played
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 71 YOC
Email or call Laura Bavaird, director of the GAM Foundation, to learn more about participating in Youth on Course: LBavaird@gam.org, (248) 417-0428.
Youth on Course members participate in a celebration day at Crooked Creek Golf Course in Saginaw.
Super Dogs Pups on Staff
Furry friends help out at golf courses around Michigan
/ BY TONY PAUL
There’s the payroll, and then there’s the play-roll, with salary paid out in — what else? — treats.
Several golf courses throughout the state of Michigan have dogs on their “staff” for a variety of reasons, from boosting staff and customer morale to the more practical, like, well …
“Chasing off the geese,” says Evan Herman, who is the superintendent at West Shore Golf & Country Club in Grosse Ile. “They make a huge mess. ... Goose poop everywhere is just horrible. At some courses, it becomes almost unplayable.”
Golfers in Michigan know. Oh, do we know.
Herman’s dog, Millie, an Australian shepherd who will be 4 in April, is among the more-seasoned golf-course dogs in the state and has been accompanying Herman to work since she was a pup, first at Detroit Golf Club and now at West Shore.
Herman got the idea to add a dog partner when he did an internship at Pinehurst in North Carolina. The club owned border collies, some of the best dogs for chasing off geese, and they regularly roamed 200 acres doing their jobs.
Millie isn’t quite that good at chasing geese. They’re too fast.
“She just kind of looks at them,” Herman says, with a laugh. “I’ll kick her out of the cart: ‘Go do your job!’”
Millie is much better at running after
squirrels and deer, and once, she decided to go after a coyote.
Her real strength, though, is cozying up to the customers at the private course south of Detroit.
“She’s got probably 10 or 15 that are on the take for treats,” Herman says. “She’ll just leave my cart and run across the
“She’s got probably 10 or 15 [golfers] that are on the take for treats. She’ll just leave my cart and run across the whole fairway, like, ‘Hey, I know this guy.’ She knows — and she’s not shy.”
—Millie’s owner, Evan Herman
whole fairway, like, ‘Hey, I know this guy.’ She knows — and she’s not shy.”
On the Course from Day One
Scaring off the geese isn’t the strong suit of Parker, the 1-year-old mutt — part pit bull, part golden retriever, part mastiff — belonging to Andrew Paxton, superintendent of Spring Lake Country Club in West Michigan.
Once, Parker spotted a goose in a pond, and the goose didn’t yet have its flight feathers. But it could swim, and fast, and Parker couldn’t catch up.
“They were just playing Marco Polo basically in the pond for about five minutes before I was able to get him to
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Millie
Bunker
Super Dogs
jump out,” Paxton says.
Parker is just a pup and displays the challenges of training a golf-course dog. His owner, whose previous dog started accompanying him to work after he was adopted at a year and a half, wanted to make sure Parker got to the course from day one.
Paxton wanted to set the boundaries and ground rules — chasing animals, good; chasing golf balls, bad — early on for Parker.
“Most people know who he is, especially over the summer when there’s junior play. He likes those days a little too much sometimes. And he likes when the ladies are out.”
“It is really nice to be able to bring him with me, because I don’t have to worry about what he’s doing at home,” Paxton says. “At the same time, it can be a bit of a distraction when he decides to go and do whatever the puppy wants. But the benefits far outweigh the distractions. And … the rest of the guys on the crew enjoy having him around, at least most of the time.
—Parker’s owner, Andrew Paxton
“It’s a work in progress. The main project for this winter is to get him to stop jumping on people when they are ready to continue on playing golf. He wants more attention. Most people know who he is, especially over the summer when there’s junior play. He likes those days a little too much sometimes. And he likes when the ladies are out.”
Parker doesn’t have to learn the ropes alone, at least. Spring Lake also has a “second-in-command” dog named Beans, a 3-year-old black Lab.
‘A Big Benefit’ to the Team
Bringing dogs to work is old hat for Dan Dingman, superintendent at Birmingham Country Club. His latest is Rossi, a black Lab who’s a year and a half old. She’s the fourth golf-course dog Dingman has had.
What’s his main reason for bringing his good boys and girls to work?
“It’s real simple,” he says. “The members might not like you, but they certainly like your dog. It’s kind of a no-brainer to have a dog, for sure.”
Birmingham Country Club has a long history of dogs “on staff” and actually has a memorial on a hill overlooking the 16th fairway. Buried up there are Merle, Red,
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Parker
COURTESY PHOTOS
Super Dogs
“The members love the dogs. They’ve always loved the dogs,” he says. “It just lightens the mood around the shop. Most of the golf-course staff are very family oriented, a very tight-knit group, because we spend so much time together — seven days a week during the golf season. … It’s kind of everybody’s dog. That’s certainly a big benefit.
“The members love the dogs. They’ve always loved the dogs. It just lightens the mood around the shop. … The ancillary benefits are there’s never food left on the lunchroom floor.”
—Rossi’s owner, Dan Dingman
“The ancillary benefits are there’s never food left on the lunchroom floor.”
Rossi, Dingman says, isn’t much of a goose chaser. Border collies are the best at that, and there are actually companies for hire that will bring them out to the golf courses. Rossi’s strengths are chasing squirrels and, Dingman says, “licking the faces of junior golfers.”
Seasoned Staffer
At West Shore in Grosse Ile, the head pro, Eric Kammeraad, also brings a dog to work, Bunker, a miniature Bernedoodle. But Herman’s Millie has the experience — and even a little bit of star power.
Bob, Indy, and Jetta. There’s a rock in place representing each one.
“They spent their whole life on the golf course,” Dingman says.
Rossi, the current trainee, is getting used to learning her limitations.
Dingman likes to teach his dogs that the golf course is, essentially, their kennel, and that’s where they’re to stay. Some of his dogs have done well, sitting out there for hours at a time while he’s in the clubhouse or working at different ends of the golf course. Others haven’t done as well.
There have been times where he’s had to hop on the radio and tell his crew to stop working and find the pup. Fortunately, Birmingham Country Club’s perimeter is surrounded by a fence. Search parties can be a headache, but Dingman, like other superintendents, says the benefits far outweigh the negatives.
Before he came to West Shore, Herman was on staff at Detroit Golf Club, and Millie was a regular on those grounds, too. She even showed up for the Rocket Mortgage Classic multiple times.
Herman says Millie “helped [him] volunteer” at the tournament, and he brought her back for the Rocket Mortgage Classic after moving over to West Shore, where Herman, a Gibraltar, Michigan, native, grew up playing and working as a kid.
Millie goes to work every day except when Herman is spraying chemicals.
“She kind of literally learned the ropes from another dog,” Herman says, referencing the late border collie Sam, who used to come to work with owner Jake Mendoza, the former superintendent at Detroit Golf Club. “The herding instinct is incredibly strong.”
“She definitely knows she has a job,” Herman adds of Millie, who gets so tuckered out at “the office” that she’s calm as can be at home.
Rocket Mortgage Classic officials even give Millie her own badge with her picture on it when she shows up for the annual summer PGA Tour stop, and West Shore’s pro shop sells merchandise with Millie’s face on it.
If that’s not official, what is?
“That,” says Herman, “is her résumé.”
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Rossi COURTESY
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 75 GUESTPLAYWELCOME The Historic Belvedere “One of Michigan’s Golf Treasures” - Golf Magazine Reservations: (866) 547-2611 • belvederegolfclub.com Founded in 1925 Restored to the originalWilliamWatson drawings Home of the Michigan Amateur 40 times Site of the 2019 U.S. Hickory Open “America’s 100 Greatest Courses You Can Play” Belvedere_2/3 page_Ad.indd 1 11/18/20 1:26 PM Untitled-1 1 2/10/21 9:33 AM Golf As It Was Meant To Be Played Founded in 1925 Restored to the original William Watson design Home of the Michigan Amateur 40 times Site of the 2023 International Grail Hickory Cup “One of Michigan’s Golf Treasures” – Golf Magazine “America’s 100 Greatest Courses You Can play” Reservations: (866) 547-2611 belvederegolfclub.com Visit www.harborpointgolfclub.com for more information Open to the Public Spring & Fall 231.526.2951 A classic course design with breathtaking views of Little Traverse Bay. HarborHarbor Point GolfClubGolfClub HarborPointe_MiLinks_1_6Pg_W20.indd 1 2/8/21 3:53 PM From the Editors of Hour Detroit Hardcover | 160 pages Order now at momentumbooks.com If you recall the J.L. Hudson Thanksgiving Day Parade, visiting the Children’s Zoo at Belle Isle, taking in a flick at downtown’s Madison Theatre, scarfing down a hot-fudge sundae at Sanders, rocking out at the Grande Ballroom, or cheering on the Red Wings at Olympia Stadium, The Way It Was, Part 2 will elicit warm memories of Detroit. This book’s vivid photos and evocative text will take you on a nostalgic journey into the city’s past Detroit Remembers! The Way It Was Book House Ad - 2024 - 1/6 Page.indd 1 2/29/24 11:33 AM
Turning Back the Clock
Renovations at golf courses around Michigan mix the old with the new
/ BY JOHN RETZER
Over the years, course fairways widen or narrow; trees grow and distort lines of play; greens slowly develop altered contours. Piecemeal adjustments made by management, membership, and various architects find their way into the layout. Sometimes neglect makes a course old before its time.
Luckily, golf courses can be renovated, restored, and reimagined. Clocks can be turned back. That which is old can be made new again.
At any given point, multiple Michigan clubs are working on creating better versions of themselves. Here are six: Pine Lake Country Club, Saint John’s Resort, White Lake Golf Club, Forest Lake Country Club, Wolf River Golf Park, and Boyne Golf.
Pine Lake: A New Course with an Old Feel
When Pine Lake Country Club reopens its golf course in July 2024, members will experience a brand-new course with a classic feel.
Pine Lake’s 18 holes — built over the course of four or so years starting in 1917 — claim Willie Park Jr. as their original designer. Over time, though, changes have been made by a bewildering number of architects, including Jerry Matthews, Bruce Matthews, Bill Newcomb, Robert von Hagge, Bruce Devlin, and Craig Schreiner.
HISTORICAL HIGHLIGHTS
Naturally, then, Rogers’s vision was to “modernize the golf course and the infrastructure so it can go on living, while at the same time creating a clean and clear, consistent identity.”
Terry Poley, the golf course superintendent at Pine Lake, puts it like this: “The goal for this project was to regain a single vision and have a golf course that is pleasant to the eye, and all of our features match.”
Pine Lake Country Club, founded by Henry Ford, Ransom Olds, and John Lodge, opened in 1902 as the Automobile Club of Detroit. The name changed to Pine Lake in 1921.
“When I saw the course for the first time, I saw a lot of bits and pieces of different styles,” says Drew Rogers, an architect based in Toledo, Ohio, who was tapped to undertake the latest renovations. “That’s not surprising given all the influences that have taken place through the decades.”
Saint John’s Resort: Complete Transformation
Perhaps the most dramatic Michigan golf project in recent years has taken place in Plymouth at the former Inn at St. John’s. Neither “renovation” nor “restoration” is quite the right word to describe the changes to the 27 holes. They’ve been transformed into something entirely new.
During the rebuild of the course, Rogers has worked to restore the angles, shot values, and alternate routes of play that are characteristic of historical courses.
“We have shifted tees and made subtle relocations of greens, but the playing corridors have remained the same,” he says. “We peeled away layers and trees, and it opened up the original character of the site.”
The result, he says, is “a brand-new course, but it’s got an old feel.”
Under the guidance of noted architect Ray Hearn, from Holland, Michigan, the property has been reimagined as an 18-hole championship course, a seven-hole short course, and a 2-acre putting green. Hearn says that little of the original 27 remains, except for a few “playing corridors.”
“When the Pulte Family Charitable Foundation purchased the property, they told me that they wanted a par-3 course, putting course, and a short-game course,” he says. “They also wanted the course to look like it has been here forever, with memorable golf holes.”
Hearn is proud to have created a course
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Pine Lake Country Club
“When I saw this property, I thought we could do really big things here. … Our goal is to make Saint John’s the premier golf destination for metro Detroit.”
—Stan Witko, PGA executive director of golf at Saint John’s Resort
where each hole has its own distinct personality. No two holes play or look alike. That was possible, he says, because of the distinctive character of the land.
Stan Witko, PGA executive director of golf at Saint John’s Resort, was one of the people who recognized its potential.
“When I saw this property, I thought we could do really big things here,” he says. “We are going to offer something for everyone with a high level of service, detail, and quality. Our goal is to make Saint John’s the premier golf destination for metro Detroit.”
Saint John’s Resort has a long history in the Plymouth community. After 40 years as a Catholic seminary, the property was redeveloped starting in 1998 into a center for conferences and social gatherings, such as Catholic weddings. The property eventually housed a hotel and dining, while surrounding parklands hosted 27 holes of golf, a Carl’s Golfland location, and a large driving range.
In 2021, the Pulte Family Charitable
HISTORICAL HIGHLIGHTS
Foundation acquired the property and has since invested $50 million into the dramatic transformation, which includes the golf courses, updated hotel rooms, new meeting and social spaces — including a 17,000-square-foot ballroom — a wine grotto, and more.
White Lake Golf Club Takes the Long View
In contrast to courses that shut down for a year or two to rebuild, White Lake Golf Club in Whitehall is taking a longer-term approach. In 2022, the club restored one hole. In 2023, two more were rebuilt. More changes are planned.
“Our club was started in 1916, and it has aged quite a bit,” says Don Nellis, chair of the Renovation Committee. “We’ve had tree issues, and it was just tired and ready for changes.”
The project is being guided by architect Ray Hearn, who has drawn inspiration from a 1930s aerial photograph for his plan
White Lake’s original nine were designed by Tom Bendelow. Known as the Johnny Appleseed of American golf, Bendelow designed hundreds of courses in the early 20th century. Among the most famous is Medinah Country Club in Illinois, which has hosted six major championships and a Ryder Cup. The second nine at White Lake are the 1927 creation of club members E.E. Roberts and Al Seckel.
to restore seven original Tom Bendelow greens. Hearn’s plan also involves remodeling the remaining holes to create “more of a Bendelow look and feel.”
The restoration is not a carbon copy, though. “We wanted to bring forth the classic Bendelow features, but at the same time, we wanted to embrace the beautiful sandy soils of Michigan’s Gold Coast,” Hearn says. “So, we created great sandy waste areas to replace areas of rough. It looks great and saves on maintenance.”
Nellis says the club is thrilled with the new look created by the waste areas: “It is very dramatic, and as we go forward, we are going to add more of these areas.”
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 77
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Kaufman Golf Course
White Lake Golf Club
Saint John’s Resort
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Forest Lake: A Welcoming
New Entrance
Forest Lake Country Club in Bloomfield Hills is working on a facelift of its front entrance area, known as the “Top of the Hill.”
“It is a special project,” says Chris Wilczynski, the Saline-based architect who has been consulting with the club since 2012.
“The entrance of the club is unique in that the club buildings are on one side of a road and the golf course is on the other,” he says. “The
HISTORICAL HIGHLIGHTS
Forest Lake Country Club’s course dates back to 1926. The original architect was William Diddel, one of the founding members of the American Society of Golf Course Architects.
Top of the Hill project was designed to give the club a beautiful entrance to the course that the members will be proud to show to their guests.”
To create the new space, Wilczynski moved the sixth green about 80 feet to the right of its original location. That, he says, allowed an expansion of the range and a putting green that is three times the size of the old one. Tees were relocated on the seventh hole, and new tees were constructed for the first. In addition, the club rebuilt bunkers on holes nine through 18.
The project has progressed without necessitating a shutdown of the course. Most of the work occurred after the summer 2023 season, and Wilczynski says the temporary greens enabled members to play around the construction.
Wolf River Golf Park
Makes a Comeback
Wolf River Golf Park in Bear Lake had a neardeath experience before it was purchased and restored by the Little River Band of Ottawa Indians as part of their Little River Casino Resort operation.
Originally known as Bear Lake Highlands, the course opened as a nine-hole facility in the 1960s, expanding to 18 in the 1970s. After going through several owners, the course ultimately failed to thrive.
The Little River Band purchased Bear Lake Highlands in 2018. That year, newly hired Superintendent Steven Biehl found the course in a state of “neglect.” The first order of business was catching up on deferred maintenance and making general improvements, such as cleaning up dead trees.
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Wolf River Golf Park
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Forest Lake Country Club
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 79 Michigan Links Rocket Tour- HP-Hor-Mi Links 2024.indd 1 2/20/24 10:33 AM
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After two years of evaluation and planning, the course closed in 2021, reopening as Wolf River Golf Park in May 2023. It has been completely reseeded and now has updated tees, bunkers, and greens.
One of the biggest and most well-received changes, Biehl says, is that the course is cut to a fairway height from tee through green.
“There’s no rough cut,” he says. “The fairway goes out to the unmaintained areas, so golfers can see their ball bounce and roll. It makes the course very playable.”
Enjoyment and affordability are Biehl’s priorities. “We want to create a place where people can come and have fun at a price point of $50 or less,” he says.
The new name is an homage to the Wolf River apples grown on the orchard that once occupied the land. The “Park” part of the name reflects the goal of tribal ownership to make the property more than just a golf course.
“It is a really beautiful piece of property with wonderful vistas of the countryside and Bear Lake,” Biehl says. “We want to find ways for everybody to enjoy it — not just golfers.”
Doon Brae: 11 Out of 10 Northern Michigan’s Boyne Golf, known nationally for its collection of 10 destination resort courses, is adding an 11th.
Boyne’s latest is Doon Brae, a nine-hole par-3 inspired by the best of the British Isles. The short course is complemented by a new 1.5-acre putting course styled after St. Andrews’s famous Himalayas in Scotland.
“The new short course at The Highlands will add an entirely new dimension to our portfolio of courses,” says Bernie Friedrich, Boyne Golf’s director of course renovations and development. “We have plans to build short courses at our other facilities in upcoming years as well.”
Located near The Highlands’ Main Lodge, Doon Brae is routed along a hillside that serves as a ski slope during the winter. The par-3’s name has an appropriate Scottish and skiing flair: “Doon Brae” can be translated as “downhill.”
Architect Ray Hearn, who has been working with Boyne for several years renovating the resort’s courses, was tapped for the project.
Doon Brae features holes and greens in the spirit of classics such as the Eden hole at St. Andrews, the Redan at North Berwick in Scotland, and the short hole at National Golf Links of America in New York. The holes, which range from 57 yards to 134 yards, will feature multiple angles, a variety of lies, and lots of strategic options.
Although Doon Brae is built on a ski slope, Hearn says the walk, which has just a couple of short uphill climbs, is manageable, and there are several holes that are level from tee to green.
A unique feature of Doon Brae is that the bluegrass fairways will be cut to the same half-inch height. This opens nearly infinite possibilities for play and practice.
“Short courses have been gaining in popularity since they increase the opportunities to enjoy the game for everyone,” says Josh Richter, senior vice president of golf operations for Boyne Golf. “Nongolfers and families can enjoy it as an activity, while avid golfers can play a few more holes without playing another 18, since fun is paramount to the experience.”
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Doon Brae
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COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 81 1003 Perry Ave., Big Rapids, Michigan | (231) 591-3765 An enjoyable experience for new golfers and pros. Learn more at ferris.edu/katke Ferris State University is an equal opportunity institution. For information on the University’s Policy on Non-Discrimination, visit ferris.edu/non-discrimination. Ferris U - HP-Hor-Mi Links 2024.indd 1 2/16/24 5:09 PM Upgrades
Doon Brae
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Visit A-Ga-Ming and experience northern Michigan golf at its finest.
The resort includes three golfing locations spread out over 35 miles and offers four championship courses for guests to enjoy. The Sundance, Torch, Antrim Dells, and Charlevoix Country Club courses are Up North favorites, while also serving as a home away from home for countless area golfers and overnight guests.
Surrounded by incredible views of lakes and rolling countryside, each venue encompasses a beautiful natural setting meant for creating special memories with family and friends.
A-Ga-Ming prides itself on being a friendly small business that has established a fantastic golfing value for guests. Golfers enjoy fun layouts with excellent playing conditions. Local golfers are able to enjoy the courses through daily-fee play, leagues, and annual memberships. Supported by amazing nearby communities, each location strives to provide affordable, great golf.
Overnight guests can take advantage of custom-built golf packages. Group leaders have the option to combine their ideal lodging choice and golf schedule. A nice variety of well-kept suites and condominiums with spectacular lake
and golf course views are available throughout the A-Ga-Ming property.
Golfers and other guests can expect delicious comfort food to be readily available throughout their visit. Menus were created with food and drink options that are guaranteed to please. Each restaurant presents incredible views that will entice golfers to participate in a wonderful meal with their playing partners.
Additionally, the resort continues to grow by upgrading facilities and adding new amenities for guests to enjoy.
A-Ga-Ming, Antrim Dells, and Charlevoix Country Club work together to be a wonderful resort, helping to ensure a memorable golf experience on every visit.
www.a-ga-ming.com
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TOP TRACKS • • • Michigan’s Gems
82 MICHIGAN LINKS | WWW.GAM.ORG
Your Next Golf Road Trip: Michigan’s Upper Peninsula
Sage
F or years, the golf buzz in Michigan has centered on the northern part of the state with all its award-winning golf courses and destinations. Over the last decade, the region, which is often referred to as America’s Summer Golf Capital, has expanded to the western part of the Upper Peninsula.
Sweetgrass
This golfing road trip takes you over the scenic Mackinac Bridge and west across beautiful U.S. 2, one of the most visually breathtaking drives along Lake Michigan, bringing you west of Escanaba to Island Resort & Casino in Harris, one of the Midwest’s largest golf, casino, and resort destinations, the anchor to this premier golf destination. Adding in Greywalls in Marquette and Timber Stone in nearby Iron Mountain, the “Perfect 4-Some” package is Michigan’s next great golfing adventure.
Golf in this region has been described as “unforgettable” and “underrated.” The resort’s original course, the exceptional Sweetgrass, designed by Paul Albanese, opened in 2008 and consistently ranks among the top 10 courses in the state. It was also named the 2022 National Golf
Course of the Year by the National Golf Course Owners Association and is home to the Island Resort Championship, one of the premier stops on the Epson Tour — the official “Road to the LPGA.”
The prairie links-style Sweetgrass layout meanders to a wide-open vista where many greens and flags can be seen in the distance. The highlights of this course are the most fun green complexes you will ever putt on. For course architecture geeks, you have redan, Biarritz, island, and double-green complexes.
The resort’s second course, Sage Run, also designed by Albanese, was inspired by the “rough and rugged” appeal of Northern Ireland’s Royal County Down. The course, which was named to Golf Digest ’s prestigious list of the best new courses in 2019, features a stunning ridge running through it with scenic views that stretch for 30-40 miles and plays down to an open area with wide fairways and rugged fescue grasses.
Greywalls
Club, and Timber Stone in nearby Iron Mountain. Greywalls is a truly unique golf experience spanning over 230 acres combining views of Lake Superior with several natural rock outcroppings. Timber Stone is home to legendary Michigan State basketball coach Tom Izzo and former NFL coach Steve Mariucci. The course, designed by Jerry Matthews and Paul Albanese, winds up and down a mountainside showcasing scenic vistas, wetlands, and tall pines.
Timber Stone
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 83 SPONSORED CONTENT TOP TRACKS TOP TRACKS • • • Michigan’s Gems
Sweetgrass, Sage Run, Greywalls, and Timber Stone shine together as the Perfect 4-Some Run
Rounding out the “Perfect 4-Some” are Greywalls, designed by Mike DeVries and part of the popular Marquette Golf
Island Resort & Casino now has 450-plus guest rooms, including golfer suites, a top-floor restaurant, and a luxurious spa. Fully customizable packages offer three-, four-, and five-night lodging options with four rounds of golf. Golfers can also fly into nearby Escanaba or Marquette from Detroit. To book your Perfect 4-Some, visit islandresortgolf.com or call (877) 475-4733.
2024 Course Directory
On the following pages, the Golf Association of Michigan presents our members with a comprehensive listing of Michigan golf courses that range from some of the state’s best-known to its many hidden gems.
Keep this 2024 Michigan Links Course Directory and refer to it when venturing out to play. Check it out:
• Basic information on every course in Michigan.*
• Expanded listings for GAM member clubs.
*Information is provided by club and/or course representatives. The GAM has made every reasonable effort to ensure accuracy. Please call ahead to obtain the latest details on fees, etc.
Indicates course participation in Youth on Course. See page 70 to find out more.
AA-GA-MING GOLF RESORT
627 A-Ga-Ming Dr. Kewadin, MI 49648
Web: a-ga-ming.com
Facebook: A-Ga-Ming Golf
Resort
Type: Resort
Region: Northwest
Torch Course
Architects: Chick Harbert/Bill
Siebenthaler
Holes: 18
Phone: (231) 264-5081
Sundance Course
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
Phone: (231) 264-5081
Antrim Dells Course
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
Phone: (231) 599-2679
Charlevoix Country Club
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
Phone: (231) 547-9796
ALPENA GC
1135 Golf Course Rd.
Alpena, MI 49707
Pro Shop: (989) 354-5052
Web: alpenagolfclub.com
Facebook: Alpena Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Founded: 1928
Architect: Warner Bowen
Holes: 18
Walking Permitted
ALPINE GC
6320 Alpine Ave. NW
Comstock Park, MI 49321
Club: (616) 784-1064
Type: Public
Web: alpinegolfmichigan.com
Facebook: Alpine Golf Michigan
Instagram: @alpinegolf
Region: West Central
Architect: Mark Devries
Founded: 1967
Holes: 18
AMERICAN DUNES GC
17000 Lincoln St.
Grand Haven, MI 49417
Pro Shop: (616) 842-4040
Web: americandunesgolfclub.com
Facebook: American Dunes Golf Club
Region: West Central
Holes: 18
Architect: Jack Nicklaus
ANGELS CROSSING GC
3600 East W Ave.
Vicksburg, MI 49097
Pro Shop: (269) 649-2700
Web: golfangelscrossing.com
Facebook: Angels Crossing Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Architect: Bruce Matthews
Holes: 18
ANN ARBOR GOLF & OUTING
400 E. Stadium Blvd.
Ann Arbor, MI 48104
Pro Shop: (734) 663-4044
Web: aagoc.org
Facebook: Ann Arbor Golf & Outing Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Holes: 9
Walking Permitted
ANTIOCH HILLS GC
Mesick (231) 885-1220
APPLE MOUNTAIN GC
4519 N. River Rd. Freeland, MI 48623
Pro Shop: (989) 781-6789
Web: applemountain.com
Facebook: Apple Mountain
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Architect: John Sanford
Founded: 1998
Holes: 18
ARBOR HILLS GC
1426 Arbor Hills Rd. Jackson, MI 49201
Club: (517) 750-1400
Web: arborhillsgolfclub.com
Facebook: Arbor Hills Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Arthur Ham
Holes: 18
Walking Permitted
ARCADIA BLUFFS GC
14710 Northwood Hwy.
Arcadia, MI 49613
Club: (800) 494-8666
Pro Shop: (231) 889-3001
Web: arcadiabluffs.com
Facebook: Arcadia Bluffs Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
The Bluffs
Architect: Warren Henderson
Founded: 1999
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
Caddies Available
The South Course
Architect: Fry/Straka Global Golf
Founded: 2017
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified Caddies Available
ARCADIA HILLS GC
Attica (810) 724-6967
ARROWHEAD GOLF & GRILL
1201 Gun Club Rd.
Caro, MI 48723
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A B D G C F E H
Pro Shop: (989) 673-2017
Web: arrowheadgolfandgrill.com
Facebook: Arrowhead Golf & Grill
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Holes: 18
ARROWHEAD GC
Lowell (616) 438-0502
ARTHUR HILLS
THOROUGHBRED GC
Rothbury (231) 894-3939
ATLAS VALLEY GC
8313 Perry Rd.
Grand Blanc, MI 48439
Pro Shop: (810) 636-9501
Type: Semiprivate
Web: atlasvalleygolf.com
Facebook: Atlas Valley Golf Club
Region: East Central
Founded: 1912
Holes: 18
BBAHLE FARMS GC
9505 E. Otto Rd.
Suttons Bay, MI 49682
Pro Shop: (231) 271-2020 ext. 1
Web: traversecitygolf.com
Facebook: Bahle Farms
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Architect: Gary Pulsipher
Holes: 18
BARTON HILLS CC
730 Country Club Rd.
Ann Arbor, MI 48105
Club: (734) 663-8511
Pro Shop: (734) 662-4955
Fax: (734) 663-0611
Web: bartonhillscc.com
Facebook: The Barton Hills
Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1919
Architect: Donald Ross
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
BATTLE CREEK CC
318 Country Club Dr.
Battle Creek, MI 49015
Club: (269) 962-8734
Pro Shop: (269) 962-6121
Web: battlecreekcc.com
Type: Private
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1919
Architect: Willie Park Jr.
Holes: 18
BAY COUNTY GC
584 W. Hampton Rd.
Essexville, MI 48732
Pro Shop: (989) 892-2161
Web: baycounty-mi.gov/golf-
course
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Founded: 1966
Holes: 18
BAY HARBOR GC/ BOYNE RESORTS
3600 Village Harbor Dr. Bay Harbor, MI 49770
Club: (231) 439-4028
Web: bayharborgolf.com
Facebook: BOYNE Golf
Instagram: @Boyne.golf
Type: Resort
Region: Northwest
Architects: Arthur Hills/Stephen Kircher
Holes: 27
BAY MEADOWS
FAMILY GC
5550 Bay Meadows Dr. Traverse City, MI 49684
Pro Shop: (231) 946-7927
Web: baymeadowsgfc.com
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Founded: 1994
Holes: 9
BAY POINTE GC
4001 Haggerty
West Bloomfield, MI 48323
Club: (248) 360-0600
Pro Shop: (248) 360-0603
Web: baypointegolfcourse.com
Facebook: Bay Pointe Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Fuller Family
Holes: 18
BAY VALLEY RESORT
2470 Old Bridge Rd. Bay City, MI 48706
Club: (888) 241-4653
Pro Shop: (989) 686-5400
Web: bayvalley.com
Facebook: Bay Valley Resort & Conference Center
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Architect: Desmond Muirhead
Holes: 18
BEACON HILL GC
6011 Majestic Oaks Dr. Commerce Twp., MI 48382
Pro Shop: (248) 684-2200 ext. 1
Web: beaconhillgolf.com
Facebook: Beacon Hill Golf Club and Banquet Center
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
BEAR ON THE MOUNTAIN GC
2061 N. 3 Mile Rd.
Hessel, MI 49745
Club: (906) 484-2107
Type: Public
Region: Upper Peninsula
Holes: 18
BEAVER ISLAND GC
Beaver Island (231) 448-2301
BEDFORD HILLS GC
6400 Jackman Rd.
Temperance, MI 48182
Pro Shop: (734) 854-4653
Web: bedfordhillsgolf.com
Belvedere Golf Club
Type: Public
Facebook: Bedford Hills Golf Club
Instagram: @bedfordhillsgc
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1992
Holes: 27
BEECH HOLLOW GC
7494 Hospital Rd.
Freeland, MI 48623
Club: (989) 695-5427
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Architect: Elmer Kloha
Founded: 1969
Holes: 18
BEECH WOODS
HEATED TEES
Southfield (248) 796-4655
BEECHES GC
9601 68th St.
South Haven, MI 49090
Club: (269) 637-2600
Web: beechesgolfclub.com
Facebook: @BeechesGolfClub
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Architect: Bruce Matthews III
Founded: 2006
Holes: 18
BEECHWOOD GREENS
Mt. Morris (810) 686-4200
BEE TEE GC
Macomb (586) 493-9500
BELLA VISTA GC
608 One Straight Dr.
Coldwater, MI 49036
Club: (517) 238-6085
Web: bellavistagolf.org
Facebook: Bella Vista Golf
Course of Coldwater
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Architect: Ernie Schrock
Holes: 18
Walking Permitted Weekdays ONLY
BELLAIRE CENTENNIAL GC
3388 W. Eddy School Rd.
Bellaire, MI 49615
Pro Shop: (231) 533-6886
Web: golfthecentennial.com
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Founded: 1996
Holes: 18
BELLE ISLE GC
Detroit (313) 566-4146
BELLE RIVER GC
Memphis (810) 392-2121
BELLO WOODS GC
Macomb (586) 949-1200
BELVEDERE GC
5731 Marion Center Rd.
Charlevoix, MI 49720
Club: (231) 547-2512
Toll Free: (866) 547-2611
Pro Shop: (231) 547-2611
Web: belvederegolfclub.com
Facebook: Belvedere Golf Club
Type: Private
Region: Northwest
Architect: William Watson
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
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BENONA SHORES GC
3410 Scenic Dr.
Shelby, MI 49455
Club: 231-861-2098
Type: Public
Facebook: Benona Shores Golf
Course
Region: West Central
Founded: 1974
Architect: Bob Hukill
Holes: 18
BENT PINE GC
Whitehall (231) 766-2045
BINDER PARK GC
7255 B Drive S.
Battle Creek, MI 49014
Pro Shop: (269) 979-8250
Web: binderparkgolf.com
Facebook: Binder Park Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Holes: 27
Founded: 1963
BIRCH POINTE GC
St. Helen (989) 389-7009
BIRCH VALLEY GC
Sears (231) 734-9112
BIRCHWOOD FARMS G&CC
600 Birchwood Dr.
Harbor Springs, MI 49740
Pro Shop: (231) 526-6245
Web: birchwoodcc.com
Facebook: Birchwood Farms
Golf & Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Northwest
Architects: Bruce Matthews/ Jerry Matthews
Founded: 1972
Holes: 27
BIRD CREEK GC
7850 N. Van Dyke
Port Austin, MI 48467
Pro Shop: (989) 738-4653
Web: birdcreekgolf.com
Facebook: Bird Creek Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Architect: Bruce Matthews
Founded: 1990
Holes: 18
BIRMINGHAM CC
1750 Saxon Dr.
Birmingham, MI 48009
Club: (248) 644-4111
Pro Shop: (248) 220-5144
Web: bhamcc.com
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1916
Architect: Tom Bendelow
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
BLACK BEAR GC
Vanderbilt (989) 983-4441
BLACK LAKE GC
2800 Maxon Rd.
eld
Onaway, MI 49765
Pro Shop: (989) 733-4653
Web: blacklakegolf.com
Facebook: @UAWEvents
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Architect: Rees Jones
Founded: 2000
Holes: 27
BLACK RIVER GC
3300 Country Club Dr. Port Huron, MI 48060
Pro Shop: (810) 982-5251
Web: blackrivercountryclub.com
Facebook: Black River Country Club
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Founded: 1926
Architect: William Diddel
Holes: 18
BLACKHEATH GC
3311 N. Rochester Rd. Rochester Hills, MI 48306
Pro Shop: (248) 601-8000
Web: blackheathgolfclub.com
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1994
Architect: Kevin Aldrich
Holes: 18
BLOOMFIELD
HILLS CC
350 W. Long Lake Rd.
Bloomfield Hills, MI 48304
Club: (248) 644-6262
Pro Shop: (248) 646-2626
Web: bloomfieldhillscc.org
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1909
Architect: H.S. Colt
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
BLOSSOM TRAILS GC
Benton Harbor (269) 925-4951
BLYTHEFIELD COUNTRY CLUB
5801 Northland Dr.
Belmont, MI 49306
Club: (616) 361-2661
Pro Shop: (616) 363-1902
Grounds Dept: (616) 363-5945
Web: blythefieldcc.org
Facebook: Blythefield Country
Club
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Founded: 1928
Architects: Langford/Moreau
Restoration: Chris Wilczynski (2020)
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
BONNIE VIEW GC
Eaton Rapids (517) 663-4363
BOULDER CREEK GC
5750 Brewer Ave. NE
Belmont, MI 49306
Pro Shop: (616) 363-1330
The Alpine Course
Architect: Bill Newcomb
Holes: 18
The Monument Course
Architects: Bill Newcomb/ Everett Kircher
Holes: 18
BRAE BURN GC
10860 W. 5 Mile Rd.
Plymouth, MI 48170
Pro Shop: (734) 453-1900
Pro Shop: (800) 714-6700
Web: braeburngc.com
Facebook: Brae Burn Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
BRENTWOOD GOLF CLUB & BANQUET CENTER
2450 Havenwood
White Lake, MI 48383
Pro Shop: (248) 684-2662
Web: brentwoodgc.com
Facebook: Brentwood Golf Club and Banquet Center
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Jim Ludwig
Holes: 18
BRIAR RIDGE GC
11099 W. Dodge Rd.
Montrose, MI 48457
Web: bouldercreekgolfclub.com
Facebook: Boulder Creek Golf
Club (Belmont MI)
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Founded: 1998
Architect: Mark DeVries
Holes: 18
BOULDER CREEK GC
Bessemer (906) 932-9066
BOULDER POINTE GC
One Champions Circle
Oxford, MI 48371
Pro Shop: (248) 969-1500
Web: boulderpointe.net
Facebook: Boulder Pointe Golf
Club and Banquet Center
Instagram: @BoulderPointeMI
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Southeast
Founded: 2000
Architects: Conroy/Dewling
Holes: 27
BOYNE MOUNTAIN RESORT/BOYNE RESORTS
1 Boyne Mountain Rd.
Boyne Falls, MI 49713
Golf Shop: (231) 549-6028
Web: Boynegolf.com
Facebook: BOYNE Golf
Instagram: @Boyne.golf
Type: Resort
Region: Northwest
Pro Shop: (810) 639-4653
Web: briarridgegolf.com
Facebook: Briar Ridge Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Holes: 18
BRIARWOOD GC
Caledonia (616) 698-8720
BROADMOOR CC
Caledonia (616) 891-8000
BROOKSHIRE INN & GC
Williamston (517) 655-4694
BROOKSIDE GOLF & GRILL
1518 S. Johnson Rd.
Gowen, MI 49326
Pro Shop: (616) 984-2381
Web: brooksidegolf.com
Facebook: BrooksideGolfandgrill
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Holes: 18
BROOKSIDE GC
Saline (734) 429-4276
BROOKWOOD GOLF CLUB
998 Brookwood Ln.
Rochester Hills, MI 48309
Pro Shop: (248) 651-4820
Web: brookwood.golf
Facebook: Brookwood Golf Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1976
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Bloomfi
Hills Country Club
Architect: William Newcomb
Holes: 9
BROOKWOOD GOLF COURSE
1339 Rynearson Rd.
Buchanan, MI 49107
Pro Shop: (269) 695-7818
Web: golfbrookwood.com
Facebook: Brookwood Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Holes: 18
BRUCE HILLS GC
6771 Taft Rd.
Romeo, MI 48065
Pro Shop: (586) 752-7244
Web: golfbrucehills.com
Facebook: Bruce Hills Golf
Course
Instagram: @brucehillsgolf
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1967
Holes: 18
BUCKS RUN GC
1559 S. Chippewa Rd.
Mt. Pleasant, MI 48858
Pro Shop: (989) 773-6830
Web: bucksrun.com
Facebook: Bucks Run Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Founded: 2000
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
BURR OAK GC
Parma (517) 531-4741
BUSHWOOD GC
Northville (734) 420-3200
CCABERFAE PEAKS SKI & GOLF
RESORT
Cadillac (231) 862-3000
CADILLAC CC
5510 E. M-55
Cadillac, MI 49601
Club: (231) 775-8586
Pro Shop: (231) 775-9442
Web: cadillaccountryclub.org
Facebook: Cadillac Country
Club
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Northwest
Founded: 1910
Holes: 18
CALDERONE GC
4490 Willis Rd. Grass Lake, MI 49240
Pro Shop: (517) 522-6661
Web: calderonegolfclub.com
Facebook: Calderone Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: William Newcomb
CALUMET GC
54720 Golf Course Rd.
Calumet, MI 49913
Club: (906) 337-3911
Facebook: Calumet Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Upper Peninsula
Holes: 9
CANADIAN LAKES CC
6898 Clubhouse Dr.
Stanwood, MI 49346
Pro Shop: (231) 972-8979
Web: canadianlakes.org
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Founded: 1982
Holes: 36
CANDLESTONE GOLF & RESORT
8100 N. Storey Rd.
Belding, MI 48809
Club: (616) 794-1580
Pro Shop: (616) 608-0681
Web: candlestone.com
Facebook: Candlestone Resort
Type: Resort
Region: West Central
Architect: Bruce Matthews
Founded: 1978
Holes: 18
CAPTAIN’S CLUB AT WOODFIELD
10200 Woodfield Dr.
Grand Blanc, MI 48439
Pro Shop: (810) 695-4653
Web: captainsclubatwoodfield. com
Facebook: The Captains Club at Woodfield
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Founded: 1994
Architects: Harry Bowers/ Raymond Floyd
CARL’S GOLFLAND/ BLOOMFIELD HILLS
1976 Telegraph Rd.
Bloomfield Hills, MI 48032
Business: (248) 335-8095
Web: carlsgolfland.com
Facebook: Carl’s Golfland
Region: Southeast
Type: Pro Shop/Driving Range
CARL’S GOLFLAND/ PLYMOUTH
44135 5 Mile Rd.
Plymouth, MI 48170
Business: (734) 354-9274
Web: carlsgolfland.com
Facebook: Carl’s Golfland
Region: Southeast
Type: Pro Shop/Driving Range
CARLETON GLEN GC
Carleton (734) 654-6201
CARO GC
Caro (989) 673-7797
CARRINGTON GC
911 St. James Park Ave.
Web: golfcarrington.com
Facebook: Carrington Golf Club
Type: Public Region: Southeast
Founded: 1998
Architect: Brian Huntley
Holes: 18
CASCADE HILLS CC
3725 Cascade Rd. SE Grand Rapids, MI 49546
Club: (616) 949-0810
Pro Shop: (616) 949-0740
Web: cascadehillscc.com
Facebook: Cascade Hills Country Club
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Founded: 1921
Holes: 27
Caddies Available
CASCADE SHORT COURSE & DRIVING RANGE
Jackson (517) 768-5846
CASCADES GC
1992 Warren Ave.
Jackson, MI 49203
Pro Shop: (517) 788-4323
Business Office: (517) 768-2916
Web: cascadesgolfcourse.com
Facebook: Cascades Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1929
Architect: Tom Bendelow
Holes: 18
CASEVILLE GC
Caseville (989) 856-2613
CASTLE CREEK GC
Attica (810) 724-0851
CATTAILS GC
57737 9 Mile Rd.
South Lyon, MI 48178
Pro Shop: (248) 486-8777
Web: cattailsgolfclub.com
Facebook: Cattails Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1991
Architects: Don Childs/Doug
Palm
Holes: 18
CEDAR CHASE GC
7551 17 Mile Rd. NE
Cedar Springs, MI 49319
Pro Shop: (616) 696-2308
Web: cedarchasegolfclub.com
Facebook: Cedar Chase Golf Club
Type: Public
Owner: Dick Card
Region: West Central
Architect: Bruce Matthews III
Holes: 18
CEDAR CREEK GOLF CLUB
14000 Renton Rd.
Battle Creek, MI
Facebook: Cedar Creek Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1974
Architect: Robert Beard
Holes: 18
CEDAR GLEN GC
New Baltimore (586) 725-8156
CEDAR VALLEY GC
Comins (989) 848-2792
CENTENNIAL ACRES
12485 Dow Rd. Sunfield, MI 48890
Pro Shop: (517) 566-8055
Web: centennialacres.com
Facebook: Centennial Acres Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1979
Architect: Warner Bowen
Holes: 27
CENTURY OAKS
PUBLIC GC
P.O. Box 154
4570 Pigeon Rd. Elkton, MI 48731
Pro Shop: (989) 375-4419
Facebook: @
Centuryoakspublicgolfcoursellc
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Architect: Jim & Tom Matteson
Holes: 9
CHAMPION HILL GC
501 N. Marshall Rd. Beulah, MI 49617
Pro Shop: (231) 882-9200
Web: championhill.com
Facebook: Champion Hill
Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Architects: Jim Cole/Lee Stone
Holes: 18
CHANDLER PARK GC
12801 Chandler Park Dr. Detroit, MI 48213
Pro Shop: (313) 331-7755
Web: www.chandler.golf
Facebook: Chandler Park
Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1929
Architect: William Grill
Holes: 18
CHARLEVOIX GC
400 Fairway Dr. Charlevoix, MI 49720
Pro Shop: (231) 547-3268
Web: cityofcharlevoix.org/156/ Golf-Course
Facebook: Charlevoix Golf Club (Municipal)
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
CHASE HAMMOND GC
2454 Putnam Rd.
Muskegon, MI 49423
Pro Shop: (231) 766-3035
Web: chasehammondgolfclub.com
Facebook: Chase Hammond
Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Founded: 1970
Holes: 18
Architect: Mark DeVries
CHEBOYGAN G&CC
1431 Old Mackinaw Rd.
Cheboygan, MI 49721
Pro Shop: (231) 627-4264
Web: cheboygangolf.com
Facebook: Cheboygan Golf & Country Club
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Northeast
Founded: 1921
Holes: 18
CHEMUNG HILLS GC
3125 Golf Club Rd.
Howell, MI 48843
Club: (517) 546-4230
Web: chemunghills.com
Type: Public
Region: Southeast Founded: 1927
Holes: 18
CHERRY CREEK GC
52000 Cherry Creek Dr. Shelby Twp., MI 48316
Pro Shop: (586) 254-7700
Web: cherrycreekgolf.com
Facebook: Cherry Creek Golf
Club and Banquet Center
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1995
Architects: Lanny Wadkins/Mike
Bylen
Holes: 18
CHERRYWOOD GC
Ottawa Lake (734) 856-6669
CHESHIRE HILLS GC
3829 102nd Ave.
Allegan, MI 49010
Pro Shop: (269) 673-2882
Web: cheshirehills.com
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Architects: Herb and Ken
Johnson
Holes: 27
Children 10 and under play free
CHESTNUT HILLS GC
7700 Glovers Lake Rd.
Bear Lake, MI 49614
Pro Shop: (231) 864-2458
Web: chestnutgolf.com
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Architect: Doug Carter
Holes: 18
Holes: 9
CHESTNUT VALLEY GC
Holes: 18
Monroe, MI 48161
Pro Shop: (734) 241-0707
Pro Shop: (269)-965-6423
Web: cedargolfclub.com
Walking Permitted (pull carts available)
No motorized carts available
1875 Clubhouse Dr.
Harbor Springs, MI 49740
Club: (231) 526-9100
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 87 A B D P J V G S M Y C O I U F R L X E Q K W H T N Z D M O Q H N
Web: chestnutvalleygolf.com
Facebook: Chestnut Valley Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Architect: Larry Mancour
Holes: 18
THE CHIEF GC
5085 Shanty Creek Rd.
Bellaire, MI 49615
Pro Shop: (231) 533-9000
Web: golfthechief.com
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Founded: 2000
Holes: 18
CHIKAMING CC
15029 Lakeside Rd.
Lakeside, MI 49116
Club: (269) 469-5141
Pro Shop: (269) 469-5484
Web: chikamingcc.org
Type: Private
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1913
Architect: Harry Collis
Holes: 18
CHISHOLM HILLS GC
Lansing (517) 694-0169
CLARK LAKE GC
Brooklyn (517) 592-6259
CLEAR LAKE GC
Big Rapids (231) 796-8200
CLEARBROOK GC
Saugatuck (269) 857-2000
CLIO CC
13141 N. Linden Rd.
Clio, MI 48420
Club: (810) 686-0211
Pro Shop: (810) 687-0340
Web: cliocountryclub.com
Facebook: Clio Country Club
Type: Private
Region: East Central
Holes: 18
Founded: 1960
COLDWATER GC
270 Narrows Rd.
Coldwater, MI 49036
Pro Shop: (517) 279-2100
Web: coldwatergolfcourse.com
Facebook: The Coldwater Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Holes: 18
COLLEGE FIELDS
3800 Hagadorn
Okemos, MI 48864
Pro Shop: (517) 332-8100
Web: collegefields.net
Facebook: College Fields Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 2006
Architect: David Savic
Holes: 18
COLONIAL GC
2763 N. 72nd Ave.
Hart, MI 49420
Pro Shop: (231) 873-8333
Web: colonialgolfhart.com
Facebook: Colonial Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architect: Jeff Gorney
Founded: 1999
Holes: 18
CONCORD HILLS GC
Concord (517) 524-8337
COPPER CREEK GC
Farmington Hills (248) 489-1777
COPPER HILLS G&CC
2125 Lakeville Rd.
Oxford, MI 48370
Club: (248) 969-9808
Web: copperhills.com
Facebook: Copper Hills Golf & Country Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Curtis Wright
Holes: 27
Founded: 1997
COPPER RIDGE GC
Davison (810) 658-7775
CORUNNA HILLS GC
Corunna (989) 277-0477
COUNTRY CLUB OF DETROIT
220 Country Club Dr.
Grosse Pointe Farms, MI 48236
Club: (313) 881-8000
Pro Shop: (313) 881-8779
Web: ccofd.com
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1897
Architects: H.S. Colt & C.H.
Alison
Holes: 18 (Championship Course)
9-hole short course
Caddies Available
COUNTRY CLUB OF JACKSON
3135 Horton Rd.
Jackson, MI 49203
Club: (517) 783-2661
Pro Shop: (517) 782-5347
Web: countryclubofjackson.com
Facebook: Country Club of Jackson
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Region: East Central
Architect: Arnold Palmer
Holes: 18
CRACKLEWOOD GC
18215 24 Mile Rd.
Macomb, MI 48042
Pro Shop: (586) 781-0808
Web: cracklewood.com
Facebook: @Cracklewood
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1989
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
CREST VIEW GC
Zeeland (616) 875-8101
CRESTVIEW GC
Kalamazoo (269) 349-1111
CROOKED CREEK GC
9387 Gratiot Rd.
Saginaw, MI 48609
Pro Shop: (989) 781-4653
Web: thecreekandthevalley.com
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Founded: 1959
Holes: 18
Founded: 1926
Architects: Arthur Hamm/Arthur
Hills
Holes: 27
Caddies Available
COUNTRY CLUB OF LANSING
2200 Moores River Dr. Lansing, MI 48911
Club: (517) 484-4567
Pro Shop: (517) 318-5219
Web: cclansing.org
Facebook: Country Club of Lansing
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1908
Architect: William Langford
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
COUNTY LINE GC
Reese (989) 868-4991
COUNTRY MEADOWS GC
Escanaba (906) 786-1565
COYOTE GC
28700 Milford Rd. New Hudson, MI 48165
Pro Shop: (248) 486-1228
Web: coyotegolfclub.com
Facebook: Coyote Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Scott Thacker
Holes: 18
COYOTE PRESERVE GC
9218 Preserve Dr. Fenton, MI 48430
Pro Shop: (810) 714-3206
Web: coyotepreserve.com
Facebook: Coyote Preserve
Golf Club
Type: Public
CROOKED TREE GC/ BOYNE RESORTS
600 Crooked Tree Dr. Petoskey, MI 49770
Club: (231) 439-4030
Web: boyne.com/bayharbor
Facebook: BOYNE Golf
Instagram: @Boyne.golf
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Holes: 18
Architect: Arthur Hills (2013 redesign)
THE CROWN GC
2430 W. Crown Dr. Traverse City, MI 49684
Club: (231) 946-2975
Web: golfthecrown.com
Facebook: The Crown Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Founded: 1998
Holes: 18
CRYSTAL DOWNS CC
249 E. Crystal Downs Dr. Frankfort, MI 49635
Club Office: (231) 352-9933
Pro Shop: (231) 352-7979
Type: Private
Region: Northwest
Architect: Alister MacKenzie
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
Guest of member only
CRYSTAL LAKE GC
Beulah (231) 882-4061
CRYSTAL MOUNTAIN
12500 Crystal Mountain Dr. Thompsonville, MI 49683
Pro Shop: (888) 968-7686 ext. 4000
Web: crystalmountain.com
Facebook: Crystal Mountain
88 MICHIGAN LINKS | WWW.GAM.ORG A B D P J V G S M Y C O I U F R L X E Q K W H T N Z
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE COURSE
Eagle Crest Golf Club
Type: Resort
Region: Northwest
MTESP Certified
Mountain Ridge
Architect: Bill Newcomb
Holes: 18
Betsie Valley
Architect: Renovated by Paul Albanese
Holes: 18
CRYSTAL VIEW GC
602 Wagner
Crystal Falls, MI 49920
Club: (906) 875-6647
Pro Shop: (906) 875-3029
Web: crystalviewgolfcourse.com
Facebook: Crystal View Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Upper Peninsula
Founded: 1929
Holes: 9
CURRIE MUNICIPAL GC
1006 Currie Pkwy. Midland, MI 48640
Pro Shop: (989) 839-9600
Web: curriegolf.com
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Founded: 1954
West Course
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
East Course Holes: 9
Par 3 Course
Holes: 9
CUSTER GREENS GC
Battle Creek (269) 968-7398
DDAVISON CC
9512 E. Lippincott Blvd. Davison, MI 48423
Club: (810) 658-5211
Pro Shop: (810) 653-5301
Web: dccdac.com
Type: Private
Architects: Ellis/Arndt/Truesdale
Holes: 18
DEARBORN CC
800 N. Military
Dearborn, MI 48124
Club: (313) 561-0800
Pro Shop: (313) 561-4433
Web: dearborncountryclub.net
Facebook: Dearborn Country
Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architects: Donald Ross/C.E.
Robinson Holes: 18
Caddies Available
DEARBORN HILLS GC
Dearborn (313) 563-4653
DEER RUN GC
Horton (517) 688-3350
DEER RUN GC
Lowell (616) 897-8481
DEER VIEW GC
Imlay City (810) 395-1821
DEME ACRES GC
17707 Albain Rd.
Petersburg, MI 49270
Club: (734) 279-1151
Web: demeacres.com
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1962
Holes: 18
DETROIT GC
17911 Hamilton Rd.
Detroit, MI 48203
Pro Shop: (313) 345-1818
Web: detroitgolfclub.org
Facebook: Detroit Golf Club
Type: Private Region: Southeast
South Course
Architect: Donald Ross
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
Pull carts in offseason
North Course
Architect: Donald Ross
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
Pull carts in offseason
DEVIL’S KNOB GC
Harrison (989) 539-5662
DEVILS LAKE GC
Manitou Beach (517) 547-3653
DEVIL’S RIDGE GC
3700 Metamora Rd.
Oxford, MI 48371
Pro Shop: (248) 969-0100
Web: devilsridgegolfclub.com
Facebook: Devil’s Ridge Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
DIAMOND LAKE GC
Cassopolis (269) 445-3143
DIAMOND SPRINGS GC
3400 34th St.
Hamilton, MI 49419
Pro Shop: (269) 751-4545
Web: diamondspringsgolf.com
Facebook: Diamond Springs
Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Architects: Kris Shumaker/Mike
DeVries
Holes: 18
DOWAGIAC ELKS GC
Dowagiac (269) 782-3889
DOWNING FARMS GC
Northville (248) 486-0990
THE DREAM GC
5266 Old 76 (West M-55)
West Branch, MI 48661
Pro Shop: (877) 345-6300
Web: thedream.golf
Facebook: The Dream The
Nightmare
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Architect: John Gorney
Holes: 18
DRUMMOND ISLAND GC
Drummond Island (906) 493-5406
DUCK LAKE CC
2827 Country Club Way Albion, MI 49224
Pro Shop: (517) 629-6000
Web: ducklakecc.com
Type: Private
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1922
Holes: 18
DUNDEE GC
Dundee (734) 529-2321
THE DUNES GC
New Buffalo (269) 469-5539
DUNES GC
Empire (231) 326-5390
DUNHAM HILLS GC
13561 Dunham Rd. Hartland, MI 48353
Pro Shop: (248) 887-9170
Web: dunhamhills.com
Facebook: Dunham Hills Golf
Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1967
Holes: 18
DUNMAGLAS GC
Charlevoix (231) 547-4653
DUTCH HOLLOW GC
Durand (989) 288-3960
EEAGLE CREST GC
1201 S. Huron St.
Ypsilanti, MI 48197
Club: (734) 487-2441
Web: eaglecrestresort.com
Instagram: @eaglecrestgolfclubemu
Facebook: eaglecrestgolfclubemu
Type: University/Resort
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1989
Architect: Carl Litten
Founded: 1989
Holes: 18
EAGLE EYE GC
15500 Chandler Rd.
Pro Shop: (517) 903-8063
Web: eagleeyegolfclub.com
Facebook: Eagle Eye Golf & Banquet Center
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Founded: 2003
Architects: Chris Lutzke/Pete Dye
Holes: 18
EAGLE GLEN GC
1251 Clubhouse Dr. Farwell, MI 48622
Pro Shop: (989) 588-4424
Facebook: Eagle Glen Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
Mandatory carts on weekends, holidays until 1 p.m.
EAGLE RIDGE GC
Glennie (989) 735-3500
EAGLE VIEW GC
Mason (517) 676-5366
EAGLE’S NEST GC
Nahma (906) 644-2728
EASTERN HILLS GC
6075 East G Ave.
Kalamazoo, MI 49004
Pro Shop: (269) 385-8175
Web: kmgagolf.com
Facebook: KMGA–Milham Park, Eastern Hills & Red Arrow Golf
Courses
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1959
Holes: 27
EDGEWOOD CC
8399 Commerce Rd.
Commerce Twp., MI 48382
Club: (248) 363-7112
Pro Shop: (248) 363-6189
Web: edgewoodcountryclub.org
Facebook: Edgewood Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: Ernest W. Way
Founded: 1969
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
EGYPT VALLEY CC
7333 Knapp NE
Ada, MI 49301
Club: (616) 676-2626
Pro Shop: (616) 676-3989
Web: egyptvalley.com
Facebook: Egypt Valley Country
Club
Type: Private
Region: West Central
MTESP Certified
Founded: 1921
Ridge Course
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
Valley Course
Architect: Arthur Hills
ELDORADO
7839 E. 46 ½ Rd.
Cadillac, MI 49601
Pro Shop: (231) 779-9977
Web: golfeldorado.com
Facebook: Eldorado Golf Course
Type: Public Region: Northwest
Founded: 1996
Architect: Bob Meyer
Holes: 18
ELDORADO GC
3750 W. Howell Rd.
Mason, MI 48854
Pro Shop: (517) 676-2854
Web: eldorado27.com
Facebook: Eldorado Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1965
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 27
ELK RAPIDS GC
724 Ames St.
Elk Rapids, MI 49629
Pro Shop: (231) 264-8891
Web: golfelkrapids.com
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Northwest
Founded: 1922
Architect: Donald Ross
Holes: 9
ELLA SHARP PARK GC
2800 4th St.
Jackson, MI 49203
Pro Shop: (517) 788-4066
Web: cityofjackson.org
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1924
Architects: Tom Bendelow/Harry
Bowers
Holes: 18
ELMBROOK GC
1750 Townline Rd.
Traverse City, MI 49696
Pro Shop: (231) 946-9180
Web: elmbrookgolf.com
Facebook: Elmbrook Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Founded: 1964
Holes: 18
THE EMERALD GC
2300 W. Maple Rapids Rd.
St. Johns, MI 48879
Pro Shop: (989) 224-6287
Web: emeraldgolfcourse.com
Facebook: The Emerald Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
Founded: 1996
EMERALD HILLS
GC
Marshall (269) 367-2121
EMERALD VALE GC
Manton (231) 824-3631
Bath, MI 48808
Holes: 18
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 89 A B D P J V G S M Y C O I U F R L X E Q K W H T N Z D M O Q H N
EPWORTH HEIGHTS GC
Ludington (231) 843-6355
ESCANABA CC
1800 11th Ave. S.
Escanaba, MI 49829
Pro Shop: (906) 786-4430
Web: escanabacc.com
Facebook: Escanaba Country
Club
Type: Public
Region: Upper Peninsula
Founded: 1915
Holes: 18
ESSEX G&CC
7555 Matchette Rd.
LaSalle, ONT, N9J 2S4, Canada
Club: (519) 734-1251
Pro Shop: (519) 734-7816
Toll Free: (855) 213-1251
Web: essexgolf.com
Facebook: Essex Golf & Country
Club
Type: Private
Region: Canada
Architect: Donald Ross
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
EVERGREEN GC
Hudson (517) 448-8174
EVERGREEN HILLS GC
26000 Evergreen Rd.
Southfield, MI 48076
Pro Shop: (248) 796-4666
Web: cityofsouthfield.com/departments/parks-recreation/golf
Facebook: @
Evergreenhillsgolfcourse
Instagram: @city_of_southfield
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1972
Architect: Bruce Matthews III
Holes: 9
Walking Permitted
EVERGREEN RESORT
Cadillac (231) 942-7021
EXCALIBUR GC
800 Mill Iron Rd. Muskegon, MI 49442
Pro Shop: (231) 773-7171
Web: excaliburgolfclub.net
Facebook: Excalibur Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Holes: 9
FFAIRVIEW HILLS GC
Mio (989) 848-5810
FALCON GC
Bath (517) 371-3484
THE FALLS AT BARBER CREEK
16030 Barber Creek Ave.
Kent City, MI 49330
Club: (616) 675-7345
Web: thefallsatbc.com
Facebook: The Falls at Barber
Creek
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Holes: 18
FARMINGTON HILLS GC
37777 11 Mile Ct.
Farmington Hills, MI 48335
Pro Shop: (248) 476-5910
Web: fhgov.com
Facebook: City of Farmington Hills, Michigan – Municipal Government
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 2003
Architect: Don Childs
Holes: 18
FAULKWOOD SHORES GC
300 S. Hughes Rd. Howell, MI 48843
Pro Shop: (517) 546-4180
Web: faulkwoodshoresgolf.com
Facebook: Faulkwood Shores
Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1969
Architect: Ralph Banfield
Holes: 18
FAWN CREST GC
Wellston (231) 848-4174
FELLOWS CREEK GC
2936 Lotz Rd.
Canton, MI 48188
Pro Shop: (734) 728-1300
Web: fellowscreekgolf.com
Facebook: Fellows Creek Golf
Club
and Banquet Facility
Type: Public
Region: Southeast Founded: 1963
Architects: Bruce Matthews/ Jerry Matthews Holes: 27
FENTON FARMS GC
12312 Torrey Rd. Fenton, MI 48430
Pro Shop: (810) 882-1014
Web: fentonfarms.com
Facebook: Fenton Farms Golf
Club
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Founded: 1930
Architect: George Crane
Holes: 18
FERN HILL GC
Clinton Twp. (586) 286-4700
THE FIELDS GC
1508 N. State Rd.
Ithaca, MI 48847
Pro Shop: (989) 875-4612
Web: thefieldsgolfcourse.com
Facebook: thefieldsgolfcourse
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Founded: 1932
Holes: 18
FIELDSTONE GC OF AUBURN HILLS
1984 Taylor Rd.
Auburn Hills, MI 48326
Pro Shop: (248) 370-9354 ext. 2
Web: fieldstonegolfclub.com
Facebook: Fieldstone Golf Club of Auburn Hills
Country Club & Golf
Type: Semiprivate
Region: East Central
Founded: 1959
Architects: Wilfrid Reid/William Connellan
Holes: 18
FOREST AKERS GC
3535 Forest Rd., Suite C88A Lansing, MI 48910
Club: (517) 355-1635
Web: golf.msu.edu
Facebook: Forest Akers Golf Course @ Michigan State University
Type: University
Region: Southeast
MTESP Certified
Founded: 1958
East Course
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
MSU students and alumni enjoy discounted rates
West Course
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
MSU students and alumni enjoy discounted rates
FOREST DUNES GC
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1998
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
FIREFLY GOLF LINKS
Clare (989) 386-3510
FLINT ELKS GC
7177 E. Maple Ave. Grand Blanc, MI 48439
Club: (810) 743-9440
Pro Shop: (810) 743-0730
Web: flintelks222.com
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1970
Architect: Larry Mancour
Holes: 18
FLINT GC
3100 Lakewood Dr. Flint, MI 48507
Club: (810) 743-6100
Pro Shop: (810) 743-6750
Web: flintgolfclub.com
Facebook: The Real Flint Golf
Club
Type: Private
Region: East Central
Founded: 1910
Architect: Willie Park Jr.
Holes: 18
Only club-owned pull carts allowed
FLUSHING VALLEY G&CC
1124 E. Main St. Flushing, MI 48433
Club: (810) 487-0792
Facebook: Flushing Valley
6376 Forest Dunes Dr. Roscommon, MI 48653
Pro Shop: (989) 275-0700
Web: forestdunesgolf.com
Facebook: Forest Dunes Golf Club
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Northeast
Founded: 2000
Architect: Tom Weiskopf Design
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
Forest Dunes Course
The Loop
Architect: Tom Doak
Superintendent: Rob Falconer
Holes: 18/36
FOREST LAKE CC
1401 Club Dr.
Bloomfield Hills, MI 48302
Club: (248) 332-8300
Pro Shop: (248) 332-7070
Web: flcc.us
Facebook: Forest Lake Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1926
Architect: William Diddel
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
Caddies Available
Pull carts not allowed
THE FORTRESS
950 Flint St.
Frankenmuth, MI 48734
Pro Shop: (989) 652-0460
Web: zehnders.com
Facebook: The Fortress
Type: Public
Region: East Central
90 MICHIGAN LINKS | WWW.GAM.ORG A B D P J V G S M Y C O I U F R L X E Q K W H T N Z
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE COURSE
Forest Akers Golf Course
Founded: 1992
Architect: Dick Nugent
Holes: 18
THE FOUNTAINS GOLF & BANQUET CENTER
6060 Maybee Rd.
Clarkston, MI 48346
Club: (248) 625-3731
Web: fountainsgolf.com
Facebook: The Fountains!
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1967
Architects: William Newcomb/ Kevin Aldridge
Holes: 18
FOUR LAKES CC
22786 U.S. Hwy. 12
Edwardsburg, MI 49112
Club: (269) 699-5701
Web: fourlakescc.com
Type: Private
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1934
Holes: 18
FOX CREEK GC
36000 7 Mile Rd.
Livonia, MI 48152
Pro Shop: (248) 471-3400
Web: golflivonia.com
Facebook: Golf Livonia
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1988
Architect: Mark DeVries
Holes: 18
THE FOX GC
Roscommon (989) 422-2497
FOX HILLS GOLF & BANQUET CENTER/ FOX HILLS LEARNING CENTER
8768 N. Territorial Plymouth, MI 48170
Pro Shop: (734) 453-7272
Web: foxhills.com
Facebook: Fox Hills Golf & Banquet Center
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Strategic Fox
Architect: Ray Hearn
Holes: 18
Golden Fox
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
Fox Classic
Architect: Wilfrid Reed
Holes: 27
FRANKLIN HILLS CC
31675 Inkster Rd.
Franklin, MI 48025
Club: (248) 851-2200
Pro Shop: (248) 851-6632
Web: franklinhills.com
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: Donald Ross
MTESP Certified Caddies Available
FRUITPORT GC
Muskegon (231) 798-3355
GGARDEN GC
Garden (906) 644-4653
GARLAND LODGE & RESORT
4700 N. Red Oak Rd. Lewiston, MI 49756
Club: (877) 442-7526
Pro Shop: (989) 786-1444
Web: garlandusa.com
Facebook: Garland Lodge and Resort
Type: Resort
Region: Northeast
Fountains
Architect: Ron Otto
Founded: 1995
Holes: 18
Monarch
Architect: Ron Otto
Founded: 1990
Holes: 18
Reflections
Architect: Ron Otto
Founded: 1992
Holes: 18
Swampfire
Architect: Ron Otto
Founded: 1990
Holes: 18
GARVER LAKE GC
Edwardsburg (269) 663-6463
GAUSS GREEN VALLEY GC
Jackson (517) 764-0270
GAYLORD GC
4893 M-32 W.
Gaylord, MI 49735
Pro Shop: (231) 546-3376
Web: gaylordgolfclub.com
Facebook: Gaylord Country Club
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Founded: 1924
Architect: Don Childs
Holes: 18
GENESEE VALLEY GC
Swartz Creek (810) 732-1401
GENTZ’S HOMESTEAD GC
Marquette (906) 249-1002
GEORGETOWN CC
Ann Arbor (734) 971-5500
GIANT OAK GC
1024 Valetta Dr.
Temperance, MI 48182
Pro Shop: (734) 847-6733
Web: giantoakgolfclub.com
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
Founded: 1969
GLACIER CLUB
8000 Glacier Club Dr. Washington, MI 48094
Pro Shop: (586) 786-0800
Web: glacierclub.com
Facebook: Glacier Club Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
GLADSTONE GC
6514 Days River 24.5 Rd.
Gladstone, MI 49837
Club: (906) 428-9646
Web: gladstonegolf.com
Facebook: Gladstone Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Upper Peninsula
Holes: 18
GLADWIN HEIGHTS GC
Gladwin (989) 426-9941
GLEN OAKS GC
30500 13 Mile Rd.
Farmington Hills, MI 48334
Pro Shop: (248) 851-8356
Web: OaklandCountyParks.com
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
Founded: 1927
MTESP Certified
GLENBRIER GC
Perry (517) 625-3800
GLENEAGLE GC
6150 14th Ave.
Hudsonville, MI 49426
Pro Shop: (616) 457-8800
Web: gegolfclub.com
Facebook: Gleneagle Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Founded: 1997
Architect: Mike Shields
Holes: 18
GLENHURST GC
25345 W. 6 Mile Rd.
Redford, MI 48240
Pro Shop: (313) 592-8758
Web: redfordtwp.com/community/glenhurst-golf-course
Facebook: @GolfRedford
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1932
Architect: George McLain
Holes: 18
GLENKERRY GC
1413 East Kent Rd.
Greenville, MI 48838
Club: (616) 225-4653
Founded: 1997
Holes: 18
GOGEBIC CC
Ironwood (906) 932-2515
GOLDEN SANDS GC
Mears (231) 873-4909
GOLDEN HAWK GC
9861 Meisner Ln.
Casco Twp., MI 48064
Pro Shop: (586) 727-4681
Web: goldenhawkgolf.com
Facebook: Golden Hawk Golf
Club & Banquet Center
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Founded: 1995
Architect: John Grissim
Holes: 18
GOODRICH CC
10080 Hegel Rd.
Goodrich, MI 48438
Pro Shop: (810) 636-2493
Web: goodrichcountryclub.com
Facebook: Goodrich Country Club
Type: Semiprivate
Region: East Central
Holes: 18
GOWANIE GC
24770 S. River Rd.
Harrison Twp., MI 48045
Club: (586) 468-1431
Pro Shop: (586) 468-1374
Web: gowaniegolfclub.com
Facebook: Gowanie Golf Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: Ross Axford
Holes: 18
GRACEWIL CC
Grand Rapids (616) 784-2455
GRAND BEACH MUNICIPAL GC
Grand Beach (269) 469-4888
GRAND LEDGE CC
5811 E. St. Joseph Hwy. Grand Ledge, MI 48837
Club: (517) 627-2495
Web: grandledgecountryclub.com
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1958
Holes: 18
GRAND PRAIRIE GC
Kalamazoo (269) 388-4447
GRAND TRAVERSE
RESORT & SPA
100 Grand Traverse Village Blvd.
Acme, MI 49610
Club: (231) 534-6000
The Bear Architect: Jack Nicklaus
Holes: 18
Spruce Run
Architect: William Newcomb
Holes: 18
The Wolverine
Architect: Gary Player
Holes: 18
GRAND VIEW GC
New Era (231) 861-6616
THE GRANDE GC
1579 Floyd Ave.
Jackson, MI 49201
Pro Shop: (517) 768-9494
Web: grandegolfclub.com
Facebook: @GrandeGolfClub
Instagram: @GrandeGolfClub
Type: Public Region: Southeast
Founded: 2000
Architect: Ray Hearn
Holes: 18
GRANDVIEW GC
3003 Hagni Rd. NE
Kalkaska, MI 49646
Pro Shop: (231) 258-3244
Email: Play@grandviewgolfkalkaska.com
Web: grandviewgolfkalkaska. com
Facebook: Grandview Golf Club
Type: Public Region: Northwest
Holes: 18
GRAYLING CC
2122 S I-75 Business Loop
Grayling, MI 49738
Club: (989) 348-5618
Web: graylingcountryclub.com
Facebook: Grayling Country Club
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Founded: 1924
Holes: 18
GREAT OAKS CC
777 Great Oaks Blvd.
Rochester, MI 48307
Club: (248) 651-5200
Pro Shop: (248) 651-6566
Web: greatoakscc.com
Facebook: Great Oaks
Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1971
Architect: McCumber & Associates
Holes: 18
Caddies Available Pull carts not allowed
Web: golfglenkerry.com
Facebook: Glenkerry Golf Course
Type: Public
Pro Shop: (231) 534-6470
Web: grandtraverseresort.com
Facebook: Grand Traverse
Resort & Spa
Type: Resort
Region: Northwest
MTESP Certified
GREEN ACRES GC
7323 Dixie Hwy.
Bridgeport, MI 48722
Club: (989) 401-6100
Web: golfgreenacres.us
Type: Public
Holes: 18
Facebook: Giant Oak Golf Club
Region: West Central
Facebook: Green Acres Golf Courses
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 91 A B D P J V G S M Y C O I U F R L X E Q K W H T N Z D G M O Q H N
Instagram: @GolfGreenAcres
Region: East Central
Architect: Ernie Wohlfeill
Founded: 1960
Holes: 18
GREENBRIER GC
Mayville (989) 843-6575
GREENBUSH GC
Greenbush (989) 724-6356
GREEN HILLS GC
Pinconning (989) 697-3011
GREEN MEADOWS GC
1555 Strasburg Rd.
Monroe, MI 48161
Pro Shop: (734) 242-5566
Web: greenmeadowsgolf.com
Facebook: Green Meadows
Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
GREEN OAKS GC
1775 E. Clark Rd. Ypsilanti, MI 48198
Pro Shop: (734) 485-0881
Web: golfgreenoaks.com
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1970
Architect: R.W. Bills
Holes: 18
GREEN VALLEY GOLF & HEALTH CLUB
Sturgis (269) 651-6331
GREYSTONE GC & BANQUET CENTER
67500 Mound Rd.
Washington, MI 48095
Pro Shop: (586) 752-7030
Web: golfgreystone.com
Facebook: Greystone Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1992
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
GREYWALLS/ MARQUETTE GC
1075 Grove St. Marquette, 49855
Club: (906) 225-0721
Web: golfgreywalls.com
Facebook: Marquette Golf Club
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Upper Peninsula
Greywalls
Architect: Mike DeVries
Founded: 2005
Holes: 18
The Heritage
Architects: William B. Langford/ Theodore Moreau/David Gill
Founded: 1926
Holes: 18
GROESBECK GC
1523 E. Cesar Chavez Ave. Lansing, MI 48906
Pro Shop: (517) 483-4333
Web: groesbeckgolfcourse.com
Facebook: Groesbeck Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architects: Jack Doray/Jerry
Matthews
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
GROSSE ILE G&CC
9339 Bellevue Rd. Grosse Ile, MI 48138
Club: (734) 676-1166
Pro Shop: (734) 676-1169
Web: gigcc.com
Facebook: Grosse Ile Golf & Country Club
Instagram: @Grosseilegcc
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1919
Architect: Donald Ross
Holes: 18
Caddies Available No pull carts allowed
GULL LAKE CC
9725 W. Gull Lake Dr. Richland, MI 49083
Club: (269) 629-9714
Pro Shop: (269) 629-9311
Web: gulllakecc.com
Facebook: Gull Lake Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1911
Architect: Tom Bendelow
Holes: 18
GULL LAKE VIEW GOLF
CLUB & RESORT
7417 N. 38th St.
Augusta, MI 49012
Club: (800) 432-7971
Pro Shop: (269) 731-4149
Web: gulllakeview.com
Facebook: Gull Lake View Golf
Club & Resort
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
West Course
Architects: Darl Scott family
Founded: 1963
Holes: 18
East Course
Architects: Darl, Charles, and Jim Scott
Founded: 1973
Holes: 18
BEDFORD VALLEY GC
23161 Waubascon Rd. Battle Creek, MI 49017
Pro Shop: (269) 965-3385
Web: gulllakeview.com
Facebook: Gull Lake View Golf
Club & Resort
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Architect: William Mitchell
Holes: 18
STOATIN
BRAE GC
15579 E. Augusta Dr.
Augusta, MI 49012
Pro Shop: (269) 220-3976
Web: gulllakeview.com
Facebook: Gull Lake View Golf
Club & Resort
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Architect: Renaissance Golf
Design
Holes: 18
STONEHEDGE GC
15530 M-89
Augusta, MI 49012
Pro Shop: (269) 731-2300
Web: gulllakeview.com
Facebook: Gull Lake View Golf
Club & Resort
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
North Course
Architects: Charles Scott/Jon
Scott
Founded: 1995
Holes: 18
South Course
Architect: Charles Scott
Founded: 1988
Holes: 18
GUN RIDGE GC
Hastings (269) 948-8366
HHADLEY ACRES GC
Hadley (810) 797-4820
HAMPSHIRE CC
29592 Pokagon Hwy.
Dowagiac, MI 49047
Pro Shop: (269) 782-7476
Web: hampshire36.com
Facebook: Hampshire Country Club
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Architect: Edward Lawrence Packard
Holes: 18
Walking Permitted
Dogwood Trail
Architect: Duane Dammeyer
Holes: 18
HAMPTON GC
2600 Club Rd.
Rochester, MI 48307
Pro Shop: (248) 852-3250
Web: golfthehampton.com
Facebook: Hampton Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 9
HANKERD HILLS GC
Pleasant Lake (517) 769-9156
HARBOR BEACH GC
Harbor Beach (989) 479-3423
HARBOR POINT GC
8475 S. Lakeshore Dr.
Harbor Springs, MI 49740
Pro Shop: (231) 526-2951
Web: harborpointgolfclub.com
Facebook: Harbor Point Golf Club
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Northwest
Founded: 1896
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
Members Only Dates Vary
Contact Pro Shop for details
HARBOR SHORES
201 Graham Ave.
Benton Harbor, MI 49022
Club: (269) 927-4653
Web: harborshoresresort.com
Facebook: Harbor Shores
Instagram: harborshoresgolf
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Architect: Jack Nicklaus
Holes: 18
Founded: 2006
MTESP Certified
HARBOUR CLUB GC
Belleville (734) 697-6845
HARTLAND GLEN GC
12400 Highland Rd.
Hartland, MI 48353
Pro Shop: (248) 887-3777
Web: hartlandglen.com
Facebook: Hartland Glen Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
North Course
Founded: 1972
Holes: 18
South Course
Founded: 1996
Holes: 18
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Harbor Shores
HAWK HOLLOW GC
15101 Chandler Rd.
Bath, MI 48808
Pro Shop: (517) 641-5944
Web: eagleeyegolfclub.com
Facebook: Eagle Eye Golf & Banquet Center
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 27
HAWK MEADOWS
Howell (517) 546-4635
HAWKSHEAD
523 Hawksnest Dr.
South Haven, MI 49090
Pro Shop: (269) 639-2121
Web: hawksheadlinks.com
Facebook: HawksHead Links
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1996
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
HEATHER HIGHLANDS GC
11450 E. Holly Rd.
Holly, MI 48442
Pro Shop: (248) 634-6800
Web: heatherhighlands.com
Facebook: Heather Highlands GC
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1965
Architect: Robert Bruce Harris
Holes: 18
HEATHER HILLS GC
3100 McKail Rd.
Romeo, MI 48065
Pro Shop: (810) 798-3971
Web: heatherhills.net
Facebook: Heather Hills Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1978
Architect: Gunnar Hemstrom
Holes: 18
THE HEATHERS CLUB OF BLOOMFIELD HILLS
900 Upper Scotsborough Way
Bloomfield Hills, MI 48304
Club: (248) 334-9770
Pro Shop: (248) 334-4494
Web: heathersclub.com
Facebook: Heathers Club of Bloomfield
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: William Newcomb
Holes: 9
Founded: 1990
HEMLOCK GC
5105 W. Decker
Ludington, MI 49431
Club: (231) 845-1300
Web: hemlockgolfclub.com
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Architect: Raymond Hearn
Founded: 2002
Holes: 18
HERITAGE GLEN GC
29795 Heritage Ln.
Paw Paw, MI 49079
Pro Shop: (269) 657-2552
Web: heritageglengolf.com
Facebook: Heritage Glen Golf
Club in Paw Paw, MI
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
Founded: 1994
HIAWATHA SPORTSMAN’S CLUB
Engadine (906) 477-6592
HICKORY CREEK GC
3625 Napier Rd. Superior Twp., MI 48198
Pro Shop: (734) 454-1850
Web: hickorycreekgolf.com
Facebook: Hickory Creek Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
HICKORY HILL GC
Wixom (248) 624-4733
HICKORY HILLS GC
Jackson (517) 750-3636
HICKORY HILLS GC
Fenwick (989) 248-3042
HICKORY HOLLOW GC
49001 North Ave.
Macomb, MI 48042
Club: (586) 949-9033
Web: hickoryhollowgolfclub.com
Facebook: Hickory Hollow Golf
Club
Instagram: @golfhickoryhollow
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
HICKORY KNOLL GC
Whitehall (231) 894-5535
HICKORY RIDGE GC
Galesburg (269) 382-6212
HIDDEN OAKS GC
1270 W. Monroe Rd.
St. Louis, MI 48880
Club: (989) 681-3404
Holes: 18
The Heather Course
Architect: Robert Trent Jones Sr.
Holes: 18
Donald Ross Memorial Course
Holes: 18
Moor Course
Architect: Bill Newcomb
Holes: 18
HILLS HEART OF THE LAKES GC
Brooklyn (517) 592-2110
THE HILLS AT BAW BEESE LAKE
1990 Ash-Te-Wette Dr. Hillsdale, MI 49242
Club: (517) 437-7538
Pro Shop: (517) 437-2201
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1910
Holes: 9
HILLTOP GC
47000 Powell Rd. Plymouth, MI 48170
Pro Shop: (734) 453-9800
Type: Public
Web: hilltopgc.com
Web: hiddenoaksgolfmichigan.com
Facebook: Hidden Oaks Golf
Type: Public
Region: Central
Architect: Bruce Matthews Sr. and Jerry Matthews
Founded: 1970
Holes: 18
HIDDEN RIVER GOLF & CASTING CLUB
7688 Maple River Rd. Brutus, MI 49716
Pro Shop: (231) 529-4653
Web: hiddenriver.com
Facebook: @hiddenrivergolf
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Founded: 1996
Holes: 18
HIGHLAND GC
Escanaba (906) 466-2791
HIGHLAND HILLS GC
Highland (248) 887-4481
THE HIGHLANDS AT HARBOR SPRINGS/ BOYNE RESORTS
600 Highlands Dr. Harbor Springs, MI 49740
Heather Golf Shop: (231) 5263029
Heather-Hills-Ross-Moor Golf Shop: (231) 526-3028
Web: highlandsharborsprings.com
Facebook: BOYNE Golf
Instagram: @Boyne.golf
Type: Resort
Region: Northwest
Arthur Hills Course
Architect: Arthur Hills
Founded: 2000
Facebook: Hilltop Golf Course
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
HOLIDAY MEADOWS GC
Durand (810) 621-5454
HOLLAND LAKE GC
Sheridan (989) 291-5757
HOLLY MEADOWS GC
4855 Capac Rd. Capac, MI 48014
Pro Shop: (810) 395-4653
Web: hollymeadows.com
Facebook: Holly Meadows Golf
Bowling Restaurant & Banquet
Center
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Founded: 1994
Architect: Don Childs
Holes: 18
HUCKLEBERRY CREEK GC
Pewamo (989) 593-3305
HUDSON MILLS METROPARK GC
4800 Dexter-Pinckney Rd. Dexter, MI 48130
Pro Shop: (734) 426-0466
Web: golf.metroparks.com
Facebook: Hudson Mills, Delhi & Dexter-Huron Metroparks
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Sue Nyquist
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
HUNTMORE GC
9595 Estancia Dr. Brighton, MI 48114
Pro Shop: (810) 225-4498
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Hidden River Golf & Casting Club
Web: huntmoregolfclub.com
Facebook: Huntmore Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 2000
Architect: Patrick Grelak
Holes: 18
Walking not allowed
HURON BREEZE GC
5200 Huron Breeze Dr.
Au Gres, MI 48703
Pro Shop: (989) 876-6868
Web: huronbreeze.com
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Founded: 1988
Architect: William Newcomb & Associates
Holes: 18
HURON HILLS GC
3465 E. Huron River Dr.
Ann Arbor, MI 48104
Pro Shop: (734) 794-6246
Web: huronhillsgolf.com
Facebook: a2golf
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1922
Holes: 18
HURON MEADOWS METROPARK GC
8765 Hammel Rd.
Brighton, MI 48116
Pro Shop: (810) 231-4084
Web: golf.metroparks.com
Facebook: Huron Meadows
Metropark
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1984
Architect: Sue Nyquist
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
HURON SHORES GC
1441 N. Lakeshore Rd.
Port Sanilac, MI 48469
Pro Shop: (810) 622-9961
Web: huronshoresgolfclub.com
Facebook: Huron Shores Golf
Club
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Holes: 18
IIDYL WYLD GC
35786 5 Mile Rd.
Livonia, MI 48154
Pro Shop: (734) 464-6325
Web: golflivonia.com
Facebook: Golf Livonia
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
IMA BROOKWOOD GC
6045 Davison Rd.
Burton, MI 48509
Pro Shop: (810) 742-4930
Web: brookwoodgolfclub.com
Facebook: IMA Brookwood
Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Founded: 1938
Holes: 18
INDIAN HILLS GC
4887 Nakoma
Okemos, MI 48864
Pro Shop: (517) 349-1010
Web: ihcustomgolf.com
Type: Public Region: Southeast
Holes: 9
INDIAN HILLS GC
Stephenson (906) 753-4781
INDIAN LAKE G&CC
Manistique (906) 341-5600
INDIAN LAKE HILLS GC
55321 Brush Lake Rd. Eau Claire, MI 49111
Club: (269) 782-2540
Web: indianlakehills.com
Facebook: Indian Lake Hills Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1925
Holes: 27
INDIAN RIVER GC
3301 Chippewa Beach Rd.
Indian River, MI 49749
Club: (231) 238-7011
Pro Shop: (231) 238-7011
Web: indianrivergolfclub.com
Facebook: Indian River Golf Club
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Northeast
Founded: 1923
Architects: Warner Bowen/ Wilfrid Reid
Holes: 18
INDIAN RUN GC
INDIAN SPRINGS METROPARK
5100 Indian Tr. White Lake, MI 48386
Pro Shop: (248) 625-7870
Web: golf.metroparks.com
Facebook: Huron-Clinton Metroparks
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1989
Architect: Sue Nyquist
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
INDIAN TRAILS GC
2776 Kalamazoo Ave. SE Grand Rapids, MI 49507
Pro Shop: (616) 245-2021
Web: indiantrailsgc.org
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Holes: 18
Founded: 1928
INDIANWOOD G&CC
1081 Indianwood Rd.
Lake Orion, MI 48361
Club: (248) 693-9100
Pro Shop: (248) 693-8049
Web: iwgcc.com/home/
Type: Private
Founded: 1925
Region: Southeast
New Course
Architects: Jerry Pate/Bob Cupp
Holes: 18
Old Course
Architect: Wilfrid Reid
Holes: 18
INKSTER VALLEY GC
2150 Middlebelt Rd.
Inkster, MI 48141
Pro Shop: (734) 722-8020
Web: inkstervalleygolf.com
ISLAND HILLS GC
23510 Island Hills Dr.
Centreville, MI 49032
Pro Shop: (269) 467-7261
Web: islandhillsgolf.com
Facebook: Island Hills Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1999
Architect: Raymond Hearn Golf
Designs
Holes: 18
IYOPAWA ISLAND GC
Coldwater (517) 238-2216
JKatke Golf Course
INTERLOCHEN GC
10586 US 31 S
Interlochen, MI 49643
Pro Shop: (231) 275-7311
Facebook: @InterlochenGolf
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Founded: 1965
Architect: Hubert Morris
Holes: 18
THE INTIMIDATOR
Reed City (231) 832-5616
INVERNESS CC
13893 N. Territorial Rd. Chelsea, MI 48118
Pro Shop: (734) 475-8746
Web: inverness-mi.com
Facebook: Inverness Country
Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1926
Architect: Dan Denton
Holes: 9
IRISH HILLS GC Onsted (517) 467-2997
IRON HORSE GC AT DOUBLE
R RANCH Belding (877) 794-0520
IRON RIVER CC
Iron River (906) 265-3161
IRONWOOD GC
6902 E. Highland Rd. Howell, MI 48843
Pro Shop: (517) 546-3211
Web: golfironwood.com
Facebook: @IronwoodGolfClub.
HowellMI
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1990
Holes: 18
JAWOR’S GRATIOT GOLF
CENTER
Roseville (586) 293-9836
THE JEWEL
286 Grand Ave.
Mackinaw Island, MI 49758
Club: (906) 847-3331
Web: grandhotel.com
Facebook: The Jewel Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Upper Peninsula
Architects: Tom Bendelow and Jerry Matthews
Founded: 1901
Holes: 18
KKALAMAZOO CC
1609 Whites Rd.
Kalamazoo, MI 49008
Club: (269) 345-6149
Pro Shop: (269) 344-0752
Web: kalamazoocountryclub.
com
Facebook: Kalamazoo Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1909
Architect: Tom Bendelow
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified Caddies Available
KATKE GC
1003 Perry Ave.
Big Rapids, MI 49307
Pro Shop: (231) 591-3765
Web: katkegolf.com
Facebook: Katke Golf Course, Ferris State University
Instagram: @KatkeGolf
Type: University/Public
Region: West Central
Architect: Frank Beard
Holes: 21
6359 RS Ave E. Scotts, MI 49088
Club: (269) 327-1327
Web: irgolfclub.com
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Holes: 18
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1998
Architect: Harry Bowers
Holes: 18
IRONWOOD GC
Byron Center (616) 538-4000
IRONWOOD LINKS GC
Mason (517) 676-3116
Practice Range and Golf Learning Center
KAUFMAN GC
4807 Clyde Park SW
Wyoming, MI 48509
Pro Shop: (616) 538-5050
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Web: kentcountyparks.org/ kaufman
Facebook: Kaufman Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architect: Bruce Matthews
Holes: 18
KEARSLEY LAKE GC
4266 E. Pierson Rd. Flint, MI 48506
Club: (810) 736-0930
Web: flintcitygolfllc.com
Facebook: Kearsley Lake Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Holes: 18
KENSINGTON
METROPARK GC
13760 High Ridge Dr. Brighton, MI 48114
Pro Shop: (810) 227-8916
Web: golf.metroparks.com
Facebook: Kensington
Metropark
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1961
Architect: Hugh Lamley
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
KENT CC
1600 College Ave. NE
Grand Rapids, MI 49505
Club: (616) 363-6811
Pro Shop: (616) 363-6112
Web: kentcountryclub.com
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Founded: 1896
Architect: Donald Ross
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
KEWEENAW MOUNTAIN
LODGE & GOLF COURSE
Copper Harbor (906) 289-4403
KINGSLEY CLUB
600 Niblick Tr. Kingsley, MI 49649
Pro Shop: (231) 263-3000
Web: kingsleyclub.com
Type: Private
Region: Northwest
Architect: Mike DeVries
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
KLINGER LAKE CC
21050 W. US 12
Sturgis, MI 49091
Club: (269) 651-7453
Pro Shop: (269) 651-4653
Web: klingerlakecc.com
Facebook: Klinger Lake Country
Club
Type: Private
Holes: 18
Region: Southwest
KNOLL VIEW GC
AuGres (989) 876-4653
KNOLLWOOD CC
5050 W. Maple Rd.
West Bloomfield, MI 48322
Club: (248) 855-1800
Pro Shop: (248) 855-0825
Web: knollwoodcountryclub.net
Facebook: Knollwood Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1925
Architect: Arthur Ham/George
McLean
Holes: 18
LL’ANSE GC
Hancock (906) 524-6600
LAC VIEUX DESERT GC
Watersmeet (906) 358-0303
LAKE CORA HILLS GC
56640 Country Rd. 671
Paw Paw, MI 49079
Pro Shop: (269) 657-4074
Web: LakeCoraGolf.com
Facebook: Lake Cora Hills Golf
Club
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Holes: 18
LAKE DOSTER GC
116 Country Club Blvd.
Plainwell, MI 49080
Pro Shop: (269) 685-5308
Web: lakedostergolf.com
Facebook: Lake Doster Golf Club
Type: Semiprivate
Architect: Charlie Scott
Holes: 18
LAKE ERIE METROPARK GC
14786 Lee Rd.
Brownstown, MI 48173
Pro Shop: (734) 379-0048
Web: golf.metroparks.com
Facebook: Lake Erie Metropark
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Sue Nyquist
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
LAKE FOREST GC
3110 W. Ellsworth Ann Arbor, MI 48103
Pro Shop: (734) 994-8580 ext. 1
Web: lakeforestgc.com
Facebook: facebook.com/lakeforestannarbor
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1999
Architect: Golf Services Group
Holes: 18
Walking Permitted
LAKE LEANN GC
Somerset Center (517) 688-3445
LAKE MICHIGAN HILLS GC
2520 Kerlikowske Rd.
Benton Harbor, MI 49022
Pro Shop: (269) 849-2722
Web: lakemichiganhills.com
Facebook: Lake Michigan Hills
Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Holes: 18
LAKE MONTEREY GC AT SANDY PINES RESORT Dorr (616) 896-8118
LAKE O’ THE HILLS GC
2101 Lac du Mont Haslett, MI 48840
Club: (517) 339-9445
Web: lakeothehills.com
Type: Public
Region: Southeast Holes: 9
LAKE ST. CLAIR METROPARK GC
Harrison Twp. (586) 463-4581
LAKELAND HILLS GC
Jackson (517) 764-5292
LAKELANDS G&CC
8760 Chilson Rd. Brighton, MI 48116
Club: (810) 231-3000
Pro Shop: (810) 231-3010
Web: lakelandsgolf.com
Facebook: Lakelands Golf and Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1922
Holes: 18
LAKES OF TAYLOR GC
25505 Northline Rd. Taylor, MI 48180
Pro Shop: (734) 287-2100
Web: taylorgolf.com
Facebook: Lakes of Taylor Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1995
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
LAKES OF THE NORTH GC
8151 Pineview Dr. Mancelona, MI 49659
Pro Shop: (231) 585-6800
Web: lakesofthenorthgc.com
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Holes: 18
LAKESIDE GC
Gladwin (989) 426-1664
LAKESIDE LINKS GC
5369 W. Chauvez Rd. Ludington, MI 49431
Pro Shop: (231) 843-3660
Web: lakesidelinks.com
Facebook: Lakeside Links Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Founded: 1987
Holes: 27
LAKEVIEW HILLS GOLF RESORT
6560 E. Peck Rd. Lexington, MI 48450
Club: (810) 359-7333
Pro Shop: (810) 359-8901
Web: lakeviewhills.com
Facebook: Lakeview Hills Golf
Resort
Type: Semiprivate
Region: East Central Holes: 36
LAKEWOOD ON THE GREEN
Cadillac (231) 468-3344
LAKEWOOD SHORES RESORT
Oscoda (989) 739-2073
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Lakes of Taylor Golf Course
LAPEER CC
3786 Hunt Rd.
Lapeer, MI 48446
Club: (810) 664-2442
Web: lapeergolf.com
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1927
Holes: 18
LEANING TREE GC
Wales (810) 367-3528
LEDGE MEADOWS GC
1801 E. Grand Ledge Hwy.
Grand Ledge, MI 48837
Pro Shop: (517) 627-7492
Web: ledgemeadowsgolfcourse.
com
Facebook: Ledge Meadows Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Holes: 18
THE LEGACY
Ottawa Lake (734) 854-1101
THE LEGACY
AT HASTINGS
1550 N. Broadway
Hastings, MI 49058
Pro Shop: (269) 945-2756
Web: legacyathastings.com
Facebook: The Legacy at Hastings
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1921
Architect: Jack Deray/Bruce Matthews (Redesign)
Holes: 18
LELAND CC
184 N. Fifth St.
Leland, MI 49654
Club: (231) 256-9721
Web: lelandcc.com
Type: Private
Region: Northwest
Founded: 1914
Architects: Charles Wilder/C.D.
Wagstaff (Bruce Hepner redesign)
Holes: 18
LENAWEE CC
Adrian (517) 265-8227
LES CHENEAUX GC
1407 W. Club Rd.
Cedarville, MI 49719
Club: (906) 484-3606
Web: lescheneauxgolfclub.org
Type: Public
Region: Upper Peninsula
Founded: 1898
Holes: 9
LESLIE PARK GC
2120 Traver Rd.
Ann Arbor, MI 48105
Architects: E. Lawrence Packard/ Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
Audubon International Certified
LITCHFIELD GREENS GC
Litchfield (517) 542-3121
LINCOLN GC
4907 Whitehall Rd.
Muskegon, MI 49445
Club: (231) 766-3636 ext. 2
Pro Shop: (231) 766-3636 ext. 1
Web: lincolngolfcourse.com
Facebook: Lincoln Golf Club
Type: Semiprivate
Region: West Central
Founded: 1927
Holes: 18
LINCOLN HILLS GOLF CLUB
1527 N. Lakeshore Dr.
Ludington, MI 49431
Pro Shop: (231) 843-4666
Web: lincolnhillsgc.com
Facebook: Lincoln Hills Golf Club
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Northwest
Holes: 18
LINCOLN HILLS GOLF COURSE
2666 W. 14 Mile Rd.
Birmingham, MI 48009
Pro Shop: (248) 530-1670
Web: golfbirmingham.org
Facebook: City Government of Birmingham, MI
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1964
Holes: 9
LINKS AT BOWEN LAKE
12990 Bradshaw Dr.
Gowen, MI 49326
Mailing: P.O. Box 99
Gowen, MI 49326
Pro Shop: (616) 984-9916
Web: linksatbowenlake.com
Facebook: The Links at Bowen
Lake
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Founded: 1998
Architect: William Newcomb
Holes: 18
Carts Mandatory
THE LINKS AT CRYSTAL LAKE
800 Golf Dr.
Pontiac, MI 48341
Phone: (248) 758-3966
Web: tlacl.com
Facebook: The Links at Crystal Lake
Region: Southeast Holes: 18
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 2000
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
THE LINKS AT HUNTERS RIDGE GC
8101 Byron Rd.
Howell, MI 48855
Pro Shop: (517) 545-4653
Web: golfhuntersridge.com
Facebook: @golfhuntersridge
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1995
Holes: 18
LINKS OF LAKE ERIE GOLF & BANQUET
Monroe (734) 384-1177
LINKS AT ROLLING MEADOWS
Holland (616) 395-5926
LINKS OF EDMORE
Edmore (989) 427-3241
LINKS OF NOVI
50395 10 Mile Rd.
Novi, MI 48374
Pro Shop: (248) 380-9595
Web: linksofnovi.com
Facebook: Links of Novi
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 27
LOCHENHEATH GC
7951 Turnberry Circle
Williamsburg, MI 49690
Pro Shop: (231) 938-9800
Web: lochenheath.com
Facebook: LochenHeath Golf Club
Type: Private
Region: Northwest
Holes: 18
LOCHMOOR CLUB
1018 Sunningdale
Grosse Pointe Woods, MI 48236
Club: (313) 886-1010
Pro Shop: (313) 884-3820
Web: lochmoorclub.com
Facebook: Lochmoor Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1917
Architects: John S. Sweeney/ Walter Travis
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
Caddies Available
LOGGERS TRACE AT SPRINGPORT HILLS
5184 E. Springport Rd. Harrisville, MI 48740
Pro Shop: (989) 724-5611
Springport Hills GC
Holes: 9
Loggers Trace
Holes: 18
LOON GOLF RESORT
Gaylord (989) 732-4454
LOST LAKE WOODS CLUB
4243 Lost Lake Tr. Lincoln, MI 48742
Club: (989) 736-8197
Pro Shop: (989) 736-8412
Web: lostlakewoodsclub.com
Facebook: Lost Lake Woods Club
Type: Private Region: Northeast
Architects: Killian/Nugent
Holes: 18
Founded: 1926
THE LYNX GC
900 Lincoln Rd.
Otsego, MI 49078
Pro Shop: (269) 694-5969
Web: lynxgc.com
Facebook: LynxGC
Type: Public Region: Southwest
Architects: Charles & Jon Scott
Founded: 1997
Holes: 18
LYON OAKS GC
52251 Pontiac Tr. Wixom, MI 48393
Pro Shop: (248) 437-1488
Web: OaklandCountyParks.com
Facebook: Lyon Oaks Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
Founded: 2002
MTESP Certified
MMACATAWA GC
4600 Macatawa Legends Blvd.
Holland, MI 49424
Pro Shop: (616) 212-2600
Web: macatawagc.com
Facebook: @MacatawaGolfClub
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Architect: Ray Hearn Design
Founded: 2005
Holes: 18
THE MACKINAW CLUB
Carp Lake (231) 537-4955
MACK MAYFIELD
MUNICIPAL GC
Westland (734) 721-6660
Walden Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1994
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 27
MALLARD GC
East Jordan (231) 536-3636
MANISTEE G&CC
500 Cherry Rd. P.O. Box 487
Manistee, MI 49660
Pro Shop: (231) 723-2509
Web: manisteegolfandcc.com
Facebook: Manistee Golf & Country Club
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Northwest
Founded: 1901
Architects: Thomas Bendelow/ H.B. Matthews
Holes: 18
MANISTEE NATIONAL GOLF & RESORT
4797 US-31 S. Manistee, MI 49660
Pro Shop: (231) 398-0123
Web: manisteenational.com
Facebook: Manistee National Golf and Resort
Type: Public/Resort
Region: Northwest
The Retreat
Architect: Gary Pulsipher
Holes: 18
The Revenge
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
MANITOU PASSAGE GC
4600 S. Club Dr. Cedar, MI 49621
Pro Shop: (231) 228-6000
Web: manitoupassagegolfclub. com
Facebook: Manitou Passage Golf Club
Instagram: Manitou Passage Golf Club
Region: Northwest
Type: Public
Architect: Arnold Palmer Design Co.
Holes: 18
MAPLE BROOK GC
681 Lansing St. Charlotte, MI 48813
Pro Shop: (517) 543-1570
Facebook: Maple Brook Golf Club
Region: Southwest
Type: Public
Holes: 9
MAPLE CREEK GC
Pro Shop: (734) 794-6245
Web: a2golf.org
Facebook: Ann Arbor Parks & Recreation
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1967
THE LINKS AT GATEWAY
33290 Gateway Dr.
Romulus, MI 48174
Pro Shop: (734) 721-4100
Web: linksatgateway.com
Facebook: Links at Gateway Golf
Web: loggerstrace.net
Facebook: Loggers Trace/ Springport Hills Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Founded: 1972
THE MAJESTIC GC
9600 Crouse Rd.
Hartland, MI 48353
Pro Shop: (810) 632-5235
Web: majesticgolf.com
Facebook: The Majestic @ Lake
Shepherd (989) 828-6315 ext. 2
MAPLE GROVE GC
Lambertville (734) 854-6777
MAPLE HILL GC
Wyoming (616) 538-0290
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MAPLE HILL LAKESHORE GOLF
SHOP & DRIVING RANGE
Fruitport (231) 865-3379
MAPLE HILLS GC
Augusta (616) 731-4430
MAPLE LANE GC
33203 Maple Lane Dr.
Sterling Heights, MI 48312
Pro Shop: (586) 795-4000 ext. 2
Web: maplelanegolf.com
Facebook: Maple Lane Golf Club
Type: Public
Holes: 54
Region: Southeast
West Course
Architects: Clarence Wolfrom/
Carl P. Roehl
Founded: 1926
Holes: 18
East Course
Architects: Clarence Wolfrom/
Carl P. Roehl
Founded: 1926
Holes: 18
North Course
Architects: Clarence Wolfrom/
Carl P. Roehl
Founded: 1926
Holes: 18
MAPLE LEAF GC
158 N. Mackinaw
Linwood, MI 48634
Pro Shop: (989) 697-3531
Web: golfmapleleaf.com
Facebook: Maple Leaf Golf
Course – MI
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Architect: Bill Childs
Founded: 1963
Holes: 27
MAPLE RIVER RESORT
Brutus (231) 529-6574
MARQUETTE TRAILS GC
Baldwin (231) 898-2450
MARSHALL CC
151 Lyon Lake Rd. Marshall, MI 49068
Pro Shop: (269) 781-1182
Web: marshallcountryclub.com
Facebook: Marshall Country Club
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Southwest
Holes: 18
MARYSVILLE GC
2080 River Rd.
Marysville, MI 48040
Pro Shop: (810) 364-4653
Web: cityofmarysvillemi.com
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Architect: Lions Club/Don Childs
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
MARYWOOD GC
21310 North Ave. Battle Creek, MI 49017
Club: (269) 968-1168
Web: marywoodgolf.com
Facebook: Marywood Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Architect: Maurice McCarthy
Founded: 1926
Holes: 18
MEADOWBROOK CC
40941 W. 8 Mile Rd. Northville, MI 48167
Club: (248) 349-3600
Pro Shop: (248) 349-3606
Web: meadowbrookcountryclub. com
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: Willie Park Jr. (restoration by Andy Staples, 2016)
Founded: 1916
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
THE MEADOWS GC AT GVSU
4645 W. Campus Dr. Allendale, MI 49401
Pro Shop: (616) 331-1004
Web: gvsu.edu/meadows
Type: University/Public
Region: West Central
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
THE MEDALIST GC
15701 N. Drive North Marshall, MI 49068
Pro Shop: (269) 789-4653
Web: themedalist.com
Facebook: The Medalist Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1996
Architect: William Newcomb
Holes: 18
MERIDIAN SUN GC
1018 Haslett Rd. Haslett, MI 48840
Pro Shop: (517) 339-8281
Web: meridiansungc.com
Technological University
Type: Public
Region: Upper Peninsula
Founded: 1902
Holes: 18
MIDLAND CC
1120 W. St. Andrews
Midland, MI 48641
Club: (989) 832-8866
Golf Shop: (989) 832-3074
Web: midlandcc.net
Facebook: Midland Country Club
Type: Private
Region: East Central
Architects: Jerry Matthews (original design)/Craig Schreiner (2008)
Founded: 1928
Holes: 18
MILES OF GOLF/ KENDALL ACADEMY
3113 Carpenter Rd.
Ypsilanti, MI 48197
Business: (734) 973-9004
Web: milesofgolf.com
Facebook: Miles of Golf
Type: Golf Shop/ Driving Range/ Teaching Academy
Region: Southeast
MILHAM PARK GC
Facebook: Meridian Sun Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast Founded: 1964
Holes: 18
METAMORA G&CC
1600 Club Dr. Metamora, MI 48455
Club: (248) 969-2120
Web: metamoragolf.com
Facebook: Metamora Golf and Country Club
Type: Semiprivate
Region: East Central Founded: 1990
Architect: Don Childs & Associates
Holes: 18
MICHAYWE PINES GC
1535 Opal Lake Rd. Gaylord, MI 49735
Pro Shop: (989) 939-8911
Web: michaywepines.com
Facebook: Michaywe
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Architect: Don Childs
Holes: 18
Walking Permitted Mon.-Thur. Only
MICHIGAN MEADOWS GC Casco (586) 727-7029
MICHIGAN TECH/ PORTAGE LAKE GC
46789 N. Hwy. US-41
Houghton, MI 49931
Pro Shop: (906) 487-2641
Web: mtu.edu/golfcourse
Facebook: Michigan
4200 Lovers Ln.
Kalamazoo, MI 49001
Pro Shop: (269) 344-7639
Web: kmgagolf.com
Facebook: KMGA – Milham Park, Eastern Hills & Red Arrow Golf Courses
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Architect: Bob Millar
Founded: 1931
Holes: 18
MILL RACE GC
Jonesville (517) 849-9439
THE MINES GC
330 Covell Ave. SW
Grand Rapids, MI 49534
Pro Shop: (616) 791-7544
Web: minesgc.com
Facebook: The Mines Golf Course
Instagram: @minesgolf
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architect: Mike DeVries
Founded: 2005
Holes: 18
MISSAUKEE GC
5300 S. Morey Rd. Lake City, MI 49651
Pro Shop: (231) 839-2901
Web: missaukeegolfclub.com
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Founded: 1970
Holes: 18
MISTWOOD GC
7568 Ole White Dr. Lake Ann, MI 49650
Pro Shop: (231) 275-5500
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 97 A B D P J V G S M Y C O I U F R L X E Q K W H T N Z D M O Q H N
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Lochenheath Golf Club
Web: lakeanngolf.com
Facebook: Mistwood Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Architects: Jerry Matthews/Ray
Hearn
Holes: 27
MONROE G&CC
611 Cole Rd.
Monroe, MI 48162
Club: (734) 241-5190
Pro Shop: (734) 241-6531
Web: Monroe.golf
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1919
Architect: Donald Ross
Holes: 18
THE MOORS GC
7877 Moorsbridge Rd. Portage, MI 49002
Pro Shop: (269) 323-8873
Web: moorsgolf.com
Facebook: The Moors Golf Club
Type: Private
Region: Southwest
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
MOOSE RIDGE GC
11801 Doane Rd.
South Lyon, MI 48178
Pro Shop: (248) 446-9030
Web: mooseridgegolfcourse.com
Facebook: Moose Ridge Golf
Course & Grille
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Ray Hearn
Holes: 18
MORRISON LAKE CC
Saranac (616) 642-9528
MOSS RIDGE GC & BANQUET CENTER
13545 Apple Ave.
Ravena, MI 49451
Pro Shop: (231) 853-5665
Web: mossridge.com
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Founded: 1997
Holes: 18
MOUNT PLEASANT CC
3686 E. River Rd.
Mt. Pleasant, MI 48858
Club: (989) 772-1591
Web: mtpleasantcc.com
Facebook: Mt. Pleasant Country
Club
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Founded: 1921
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
MOUNTAIN FLOWERS GC (AT THE HOMESTEAD)
Glen Arbor (231) 334-5505
MUELLER’S VALLEY VIEW FARM GC
Saginaw (989) 781-1248
MULBERRY HILLS GC
Oxford (248) 628-2808
MULLENHURST GC
9810 Mullen Rd. Delton, MI 49046
Pro Shop: (269) 623-8383
Web: mullenhurstgolfcourse.com
Type: Public
Facebook: Mullenhurst Golf
Course
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1974
Architect: Richard Enyart
Holes: 18
MULLETT LAKE CC
7475 Mullett Lake Rd. Mullett Lake, MI 49761
Club: (231) 627-5971
Type: Semiprivate
Web: mullettlakecc.com
Facebook: Mullett Lake Country
Club
Region: Northeast
Founded: 1921
Holes: 9
MUNOSCONG GC
Pickford (906) 647-9812
MUSKEGON CC
2801 Lakeshore Dr.
Muskegon, MI 49441
Club: (231) 755-3737
Pro Shop: (231) 755-1841
Web: muskegoncc.com
Facebook: Muskegon Country
Club
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Architect: Donald Ross
Holes: 18
MYSTIC CREEK GOLF & BANQUET CENTER
One Champions Circle Milford, MI 48380
Pro Shop: (248) 684-3333
Web: mysticcreekgolfclub.com
Facebook: Mystic Creek Golf
Club & Banquet Center
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 27
THE MYTH GOLF & BANQUET CENTER
850 Stoney Creek Rd. Oakland, MI 48363
Pro Shop: (248) 693-7170
Web: golfthemyth.com
Facebook: Myth Golf and Banquets
Instagram: @golfmyth
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18 and Par 3 Course
NNAHMA RESORTS GC
Rapid River (906) 644-2648
THE NATURAL AT BEAVER CREEK RESORT
Gaylord (989) 732-1785
NEWBERRY CC
5073 M-123
Newberry, MI 49868
Pro Shop: (906) 293-8422
Web: newberrycountryclub.com
Facebook: Newberry Country Club
NORTHERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY GC
125 Chocolay Downs Golf Dr. Marquette, MI 49855
Pro Shop: (906) 227-3111
Web: nmu.edu/golfcourse
Facebook: NMU Golf Course
Region: Upper Peninsula
Type: University/Public
Founded: 1993
Holes: 18
NORTHPORT CREEK GC
355 8th St.
Northport, MI 49670
Pro Shop: (231) 386-1088
Web: northportcreek.com
Facebook: Northport Creek Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Founded: 2014
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 9
NORTHPORT POINT GC
209 N. Northcott Dr.
Northport, MI 49670
Club: (231) 386-5871
Web: nppoint.com
Type: Private
Oak Pointe Country Club
Type: Public
Region: Upper Peninsula
Architect: Mike Husby
Founded: 1997
Holes: 18
THE NIGHTMARE
5745 Old 76 (M-55)
West Branch, MI 48661
Pro Shop: (989) 345-1500
Web: thenightmare.golf
Facebook: The Dream The
Nightmare
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Architect: John J. Gorney
Founded: 2003
Holes: 18
NORM’S GOLF CENTER
Portage (269) 321-6676
NORTH KENT GC
11029 Stout Ave. Rockford, MI 49341
Pro Shop: (616) 866-2659
Web: northkentgolf.com
Facebook: North Kent Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architect: Warner Bowen
Founded: 1973
Holes: 18
NORTH SHORE GC
Menominee (906) 863-3026
NORTH STAR GC Ithaca (989) 875-3841
Region: Northwest
Architect: Tom Bendelow
Renovation: Bruce Hepner
Holes: 9
NORTHVILLE HILLS GC
15565 Bay Hill Dr. Northville, MI 48168
Pro Shop: (734) 667-4653
Web: northvillehillsgolfclub.com
Facebook: Northville Hills Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 2000
Architect: Arnold Palmer
Holes: 18
NORTHWOOD GC
Fremont (231) 924-3380
OOAK CREST GC
Norway (906) 563-5891
OAK LANE GC
800 N. Main
Webberville, MI 48892
Club: (517) 521-3900
Web: oaklanegolf.com
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
OAK POINTE CC
4500 Club Dr. Brighton, MI 48116
Club: (810) 229-4554
Pro Shop: (810) 227-9194
Web: oak-pointe.com
Facebook: Oak Pointe Golf and Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
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The Classic Architect: William H. Diddel
Holes: 18
The Tribute
Architect: Robbins/Koch
Holes: 18
OWOSSO CC
4200 N. Chipman Rd.
Owosso, MI 48867
Club: (989) 723-1470
Pro Shop: (989) 723-2592
Web: owossocountryclub.com
Facebook: owossocountryclub
Type: Private
Region: East Central
Founded: 1923
Architect: Tom Bendelow
Holes: 18
OXFORD HILLS GC
300 E. Drahner
Oxford, MI 48371
Pro Shop: (248) 628-2518
Web: oxfordhillsgolf.com
Facebook: Oxford Hills
Otsego Resort
Honors Course
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
Championship Course
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
Walking Permitted (at club’s discretion)
OAK RIDGE GC
513 W. Pontaluna Rd.
Muskegon, MI 49444
Pro Shop: (231) 798-3660
Web: golfoakridgegc.com
Facebook: Oak Ridge Golf Club
Muskegon
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Holes: 18
Founded: 1925
OAK RIDGE/MARSH
OAKS GC
35035 26 Mile Rd.
Lenox, MI 48048
Pro Shop: (586) 749-5151
Web: oakridgegolf.com
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 36
OAKHURST G&CC
7000 Oakhurst Ln.
Clarkston, MI 48348
Club: (248) 391-3300
Pro Shop: (248) 391-3900
Web: oakhurstgolf.com
Facebook: Oakhurst Golf & Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
Founded: 1998
OAKLAND HILLS CC
3951 W. Maple Rd.
Bloomfield Hills, MI 48301
Club: (248) 644-2500
Pro Shop: (248) 433-0671
Web: oaklandhillscc.com
Type: Private Region: Southeast
North Course
Architects: Donald Ross/Robert Trent Jones
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
South Course
Architect: Gil Hanse
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
OAKLAND UNIVERSITY GOLF & LEARNING CENTER
492 Golf View Ln.
Rochester, MI 48309
Pro Shop: (248) 364-6300
Web: oakland.edu/golf
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
MTESP Certified
Founded: 1979
R & S Sharf Course
Holes: 18
Katke Cousins GC
Holes: 18
THE OAKS AT KINCHELOE
Kincheloe (906) 495-5706
THE OASIS GOLF CENTER
Plymouth (734) 420-4653
OCEANA GC
3333 W. Weaver Rd.
Shelby, MI 49455
Pro Shop: (231) 861-4211
Web: oceanagolfclub.com
Facebook: @
OceanaGolfClubPage
Instagram: oceanagolfclub
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1962
Holes: 18
OLD CHANNEL TRAIL GC
8325 N. Old Channel Trail Montague, MI 49437
Pro Shop: (231) 894-5076
Web: golfoct.com
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architects: Robert Bruce Harris/ Bruce Matthews/Jerry Matthew
Holes: 27
OLD TOWN GOLF & SPORTLAND
Monroe (734) 242-4476
OLDE MILL GC
6101 West XY Ave.
Schoolcraft, MI 49087
Club: (269) 679-5625
Web: oldemillgolf.com
Facebook: OldeMillGolfCourse
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Holes: 18
Founded: 1958
Architect: Gil Stiver
ON THE DUNES SPORTS
Commerce Twp. (248) 313-9713
ONTONAGON GC
Ontonagon (906) 884-4130
ORCHARD HILLS CC
2841 Niles-Buchanan Rd.
Buchanan, MI 49107
Club: (269) 695-5991
Pro Shop: (269) 695-5722
Web: orchardhillscc.com
Facebook: Orchard Hills Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southwest
Holes: 18
ORCHARD HILLS GC
Shelbyville (269) 672-7096
ORCHARD LAKE CC
5000 West Shore Dr.
Orchard Lake, MI 48324
Club: (248) 682-0100
Pro Shop: (248) 682-2500
Web: orchardlakecountryclub.com
Facebook: Orchard Lake Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architects: Colt/Alison
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
THE ORCHARDS GC
62900 Campground Rd. Washington, MI 48094
Pro Shop: (586) 786-7200
Web: orchards.com
Facebook: The Orchards Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1993
Architect: Robert Trent Jones Jr.
Holes: 18
OTSEGO RESORT
696 M-32 East
Gaylord, MI 49735
Club: (800) 752-5510
Pro Shop: (989) 732-5181
Web: otsegoclub.com
Facebook: Otsego Resort
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Founded: 1958
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: John Hubbard
Holes: 18
PPAINT CREEK CC
2375 Stanton Rd.
Lake Orion, MI 48362
Club: (248) 693-4695
Pro Shop: (248) 693-9292
Web: paintcreekgolf.com
Facebook: Paint Creek Country
Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: Don Childs
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
THE PATRIOT GC
Grayling (989) 348-4343
PAW PAW LAKE GC
Watervliet (269) 463-3831
PEBBLEWOOD CC
9794 Jericho Rd.
Bridgman, MI 49106
Club: (269) 465-5611
Type: Public
Web: golfpebblewood.com
Region: Southwest Holes: 18
PETOSKEY-BAY VIEW CC
2328 Country Club Rd.
Petoskey, MI 40770
Club: (231) 347-2402
Pro Shop: (231) 347-3394
Type: Private
Web: pbvcc.com
Facebook: @PBVCC
Region: Northwest
Holes: 18
Founded: 1915
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PHEASANT GC
Zeeland (616) 875-4653
PHEASANT RUN GC
46500 Summit Pkwy.
Canton, MI 48188
Pro Shop: (734) 397-6460
Web: golfprgc.org
Facebook: Pheasant Run Golf
Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1995
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 27
PICTURED ROCKS GC
Munising (906) 387-3970
PIERCE LAKE GC
1175 S. Main St.
Chelsea, MI 48118
Pro Shop: (734) 475-5858
Web: piercelakegolf.com
Facebook: Pierce Lake Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Harry Bower
Holes: 18
Founded: 1995
PIGEON CREEK GC
10195 120th Ave.
West Olive, MI 49460
Pro Shop: (616) 875-4300
Web: golfpigeoncreek.com
Facebook: Pigeon Creek Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Holes: 18
Founded: 2000
PILGRIM’S RUN GC
11401 Newcosta Ave.
Pierson, MI 49339
Pro Shop: (888) 533-7742
Web: pilgrimsrun.com
Facebook: Pilgrim’s Run Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architects: Kris Shumaker/Mike
DeVries
Holes: 18
Founded: 1998
PIN HIGH GC
Lawton (269) 624-4653
PINE GROVE CC
1520 W. Hughitt
Iron Mountain, MI 49801
Web: pinegrovecc.org
Club: (906) 774-2994
Pro Shop: (906) 774-3493
Type: Semiprivate
Founded: 1902
Architect: Lawrence Packard
Holes: 18
PINE HILLS GC
Laingsburg (517) 651-9700
PINE HOLLOW GC
Jackson (517) 764-4200
PINE KNOB GC
5580 Waldon Rd.
Clarkston, MI 48348
Club: (248) 625-0700
Pro Shop: (248) 625-4430
Web: pineknobgolfclub.com
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 27
Founded: 1970
PINE LAKE CC
3300 Pine Lake Rd.
Orchard Lake, MI 48324
Club: (248) 682-1300
Pro Shop: (248) 682-2121
Web: pinelakecc.com
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1902
Architect: Willie Park Jr.
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
PINE RIVER CC
1400 W. Superior
Alma, MI 48801
Club: (989) 463-4610
Web: pinerivercc.net
Facebook: Pine River Country Club
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Founded: 1926
Holes: 18
PINE RIVER GC
Standish (989) 846-6819
PINE SHORES GC
St. Clair (810) 329-4294
PINE TRACE GC
3600 Pine Trace Blvd.
Rochester Hills, MI 48309
Pro Shop: (248) 852-7100
Web: pinetrace.com
Facebook: Pine Trace Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1989
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
PINE VIEW GC
52065 Pulver Rd.
Three Rivers, MI 49093
Club: (269) 279-5131
Web: pineviewgolf.com
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Holes: 36
Founded: 1965
PINE VIEW GC
5820 Stony Creek Rd. Ypsilanti, MI 48197
Pro Shop: (734) 481-0500
Web: pineviewgc.com
Facebook: Pine View Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1989
Architect: Harley Hodges
Holes: 18
PINECROFT GC
8260 Henry Rd.
Benzonia, MI 49616
Pro Shop: (231) 882-9100
Web: pinecroftgolf.com
Facebook: Pinecroft Golf
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Founded: 1992
Architects: L. Stone/J. Cole/A.
Norman/C. Carlson
Holes: 18
THE PINES GC
Wyoming (616) 538-8380
THE PINES GC AT LAKE ISABELLA
1022 Clubhouse Dr. Lake Isabella, MI 48893
Club: (800) 741-3435
Pro Shop: (989) 644-2300
Web: thepinesgolfcourse.com
Facebook: The Pines Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architect: Bruce Matthews
Holes: 18
PINE VIEW HIGHLANDS
GC
4671 W. Houghton Lake Dr. Houghton Lake, MI 48629
Pro Shop: (989) 366-7726
Web: pineviewhighlands.com
Facebook: Pineview Highlands Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Holes: 18
PIPESTONE CREEK GC
6768 Naomi Rd. Eau Claire, MI 49111
Pro Shop: (269) 944-1611
Facebook: @pipestonecreekgc
Type: Public
Region: Southwest Holes: 18
PLEASANT HILLS GC
Mt. Pleasant (989) 772-0487
PLEASANT VIEW GC
Saginaw (989) 791-4768
PLUM BROOK GC
13390 Plumbrook Dr. Sterling Heights, MI 48312
Pro Shop: (586) 264-9411
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1927
Architects: Michael Beaupre/ William Beaupre
Holes: 18
PLUM HOLLOW CC
21631 Lahser Rd. Southfield, MI 48033
Club: (248) 357-5353
Pro Shop: (248) 353-3553
Web: plumhollowcc.com
Facebook: Plum Hollow Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1921
Architect: C.H. Alison and Harry S. Colt
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
PLYM PARK GC
Niles (269) 684-7331
THE POHLCAT CHAMPIONSHIP GC
6595 E. Airport Rd.
Mt. Pleasant, MI 48858
Pro Shop: (989) 773-4221
Web: pohlcat.net
Facebook: PohlCat Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architect: Dan Pohl
Holes: 18
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Pheasant Run Golf Club
POINT O’ WOODS
G&CC
1516 Roslyn Rd.
Benton Harbor, MI 49022
Club: (269) 944-1433
Pro Shop: (269) 944-5851
Web: pointowoods.com
Facebook: Point O’ Woods Golf and Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southwest
Architect: Robert Trent Jones Sr.
Holes: 18
Founded: 1957
MTESP Certified
Caddies Available
POINTE AUX BARQUES GC
1846 Bayview Dr.
Port Austin, MI 48467
Club: (989) 738-7585
Pro Shop: (989) 738-7922
Type: Private
Region: East Central
Founded: 1896
Holes: 18
POLO FIELDS G&CC
5200 Polo Fields Dr.
Ann Arbor, MI 48103
Club: (734) 998-1555
Pro Shop: (734) 998-3456
Web: polofieldsccmi.com
Facebook: The Polo Fields Golf & Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: William Newcomb
Holes: 18
PONTIAC CC
4335 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Waterford, MI 48328
Pro Shop: (248) 682-6333
Web: pontiaccountryclub.com
Facebook: Pontiac Country Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast Holes: 18
PORT HURON ELKS GC
3292 Beach Rd.
Port Huron, MI 48060
Pro Shop: (810) 984-1204
Web: phelkslodge343.com/ golfing
Facebook: Port Huron Elks Lodge 343
Type: Private
Region: East Central Holes: 18
PORT HURON GC
4101 Fairway Dr. Fort Gratiot, MI 48059
Club: (810) 385-4447
Pro Shop: (810) 385-3881
Web: phgc.net
Facebook: Port Huron Golf Club
Type: Private
Region: East Central
Architect: Captain C.H. Allison
Holes: 18
PORTLAND CC
Portland (517) 647-4521
PRAIRIE CREEK GC & BANQUET CENTER
DeWitt (517) 669-1958
THE PRAIRIES
5303 W. Main
Kalamazoo, MI 49009
Club: (269) 343-3906
Type: Public
Web: prairiesgolf.com
Facebook: The Prairies Golf Club
Region: Southwest
Holes: 18
PRESTWICK VILLAGE GC
136 Inverness
Highland, MI 48357
Club: (248) 887-1762
Pro Shop: (248) 887-4334
Web: pvgcc.com
Facebook: Prestwick Village Golf
Course
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: Ron Garl
Holes: 18
Founded: 1996
QQUAIL RIDGE GC
8375 36th St. E.
Ada, MI 49301
Club: (616) 676-2000 ext. 1
Web: quailridgegc.com
Facebook: Quail Ridge Golf Club
Ada & Grand Rapids MI
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Founded: 1999
Architect: Ray Hearn
Holes: 18
QUARRY RIDGE GC
Ottawa Lake (734) 888-1020
THE QUEST GC
119 Questview Dr.
Houghton Lake, MI 48629
Pro Shop: (989) 422-4516
Web: questgolfcourse.com
Facebook: The Quest Golf Club –Houghton Lake
Instagram: @questgolfclub
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Founded: 1994
Architects: John Sanford Jr./ Ken Green
Holes: 18
QUINCY GC
955 Miller Dr.
Quincy, MI 49082
Club: (517) 639-4491
Facebook: Quincy Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: South Central
Holes: 9
RRACKHAM GC
10100 W. 10 Mile Rd.
Huntington Woods, MI 48070
Pro Shop: (248) 543-4040
Web: rackham.golf
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1923
Architect: Donald Ross
Holes: 18
RADRICK FARMS
4875 Geddes Rd.
Ann Arbor, MI 48105
Golf Shop: (734) 998-7040
Web: radrick.umich.edu
Instagram: umichradrick
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Southeast
Architect: Pete Dye
Founded: 1965
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified Certified Audubon International Cooperative Sanctuary
RAILSIDE GC
2500 76th St. SW
Byron Center, MI 49315
Club: (616) 878-1140
Pro Shop: (616) 878-0202
Web: railsidegolf.com
Facebook: Railside Golf Club
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Architect: Matthews Assn.
Holes: 18
RAISIN VALLEY GC
Tecumseh (517) 423-2050
RAMMLER GC
38180 Utica Rd. Sterling Heights, MI 48312
Pro Shop: (586) 264-4101
Web: rammlergolf.com
Facebook: RammlerGolfClub
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1929
Holes: 18
Rammler Par 3 Course
RATTLE RUN GC
East China (810) 329-2070
RAVENNA CREEKS GC
Ravenna (231) 853-6736
RAVINES GC
3520 Palmer Dr. Saugatuck, MI 49453
Pro Shop: (269) 857-1616
Web: ravinesgolfclub.com
Facebook: Ravines Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Architect: Arnold Palmer
Holes: 18
RED ARROW GC
1041 King Hwy.
Kalamazoo, Mi 49048
Club: (269) 492-7800
Web: kmgagolf.com/red-arrowgolf-course/
Facebook: KMGA–Milham Park, Eastern Hills & Red Arrow Golf
Courses
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Holes: 9
RED FOX RUN GC
Gwinn (906) 346-7010
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Polo Fields Golf & Country Club
RED HAWK GC
350 W. Davison
East Tawas, MI 48730
Pro Shop: (989) 362-0800
Web: redhawkgolf.net
Facebook: Red Hawk Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Holes: 18
RED OAKS GC
29600 John R Rd.
Madison Heights, MI 48071
Pro Shop: (248) 541-5030
Web: OaklandCountyParks.com
Facebook: Oakland County
Parks and Recreation
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 9
RED RUN GC
2036 Rochester Rd.
Royal Oak, MI 48073
Club: (248) 548-7500
Pro Shop: (248) 548-8423
Web: redrungolfclub.com
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1914
Architect: Willie Park Jr.
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
Walking Permitted (Walking w/out caddie available certain times only)
No pull carts allowed
REDWOOD GC
Roscommon (989) 821-9821
RICHMOND FOREST GC
33300 32 Mile Rd.
Lenox, MI 48050
Club: (586) 727-4742
Web: richmondforestgolf.com
Facebook: Richmond Forest Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Bruce Matthews III
Founded: 1994
Holes: 18
RIDGE GC
Breckenridge (989) 842-1510
RIDGEVIEW GC
Belding (616) 794-1860
RIDGEVIEW GC
10360 W. Main
Kalamazoo, MI 49009
Pro Shop: (269) 375-8821
Web: ridgeviewgolf.com
Facebook: Ridgeview Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Holes: 18
RIPPLING RAPIDS GC
Cheboygan (231) 625-2770
RIVER’S EDGE GC
6373 Werth Rd.
Alpena, MI 49707
Pro Shop: (989) 354-4312
Web: riversedgeofalpena.com
Facebook: River’s Edge Golf
Club
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Architect: Bruce Matthews
Holes: 18
RIVERBANK GC
South Lyon (248) 486-6251
RIVERSIDE GC &
BANQUET CENTER
245 Columbia Ave. E
Battle Creek, MI 49015
Pro Shop: (269) 964-0291
Web: bcriverside.com
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1926
Architects: Bruce & Jeffery
Matthews
Holes: 18
RIVERSIDE GC
Menominee (906) 863-4837
RIVERVIEW HIGHLANDS
15015 Sibley Rd.
Riverview, MI 48193
Pro Shop: (734) 479-2266
Web: riverviewhighlands.com
Facebook: Riverview Highlands
Golf Course
Instagram: Riverview Highlands
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1973
Architects: William Newcomb/ Arthur Hills
Holes: 27
RIVERWOOD RESORT
1313 E. Broomfield Rd.
Mt. Pleasant, MI 48858
Club: (989) 772-5726
Pro Shop: (989) 773-7063
Web: riverwoodresort.com
Facebook: Riverwood/Nine
Eight Nine
Type: Resort
Region: West Central
Founded: 1932
Architect: Harley Hodges
Holes: 18
THE ROCK AT DRUMMOND ISLAND
33494 S. Maxton Rd.
Drummond Island, MI 49726
Club: (906) 493-1000
Web: drummondisland.com
Facebook: Drummond Island
Resort
Type: Public
Region: Upper Peninsula
Architect: Harry Bowers
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
ROGERS CITY CC
4796 Golf Course Rd.
Rogers City, MI 49779
Club: (989) 734-4909
Web: rogerscitygolfclub.com
Facebook: RogersCityCC
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Holes: 18
Founded: 1971
ROLLING HILLS GC
3274 Davison Rd.
Lapeer, MI 48446
Club: (810) 664-2281
Web: golfrh.com
Instagram: @golf.rh
Type: Public Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
Founded: 1966
ROLLING HILLS GC
6586 Milligan Rd. Cass City, MI 48726
Club: (989) 872-3569
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Founded: 1968
Architect: Grant Hutchinson
Holes: 9
ROLLING MEADOWS GC
6484 Sutton Rd.
Whitmore Lake, MI 48189
Pro Shop: (734) 662-5144
Web: rmgolfcourse.com
Facebook: Rolling Meadows Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
Founded: 1978
ROUGE PARK GC
11701 Burt Rd. Detroit, MI 48228
Pro Shop: (313) 837-5900
Web: rouge.golf
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
ROYAL OAK GOLF CENTER
3500 Edgar
Royal Oak, MI 48073
Pro Shop: (248) 549-4653
Web: royaloakgolfcenter.com
Facebook: Royal Oak Golf Center
Region: Southeast
Type: Driving Range/Miniature
Golf/Golf Learning Center
ROYAL OAK GC
3417 Don Soper Dr.
Royal Oak, MI 48073
Pro Shop: (248) 554-0019
Web: ci.royal-oak.mi.us
Facebook: Tee Time Grille at
Royal Oak Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1958
Holes: 9
MTESP Certified
ROYAL SCOT GC
4722 W. Grand River Ave.
Lansing, MI 48906
Pro Shop: (517) 321-6220
Web: royalscot.net
Facebook: Royal Scot Golf & Bowl
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architects: Thingsted/Hearn
Holes: 27
MTESP Certified
RUSH LAKE HILLS GC
Pinckney (734) 878-9790
RUSTIC GLEN GC
12090 W. Michigan Ave.
Saline, MI 48176
Pro Shop: (734) 429-7679
Web: rusticglen.com
Facebook: Rustic Glen Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
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Rogers City Country Club
SSAGE RUN GC
W1824 Co. Road 400
Bark River, MI 49807
Club: (906) 466-2941
Web: islandresortandcasino.com
Type: Public
Region: Upper Peninsula
Holes: 18
SAGINAW CC
4465 Gratiot Ave.
Saginaw, MI 48638
Club: (989) 793-2860
Pro Shop: (989) 793-3461
Web: saginawcountryclub.com
Facebook: Saginaw
Country Club
Type: Private
Region: East Central
Holes: 18
SAGINAW VALLEY
PUBLIC GC
7255 3 Mile Rd.
Bay City, MI 48706
Club: (989) 684-2611
Web: Saginawvalleygolf.com
Facebook: Saginaw Valley Public
Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Holes: 18
SAINT JOHN’S RESORT
44045 5 Mile Rd.
Plymouth, MI 48170
Club: (734) 414-0600
Pro Shop: (734) 453-1047
Web: saintjohnsresort.com
Facebook: Saint John’s Resort
Region: Southeast
Type: Public
Holes: 18, 7 hole Par 3 Course
SALEM HILLS GC
8810 W. 6 Mile Rd. Northville, MI 48168
Pro Shop: (248) 437-2152
Web: salemhillsgolfclub.com
Facebook: Salem Hills Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Bruce Matthews
Holes: 18
SANCTUARY LAKE GC
1450 E. South Blvd.
Troy, MI 48085
Pro Shop: (248) 619-7600
Web: golftroy.com
Facebook: Sanctuary Lake Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 2004
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
SAND CREEK GC
Marne (616) 677-3379
SAND WEDGE GC
Ottawa Lake (734) 854-4909
SANDY CREEK GC
Monroe (734) 242-7200
SANDY PEBBLES GC
Ahmeek (906) 337-3516
SANDY RIDGE GC
2750 W. Lauria Rd Midland, MI 48641
Pro Shop: (989) 631-6010
Web: golfsandyridge.com
Facebook: Sandy Ridge Golf
Course
Instagram: @sandy_ridge_golf_
course
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Founded: 1964
Holes: 18
SASKATOON GC
9038 92nd St. SE
Alto, MI 49302
Pro Shop: (616) 891-9229
Web: saskatoongolf.com
Facebook: Saskatoon-Golf-Club
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Holes: 45
SAUGANASH CC
61270 Lutz Rd.
Three Rivers, MI 49093
Pro Shop: (269) 278-7825
SCENIC G&CC
8364 W. Filion Rd.
Pigeon, MI 48755
Pro Shop: (989) 453-3350
Web: scenicgcc.com
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Architect: Ron Ferris Golf Design
Holes: 18
SCOTT LAKE CC
Comstock Park (616) 784-1355
SEIFERT GOLF CENTER
Grand Blanc (810) 655-8070
SELFRIDGE GC
Building 570
Selfridge ANGB, MI 48045
Club: (586) 239-4344
Pro Shop: (586) 239-4653
Web: detroit.armymwr.com
Facebook: Selfridge Golf Club
Type: Government/Military
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
SHADOW RIDGE GC
1911 Kelsey Hwy. Ionia, MI 48846
Pro Shop: (616) 527-1180
Web: Shadowridgegolf.net
Facebook: Shadow Ridge Golf
Course and Banquet Center
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Holes: 18
SHAMROCK HILLS GC
31071 County Rd. 390 Gobles, MI 49055
Web: golfsauganash.com
Facebook: Sauganash Country Club
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Architect: A.W. Tillinghast
Founded: 1924
Holes: 18
SAULT STE. MARIE CC
1520 Riverside Dr. Sault Ste. Marie, MI 49783
Club: (906) 632-9771
Pro Shop: (906) 632-7812
Web: saultstemariecc.com
Facebook: ssmcountryclub
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Upper Peninsula
Founded: 1901
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
THE SAWMILL GOLF COURSE
19 Sawmill Blvd.
Saginaw, MI 48603
Pro Shop: (989) 793-2692
Web: TheSawmill.com
Facebook: The Sawmill Golf &/or
Sawmill Pub & Grill
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Founded: 1997
Architect: John Sanford Jr.
Holes: 18
Pro Shop: (269) 628-2070
Web: shamrockhillsgolf.com
Facebook: Shamrock Hills
Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Founded: 1969
Holes: 18
Architect: W. Bruce Matthews
SHANTY CREEK RESORTS
5780 Shanty Creek Rd. Bellaire, MI 49615
Club: (231) 533-3000
Web: shantycreek.com
Facebook: Shanty Creek Resorts
Type: Public
Region: Northwest
Cedar River GC
Architect: Tom Weiskopf
Holes: 18
Summit GC
Architect: William Diddel
Holes: 18
Schuss Mountain GC
Architects: Warner Bowen/ William Newcomb
Holes: 18
The Legend GC
Architect: Arnold Palmer
Holes: 18
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Saint John’s Resort
Hawk’s Eye GC
Architect: John Robinson
Holes: 18
SHENANDOAH CC
5600 Walnut Lake Rd.
West Bloomfield, MI 48323
Pro Shop: (248) 682-4300
Web: shenandoahgolfclub.com
Facebook: Shenandoah Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: Bruce Matthews Sr.
Holes: 18
SHEPHERD’S HOLLOW GC
9085 Big Lake Rd.
Clarkston, MI 48346
Pro Shop: (248) 922-0300
Web: shepherdshollow.com
Facebook: Shepherd’s Hollow Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architects: Arthur Hills/Mike
Bylen
Holes: 27
SHERWOOD ON THE HILL
Gagetown (989) 665-9971
SILVER LAKE CC
Rockford (616) 874-7595
SILVER LAKE GC
Waterford (248) 673-1611
SILVER LAKE GC
Brooklyn (517) 592-8036
SINGING BRIDGE GC
Tawas City (989) 362-0022
SNOW SNAKE SKI & GOLF
Harrison (989) 539-6583
SOLITUDE LINKS GC & BANQUET CENTER
5810 Flinchbaugh Rd. Kimball, MI 48074
Pro Shop: (810) 982-3673 ext. 1
Web: solitudelinksgolf.com
Facebook: @solitudelinks
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Founded: 2000
Architect: Torello Group Ltd.
Holes: 18
SOMERSET GC
Troy (248) 643-8737
SOUTH WINDS GOLF CLUB
Southgate (734) 258-3004
SPARKS BROADWAY GC
Charlotte (517) 543-6723
SPARTA MOOSE FAMILY CENTER & GOLF COURSE
Sparta (616) 887-9126
SPRING LAKE CC
17496 Fruitport Rd. Spring Lake, MI 49456
Club: (616) 842-4200
Pro Shop: (616) 850-1153
Web: springlakecc.com
Facebook: Spring Lake Country Club
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Holes: 18
Founded: 1911
SPRING MEADOWS CC
1129 Ripley Rd. Linden, MI 48451
Club: (810) 735-7836
Pro Shop: (810) 735-4363
Web: springmeadowscountryclub.com
Facebook: Spring Meadows Country Club
Type: Private
Region: East Central
Architect: Larry Packard
Holes: 18
SPRING VALLEY GC
Hersey (231) 832-5041
SPRING VALLEY GC
Kawkawlin (989) 686-0330
SPRINGBROOK GC
Walloon Lake (231) 535-5155
SPRINGBROOK GC & GRILL Springfield (269) 441-7529
SPRINGDALE GC
316 Strathmore Birmingham, MI 48009
Pro Shop: (248) 530-1660
Web: golfbirmingham.org
Facebook: City Government of Birmingham, MI
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Southeast
Holes: 9
Founded: 1929
SPRINGFIELD OAKS GC
12450 Andersonville Rd. Davisburg, MI 48350
Pro Shop: (248) 634-2261
Web: oaklandcountyparks.com
Facebook: Oakland County
Parks and Recreation
Instagram: @oaklandcountyparks
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
SQUIRREL HOLLOW GC
Battle Creek (269) 979-7277
ST. CLAIR GC
1714 N. River Rd. St. Clair, MI 48079
Club: (810) 329-7300
Pro Shop: (810) 329-7458
Web: stclairgolfclub.com
Facebook: St. Clair Golf Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architects: Donald Ross/Jerry
Matthews
Holes: 18
Unaccompanied guest must get permission to play from the golf professional
ST. CLAIR SHORES GC
22185 Masonic Blvd. St. Clair Shores, MI 48082
Pro Shop: (586) 294-2000 ext. 1
Web: scsgolf.com
Facebook: St. Clair Shores Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
Architect: Jerry Matthews
*St. Clair Shores residents receive discounted rates
Senior and junior rates available M-F before noon
ST. IGNACE G&CC
W. 223 W. US-2
St. Ignace, MI 49781
Club: (906) 643-8071
Web: stignacegolf.com
Type: Public
Region: Upper Peninsula
Founded: 1927
Holes: 9
ST. JOE VALLEY GC Sturgis (269) 467-6275
STATES GC
20 E West Ave.
Schoolcraft, MI 49087
Club: (269) 649-1931
Web: statesgolfcourse.com
Facebook: States Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Holes: 18
Founded: 1927
STONEBRIDGE GC
1825 Clubhouse Dr.
Ann Arbor, MI 48108
Pro Shop: (734) 429-8383
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Spring Lake Country Club
Web: stonebridgegolfclub.net
Facebook: Stonebridge Golf
Club – Ann Arbor, MI
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
STONEGATE GC
4100 Sweeter Rd.
Twin Lake, MI 49457
Pro Shop: (231) 744-7200
Web: stonegategolfclub.com
Facebook: Stonegate Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architect: Pat Grelak
Founded: 2004
Holes: 18
Walking Not Permitted
STONEWATER CC
7177 Kalamazoo Ave.
Caledonia, MI 49316
Pro Shop: (616) 656-9898
Web: stonewatercc.com
Facebook: StoneWater
Country Club
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Holes: 18
STONY CREEK METROPARK GC
5140 Main Pkwy.
Shelby Twp., MI 48316
Pro Shop: (586) 781-9166
Web: golf.metroparks.com
Facebook: Stony Creek
Metropark
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: William Newcomb
Holes: 18
STONY POINT GC
Manistique (906) 341-3419
STONYCROFT HILLS CLUB
1960 Stonycroft Ln.
Bloomfield Hills, MI 48304
Pro Shop: (248) 647-1294 ext. 1
Web: stonycroft.com
Type: Private
Region: Southeast Holes: 9
STORMY CREEK GC
Grand Rapids (616) 942-1330
SUGAR SPRINGS GC
1930 W. Sugar River Rd. Gladwin, MI 48624
Web: sugarsprings.net
Pro Shop: (989) 426-4391
Region: Northeast
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
Type: Public
SUGARBUSH GC
One Sugarbush Dr. Davison, MI 48423
Club: (810) 653-3326
Pro Shop: (810) 653-1124
Web: sugarbushgolf.com
Facebook: Sugarbush Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Architect: Dave Mancour
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Architect: Bruce Matthews
Founded: 1958
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
SWAN VALLEY GC
9521 Highland Green Dr. Saginaw, MI 48609
Pro Shop: (989) 781-4653
Club: (810) 766-7043
Web: swanvalleygolf.com
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Holes: 18
Founded: 1959
Architect: Jerry Matthews
SWARTZ CREEK GC
1902 Hammerburg Rd. Flint, MI 48507
Club: (810) 766-7043
Web: flintcitygolfllc.com
Facebook: Swartz Creek Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: East Central Holes: 18
Swartz Creek Executive Course Holes: 9
SWEETGRASS GC
W399 Hwy. 2 & 41 Harris, MI 49845
Pro Shop: (906) 723-2251
Web: islandresortgolf.com
Facebook: Island Resort & Casino
Type: Public
Region: Upper Peninsula
MTESP Certified Holes: 18
SYCAMORE HILLS GC
48787 North Ave. Macomb, MI 48042
Pro Shop: (586) 598-9500
Web: sycamorehills.com
Facebook: Sycamore Hills Golf
Founded: 1995
Holes: 18
Walking Not Permitted
SUGAR LOAF/THE OLD COURSE
4512 S. Townline Rd. Cedar, MI 49621
Pro Shop: (231) 228-2040
Web: sugarloaftheoldcourse.com
Facebook: Sugar Loaf The Old Course
Type: Public
Region: Northwest Holes: 18
SUMMER BREEZE PAR 3 GC
Fremont (231) 924-9759
SUNNYBROOK CC
624 Port Sheldon Ave. Grandville, MI 49418
Club: (616) 457-1100
Pro Shop: (616) 457-1102
Web: sunnybrookcc.com
Facebook: Sunnybrook Country
Club – Golf & Pool
Club and Banquet Center
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 27
SYLVAN GLEN GC
5725 Rochester Rd. Troy, MI 48085
Pro Shop: (248) 619-7600
Web: golftroy.com
Type: Public Region: Southeast
Founded: 1922
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
TTAM O’SHANTER CC
5051 Orchard Lake Rd.
West Bloomfield, MI 48323
Club: (248) 855-1900
Pro Shop: (248) 855-0655
Web: tamoshantercc.org
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 105 A B D P J V G S M Y C O I U F R L X E Q K W H T N Z D M O Q H N
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Sunnybrook Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: Captain C.H. Alison
Holes: 18
Caddies Available
THE TAMARACKS
Harrison (989) 539-5441
TANGLEWOOD GC
22805 Country Club Dr.
South Lyon, MI 48178
Pro Shop: (248) 486-3355
Web: tanglewoodlion.com
Facebook: Tanglewood Golf
Club & Restaurant
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: William Newcomb
Holes: 27
TANGLEWOOD MARSH GC
2600 W. 16th Ave.
Sault Ste. Marie, MI 49783
Club: (906) 635-7651
Web: tanglewoodmarsh.com
Type: Public
Region: Upper Peninsula
Holes: 18
TAWAS CREEK GC
Tawas City (989) 362-6262
TAYLOR MEADOWS GC
25360 Ecorse Rd.
Taylor, MI 48180
Pro Shop: (734) 287-2100
Web: taylorgolf.com
Facebook: Taylor Meadows
Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Arthur Hills
Holes: 18
TECUMSEH GC
5200 Milwaukee Rd.
Tecumseh, MI 49286
Pro Shop: (734) 730-1506
Club: (517) 423-2070
Web: tecumsehgolfclub.com
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1948
TERRA VERDE GC & BANQUET CENTER
Nunica (616) 837-8249
TERRACE BLUFF GC
Gladstone (906) 428-2343
THORNAPPLE POINTE
7211 48th St.
Grand Rapids, MI 49512
Pro Shop: (616) 554-4747
Web: thornapplepointe.com
Facebook: Thornapple Pointe
Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architect: William Newcomb
Holes: 18
THORNE BROTHERS AT LILAC GC
Newport (734) 586-7555
Tanglewood Golf Club
THORNE HILLS GC
Carleton (734) 587-2332
THOUSAND OAKS GC
4100 Thousand Oaks Dr. Grand Rapids, MI 49525
Pro Shop: (616) 447-7750 ext. 2
Web: thousandoaksgolf.com
Facebook: Thousand Oaks Golf Club
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Architect: Rees Jones
Holes: 18
THREE FIRES GC
6045 136th St.
Holland, MI 49424
Pro Shop: (616) 399-1678
Web: threefiresgolf.com
Facebook: Three Fires Golf Club
Instagram: @threefiresgolfclub
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Founded: 1961
Architect: Bruce Matthews
Holes: 27
THUNDER BAY GOLF & RV RESORT
Hillman (989) 742-4875
TIMBER RIDGE GC
16339 Park Lake Rd. East Lansing, MI 48823
Pro Shop: (517) 940-8095
Web: eagleeyegolfclub.com
Facebook: Eagle Eye Golf & Banquet Center
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
TIMBER TRACE GC
One Champions Circle
Pinckney, MI 48169
Club: (734) 878-1800
Web: timbertracegc.com
Facebook: TimberTraceGolf
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Conroy/Dewling
Associates
Holes: 18
TIMBER WOLF GC
Kalkaska (231) 258-5685
TIMBERS GC
7300 Bray Rd. Vassar, MI 48768
Pro Shop: (989) 871-4884
Web: timbersgolfclub.com
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Holes: 18
TIMBERSTONE GC
Iron Mountain (906) 776-0111
TIMBERWOOD GC
23700 31 Mile Rd.
Ray, MI 48096
Club: (586) 784-6000
Web: timberwoodgc.com
Facebook: Timberwood Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Laura Viola
Holes: 18
Founded: 2006
TOMAC WOODS GC
Albion (517) 629-8241
Holes: 18
Founded: 1977
TREETOPS RESORT
3962 Wilkinson Rd.
Gaylord, MI 49735
Pro Shop: (989) 732-6711
Web: treetops.com
Facebook: Treetops Resort
Type: Resort
Smith Signature Architect: Rick Smith
Holes: 18
Region: Northeast
Smith Tradition
Architect: Rick Smith
Holes: 18
Fazio Premier
Architect: Tom Fazio
Holes: 18
Jones Masterpiece
Architect: Robert Trent Jones Sr.
Holes: 18
Threetops Par 3 Course
Architect: Rick Smith
Holes: 9
TRUE NORTH GC
2500 True North Dr.
Harbor Springs, MI 49740
Club: (231) 526-3300
TPC MICHIGAN
One Nicklaus Dr.
Dearborn, MI 48120
Club: (313) 436-3000
Pro Shop: (313) 436-3100
Web: tpcmichigan.com
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: Jack Nicklaus
Holes: 18
TRAVERSE CITY G&CC
1725 S. Union
Traverse City, MI 49684
Club: (231) 947-9140
Pro Shop: (231) 947-3553
Web: tcgcc.com
Type: Private
Region: Northwest
Architect: Tom Bendelow
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
TRAVERSE CITY GOLF CENTER
6270 Secor Rd.
Traverse City, MI 49685
Pro Shop: (231) 947-1185
Web: tcgolfcenter.com
Facebook: TCGolf Center
Region: Northwest
TRAVIS POINTE CC
2829 Travis Pointe Rd.
Ann Arbor, MI 48108
Club: (734) 662-2582
Pro Shop: (734) 662-5703
Web: travispointe.com
Facebook: Travis Pointe Country
Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: William Newcomb
Web: truenorthgolf.com
Facebook: True North Golf Club
Type: Private
Region: Northwest
Architect: James Engh
Holes: 18
TULLYMORE GOLF RESORT
9900 St. Ives Dr. Stanwood, MI 49346 11969 Tullymore Dr. Stanwood, MI 49346
Pro Shop: (231) 972-4837
Web: tullymoregolf.com
Facebook: Tullymore Golf Resort
Type: Resort/Semiprivate
Region: West Central
St. Ives
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
Tullymore
Architect: James Engh
Holes: 18
TURTLE CREEK GC
Burlington (517) 765-2232
TUSTIN TRAILS GC
Tustin (231) 829-5455
TWIN BEACH CC
7625 Glascott Ave.
West Bloomfield, MI 48323
Pro Shop: (248) 363-3335
Web: twinbeachcc.com
Facebook: Twin Beach Country
Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
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TWIN BIRCH GC
Kalkaska (231) 258-9691
TWIN BROOKS GC
1005 N. McKeighan Rd. Chesaning, MI 48616
Club: (989) 845-6403
Web: twinbrooksgolfclub.com
Facebook: Twin Brooks Golf
Course
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Founded: 1960
Holes: 18
TWIN LAKES GOLF & SWIM CLUB
455 Twin Lakes Dr. Oakland, MI 48363
Pro Shop: (248) 650-4960
Web: twinlakesgc.com
Facebook: Twin Lakes Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architects: Jerry Matthews/Ray
Hearn
Holes: 27
TWIN OAKS GC
Freeland (989) 695-9746
TWIN OAKS GC St. Johns (989) 224-7342
TYLER CREEK GC & CAMPGROUND Alto (616) 868-6751
TYRONE HILLS GC
8449 Old US 23
Fenton, MI 48430
Pro Shop: (810) 629-5011
Web: tyronehillsgolf.com
Facebook: Tyrone Hills Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Bruce Matthews
Holes: 18
UUBLY HEIGHTS G&CC
2400 E. Atwater Rd. Ubly, MI 48475
Pro Shop: (989) 658-2374
Web: ublyheights.com
Facebook: Ubly Heights Golf & Country Club
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Architect: Bruce Matthews III
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
UNION LAKE GC
Commerce Twp. (248) 363-4666
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN GC
500 E. Stadium Blvd.
Ann Arbor, MI 48104
Pro Shop: (734) 615-GOLF
Web: umgolfcourse.umich.edu
Facebook: umichgolfcourse
VIENNA GREENS GC
Clio (810) 686-1443
VILLAGE GREEN GC
Newaygo (231) 652-6513
WWABEEK CC
4000 Clubgate Dr.
Bloomfield Hills, MI 48302
Club: (248) 855-0700
Pro Shop: (248) 539-7109
Web: wabeekcc.com
Facebook: Wabeek Country
Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architects: Pete Dye/Jack
Nicklaus
Holes: 18
No pull carts
WALLINWOOD SPRINGS GC
8152 Weatherwax Dr. Georgetown Twp., MI 49428
Club: (616) 457-9920
Web: Wallinwoodsprings.com
Facebook: Wallinwood Springs
Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architect: Jerry Matthews
Holes: 18
WALLOON LAKE CC
05995 Country Club Shores Petoskey, MI 49770
Pro Shop: (231) 535-2992
Web: walloonlakecc.com
Facebook: Walloon Lake Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Northwest
Wabeek Country Club
Type: University/Semiprivate
Region: Southeast
Architect: Alister MacKenzie
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
UNIVERSITY PARK GC
Muskegon (231) 773-0023
VVASSAR G&CC
Vassar (989) 823-7221
VERONA HILLS GC
3175 Sand Beach Rd. Bad Axe, MI 48413
Club: (989) 269-6380
Pro Shop: (989) 269-8132
Web: veronahillsgolf.com
Facebook: Verona Hills Golf Club
Type: Semiprivate
Region: East Central
Architects: Arnat/Ellis/Trusdale
Holes: 18
Holes: 18
Founded: 1904
WALNUT CREEK CC
25501 Johns Rd.
South Lyon, MI 48178
Club: (248) 437-7337
Pro Shop: (248) 437-7470
Web: walnutcreekcc.net
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: Brian Huntley
Founded: 1955
Holes: 27
Caddies Available
Full driving range and shortgame practice facility available
WARFIELD GREENS GC
Fraser (586) 293-9887
WARWICK HILLS G&CC
G-9057 S. Saginaw Rd.
Grand Blanc, MI 48439
Club: (810) 694-4103
Pro Shop: (810) 694-9251
Web: warwickhills.org
Type: Private
Region: East Central
Architect: Joe Lee
Holes: 18
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 107 A B D P J V G S M Y C O I U F R L X E Q K W H T N Z D M O Q H N
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Western Golf & Country Club
MTESP Certified Caddies Available
WASHAKIE GC & RV RESORT
North Branch (810) 688-3235
WASHTENAW
GOLF CLUB
2955 Packard Rd.
Ypsilanti, MI 48197
Club: (734) 434-2150
Pro Shop: (734) 434-2040
Web: washtenawgolfclub.com
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
WATERLOO GC
Grass Lake (517) 522-8527
WATERMARK CC
1600 Galbraith Ave. SE
Grand Rapids, MI 49546
Club: (616) 949-0570
Pro Shop: (616) 949-0570 ext. 2
Web: watermarkcc.com
Facebook: Watermark Country
Club
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
WATER’S EDGE GC
1100 Ramshorn Dr.
Fremont, MI 49412
Pro Shop: (231) 924-2640
Web: watersedgefremont.com
Facebook: @watersedgegolfclub
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Architects: Jerry Matthews & Raymond Hearn
Holes: 18 & Practice Facility
WATER’S EDGE CC
Grosse Ile (734) 675-0777
WAWASHKAMO GC
3723 British Landing Rd.
Mackinac Island, MI 49757
Pro Shop: (906) 847-3871
Web: wawashkamo.com
Facebook: Wawashkamo Golf
Club Type: Semiprivate
Region: Upper Peninsula Holes: 9
WAWONOWIN CC
3432 County Rd. 478
Champion, MI 49814
Club: (906) 485-5660
Pro Shop: (906) 485-1435
Web: wawonowin.com
Facebook: Wawonowin Country Club
Type: Semiprivate
Region: Upper Peninsula
Holes: 18
WEQUETONSING GC
5543 M-119
Harbor Springs, MI 49740
Club: (231) 526-5351
Web: wequetonsinggolfclub.com
Type: Private
Region: Northwest
Founded: 1896
Holes: 18
WESBURN G&CC
5617 S. Huron River Dr. Rockwood, MI 48179
Pro Shop: (734) 379-3555
Web: wesburngolfcourse.com
Type: Public
Region: Southeast Holes: 18
WEST BRANCH CC
1905 Fairview West Branch, MI 48661
Club: (989) 345-2501
Web: westbranchcountryclub.
com
Facebook: West Branch Country Club
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Holes: 18
WEST SHORE G&CC
22843 W. River Rd. Grosse Ile, MI 48138
Club: (734) 676-1944
Pro Shop: (734) 676-0330
Web: westshoregcc.com
Facebook: West Shore Golf and Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: George Ferry
Holes: 18
WESTERN G&CC
14600 Kinloch Redford, MI 48239
Club: (313) 531-1240
Pro Shop: (313) 531-2323
Web: westerngcc.com
Facebook: Western Golf & Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Architect: Donald Ross
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
Caddies Available
WESTERN GREENS GC
2475 Johnson St. Marne, MI 49435
Pro Shop: (616) 677-3677
Web: westerngreensgolfcourse.com
Facebook: @westerngreensgolf
Type: Public
Region: West Central
Superintendent: Brian May
Holes: 18
WESTWIND GOLF COURSE
Muskegon (231) 773-8814
WESTWYND GC
4161 N. Adams Rd.
Rochester Hills, MI 48306
Pro Shop: (248) 608-7820
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Web: westwyndgolf.com
Facebook: Westwynd Golf & Grille
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
WHISPERING PINES GC
2500 Whispering Pines Dr.
Pinckney, MI 48169
Pro Shop: (734) 878-0009
Web: whisperingpinesgc.com
Facebook: Whispering Pines
Golf Club
Architect: Mark DeVries
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
WHITE BIRCH HILLS GC
Bay City (989) 662-6523
Web: whitelakegolfclub.com
Facebook: White Lake Golf Club
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Holes: 18 & Practice Facility
Architects: Tom Bendelow, Al Seckel & Ray Hearn
Type: Public
Architect: Van Tine family
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified
WHITE OAKS GC
Hillsdale (517) 437-3434
WHEATFIELD VALLEY GC
1600 Linn Rd. Williamston, MI 48895
Pro Shop: (517) 655-6999
Web: wheatfieldvalley.com
Facebook: Wheatfield Valley
Golf Course
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
WHIFFLETREE HILL GC
Concord (517) 524-6655
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Architect: Donald Moon
Holes: 18
WHISPERING WILLOWS GC
20500 Newburgh Rd. Livonia, MI 48152
Pro Shop: (248) 476-4493
Web: golflivonia.com
Facebook: Golf Livonia
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
WHITE DEER CC
1309 Bright Angel Dr. Prudenville, MI 48651 Club: (989) 366-5812
Web: whitedeercc.com
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Founded: 1966
Holes: 18
WHITE LAKE GC
6777 S. Shore Dr.
Whitehall, MI 49461
Pro Shop: (231) 893-4232
Founded: 1916
Lessons: PGA golf lessons available to members and nonmembers
Guest Play: Must be a guest of a member; reciprocal privileges with other private clubs, nonmember outings welcome
WHITE LAKE OAKS
GC
991 S. Williams Lake Rd. White Lake, MI 48386
Pro Shop: (248) 698-2700
Web: OaklandCountyParks.com
WHITE OAKS GC
Goodells (810) 325-9292
WHITE PINE NATIONAL GOLF RESORT
3450 N. Hubbard Lake Rd. Spruce, MI 48762
Pro Shop: (989) 736-3279
Web: whitepinenational.com
Facebook: White Pine National
Golf
Type: Resort
Region: Northeast
Architects: Bruce Wolfrom/Clem
Wolfrom
Holes: 18
WHITEFISH LAKE
GOLF & GRILL
Pierson (616) 636-5260
WHITEFORD VALLEY GC
Ottawa Lake (734) 856-4545
WHITMORE LAKE
GOLF LINKS
1111 6 Mile Rd.
Whitmore Lake, MI 48189
Pro Shop: (734) 449-4653
Web: whitmorelakegolflinks.com
Type: Public
Facebook: Whitmore Lake Golf
Links
Region: Southeast
Architect: William Newcomb
Holes: 18
WHITTAKER WOODS GC
New Buffalo (269) 469-3400
WICKER HILLS GC
7287 Wickert Rd.
Hale, MI 48739
Club: (989) 728-9971
Web: wickerhillsgolf.com
Type: Public
Region: Northeast
Founded: 1971
Holes: 18
WILD BLUFF GC
Brimley (906) 248-5860
WILD PINES GC
Hermansville (906) 295-0373
WILDERNESS GC
Carp Lake (231) 537-4973
WILDWOOD LAKES GC
Wolverine (231) 525-8949
WILLOW BROOK GC
Byron (810) 266-4660
WILLOW METRO
PARK GC
22900 Huron River Dr.
New Boston, MI 48164
Pro Shop: (734) 753-4040
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 109 A B D P J V G S M Y C O I U F R L X E Q K W H T N Z D M O Q W H N
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Web: golf.metroparks.com
Facebook: Lower Huron, Oakwoods & Willow Metroparks
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Holes: 18
WILLOW RIDGE GC
Fort Gratiot (810) 982-7010
WILLOW SPRINGS GC
Vassar (989) 871-9703
WILLOW TREE GC
Melvin (810) 387-4001
WILLOW WOOD GC
Portland (517) 647-1984
WINDING CREEK GC
4514 Ottogan St.
Holland, MI 49423
Pro Shop: (616) 396-4516
Web: windingcreekgolfclub.com
Facebook: Winding Creek Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: Southwest
Architects: Matthews/Eakley/ Wiersema
Holes: 27
WOLF CREEK GC
Adrian (517) 265-3944
WOLF RIVER GOLF
PARK 11685 Chippewa Hwy.
Bear Lake, MI 49614
Club: (231) 398-3980
Type: Public
Web: wolfrivergolfpark.com
Instagram: @wolfrivergolfpark
Region: Northwest
Holes: 18
Founded: 1965
WOODLAND HILLS GC
320 N. Gates
Sandusky, MI 48471
Pro Shop: (810) 648-2400
Web: woodlandhillsclub.com
Facebook: Woodland Hills Golf Club
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Holes: 18
WOODLANDS OF VAN BUREN
Wayne (734) 729-4477
WOODLAWN GC
Adrian (517) 263-3288
WOODSIDE GC
14400 Wood Rd.
Bath, MI 48906
Pro Shop: (517) 242-8527
Web: hawkhollow.com
Type: Public
Region: East Central
Holes: 12
WOODSIDE MEADOWS GC
Romulus (734) 782-5136
WOODY’S RUN GOLF COURSE
Escanaba (906) 786-4034
WUSKOWHAN PLAYERS CLUB
16111 Blair
West Olive, MI 49460
Pro Shop: (616) 738-6000
Web: wuskowhan.com
Facebook: Wuskowhan Players Club
Type: Private
Region: West Central
Architects: Rick Smith & Warren Henderson
Holes: 18
MTESP Certified Caddies Available
WYANDOTTE HILLS GC & RESORT
Toivola (906) 231-0966
WYANDOTTE SHORES GC
3625 Biddle Ave.
Wyandotte, MI 48192
Pro Shop: (734) 324-7270
Web: wyandotte.net
Type: Public
Region: Southeast
Founded: 1996
Holes: 9
MTESP Certified
THE WYNDGATE
1975 W. Gunn Rd.
Rochester Hills, MI 48306
Pro Shop: (248) 608-7805
Web: thewyndgate.com
Facebook: The Wyndgate Country Club
Type: Private
Region: Southeast
Founded:1995
Holes: 18
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YYANKEE SPRINGS GC Wayland (269) 795-0030
YE NYNE OLDE HOLES GC East Jordan (231) 582-7609
YE OLDE COUNTRY CLUB Roscommon (989) 275-5582
YOUNG’S GOLF COURSE
159 Young’s Ln.
Hwy. 424
Iron River, MI 49935
Pro Shop: (906) 265-3401 ext. 1
Web: experienceyoungs.com
Facebook: @YoungsIronCounty
Instagram: youngsironcounty
Type: Public
Region: Upper Peninsula
Founded: 1984
Holes: 18
GAM Allied Associations
Association of Golf Presidents (810) 938-4500
President Walt Baumgardner, Western G & CC
Secretary — Tom Bollinger, Spring Meadows CC
Greater Michigan Chapter of Club Management Association of America (248) 973-7943
President — Charles Johnson, CCM, Detroit Athletic Club
Managing Director — Tammy Carter mdgmcma@gmail.com
Michigan Golf Course Association (800) 860-8575
President — Jim Szilagyi, LYNX Golf Course
Executive Director — Jada Paisley jpaisley@michigangca.org michigangca.org
Michigan Golf Course Superintendents Association (616) 834-0450
President — Jesse Shaver, Gull Lake CC Executive Director — Adam Ikamas, CGCS adamikamas@migcsa.org migcsa.org
Michigan Golf Hall of Fame Chair — Greg Johnson Gregeeee24@gmail.com
Administrator — Loretta Larkin (248) 719-0650 llarkin@michigan-golffoundation.com mghof.org
Michigan Section of Professional Golfers’ Association (517) 641-7421
President — Stephanie Jennings
Executive Director — Kevin Helm khelm@michiganpga.com www.michiganpga.com
MSU Turf Team
Dr. Kevin Frank (517) 353-0147 frankk@msu.edu
Dr. David Gilstrap (517) 353-0140 gilstrap@msu.edu
Dr. Emily Merewitz-Holm (517) 353-0203 merewitz@msu.edu
Dr. Thom Nikolai (517) 353-0133 nikolait@msu.edu
Dr. John N. Rogers III (517) 353-0136 rogersj@msu.edu
Dr. Joe Vargas (517) 353-9082 vargas@msu.edu
Michigan Turfgrass Environmental Stewardship Program Program Director — Adam Ikamas, CGCS (616) 773-1192 adam@mtesp.org www.mtesp.org
Michigan Turfgrass Foundation (517) 392-5003
President — Dan Mausolf Executive Director — Carey Mitchelson Contact Person — Britney Vanderkodde miturfgrass@gmail.com michiganturfgrass.org
United States Golf Association (908) 234-2300 (800) 222-8742 usga@usga.org
USGA Agronomist — Zach Nicoludis, (412) 215-6488, znicoludis@usga.org
Director of Regional Affairs — Jake Miller, (920) 621-4170, jjmiller@usga.org
Western Golf Association (Evans Scholars) (847) 724-4600
President and CEO — John Kaczkowski wgaesf.org
Chapter Houses
• Michigan State University Chapter House Advisor — Steve Shablin
• University of Michigan Chapter House Advisors — Paul Robinson Lisa Emery
COURSE DIRECTORY 2024 111
A B D P J V G S M Y C O I U F R L X E Q K W H T N Z D M O Q W H N
The Wyndgate
Better Together
Collaboration powers the GAM
/ BY CHRIS WHITTEN
Publishing MichiganLinks magazine is always a celebratory occasion at the Golf Association of Michigan. I hope you enjoyed learning more about our association and the wonderful people who make it successful: players, volunteers, and other stakeholders.
Our team is especially happy to share the stories you read in this edition because they largely focus on our relationships with two important groups that help make our association what it is: the USGA and our GAM volunteers.
The GAM is one of 57 allied golf associations that help the USGA carry out its core services at a state or regional level. We conduct qualifiers for USGA championships, administer Handicap Indexes via the World Handicap System and GHIN, and rate golf courses to make the WHS work equitably. We have our own rich history and significant championships at the GAM, but our longtime collaboration with the USGA (page 46) helps us serve Michigan’s largest community of golfers and provide them with outstanding benefits. We are thankful for our friends and their mission at Liberty Corner.
Of course, none of this would be possible without our dedicated and knowledgeable GAM volunteers. The GAM is a not-for-profit organization steered by a volunteer board of governors, officers, and past presidents. Additionally, each season, over 100 trained referees help us conduct our competitions. Another 100 educated volunteers measure and rate our courses according to the Rules of Handicapping.
Our GAM volunteers have something in common: The game of golf has made a positive impact in their lives, and now they are proud
to give their time and energy to help provide a positive golfing experience to someone else. Not only are they experts in our services, but they are also great people with interesting and successful professional experiences, which makes them fantastic GAM ambassadors.
Along with our volunteer tournament referees such as Laurie Caylen and Greg Zeug, featured in this magazine starting on page 58, I couldn’t be prouder of Kim Dinh for representing Michigan at the national level (page 52). Our volunteers develop a real appreciation for and connection to our regular tournament players, especially competitors like Kim, who is the first to say thanks with a warm smile.
I hope you’ll play in a GAM event this year or see one of our course rating teams at your local course so you’ll get a chance to meet one of our volunteers and say thank you as well.
Of all the allied golf associations in the country, I’m thrilled to say that the GAM is the fastest growing over the past four years. So whether you have been a member for four years or 40, welcome back, thank you for your support, and have a great season!
The Last Word 112 MICHIGAN LINKS | WWW.GAM.ORG
Chris Whitten
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