Sweetens Cove in Tennessee to add cabins, a par-3 course, a distillery and more

Groundbreaking plans will be announced in the coming months.

The nine-hole Sweetens Cove – ranked by Golfweek’s Best as the No. 1 public-access golf course in Tennessee – announced this week that it will collaborate with Reef Capital Partners to introduce a new par-3 course and much more.

Plans also call for stay-and-play cabins, a new winding putting green, a fishing dock, a skeet range, a restaurant and a distillery at the famously laid-back facility in South Pittsburg, about a 30-minute drive west from Chattanooga. Groundbreaking plans will be announced in the coming months.

Sweetens Cove had a tough 2024, closing for several months to replant greens and fairways after a particularly bad winter killed off much of the playing surfaces – its operators opted to shut down for repairs instead of presenting sub-standard conditions. The course reopened this fall with new grass that has grown in well, and the layout should regain its often fiery and bouncy playing conditions in 2025.

Sweetens Cove
The masterplan for expansion at Sweetens Cove includes a par-3 course, shooting range, fishing dock, cabins, a restaurant, distillery, events space and more. (Courtesy of Reef Capital Partners)

Besides excelling as a nine-hole layout, Sweetens Cove is different than most courses in many other ways. Operators started several years ago offering all-day passes instead of traditional tee times, with players going round and round the course as often as they like. The dress code is basically non-existent, and music typically blasts from a patio overlooking the first tee and ninth green. The clubhouse is named the Shed because it is one, and it’s packed with much-loved merchandise sporting multiple logos. A patio built around a tree has been tagged as the heckle deck.

There have been discussions about expansion for years, with the biggest concern among die-hard fans being that the facility retains its vibe.

“Sweetens Cove grabs you the moment you step onto the course – there’s an energy here that you won’t find anywhere else,” Jared Lucero, CEO of Reef Capital Partners, said in a media release announcing the new partnership for which terms were not disclosed. “It’s not just about golf; it’s about the experience, the people and the simplicity of spending a day out here.

“We aim to preserve that unique charm while adding a place to stay, a bit more to do, including Sweetens at Night, and some amazing food and drinks. Those things will only make every visit even more memorable, whether you’re playing the course for the first time or the hundredth.”

Sweetens Cove
The heckle deck overlooks the ninth green at Sweetens Cove in Tennessee, as seen after the course reopened following the re-grassing of its greens in 2024. (Jason Lusk/Golfweek)

Sweetens Cove opened in 2015 on the site of a former course, which was erased as a new course was laid out by the team of Tad King and Rob Collins. It quickly gained a following among Golfweek’s Best course raters and catapulted into the top 100 modern courses in the U.S., where it now is No. 90.

King and Collins soon took over operations of Sweetens Cove from its founding family, and investors have come onboard including sports stars Peyton Manning and Andy Roddick. The ownership group also has released a bourbon named for the course, with the planned small-batch distillery an extension of that.

“I’ve been with Sweetens Cove from the beginning, from designing and building the original course with Tad to being responsible for its operations and management for the last 10 years,” Collins said in the media release. “It is thrilling to me and everyone involved with Sweetens Cove to see how the expansion builds on that foundation and brings to life every big dream we ever had for the place.”

Sweetens Cove
Sweetens Cove was built on the site of a former course, but the new design by Tad Kind and Rob Collins vaulted into the No. 1 spot among Golfweek’s Best ranking of public-access courses in Tennessee. (Jason Lusk/Golfweek)

Reef Capital Partners’ has been expanding in golf with its development of Black Desert Resort in Utah, which opened in 2023, jumped to the No. 1 spot among that state’s public-access courses and recently hosted an eponymous PGA Tour event. The company also is developing Marcella Deer Valley, which will include Tiger Woods designing his first mountain course.

“Reef Capital Partners has an incredible vision for this expansion,” Collins said in the media release. “They came to Sweetens to play the course and by the seventh fairway they had drawn up a model, envisioning a par-3 short course that offers flexibility and creativity. It’s not just a regular short course – you can play each hole in multiple ways, adding a cross-country style that you won’t find anywhere else.”

Sweetens Cove tee times are coveted and sell out incredibly quickly each year, a testament to the layout’s architecture as much as its atmosphere. King-Collins Golf Design has gone on to lay out several other courses around the country including Landmand, which opened in 2022 in Nebraska and has jumped to the No. 1 spot in that state’s ranking of public-access layouts.

“Sweetens Cove is a golf anomaly,” GM Matt Adamski said in the media release. “We’ve created a place where you can play all day with no tee times, no dress codes and no pressure. It’s a giant adult playground, where everyone can find something to love.

“(The expansion) will maintain our unique culture and enhance guest experience. The demand is incredible – we’re sold out through the end of the year. But even with this expansion, we’re maintaining our focus on a quality experience by keeping a limit on the number of daily passes to ensure that Sweetens Cove remains the special place people love.”

LPGA facing 2025 sponsorship concerns as Cognizant steps away from Founders Cup

The LPGA is expected to release its schedule in full at the CME Group Tour Championship next month.

Cognizant will no longer title sponsor the LPGA’s Founders Cup, Golfweek has confirmed. Three years ago, Cognizant announced its arrival in the golf space by partnering with both the LPGA and PGA Tour at the same time. The U.S.-based information technology services company immediately doubled the Founders Cup purse to $3 million, elevating an event that’s dedicated to honoring the legacy of the tour’s 13 founders. At the time, the Founders Cup boasted the largest purse on tour outside of the majors and the season-ending CME Group Tour Championship.

“We are very appreciative of our partnership with Cognizant and the support they gave to our athletes for the past three years,” the LPGA released in a statement to Golfweek. “We look forward to providing more information on the 2025 Founders Cup as well as additional exciting news about the 2025 LPGA Tour season, including new events and record-breaking purses, during the CME Group Tour Championship.”

With the tour celebrating 75 years next season, there’s no doubt the Founders Cup will have a place on the LPGA schedule next year. Golfweek has learned that one possibility is to move it from New Jersey to Florida, where the LPGA’s Drive On event was held in Bradenton last January. Nelly Korda’s hometown triumph came in a riveting playoff against Lydia Ko at Bradenton Country Club. The LPGA backed that event financially and could potentially do the same for the Founders Cup until a new sponsor is found.

More: How Nelly Korda’s streak of five consecutive LPGA wins ranks in the history of golf

If that’s the case, the Founders Cup purse of $3 million would likely decrease as the Drive On event was $1.75 million. Rose Zhang won this year’s Founders Cup and earned a check of $450,000.

From left to right, LPGA Pioneer Barbara Romack, founders Marilynn Smith, Shirley Spork, Louise Suggs, during the first round of the RR Donnelley Founders Cup.

Cognizant began its journey with the PGA Tour as a Global Partner for the Presidents Cup through 2026. The company now also title sponsors the PGA Tour’s Cognizant Classic (formerly the Honda Classic) at PGA National.

“While Cognizant’s sponsorship of the LPGA’s Founders Cup has expired, our commitment to dovetail global brand awareness campaigns with a strong voice in promoting diversity and inclusion through world-class sporting events and leagues remains unchanged,” Cognizant told Golfweek in a statement.

“We kicked off our partnership with the LPGA by doubling the prize purse, which at that time made the Cognizant Founders Cup the richest LPGA prize pool outside of the majors and Tour Championship. We are proud of the impact generated and the platform we have helped support for the next generation of female golfers. Our partnership with The John Shippen Cognizant Cup reflects our ongoing commitment to driving diversity and inclusion in the sport, honoring the legacies, and supporting the growth of Black golfers.”

Former LPGA commissioner Mike Whan created the Founders Cup in 2011 with a mock purse – in other words, players didn’t get paid. All the money went to charity. Not everyone appreciated the idea. Comments, he once said, ranged from: “You just tell me when and where and I’ll be there” to “Have you slipped and fallen?”

Karrie Webb won the inaugural event, and there were three founders on hand that week: Shirley Spork, Marilynn Smith and Louise Suggs.

Marlene Hagge Vossler was the last survivor of the band of 13. She died in May 2023 at age 89.

The LPGA-USGA Girls Golf Program is the primary beneficiary of the Founders event, raising millions over the past dozen years to fuel the next generation. There’s no question that Whan’s vision, which started as a note on a hotel napkin, has become one of the tour’s bright lights.

Other events that also have question marks surrounding them include the Ford Championship in Arizona. Ford initially signed on for a one-year deal as title sponsor in 2024 and conversations remain ongoing, sources tell Golfweek, in regards to the extent of the company’s involvement in 2025.

The LPGA’s Portland stop, which carried on this year without a title sponsor as the Portland Classic, is the tour’s longest-running non-major tournament, dating back to 1972. Aditi Ashok, the only Olympic player who teed it up in Portland this summer before jetting to Paris, said she did so in part because it might be the last time the tour plays there. The event also didn’t have a title sponsor in 2023.

The LPGA is expected to release its schedule in full at the CME Group Tour Championship next month. One new event that was announced last year is the Black Desert Championship in Utah, which will reportedly feature an eye-popping purse. The PGA Tour’s Black Desert Championship was held two weeks ago at the Tom Weiskopf-designed Black Desert Resort and offered a purse of $7.5 million.

Jordan Spieth falls out of the top 50 in the world ranking for the first time in more than 3 ½ years

The last of Spieth’s 13 career Tour titles dates back to the 2022 RBC Heritage.

For the first time since March of 2021, Jordan Spieth has dropped out of the top 50 in the world.

The former world No. 1 and three-time major champion slipped to No. 51 in the latest tabulations of the Official World Golf Ranking, which were released on Monday.

Spieth, who spent 26 weeks at No. 1 in 2015 and 2016, was ranked in the top 10 in the world as recently as the week of April 16, 2023, after losing a playoff to Matt Fitzpatrick at the RBC Heritage. But he has been in a tailspin ever since. After recording a third at The Sentry, the season opener, and a T-6 at the WM Phoenix Open, Spieth notched only one more top 10 all season and finished 62nd in the FedEx Cup. His last of 13 career Tour titles dates back to the 2022 RBC Heritage.

Spieth underwent successful surgery on his left wrist in August and will be sidelined until at least the start of the year, he said.

2024 Masters Tournament
Jordan Spieth signs autographs near the No. 9 green during the 2024 Masters Tournament Par 3 Contest at Augusta National Golf Club. (Photo: Adam Cairns-USA TODAY Network)

Spieth originally complained of a wrist injury the week before the 2023 PGA Championship, withdrawing from his hometown event, the Byron Nelson, which at the time was sponsored by AT&T.

“I kept trying not to make excuses for myself because it didn’t hurt when I was swinging,” Spieth said in August. “But it doesn’t seem coincidental based on the amount of time, and really the results being the exact same every single week. So I’m very hopeful.”

He began the year at No. 15 in the world but missed the cut at the Masters and Players Championship and his best result in the other three majors was a T-25 at the British Open.

During an interview with Golfweek in September, Spieth said he was taking advantage of the down time to regroup, mentally and physically.

“I think it’s a great break for me. I’m gonna look at it that way, but at the same time, it’s like, in the middle of this, what can I be doing to stay sharp? What adjustments can I make? I’ll be kind of wet concrete coming back so I’ll be able to kind of mold things where I’ve been maybe struggling in some of my mechanics, I can get those mechanically sound,” he said. “I’ve got enough time to wait until they’re very sound before I need to come back and be 100 percent. I’ve got to get the mobility back first and I need to get full mobility back before you then have to get the strength back. So stuff with the golf swing as I start back will start to feel very different week in and week out as I start to get the strength back in my left hand.

“So I imagine it’s going to be longer than a process to be like game-ready than when I can actually just swing a club, but I’m being very patient with it and very happy about the process.”

Jimmy Dunne, who helped broker original PGA Tour-PIF deal, named to board of one of golf’s major players

The Wall Street shaker has been named to the board of directors of one of golf’s most influential companies.

Jimmy Dunne, the Wall Street deal maker who helped architect the PGA Tour’s controversial deal with the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund and then resigned from the Tour’s Policy Board, has been named as a member of the board of directors of one of golf’s most influential companies.

The West Palm Beach, Florida, resident was named Thursday to the Troon Golf board, which manages nearly 1,000 golf clubs worldwide. He is also the vice chairman and senior managing principal of Piper Sandler, an investment bank and financial services company.

Dunne is a member of Augusta National Golf Club and the president of the exclusive Seminole Golf Club. He’s played rounds with everyone from Phil Mickelson and Jordan Spieth to retired NFL quarterback Tom Brady. In a headline last year, after he was appointed to the PGA Tour’s policy board, one magazine dubbed him the sport’s “ultimate power broker.”

In a call with Golfweek back in May, Dunne explained his decision to leave the PGA Tour’s Policy Board.

“There’s a group that decides things and I’m not in it and I’m not consulted,” he said, referring to the board of the new for-profit entity, PGA Tour Enterprises. “I’m superfluous. It’s time to move on.”

A Long Island native and Notre Dame graduate, Dunne got his foothold on Wall Street by working at Bear Stearns before leaving to co-found the investment banking firm Sandler O’Neill & Partners in 1988. The firm later took up residence on the 104th floor of the south tower of the World Trade Center, where 83 of its employees reported to work on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001.

Dunne would have been among them, but he had traveled to Bedford, New York, that day in an attempt to qualify for the U.S. Mid-Amateur Championship. Sixty-six of his coworkers, including his longtime friend Christopher Quackenbush, died in the attack on the South Tower. Golf, quite literally, may have saved his life.

In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, Dunne and his firm were repeatedly profiled by media outlets who spotlighted their resolve as they began to rebuild. “(Osama) Bin Laden set out to kill me and my colleagues,” he told Newsday in 2002. “What would he like us to do: Build a new business, or to quit and run?”

2024 Alfred Dunhill Links Championship
Jimmy Dunne tees off during a practice round prior to the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship 2024 at the Old Course in St. Andrews, Scotland. (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images)

Here’s more on his background, per a release from Troon:

Dunne began his career on Wall Street working at L.F. Rothschild and later Bear Stearns. He was a co-founder of Sandler O’Neill & Partners, which was acquired by Piper Sandler in 2020. Under his leadership, Sandler O’Neill grew to become the largest independent full-service investment banking firm focused on the financial services sector.

Over the past three decades, he has advised on some of the financial industry’s largest M&A transactions. In addition to serving on Troon’s Board of Directors, Dunne currently serves as a member of the Board of Trustees at the University of Notre Dame, and is a board member of American International Group, Inc. (AIG) and Chime Financial, Inc.

“We are thrilled to welcome Jimmy Dunne to Troon’s board,” said Troon President and CEO Tim Schantz in a release. “His leadership, experience, business acumen and passion for golf will help the company continue to touch new areas in and around golf and golf-related hospitality. Jimmy’s commitment to excellence aligns perfectly with Troon’s vision, and we’re confident he’ll have a strong impact on the company.”

Dunne joined the Policy Board in January 2023 at the request of Commissioner Jay Monahan. Six months later, on June 6, the Tour announced a shocking Framework Agreement with the Saudis, who fund the LIV Golf circuit. The deal was forged in a series of top-secret meetings involving Dunne, Monahan and board chairman Ed Herlihy. The deal has yet to be finalized.

“I’m excited to join the Board of Troon and work closely with Tim and the rest of his terrific team. I have always enjoyed playing the Troon golf courses and the more I’ve learned about the entire company, the more impressed I have become by all its offerings. I’m looking forward to helping Troon any way I possibly can,” Dunne added.

Based in Scottsdale, Arizona, Troon has completed 14 acquisitions over the last decade and has also ramped up its offerings to clubs.

Golfweek columnist Eamon Lynch and Tom Schad of USA Today Sports contributed to this reporting.

Rickey Howler, Tiger Woofs and Doggie Pepper: Doggone it! Rescue puppies given some of the cutest golfer pun names

Man’s best friend deserves a good home – and a good name.

Man’s best friend deserves a good home – and a good name.

It’s hard to top the cuteness level of naming stray pups Rickey Howler, Tiger Woofs and Doggie Pepper.

It just so happened that when a Good Samaritan rescued an emaciated dog and a pile of 10 puppies alone in the Missouri woods, it coincided with the September day of the fundraising golf tournament for the Stray Rescue of St. Louis. So, they decided why not name the dog and puppies after famous golfers.

In addition to coining plays on the names of Rickie Fowler, Tiger Woods and Dottie Pepper, they named the puppies Graeme McHowell, Betsy Jawls, Inbee Bark, Louise Puggs, Arnold Pawmer and Woofy Austin.  The rescue also named the mom Mary, Queen of Scots, in recognition of her being the first recorded female golfer.

https://www.facebook.com/StrayRescue/posts/pfbid0vVS49cfX7D7SKGJxVHvot4fHdTVqFjTCX8BiW5wxJp6aF6aC2AyRmJUWPSX6r8z6l

“The mom was so thin,” Cassady Caldwell, the CEO of the Stray Rescue of St. Louis, told People magazine. “She has literally given everything she has to keep her babies alive. Other than being covered head to toe in fleas, they were in good shape.”

Thankfully, this story has a happy ending as the Stray Rescue of St. Louis found a foster parent for Mary and all 10 of her puppies shortly after the group reached the facility.

Here’s wishing the best to Doggie Pepper, Inbee Bark and Woofy Austin.

Every day is a gift for cancer survivor Ian Gilligan, who earned a spot in the 2024 Shriners Children’s Open

Returning to the course was good for his soul.

Get ready for a wave of “Let’s go, Gilly!” cheers this week at the Shriners Children’s Open in Las Vegas.

That’s the nickname of Ian Gilligan, a 21-year-old senior at the University of Florida who won the Southern Highlands Invitational in February to earn a berth in the PGA Tour field this week at TPC Summerlin.

Gilligan shot 8-under 208 to win the event, beating Oklahoma’s Jase Summy by one shot for his first college victory since transferring from Long Beach State, where he earned second-team All-America honors as a sophomore. In August, Gilligan won the prestigious Western Amateur, claiming the title after surviving a grueling 11-hole playoff against one of his college teammates. That was nothing for Gilligan compared to surviving a rare form of lymphoma, one that only 20 kids worldwide had, after being diagnosed at age 15.

“The whole time you’re thinking, ‘Is my child going to survive?’” Gilligan’s father, Grant, told the PGA Tour.com “He was wasting away. He was down to his lowest weight. I mean, he looked like someone horribly anorexic. There was a time I sat down with the doctor, and I broke down and I said, ‘You have to start treatment now.’”

Gilligan received chemo for seven months during which time his budding golf game was placed on the backburner.

“He was smiling through it,” Ethan Schloss, a teammate of Gilligan’s on the Galena High golf team, told NCGA Golf Magazine. “Even when I saw him in the hospital, he was smiling. He had a really good attitude through everything.”

Gilligan’s first golf swings were made with a kitchen spoon in the family’s San Francisco apartment. Returning to the course and the game that he loves was good for his soul.

“Felt like I was just a normal kid again and having fun,” he said during a pre-tournament press conference on Wednesday.

A year later, in 2019, the product of the Junior Tour of Northern California competed in a Korn Ferry Tour event. His family moved to Nevada so he could focus on his game and have better access to courses, and he became the 2021 Nevada Golfer of the Year.

Gilligan visits an oncologist once a year for blood work and an MRI and has passed the five-year window during which the likelihood of a cancer relapse is greatest. He still sports a Livestrong bracelet and will wear the logo on his golf shirt this week.

Ian Gilligan at the 2024 U.S. Amateur at Hazeltine National Golf Club in Chaska, Minnesota. (Mike Ehrmann/USGA)

“I’ve had a lot of people reach out about like they’re going through something similar to what I had,” said Gilligan, noting he’s been contacted often via Instagram. “I know what they’re going through. It’s always nice to help other people and give them some reassurance or tell them what to expect.”

Gilligan already got a taste of playing in the big leagues in July and proved his game is Tour-ready – or at least trending that way. Gilligan received a sponsor invitation to the Tour’s Barracuda Championship in Truckee, California, about 40 miles outside of his adopted hometown. With his high school teammates cheering him on, Gilligan made the 36-hole and finished T-40. This week in Las Vegas, he’ll be an inspiration to the kids at the Shriners Children’s Hospitals, a network of non-profit hospitals and pediatric healthcare systems for orthopedic, spine, burn and other specialty care. He’s in the field on another sponsor exemption, having earned it the hard way and knowing his performance could be a boost to his PGA Tour U ranking.

“To earn it is definitely a little different,” Gilligan said of the college victory to secure his spot in the field. “Feels really good.”

Watching this once-bullied autistic Aussie’s interview after a historic win at Sotogrande is truly emotional

His victory at Real Club de Golf Sotogrande came with an even greater significance.

Steven Alderson is an accomplished golfer, one who’s stockpiling victories on his resume.

Less than a month ago, the 44-year-old captured the South Australian All Abilities Championship, winning by a full three strokes. In 2023, he captured the Webex Players Series South Australia, and back in 2020, he was the winner of the South Australian Mid Amateur Men’s Championship.

But on Tuesday, his victory at Real Club de Golf Sotogrande came with an even greater significance. The Australian’s nine-shot victory at the G4D Tour @ Estrella Damm N.A. Andalucía Masters marked the first time in the tour’s history that an autistic player claimed a crown.

“Just amazing,” he said while fighting back tears. “I’ve got to thank mum and dad all the way.”

With the victory, Alderson earns a berth into the G4D Tour Series Finale @ DP World Tour Championship in Dubai. It’s something he put in perspective after the victory, especially after noting he’s been bullied during his days on and off the golf course.

“I’m so proud,” he said. “Just growing up as a kid and being bullied all the time at school and even bullied at other golf clubs, it just means the world. I’m on top of the world. It’s just amazing.”

Steven Alderson holds the trophy at the G4D @ Estrella Damm NA Andalucía Masters (G4D Tour)

Alderson, who plays off a 1.4 handicap, is a member at Willunga Golf Club, just south of Adelaide, but he felt right at home in his Spanish surroundings while

“(Sotogrande) is a fantastic, fantastic golf course and the people here are just really friendly and inviting,” he said. “It’s a great country.”

So what’s next? Aside from the invite to Dubai, Alderson is pining for a chance to play in the pro-am at the LIV Golf Adelaide event in February.

Jack Nicklaus makes surprise appearance at PGA HOPE event at Congressional

The 18-time major champion participated in a putting contest with FOX News anchor Bret Baier.

Jack Nicklaus made a surprise visit at PGA HOPE National Golf & Wellness Week on Sunday. The longtime North Palm Beach resident and 18-time major champion participated in a putting contest as well as a fireside chat with Fox News anchor Bret Baier.

Nicklaus, joined by his wife, Barbara, the 2019 winner of the PGA of America’s Distinguished Service Award, is a Trustee of The PGA of America REACH Foundation — which hosted 19 veterans and two veteran squad leaders from Oct. 10-14 at Congressional Country Club in Bethesda, Maryland.

The veterans, graduates of their local PGA HOPE (Helping Our Patriots Everywhere) programs, participated in advanced golf instruction from PGA of America professionals and wellness training from the Cohen Veterans Network — covering topics such as social media, public speaking, stress management and mental health.

“Our veterans have given so much for this country, and some have paid the ultimate sacrifice to protect our freedom and safety, so it’s an honor, alongside Barbara, to continue to support them through PGA HOPE National Golf & Wellness Week,” Nicklaus said in a statement. “Their courage, sacrifice and unwavering commitment are the true embodiment of our nation. Supporting our veterans isn’t just our duty, it’s a privilege we should all cherish.”

Photos: Jack Nicklaus through the years

A $2 million commitment supporting PGA HOPE and the PGA of America REACH Foundation was made in Nicklaus’ honor from real estate investor and PGA of America REACH Foundation Trustee, David P. O’Connor.

According to a release, PGA HOPE, the flagship military program of the PGA of America REACH Foundation, is a six- to eight-week developmental curriculum taught by PGA of America Golf Professionals trained in adaptive golf and military cultural competency. The program introduces golf to veterans and active duty military to enhance their physical, mental, social and emotional well-being.

Robert Trent Jones II firm to build new course at Buenaventura in Panama

New course at Buenaventura Resort will focus on fun and playability.

The firm of Robert Trent Jones II Golf Course Architects has signed on to build a second course at Buenaventura Resort in Panama 90 miles southwest of Panama City.

The new course will top out at 6,810 yards with a par of 72, and it will feature long ribbon tees that allow players to choose their best distances. Instead of heavy earth-moving to build the course, the designers plan to rely on the varied natural topography to create interest and provide long sightlines and ocean views. Fairways will feature generous width, allowing players to choose strategic lines into the greens with an emphasis on fun and playability.

Buenaventura Panama
The routing plan for the second course, to be named No. 2, at Buenaventura Resort in Panama (Courtesy of Robert Trent Jones II Golf Course Architects)

“As they play, golfers will journey through a variety of distinct environments,” Bruce Charlton, president of Robert Trent Jones II Golf Course Architects, said in a media release announcing the plans.

Golfweek’s Best 2024: Top 50 courses in Mexico, Caribbean, Atlantic islands and Central America

“The jungle holes will be surrounded by dense foliage and towering Guanacaste trees, punctuated by a series of running streams and offering an adventurous experience of navigating winding fairways. The meadow holes, with their wide-open spaces, provide expansive scale and invite bold, strategic play. Players will encounter the challenge a breathtaking beach and ocean-view hole, a one-of-a-kind challenge comprised of ocean breezes and sandy shores.”

Buenaventura is an 800-acre Central American beach resort and residential community, and its first course was designed by Jack Nicklaus and opened in 2012.

Watch: Caitlin Clark comes close to a hole-in-one, celebrates on the tee box

Clark loves her some golf.

Caitlin Clark loves her some golf. Just after the WNBA season ended for her Indiana Fever squad, Clark said she’d be hitting the golf course soon, joking that “I’ll become a professional golfer.”

On Monday, video surfaced on TikTok of Clark at a golf course, where she teed one up on a par 3 and then got all jazzed after getting it close to the hole, her ball stopping about three feet away.

“Is this like a ‘We’re good’?” she asked. “I don’t think so,” was the reply from her playing partner.

Despite playing on some recently aerated greens, Clark then drained the putt and let out a “YES!”

Check out the video: