Which top courses are open, which are still closed after Hurricane Milton?
Hurricane Milton had different impacts on various golf courses along its path across the Florida Peninsula last Wednesday and Thursday, and some courses have reopened fully while others are waiting for water to drain before welcoming players.
Many people are still suffering mightily after the storm, with more than 400,000 Florida residents still without power. Food and water are in short supply in the worst-hit areas, lines are out of hand at some gas stations and federal agencies are trying to help as thousands of electric crews race to turn back on the lights, refrigerators and air conditioners.
It can seem like a weird time to think about a game, but golf is big business in Florida, and many people’s livelihoods depend on golf as the state begins its recovery. The National Golf Foundation reports there are more than 1,200 courses in Florida that serve nearly 1.6 million players, with an economic impact of $8.2 billion in 2022. More than 132,000 people work in Florida’s golf industry.
The biggest problem for most golf courses wasn’t Milton’s winds so much as its water. Some places in Florida received nearly two feet of rainfall overnight, and several courses are still under water in places. It can take weeks for that much water to recede from a low-lying course. It was especially damaging as Milton struck just two weeks in the wake of Hurricane Helene, which inundated Florida’s western coast with storm surge and dumped huge volumes of rain across the peninsula before hammering into Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Tennessee.
As an example of water damage, this author received a close-up look at storm water Sunday on a round at the daily-fee Forest Lake Golf Club in Ocoee near Orlando. The course had standing water on many holes, deep enough to resemble ponds more than puddling. Course operators had cobbled together a new layout, playing one par 4 and one par 5 as par 3s to avoid saturated areas in fairways while they clean up after the storm and await water to recede. One par 3 across a pond was closed entirely as water had risen to surround the green like a moat and covered two-thirds of the putting surface. Players should expect to find such conditions at many courses across Florida as grounds crews work to restore normal playing conditions.
Hundreds of courses stretch along the path of Hurricane Milton. For a sampling of how those courses are doing after the storm, we checked on the layouts that appear in Golfweek’s Best rankings of public-access courses. These vary from daily-fee operations to huge resorts. Some have reopened with negligible effects from the storm, while others remain closed. At the bottom of this story is an update on several highly ranked private clubs, too.
Streamsong
Home to three highly ranked courses – the Red by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw, the Blue by Tom Doak, and the Black by Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner – Streamsong received no major damage in the storm. The resort will reopen Tuesday after having been closed for several days as power was restored. The three courses on a former mining site feature very few trees to have blown down, and they were built atop huge piles of sand that expedited drainage. The Red is ranked by Golfweek’s Best as the No. 2 public-access course in Florida and ties for No. 37 among all modern courses in the U.S. The Blue is No. 3 in Florida and ties for No. 53 among modern courses, and the Black is No. 4 in Florida and ties for No. 67 among modern courses.
Bay Hill Club and Lodge
Longtime home to the PGA Tour’s Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, Bay Hill in Orlando is still closed as it deals with flooding after Hurricane Milton. The club is waiting for water to recede – notably on the around-the-pond par-5 sixth hole and the downhill over-the-pond 17th – before announcing a reopening plan. The facility also suffered tree damage. Bay Hill ranks No. 6 among public-access courses in Florida. Bay Hill hopes to have its 9-hole course, The Challenger, opened in the next several days.
Innisbrook
The home of the Copperhead Course – longtime site of the PGA Tour’s Valspar Championship – is in Palm Harbor, just west of Tampa and closer to the Gulf of Mexico. The resort has posted on its website that limited dining options have reopened. The resort features four golf courses: Copperhead, Island, North and South. Of those four, nine holes reopened Monday. Those nine are a compilation of holes on the North and South courses. The Copperhead – ranked No. 9 among all public-access courses in Florida – has not reopened, and a timeframe is not mentioned on the resort’s website.
Southern Dunes
The Steve Smyers layout southwest of Orlando in Haines City lost a few trees, but the course reopened Saturday with minimal damage. Southern Dunes sits on rolling sand dunes, which helps tremendously with drainage. Southern Dunes ranks No. 14 among all public-access courses in Florida.
PGA Golf Club
PGA Golf Club in Port St. Lucie on Florida’s eastern coast – home to three courses ranked among the top 30 public-access layouts in the state – has reopened two of those courses, Dye (ranked No. 17) and Ryder (No. 30). The resort’s Wannamaker course (ranked No. 18) was closed well before the storm for a renovation, and it is scheduled to reopen in November as planned. A handful of holes on the two open courses are cart-path-only as the facility continues to dry out.
Orange County National
Home to two courses among the top 30 in the state, Panther Lake (No. 23) and Crooked Cat (tied for No. 27), this Winter Garden facility just west of Orlando reopened Friday after the storm. The property’s massive circular driving range was humming with business Saturday, as usual.
Celebration
Ranked No. 29 among public-access courses in Florida, this course southwest of Orlando is still closed after Milton. The club has posted on social media that it hopes to reopen Wednesday, as water continues to drain. Golfers can check the club’s Facebook page for more information and updates.
Grand Cypress
A longtime Central Florida golf icon, Grand Cypress is home to two courses – the Cypress and the Links – at the new Evermore resort southwest of Orlando next to Disney World. The Cypress is open for play now, while the Links is slated to reopen Tuesday as stormwater recedes. Formerly known as the New Course, the renamed Links ties for No. 30 among all public-access courses in Florida.
Private clubs
Calls to several top-rated private courses in especially hard-hit areas, such as Mountain Lake in Lake Wales and The Concession in Bradenton, went unanswered. Belleair, just west of Tampa along the Intracoastal Waterway, lost dozens of trees on its two courses, and its recently restored West Course reopened Monday while its East Course will take a few more days. Nearby, Pelican Golf Club – home to the LPGA’s The Annika Driven by Gainbridge scheduled for Nov. 14-17 – plans to reopen Wednesday.
The Ryder Cup is coming to Farmingdale in 2025 for a few days of USA vs. Europe action at Bethpage Black, which means it’s going to get ROWDY on one of the toughest tests on all of golf.
Getting a ticket requires winning a “random selection process“, with tickets going on sale in November of 2024. But after that, what’s the cost?
It turns out it’s A LOT: $255.57 for practice days, $423.64 on Wednesday, and then just under $750 (!) for Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Those apparently include food and beverage, but still! That’s a lot of money.
Golf fans on social media had a lot of thoughts about this as they caught wind of it:
I would like to go on the record now and say that if Europe wins the Ryder Cup at Bethpage because the crowds were turned into a polite snooze fest like LACC by the insane ticket prices, it's going to go down as a massive own goal. pic.twitter.com/wnAOP72lqA
If you want to go see all 3 days (Fri-Sun) at the Ryder Cup in Long Island next year then you're paying $2,500 without fees or taxes. There is a price gouging crisis and in live sports. It affects the game day atmosphere and tv experience. #RyderCup#PGATour#LivGolfpic.twitter.com/YYNcZlwwHW
Let’s take a closer look at the lefties on the PGA Tour.
About 10 percent of the U.S. population is left-handed but there has only been 17 lefties to win on the PGA Tour.
One place they can find common ground is the official website of being left-handed, lefthandersday.com, where it appears the struggle is real:
“August 13th is a chance to tell your family and friends how proud you are of being left-handed, and also raise awareness of the everyday issues that lefties face as we live in a world designed for right-handers.”
August 13, 2024, marked the 33rd annual International Lefthanders Day. On that site, you can purchase things such as left-handed scissors. For left-handed golf clubs, you’re probably better off looking elsewhere.
Fifteen non-righties have combined to win 86 times on the PGA Tour, led by you-know-who, Phil Mickelson.
With Brian Harman’s win at Royal Liverpool in 2023, there have now been three lefties to win the Open Championship, joining Bob Charles (1963) and Phil Mickelson (2013).
If Bryan and Wu were the thrill of living to play another round, then Rafa Campos was the agony of defeat.
If ever we needed a reminder of why the PGA Tour needs to keep the 36-hole cut intact, Saturday morning at the Black Desert Championship could be Exhibit A.
Both Wesley Bryan and Dylan Wu elected to wait overnight when the horn blew on Friday at 7:08 p.m. suspending play due to darkness. They were two of 19 players still on the course at Black Desert Resort in Ivins, Utah who were unable to complete the second round.
Bryan faced a 14-foot eagle putt while Wu needed to knock in a 4-foot par putt to make the cut. Every cut — and FedEx Cup point — is precious for two players who are battling to keep their Tour card for next season during the FedEx Fall. The top 125 will be exempt into all full-field events and the Players Championship next season while Nos. 126-150 will earn full Korn Ferry Tour status and conditional status on Tour next season. Bryan entered the week at No. 138 and Wu at No. 128. So, just a wee bit of pressure to sleep on — no big deal.
Not for these pros with nerves of steel. When play resumed at 8:15 a.m. local time, both players came through in the clutch to finish with a 36-hole total of 5-under 137 and earn a third-round tee time on Saturday. Bryan knew his eagle try, which wrapped up a bogey-free 6-under 65, was good about halfway there. Check out his joy —hats off to Wes! — here.
A 4-foot par putt on No. 9 and 14-foot eagle putt on No. 18 await Dylan Wu and Wesley Bryan as they attempt to make the cut @BDChampionship.
Not everyone had a happy ending. If Bryan and Wu were the thrill of living to play another round, then Rafa Campos was the agony of defeat as he missed a 15-foot birdie putt at his final hole to fall one short. Both showed why the cut still matters and should remain a key component of what makes the PGA Tour special. No guaranteed contracts here. On the Tour, you eat what you kill.
Notre Dame men’s golf takes first on its home turf.
The Notre Dame Fighting Irish men’s golf team took first place in a key tournament this week, winning the Fighting Irish Classic at Warren Golf Course. Notre Dame was able to get the win on its home course.
Notre Dame was led by Nate Stevens and Rocco Salvitti, who each had four birdies in the first five holes. Salvitti finished 3 under par and in third place, while Stevens came in fifth with a score of 2 under par.
The Irish were up against Top 25 teams from Tennessee and Duke in the 15-team, 54-hole tournament.
Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on X (Formerly Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes, and opinions.
Monmouth County purchased the Hominy Hill Golf Course in 1976 and has run it as part of its park system since.
COLTS NECK, N.J. — Humble beginnings are rare in golf, and the Hominy Hill Golf Course is no exception.
The location, tucked away alongside farms and thick woods along Route 537 in western Monmouth County, exudes an unpretentious calm. The course’s meticulously manicured greens are lined with trees that loom like albatrosses, crowning the namesake hill and welcoming a refreshing breeze even on the hottest of days.
The features could make one believe the course possesses an athletic purity reminiscent of the Field of Dreams. Its status as a public course overseen by the Monmouth County Park System is a result of philanthropy from the original builder and owner, Henry Dickson Mercer Sr.
The genesis of the course is believed to be that Mercer, a member of numerous golf clubs including Augusta National, was discontent with the limitations of private country clubs refusing service to several racial demographics. This was not a purely altruistic act by the astute businessman, who was an executive at Chase Bank and Republic Steel and retired as chairman and president of States Marine Corp.; it was also logical sense.
Mercer, who died in 1978 at age 84, needed to entertain a diverse range of clients from across the world and he needed a course that would welcome them. So he built one in 1965, and it quickly became one of the most exclusive golf clubs in New Jersey as he was the sole arbiter to determine who gained entry.
Mercer commissioned Robert Trent Jones, one of the most renowned and iconic golf course designers in history, to create the pristine 18 holes. Jones’s prestige was such that he even coined a self-aggrandizing phrase that has lived on 24 years after his death: “The sun never sets on a Robert Trent Jones course.”
Hominy Hill’s inception was not born out of humble beginnings, but Mercer ensured the course’s legacy would be philanthropic. Henry and his son Dick sold the course to the county at a below-market $2.4 million in 1975, spurning more lucrative offers from developers.
For all the luxury, exclusivity and hubris associated with the course’s genesis, there is at least one constant virtue that has defined the course: it was never about the money.
Monmouth County purchased the Hominy Hill Golf Course in 1976 and has run it as part of its park system since. The scenic nature of the historic course is well-known to local golfers.
A tee time scandal at Hominy Hill?
The illustrious history of Hominy Hill is not lost on the golfers who frequent the course. Over time, a steady balance was struck amongst the ecosystem of patrons as the community embraced rules that kept the locale pristine and also developed a casual decorum in contrast with the pretentiousness of local private golf courses.
“What you would see initially is reduced availability on the county’s website for scheduling tee times,” said Catherine Moraetis. “Tee times are generally released at 8 p.m. one week prior to the day you would like to play. There’s also an opportunity to schedule a tee time 30 days in advance (for Monmouth County residents).”
The latter aspect made it clear to frequent golfers that chunks of desirable times were missing. The issue was an increase in outings; pre-booked time slots for between eight and 48 golfers for mini outings and 72 to 100 golfers for full outings at Hominy Hill.
“When there is an outing… you will observe golfers who don’t understand the etiquette and the rules of play,” Moraetis said. “You will see outing participants ignoring the cart rules for the course and driving their carts on inappropriate parts of the course that cannot withstand the weight of a golf cart. There’s a reason why golf carts are only permitted on certain parts of the course, and that’s to preserve the fidelity of the course.”
The Monmouth County Park System oversees six public courses and data reflects a clear uptick in the number of outings at Hominy. The number of golf outing rounds more than tripled over the course of one year from 2021 to 2022, going from 392 to 1291. That number increased again in 2023 as 1447 rounds were played as part of outings. From 2014 to 2021, the number of golf outing rounds had previously peaked at a mere 493 in 2018.
As the number of outings grew rapidly, there did not appear to be any restrictions on when mini-outings could be booked at Hominy Hill. Weekends and holidays, coveted windows for golfers, were made available alongside weekdays. This year, the booking of mini outings was slightly limited to be after 1 p.m. on weekends with still no restrictions on Monday through Thursday.
By contrast, Somerset County’s coveted Neshanic Valley public golf course restricted all outing bookings to Monday and Tuesday. Another comparison for Hominy Hill is nearby Pebble Creek Golf Club, also in Colts Neck. That private course does not allow outings on weekends.
In addition to the issues outings pose to course conditions and other decorum, there is the straightforward issue of pace of play with such large congregations of golfers. Moraetis recalled such an instance with a golf outing that was from 1 to 3 p.m.
“You might wait an extra five minutes on the first hole and then you might find yourself waiting an extra eight minutes to tee off on the second hole. And then by the time you reach the third hole, you’ll find that you’re waiting 10 minutes between holes to tee off,” said Moraetis. “This becomes particularly important in the fall when the sun sets earlier, and so while you might schedule a tee time that would allow you four and half hours prior to the sunset. If you have the misfortune to get behind an outing, chances are you will not be able to finish that round.”
Moraetis began the process of bringing this to county officials’ attention in October of 2023 after a weekend of outings meant that golfers were unable to finish their rounds. Subsequent letters received an underwhelming response, so she attended a Monmouth Board of Recreation Commissioners meeting last Nov. 20.
Minutes from the meeting show that Ms. Moraetis addressed the board at 7:06 p.m. regarding the issues of outings and the fiscal inefficiencies of the practice relative to standard tee time pricing. She asked the board to reconsider the practice and suggested forming an advisory committee of golfers from Monmouth County. Her suggestions were initially received warmly.
“Vice Chairman Fiore agreed with Ms. Moraetis and said that outings should not be offered on weekends,” read minutes from the meeting. “He also said that golf staff should make better use of social media to get word out on golf course conditions, especially on days when there are frost delays.”
“Chairman Kevin Mandeville thanked Ms. Moraetis for bringing the issue to the Commissioners’attention,” the minutes states. “He directed staff to review the issue with the Board’s golf sub-committee and report back to the full Board at one of the regular December meetings.”
County rebuttal
To a certain extent, some of the grievances against the management of Monmouth County Park System’s public golf courses can be attributed to a simple disagreement over the vision. And steps have been taken by officials to acquiesce the concerns around Hominy Hill and other courses while maintaining the core tenets of the MCPS philosophy.
“The recreation commissioners over the years have been committed to providing an exceptional quality playing experience for Monmouth County golfers,” said MCPS director Andrew Spears. “The six county golf courses are loved by county residents, and they provide a very unique playing experience. And again, the quality of play and the turf is something that’s been a top priority for the management of the golf courses.”
Spears noted that every year the county’s commissioners commit capital funds to invest in playing conditions at the golf courses including upgrades to bunkers or tees and greens. He cited the recently reconstructed driving range at Hominy Hill as one such example.
“The value of the courses to county residents, especially those who don’t play golf, goes beyond the fact that we’re providing a recreational facility,” said Spears. “The golf courses also are permanently dedicated open space, and they’re considered parkland. Some of our golf courses have recreational trails for non-golfers. So from an environmental and open space standpoint, the golf courses return benefits to the residents.”
That philosophy of the courses as multipurpose spaces would seem to underly the increase outings.
“We have really two different types of outings at the golf courses. One is the traditional charitable outing, where we close the course and do a shotgun start,” said Spears. “The other type of outing we refer to is a mini golf outing, and those are the outings where a group of golfers can block off a number of tee times.”
The county’s flier states that full outings can be booked Monday through Thursday at Hominy. Mini outings can be booked at any time Monday through Thursday but must be after 1 p.m. on weekends.
The increase in demand for outing rounds goes hand-in-hand with the upgrades to the facilities at Hominy as the MCPS aims to make the venue into more than just a golf course and potentially a coveted event space with meal complements.
A recent increase in prices also makes the mini outings comparably more valuable in terms of revenue. The cost per person as part of a mini outing is now $103 for weekdays and $118 for weekends, compared to $67 and $84 respectively for a single tee time.
But the push to make the courses into event spaces with meal complements hasn’t sat well with the regulars. The issues led to a season of discontent at Monmouth County golf courses.
Issues to present day
With a busy golf season already underway, the Monmouth County Parks commissioners convened at scenic Thompson Park for their bi-weekly meeting on June 17. The consternation amidst local golfers had persisted, and a few more voices had joined the calls for changes to the managerial approach to the golf courses.
“I’m here in part because I’m a little bit concerned about this outing program, most particularly focused at Hominy,” said Pamela Herzberg. “I was in the women’s golf clinic, and friends and I would sign up and make a habit of signing up every time registration was open. And we would try to and get together to take the clinic and then we could all play foursomes together at Bel-Aire (golf course in Wall) until it became harder to get into that program than it is to get tickets to a Bruce Springsteen concert.”
Herzberg, speaking during public comment at the meeting, proceeded to outline the specific issues that continue to chafe the county’s regular golfers.
“It’s ridiculous. We all set our alarms, we all warn each other to have to be online at 8 o’clock to register,” Herzberg continued. “We’re competing against people who, as it turns out, are coming from all manner of counties in New Jersey, not Monmouth County. And you know, good for the golf program, good for the quality of instruction that people think it’s such a draw that they’re coming from all these various counties. I don’t need to compete with them as a taxpayer in Monmouth County.”
To that issue, the county responded by noting state taxpayers chip in for the parks (grants from the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection help local governments acquire and develop open space for recreation and conservation). But for longtime local golfers like Herzberg, the sudden impediments to enjoying the county’s courses are unacceptable.
“I’m sure there were plenty of county residents that would have filled those spots if it weren’t for the fact that people were faster on their keyboard in Union County. My husband and I spent $7,500 on golf fees and carts last year in Monmouth County, compared to $12,000 that I pay in property taxes,” said Herzberg. “It gets a little bit unreasonable that as residents of the county, we have to compete with people coming from all over the place who have no vested interest, no history in this county.”
Adding to the frustration is that there is no clear explanation of the vision or management strategy being employed by the MCPS. The significant uptick in rounds as part of outings was a recent development. There are also the recent renovations to the clubhouse to make it more appealing as an event space and a wide-ranging contract with Jacques Catering to be the exclusive caterer of Monmouth County Parks.
Fundamentally, the belief is that the management philosophy should benefit county residents – whether that’s directly through availability of the course for local golfers, or fiscally by generating a surplus of revenue that could support other initiatives.
Abe Sanchez has been a resident of Monmouth County for several years but previously resided in South Florida amidst some of the best, and most expensive, golf courses in the world. He vouched for the elite quality and fair pricing at the courses, but he too expressed a belief that the management of the courses should benefit local residents.
“The maintenance of our courses here in Monmouth County is superb. It’s amazing,” Sanchez said. “For a course like Hominy Hill, it could easily be $120 (per round) and I think still most people would probably pay for it. And a course like Shark River, you would get upwards of $80 or more. So we do have really good rates here for our county residents. It’s something to appreciate, but at the same time to be able to use it and not just be limited.”
While golfers want to see tee times maximized and disruptions to playing pace minimized, the source of tension in many ways can be boiled down to a lack of an articulated vision by the park system. At the same meeting that Sanchez, Herzberg and Moraetis attended, the discourse in the public comment portion of the meeting was framed in a way of voicing concerns while seeking answers about the direction of MCPS management of the courses.
In the absence of answers about the direction and strategy, Herzberg recited the group’s mission statement, then added: “I don’t see anything about out-of-county residents here.”
Regardless of the feedback from residents, the MCPS has pushed forward. Hominy Hill hosted its first “Brewed in Monmouth: Taste of the Tee” event on May 17. On that Friday afternoon after 4 p.m., tee times were only available as part of the event with the cost being $55 for regular attendance and $95 to play nine holes of golf as part of the event. That continued the following month with an event on June 28 priced at $69 for dinner and $109 to include a tee time. That same week in late June, the course also hosted a 3 p.m. “Group Wedding” event with the Monmouth County Clerk.
Those events highlighted the relationship the county has with its official caterer, Jacques Exclusive Catering. In both cases, Jacques was compensated with all the revenues for regular attendance ($55 or $69) whereas MCPS received the portion of revenues that included tee time ($40). All 56 spots with a tee time were sold.
The relationship with Jacques, and the slate of events that come with it, is also a source of ire for the regulars. A series of public records requests revealed that Jacques took over as the exclusive caterer with a two-part bid that totaled $75,300 with terms extending over two years including an option for a third year. It also revealed Jacques was not on schedule with payments, but the county declined to collect late fees when it finally received payments in July for the annual fee and for events hosted up to that point in the year.
“Giving the caterer the opportunity to offer the services to the golfers directly, such a through the Taste of the Tee or through the box lunches or the grill room, contributes to the visibility of the facility as a catering venue,” Spears said.
The numbers
For all the disagreements about management and back-and-forth about policy and approach, the numbers paint the clearest picture of the efficacy of the current direction.
Both the outings at Hominy Hill and additional events as part of Monmouth County Park System’s agreement with Jacques appear to have only marginal economic benefit while potentially alienating the core group of local golfers.
The number of rounds played as part of outings more than tripled at Hominy from 2021 to 2022 as part of a broader trend across Monmouth County’s public golf courses that featured more outings. But records show that the “golf group program” (outings and mini outings) made up around 1.7% of overall the county’s $16,4 million in revenue in 2022 and around 2% of $18.6 million in 2023 revenue.
There are more peculiarities with the financial data regarding group golf programs. In 2019, 1,610 rounds of golf were recorded played as part of outings and the correlating revenue was $159,025. By 2021, the number of outing rounds played had increased by over 88% to 3,040 rounds, but the associated revenue had only gone up by just over 25% to $199,375.
Hominy Hill records show the course produced revenues of $3.63 million in 2023 and $3.41 million in 2022. Even if the entirety of the county’s $75,300 agreement (which is actually a multi-year contract) with Jacques Exclusive Catering was paid over the course of one year, it would represent 2% of annual revenue.
For all the upheaval, it hardly seems worth it to experiment with the golf courses’ viability in its primary function as a sporting venue, alienating local resident golfers in the process, when the upside appears to present only marginal gains for the county.
The 18th hole
Even as the summer turns to fall and the daylight wanes, the allure of Hominy Hill doesn’t waiver. And neither has the slate of Friday events as another Taste of the Tee event was hosted Sept. 20.
The crown jewel public golf course continues to shimmer even as its direction pivots. Once the apex of exclusivity as a private venue, Hominy is now being pulled in a variety of directions as its inclusivity as a public entity reaches an inflection point. Innumerous stakeholders feel entitled to shape the locale’s future.
It’s difficult to know what Henry Dickson Mercer would think. Surely he envisioned the course being under the public domain as a noble act, giving everyone an opportunity to enjoy the venue he created. Little did he know that five decades later golfers and course managers would clash over the vision.
Hominy Hill’s existence is rooted in the pompous grandeur of those who created, it’s destiny might be defined by something similar. Still, the tree-lined greens and fairways exude a certain kind of humility. The sun may never set on this Robert Trent Jones course, but the concern continues to be what happens in the shadows.
Curry sat down with Golfweek’s Beth Ann Nichols for an exclusive interview, discussing his love for the game of golf.
During the second round of the 2023 American Century Championship in Lake Tahoe, Steph Curry drained an ace for the ages, and then added an equally unforgettable celebration.
Recently, Curry sat down with Golfweek‘s Beth Ann Nichols for an exclusive interview, discussing his love for the game of golf, which he’s been playing for 25 years. Curry insisted he enjoys the constant chase of improvement and the humility that comes with playing. He mentioned the competitive nature of golf hasn’t gotten old for him.
“That search for the perfect shot is intoxicating,” Curry said in the clip above.
To see the entire interview, part of the Big Pickle podcast, click below.
Check out Tiger’s letter to perspective members of new course near Fort Worth.
This story was updated to include information about Mark Brooks at the new club.
Tiger Woods announced on social media Thursday that his course architecture firm, TGR Design, has signed on to build a course at a new residential community underway near Fort Worth, Texas: Bluejack Ranch.
If that sounds familiar, it’s because the developers behind the project – Andy and Kristin Mitchell – also built Bluejack National north of Houston in 2016. That is the site of Woods’ first course design in the U.S., Bluejack National.
The name Bluejack, by the way, references a bluejack oak, a tree native to Texas with one present at Bluejack National.
Bluejack Ranch in Aledo will be about a 30-minute drive southwest of Fort Worth. It is planned to be a residential club on 914 acres of working cattle ranch, according to the club’s website. Plans call for it to open in 2026.
Over a decade ago, I designed my first U.S. course at Bluejack National. I’m excited to announce that @tgrdesignbytw, @BluejackNation, and the Mitchell family are teaming up again to create @BluejackRanch, an exceptional new golf community in Aledo, Texas.… pic.twitter.com/k2nNCR82nB
Course details were not included in the social post, but Golf.com reported that the plans include a full-size course built by Woods and his design partner, Beau Welling. There also will be a lighted 10-hole, par-3 course.
Fort Worth native Mark Brooks, winner of the 1996 PGA Championship among his seven PGA Tour titles, confirmed to Golfweek that he is a senior advisor to the project and will transition into running the club’s player development programs. The club will include a full golf and fitness performance center.
It’s hard to believe it’s been over ten years since we embarked on my first U.S. course design at Bluejack National in Houston. The response to that golf experience has been truly gratifying, and when I hear how much Bluejack means to people, I feel incredibly proud of the TGR Design team.
Now, we’re bringing that same Bluejack spirit and passion to Fort Worth- a city celebrated not only as Cowtown but also as a golf town. With legends like Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson, the love for the game here is genuine. I’m grateful for the encore opportunity to reteam with Bluejack National and home-towners Andy and Kristin Mitchell to design a course around this incredibly special property and community.
Bluejack National’s success has paved the way for this next chapter at Bluejack Ranch. Our shared vision of creating a space where families can enjoy the game and have fun inspires us all once again at The Ranch.
It’s extremely motivating for me to contribute to the golfing legacy of Fort Worth, and I’m excited to see what we’ll build together. We’ll share more after our next design meeting in Aledo.
David Love III will serve as a consultant to the Harbour Town restoration.
Harbour Town Golf Links at Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, announced it will close for six months in 2025 for a restoration of the Pete Dye-designed layout that opened in 1969.
Part of Sea Pines Resort, Harbour Town is ranked by Golfweek’s Best as the No. 2 public-access layout in South Carolina. It also is the No. 21 resort course in the U.S. and the No. 59 modern course built in the U.S. since 1960. Much of the layout plays tight through trees until reaching Calibogue Sound for its final holes, with the 18th playing along the water toward the famed lighthouse beyond.
The course will close May 5, 2025, and is scheduled to reopen in November.
The work is being done to restore championship-level conditions. The course has been home to the PGA Tour’s RBC Heritage Presented by Boeing (and all the tournament’s previous names) since the year it opened.
All the greens, bunkers and bulkheads will be rebuilt alongside improvements to agronomy and maintenance. The turf will remain as TifEagle Bermuda grass on the greens with Celebration Bermuda on the fairways, tees and rough.
“Everyone at The Sea Pines Resort is committed to honoring the legacy of Pete Dye’s design,” John Farrell, director of sports operations at Harbour Town, said in a media release announcing the restoration. “We will protect the shot values, both long and short, that have come to define Harbour Town Golf Links for nearly six decades.”
Davis Love III and his design company will serve as consultants to the restoration. Love won the RBC Heritage five times, and he designed the Atlantic Dunes course at the resort.
“I’m both honored and excited to be working with The Sea Pines Resort’s Harbour Town Golf Links team on the restoration of Harbour Town,” Love, who spent much of his youth on the island, said in the media release. “Given my success on the course over the years, it is a layout I know and love. We’ve already begun a thoughtful process for protecting the integrity of this Pete Dye masterpiece.”
“I still cannot imagine ALL we have lost, but we are SAFE and all can be replaced!”
John Daly lost his home in Florida during Hurricane Helene, he announced on social media.
The two-time major champion posted on social media before and after Helene hit the Big Bend area in Florida where he resides with his family. the Category 4 hurricane devastated millions of Americans from the Gulf Coast up into the Appalachias late Thursday and into Friday when it moved inland.
On Thursday in a story on Instagram, Daly posted a screenshot of radar with an emoji where his house was near the Tampa area. Then on Friday morning, he posted on Facebook updating folks about his family’s safety but loss of property.
“For everyone that has reached out, my family are all safe, but all our homes are not as water is pouring out of every crevice,” Daly wrote. “Total loss and devastation after living here all my life! I still cannot imagine ALL we have lost, but we are SAFE and all can be replaced! Praise God!”