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8 Reasons to visit Kohler before the 2020 Ryder Cup
Kohler: An unlikely Cup host Next September, the eyes of the golf world will focus on Kohler, Wisconsin when the Ryder Cup comes to town. The Straits course at Whistling Straits will be the first public track to host the biennial competition in …
Kohler: An unlikely Cup host
Next September, the eyes of the golf world will focus on Kohler, Wisconsin when the Ryder Cup comes to town. The Straits course at Whistling Straits will be the first public track to host the biennial competition in America since 1991, giving the 2020 Cup a different feel. In addition, the tiny village of Kohler, population 2,000, is situated 150 miles from Chicago. By contrast, recent and upcoming Cup sites are just 30 miles from major cosmopolitan cities—Paris (2018), Rome (2022), and New York (2024). While in Kohler, poke around the shops, experience its charming Midwestern vibe, visit an art gallery, take a tour of the factory, or swing by the Kohler Design Center.
Play at a major championship venue
The Straits course is primed for the bright lights of a global tournament. Again. It hosted the PGA Championship in 2004, 2010 and 2015, plus the 2007 U.S. Senior Open. With eight breathtaking holes stretched along Lake Michigan’s shoreline, the Straits provides a stout challenge for the U.S. and European Ryder Cup teams. Even better? The course will remain open for public play until two weeks prior to the event.
Experience 4 highly ranked public courses
Kohler’s a bucket-list destination for golfers. The Straits is the headliner among four wonderful daily-fee layouts—two at Whistling Straits and another pair down the road at Blackwolf Run, which hosted the U.S. Women’s Open in 1998 and 2012. The four standouts are among Golfweek’s Top 200 Resort Courses in America: Whistling Straits, Straits Course (No. 5); Blackwolf Run, River (No. 24); Whistling Straits, Irish (No. 42); and Blackwolf Run, Meadow Valleys (No. 109).
Hall-of-Fame course architect Pete Dye built these gems
In 1998, Kohler Co. Chairman and CEO Herb Kohler, Jr. hired legendary designer, Pete Dye, to construct courses with the feel and playability of seaside golf in the British Isles. Besides the Straits, beautiful dunes, fescue grass and streams make the Irish Course a can’t-miss attraction. The two courses combined feature more than 1,000 bunkers. At Blackwolf Run, the inland tracks make golfers feel like they’re in a nature preserve, with tree-lined holes, mounding, and meandering water hazards.
Fun to play
All four layouts are challenging (particularly in the breeze), visually intimidating but fair. They’re fun to play, offer beautiful scenery, and require good course-management skills. They have some idiosyncrasies as well: A pair of bridges at Blackwolf Run was originally flatbed railroad cars, while a flock of Scottish Blackface sheep roams the Straits during golf season (they spend the winter at an off-site farm). Each course has a minimum of five tee boxes. Don’t be a hero and play the tips. Instead, try a set of markers forward from what you’re accustomed. You can always move back. Players must take caddies at The Straits. Caddies and carts are available at the other courses.
World-Class hotel and spa
There’s more to terrific golf experiences than rounds played. At Kohler, guests can stay at The American Club, a AAA five-diamond hotel, and dine on scrumptious Midwestern beef and local cheeses. Golfers can also unwind and rejuvenate at the Forbes five-star Kohler Waters Spa, located steps from the hotel. Indulgences like massages, hydrotherapy treatments and bathing experiences get you feeling your best.
Easy to get to
Tucked along Lake Michigan in eastern Wisconsin, Kohler is accessible from larger ports of call. The resort property is situated two-and-a-half hours from Chicago, one hour north of Milwaukee and one hour south of Green Bay.
Great deals
Kohler offers several attractive stay-and-play packages, including “Golf Kohler” (3-days/2-nights with three 18-hole rounds per person) and “Dye-Abolical” (4-days/3-nights, four rounds). Click HERE for 2020 rates. Consider a visit during “shoulder” season. The resort might be less busy than peak times, the courses are in good shape, and guests can save a few bucks. (Kohler’s next shoulder season is May 8-June 4, 2020).
Heads or tails? Geno Smith calling the coin toss in the Seahawks’ overtime win is the new Laurel or Yanny
HMMMMMM!
The blue/gold dress. Laurel or Yanny. Brianstorm or green needle.
Those all pale in comparison to the new audio debate we’re all having on Tuesday morning.
On Monday night, in the eventual win over the San Francisco 49ers, Seattle Seahawks backup quarterback Geno Smith was called upon to call the overtime coin toss. He was standing right next to the referee, who asked him for a call.
What Smith said next? According to everyone (except for the referee, of course), it’s up for debate.
According to audio that I’ve listened to now about 157 times, it sure sounds like Smith called “tails.” Others at For The Win hear “heads,” which is what the official next to Smith heard.
Time for a good ol’ fashioned Internet debate:
Geno Smith clearly said "Heads" but if yall want to make another "blue dress/gold dress" thing then ☕️🐸 pic.twitter.com/qLb6acJtxT
— NFL Retweet (@NFLRT) November 12, 2019
Here we goooooo!
anyone who's saying Geno Smith said "tails" needs to clean your ears out cause he definitely said "heads"
— Evelyn (@ItsMyOpinion16) November 12, 2019
Geno Smith calls tails during OT coin flip
Ref says he called Heads
Seahawks given ball
Ladies and Gentleman, NFL officiating… 🤦♂️ pic.twitter.com/Y1WRk4rKfx
— NFL Memes (@NFL_Memes) November 12, 2019
You’re actually an idiot if you believe he called tails
Why?
If Geno Smith called tails and the ref who not only has a mic but is standing right next to him says he called heads then Geno would have reacted and tried to stop him to make sure he got the right call https://t.co/75yXWeD879
— Kyler (@PeakKyler) November 12, 2019
Man I don’t get this Geno Smith coin flip thing, I clearly hear him say heads
— Darrick Phillips (@DPhillz) November 12, 2019
#MNF #SEAvsSF
Geno Smith: "Tails"
Ref: "He says heads and it is…HEADS"
Geno Smith: pic.twitter.com/ZsQe7cg25k— John Sparaco™ (@JohnSparaco) November 12, 2019
The genius of Geno Smith’s coin flip call is that it was so ambiguous – he may have said “Heads,” he may have said “Tails,” I think he said “Heils” – that there was no possible way he could lose. That is talent and ability you cannot teach. Hall of Fame skill.
— alexSSN (@alexSSN) November 12, 2019
Geno Smith called tails, ref said “you called heads”, Geno *calmly* waits for outcome of toss, steals “heads” win, jogs to sideline with his second straight W like the coin toss god he is. https://t.co/7uXST05Ta1
— Jacson A. Bevens (@JacsonBevens) November 12, 2019
Yeah, Geno Smith said tails…not heads. pic.twitter.com/lU2IcEmeoN
— Sebastian. (@mynameisSEB_) November 12, 2019
I hear “tails.” But listen to the clear audio that TMZ has. It sounds a lot more like “heads.” It didn’t end up mattering … but what if it did?
I don't care what Geno Smith called – heads, tails or middles. Each team had like 10 possessions each in OT. #SEAvsSF
— Jason Smith (@howaboutafresca) November 12, 2019
[opinary poll=”do-you-hear-heads-or-tails_forthewin” customer=”forthewin”]
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Bryce Thompson goes in-depth
Alpine Country Club responds to suit over wine spilled on $30K purse by suing its waiter
After wine was spilled on $30K purse at Alphine Country Club, the purse’s owner sued. The club is filing a cross-claim against the waiter.
After an Alpine woman sued a Bergen country club for $30,000 in damages when a waiter spilled wine on her ultra-expensive purse, the country club has responded by suing the waiter, records show.
In a response to the Oct. 29 lawsuit filed by Maryana Beyder against the Alpine Country Club, the country club denied almost every one of Beyder’s allegations — including that it was liable for the damage to her Hermès Kelly bag — and capped off the response by suing its own employee, according to court records.
The action is called a cross-claim, where one defendant sues another in the same proceeding.
“So basically what this is is that they’re asking the employee to pay whatever they owe under the law to my client,” said Alexandra Errico, Beyder’s attorney. “So they’re suing their own employee that they hired.”
Calls to Kenneth Merber, the attorney for the country club, were not immediately returned.
The response filed Thursday is the latest in a year-long tug-of-war between the club and Beyder after a dinner went awry, allegedly leaving a luxury handbag irreversibly damaged.
On Sept. 7, 2018, Beyder was having a meal at the Alpine Country Club in Demarest when a waiter spilled red wine on the pink handbag, according to the lawsuit. The handbag was rare — having been discontinued — and essentially irreplaceable. The bag was a 30th-birthday gift for Beyder from her husband, Errico said.
For nearly a year, Beyder tried to resolve the issue with the country club directly, the lawyer said. But the club dragged out the discussions and stopped being responsive, she said. Even the insurance company was dismissive, failing to understand why a bag would cost so much, she said.
While Errico acknowledged that the waiter’s spill was an accident, she clarified that any lawsuit needs to describe in detail what happened, in this case specifying who spilled the wine, causing the damages, she said. The waiter was not named in Beyder’s lawsuit, being called only “John Doe.”
“The way the story read is that somehow we’re blaming the employee,” Errico said. “We’re not. Not at all. You go to any restaurant. You have a leather jacket on. 100 dollars. 50 dollars. 20 dollars. If a waiter spills on it and it’s destroyed, you’re expecting the restaurant to compensate you for that particular item.”
Louis Pechman, an employment attorney who says he has handled at least 200 restaurant-pay lawsuits, said the waiter should not be liable.
“In general, the labor laws protect waiters from having deductions from their wages because of breakage, walkout or other issues that are really the responsibility of the restaurant or the catering hall,” said Pechman, who founded WaiterPay, a website that promotes awareness of restaurant employee rights.
For now, there is nothing for the waiter to do except wait until he’s identified and served, Pechman said. At that point, the waiter will likely have to hire a lawyer himself, he said.
But Pechman sees the cross-claim as unusual and flying in the face of human resources policy that should side with the employee.
“This type of a cross-claim is unheard of,” he said. “Good human resources policy would dictate that the restaurant has the employee’s back, rather than sticking the knife in his back.”
Hermès handbags are often priced in the tens of thousands. In 2017, a Hermès handbag sold at an auction in Hong Kong for $377,000, breaking the world record for most expensive bag sold at auction.
“They did not have to sue their own employee,” Errico said. “It basically shows that they really are acting in bad faith.”