When you come to think of it that is the secret of most of the great holes all over the world. They all have some kind of a twist. C.B. MACDONALD
Now Presenting The Non-Minority Collegiate Minority Golf Champs!
/The Daily's John Walters takes a look at the winners of the PGA Minority Collegiate Golf Championship and finds a lot of fine golfers resembling non-minorities.
How does Bethune-Cookman, a school that is 94.3 percent African-American and 1.5 percent white, draw such talented female golfers from Austria, Denmark and Great Britain? Coach Loritz “Scooter” Clark declined comment for this story, but the Daytona Beach-based school’s home course is the LPGA International Legends Course, which is located within driving distance, as it were, from the LPGA headquarters.
Renee Powell was the second black female to play on the LPGA Tour. Powell, 66, recalled twisting the arm of a sponsor in order to send golf equipment to three HBCUs. When she arrived at a tournament in which they were playing, Powell had a startling discovery.
“All of your golfers are white,” Powell told the coach.
“My school president wants to win,” the coach replied.
“If I had known that I would have given the equipment to another college where minority kids were struggling,” Powell said.
U.S. Amateur Trophy Part Of Stolen Memorabilia
/USGA's Golf House Burglarized
/WGC Match Play Returning To Dove Mountain
/A Truly Depressing Incorrect Scorecard Signing Story
/Thanks to reader Robert for Rob Moseley's story on high school senior Caroline Inglis losing her bid for a fourth state golf title when she signed for an incorrect score** following her final round in the Class 5A girls championship, at a golf course actually named Trysting Tree Golf Club. Really.
Because the reported total was lower than her actual score — 68, rather than 69 — Inglis was disqualified from a tournament she was on pace to win by nine strokes over her closest competitor.
The shocking turn of events came 41 years after her father, Bill, signed for an incorrect score at the 1971 state tournament, family members said, denying the South Eugene boys a team title.
Oh it gets worse.
Caroline Inglis played throughout her senior season after learning of a leukemia diagnosis to Bill last year, and through the proceeding treatment, including a stem-cell transplant from her aunt, Jane, about four months ago that has so far proven successful.
“It definitely affected my play; my dad taught me the game, and I grew up playing with him,” Inglis said before learning of her disqualification. “So it was definitely hard to go out and play. But I worked myself through it, and he’s doing a lot better now.
“I wanted to win for him, make him proud. And I did. It feels great, and I’m so glad that he could be here to watch, and that he’s healthy.”
Inglis will be playing at University of Oregon this fall.
**Not sure why the link changed but the original story has been located and the link embedded.
FL GOV: I Want More Golf Courses By "Well Named" Architects!
/LPGA To Put Twitter Handles On Caddy Bibs
/They were the first to put Twitter handles in the pairing sheets, and now, according to an unbylined AP story, the LPGA Tour is going a step further and including the handles on caddy bibs starting at the LPGA Championship. Nice idea.
More Eye-Opening Quotes For The Slow Play Files
/Flat Ratings For The Players
/Darwin's Golf Courses Of The Isles, Tablet Edition
/Pinehurst Looking At A Possible Course No. 9
/Golf Digest's Matty G interviews Don Padgett, who suggests the possibility of a totally revamped version of The Pit, though it sounds a ways off if it happens.
Q: The last time we spoke (February 2011), you had just bought the Pit. You went on to close the course and focus on the reopening of No. 2. Is there any update on what was the Pit?
A: Bill Coore was assigned to do a routing, which I think he’s close to completing. I have not seen it, but he has told me that he is almost there. We’re not going to pull the trigger anytime in the immediate future, but [Pinehurst owner] Bob Dedman would love to build that golf course. Bill [Coore] feels like it will be a very, very good golf course. He would be excited to build it. A lot of the land he’d use would be in the 150 acres east of what was the Pit golf course. That’s the parcel that Bill likes the best. At some point there will be a No. 9 at Pinehurst.
The interview touches on several other topics of note for Pinehurst fans, including the positive reaction to the changes to No. 2.