2022 Golf Oklahoma June/July

Page 15

CHIP SHOTS

Six in a Row

News around the state Sponsored by

“Well, he birdied the first six holes starting out,” the young assistant pro said. Excuse me? The first six holes of the US Open? Oh my goodness, little Andy Dillard! by pat wheeler It is hard to believe that week is now n 1992, I was living in Georgia and 30 years in the rearview mirror but time traveling the Southeast for a mort- marches on and now little Andy Dillard is gage insurance company. Late one an older guy with grown children and instead of looking like the Michelin afternoon, I pulled into a nice golf man, he now looks more like Billy course for nine holes on the way Gibbons of ZZ Top. home to Atlanta. Dillard has a story to tell, the It was the Thursday of the US inner workings of a professional Open and I peeked at the televigolfer trying to salvage a career, sion screen as I was checking in at live out his dreams and paint his the golf shop. To my surprise, they Andy Dillard masterpiece at the most beautiful were showing my old friend from course in the world – Pebble Beach. Tyler, Texas, Andy Dillard on the tube. Just released in late May, Dillard’s book, Wow, I wonder why they are showing “Six In A Row,” is a must read for the avid Andy, I pondered aloud.

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Golf Trail seeks commissioners

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he Oklahoma Golf Trail bill presented by State Rep. Sheila Dills has passed the state legislature and been signed by Gov. Kevin Stitt. Next step is forming the nine-member commission that will solicit applications to be on the Trail and set up a structure for its operation and promotion. Those with a background in golf operations and marketing who wish to be part Lt. Gov. of the commission can send Matt Pinnell a resume detailing their golf and marketing backgrounds to the three government officials who will be selecting the commission. Those who send in a resume will then receive an official application form. When sending in a resume, copy each of the following:

Lt. Gov. Matt Pinnell: Matt.pinnell@ltgov. ok.gov Okla. Speaker of the House Charles McCall: Charles.McCall@okhouse.gov Senate Pro Tem Greg Treat: Greg.Treat@ oksenate.gov Pinnell will make five selections to the commission while McCall and Treat will have two selections each. State Rep. Once the commission Sheila Dills is established it will determine a criteria and selection process for which courses will be included and how best to market those courses. Commissioners are volunteer positions and can expect to meet at least quarterly and perhaps more often. Terms will be limited to six years.

Play Southern Hills in HOF Classic

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ateurs and bring your he Oklahoma Golf own professional, or Hall of Fame Clas$5,000 for a team of five sic, a fundraiser to supamateurs. Other levport the 501 C3 organiels of sponsorship are zation’s scholarship and available as follows: Everett Dobson Award Scholarship Sponsor programs, will be held Southern Hills CC $10,000 for one year Monday Oct, 24 at SouthScholarship sponsors help sponsor the two ern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, site of the 2022 PGA Championship and seven other $5,000 scholarships the Oklahoma Golf Hall of major championships. Sign up now for this Fame presents to high school golfers annually amazing event which will include great tee as well as the $5,000 Everett Dobson Award. Hole Sponsor - $1,000. Includes signage gifts, prizes, breakfast and lunch and many special guests, including members of the for your company on a particular hole and Oklahoma Golf Hall of Fame and rofession- in the pre-tournament media. Visit www.oklahomagolfhof.org for enals from around the state. Entry fee is $4,000 per team of four am- try forms and more information. W W W.GOLFOKL AHOMA.ORG

golfer. And the subtitle, “What The U.S. Open Taught Me about Golf, Faith and Purpose,” speaks of his personal transformation from a golf hustler to committed Christian and family man. The only child of Don and Dixie Dillard, Andy grew up on the east side of Tyler and first noticed his gift for golf at the Putt-Putt course near his home. Later he was part of a dynamic junior golf program at the old Briarwood Country Club that was way ahead of its time. Probably a dozen of those junior golfers earned college scholarships in the late 1970s with Dillard, the Texas state junior champion at age 15, earning a full ride to Oklahoma State where he played on a national championship team with guys like Scott Verplank, Bob Tway and Willie Wood. It was Verplank who planted the seed for Dillard’s comeback in 1992 after playing the tour a couple of years in the late 1980s but losing his “card,” or playing privileges on the all exempt PGA Tour. Verplank told Dillard during some pre-season training in January of 1992, in Palm Springs, that Andy had the best eye-to-hand coordination he had ever seen and just to trust in his ability to hit it where you are looking. Sounds simple, and sometimes it can be that way in the strange world of competitive golf. Dillard’s book, released in time for the 2022 U.S. Open to be played at The Country Club near Boston, begins with the details of those six birdies in a row, still an Open record. Paired with fellow Texans Bob Estes and Tom Jenkins, Dillard left his birdie putt hanging on the lip of the cup on the iconic short par-3 7th hole to break his string that may never be repeated. “Heck, I thought he was going to birdie every hole,” Jenkins told me later. Dillard finished that first round with a 68 and in third place to first round leader Gil Morgan’s 66. After a second round 70, Dillard found himself in second place and in the final group with Morgan for Saturday’s third round. The remainder of the story I will leave to Dillard to tell as it is both riveting and revealing of the pressures of golf at the very highest level. The beauty of his book is Dillard’s transparency as he describes the highs and lows of pursuing his dreams as a professional golfer. Not to spoil it for you, I will simply say there is redemption and there is transformation. Six In A Row is available at Amazon and Barnes and Noble and other booksellers. JUNE/JULY 2022 • GOLF OKL AHOMA

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Articles inside

The Final Word: Pat Wheeler

4min
pages 46-48

Instruction: Maggie Roller

3min
page 45

Louisiana

6min
pages 40-43

Instruction: Ryan Rody

2min
page 44

Girls High School roundup

4min
page 39

Boys High School roundup

5min
page 38

Big improvements at John Conrad in Midwest City and Page Belcher in Tulsa

7min
pages 30-33

Huge renovation under way at Kickingbird

3min
pages 28-29

OGA Junior Boys and Girls Championship

4min
pages 36-37

Lincoln Park is the first public course in

2min
page 24

Tom Doak good to his word at Dornick Hills in Ardmore

4min
pages 34-35

A hallmark of longevity, Lincoln Park had just three men at the helm for 99 of

9min
pages 25-27

Mark Felder announces his pending retirement from the OGA

3min
pages 22-23

The fitting process and what's important

6min
pages 13-14

Ed Travis rates the latest golf gizmos

4min
page 12

OGA ED Mark Felder

2min
page 8

A magnificent PGA Championship at Southern

9min
pages 16-19

WOGA ED Laurie Campbell

2min
page 9

Chip Shots; Play Southern Hills, Andy Dillard reemerges with new book, Golf Trail seeks Commissioners

5min
page 15

OU, OSU, OCU miss on national championship bids, but next year looms

5min
pages 20-21

The Ryder Cup and how we finally got it right

7min
pages 10-11
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