Astros Owner Crane Pitches Houston Open Move To Fall And Memorial Park

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Nice reporting work by the Houston Chronicle's Dale Robertson on the latest efforts to save the Houston PGA Tour stop. With the Houston Golf Association unable to land a sponsor for the event dating to 1947, Astros and Floridian owner Jim Crane has made a proposal that may or may not include the HGA. 

He said his proposal went into PGA Tour headquarters once a deadline was not met by the HGA to find a sponsor for a possible pre-US Open date. Something doesn't feel right here with Crane talking up community, the HGA and the First Tee managed by the HGA, yet sounding like he really doesn't like them all that much. 

It's believed a wide rift has opened between Crane and the HGA over his unwillingness to step up under the organization's umbrella, even suggesting he had been sabotaging its efforts to corral a sponsor so he could run the show, post-SHO, on his own. But he insists it's simply a matter of doing what makes the most fiscal sense and best serves the big-picture needs of the community.

He stayed in the picture because nobody else was coming forward, and given his personal relationship with the sport — he's a scratch player who was once rated the country's best golfing CEO — he didn't want to see his city lose its PGA Tour event.

"They hadn't been able to pull together a deal, so I got on it," he said. "(PGA commissioner Jay Monahan) told me, 'They (the HGA) have been (the PGA's) partners for years, and we want to give them a chance.' I said, 'Fine. I'm not fighting them.' It's not about me. I won't make a dime off this thing. But if I can get it done ... (The HGA has) a pretty big budget, and I don't think you need that big of a budget to put on a golf tournament."

That statement, while perhaps accurate, is a disconcerting one given the HGA's many roles in the community developing the game. And in recent years, the organization has been working to restore Houston's run-down munis and setting a strong example for other regional golf associations.

Crane loves him some First Tee and the wonderful write-off they can be...

Crane, however, was a founding board member of what's arguably the HGA's centerpiece beneficiary, The First Tee Foundation, and he said, "I love First Tee. I donated a million dollars to First Tee, I like them so much. I'm willing to sit down with (the HGA). I want their help. I like Steve personally, and the HGA does a lot of good stuff. We'll be doing a lot of things through (the Astros') foundation."

Sadly, golfers in Houston won't benefit from the Astros foundation like they would from the HGA's work.