College coach sees mission fulfilled with second Folds of Honor Collegiate event at American Dunes

The event began as something between an idea and personal mission for Michigan State men’s golf coach Casey Lubahn.

EAST LANSING, Michigan – What began as something between an idea and personal mission for Michigan State men’s golf coach Casey Lubahn has turned into one of the bigger events in college golf. Certainly as important as any invitational.

MSU is hosting the second annual Folds of Honor Collegiate this Monday through Wednesday at the famed American Dunes Golf Course in Grand Haven, featuring 18 schools, including highly ranked programs such as Florida State and Arizona, along with all three service academies, two HBCUs and one Division II program, Grand Valley State.

The tournament, in conjunction with the Golf Coaches Association of America, benefits Folds of Honor, a nonprofit that gives scholarships to families of military members who’ve lost their lives or been disabled in action and recently began including families of first responders. To date the organization says it’s given out 44,000 scholarships.

MSU golf coach Casey Lubahn and his father Dale at USGA Qualifying in 2003. Dale is a Vietnam War veteran, giving extra meaning to Casey in having his MSU team host this week’s Fields of Honor Collegiate event at American Dunes Golf Course in Grand Haven.

Photos: Jack Nicklaus’ American Dunes, which benefits Folds of Honor

“The golf course has been opened about a year and I hadn’t been there,” Lubahn said. “And when you get to the golf course (they take your clubs and) you walk through this living memorial, with all the folks that they honor there, and I just kept thinking (how) college athletics is growing very quickly. It’s about a lot of things, some of those good things and some of them maybe are about money and other things like that. What can we do to broaden our reach as a college golf community?”

Lubahn reached out to Folds of Honor founder Lt. Col. Dan Rooney with the idea for the tournament. Three days after MSU’s James Piot won the U.S. Amateur, Lubahn flew to Oklahoma to meet with Rooney.

“It (quickly) went from a very minor thing to the biggest thing in college golf,” Lubahn said.

It’s also an organization and cause dear to Jack Nicklaus, who designed American Dunes, giving it the nickname, “The church that Jack built.” Nicklaus was scheduled to meet with the teams on Sunday. “That’s how much he believes in this event,” Lubahn said.

And of course, it’s an event that means a lot to Lubahn’s father, Dale.

“It was so emotional,” Casey said of when he first told his father about it. “There’s not a day that goes by he doesn’t wear a veteran hat or has a veteran sticker on his on his truck. It’s just something that our veterans don’t talk about a lot. And to see kind of a rejuvenation of that pride in their service, and he’s certainly gone full circle. When I was growing up, I didn’t hear him talk about his service and now we talk about it a lot. And this event becomes special to him. He just walks around beams and talks about it with such pride.”

Contact Graham Couch at gcouch@lsj.com. Follow him on Twitter @Graham_Couch.

2022 Folds of Honor Collegiate: Illinois wins team title, Liberty’s Jonathan Yaun takes medalist honors

Illinois men’s golf won the inaugural Folds of Honor Collegiate in Michigan.

Illinois men’s golf shot 10 under this week over three rounds to win the inaugural Folds of Honor Collegiate by 15 strokes.

“That was a goal this week. When you have an event that you believe is going to be around for a long time, has tradition and heritage to it, we wanted to be the first winner and we got it done,” said Illinois men’s golf coach Mike Small.

Illinois fell short last week at Olympia Fields but this time, they finished.

“To have a lead yesterday in the second round was the key to the tournament. … Today when you have a lead like that, you want to come out and expand on it or hold it strongly on the first nine holes, and we did,” said Small. “We are getting better every week and that’s all you can do.”

Illinois had three top-5 finishers at American Dunes: Adrien Dumont de Chassart (T3, 4 under ), Jackson Buchanan (T3, 4 under) and Tommy Kuhl (T5, 3 under).

Fold of Honor CollegiateTeam scores | Individual

Liberty senior Jonathan Yaun notched his second collegiate win after defeating NC State’s Maximilian Steinlechner in a two-hole playoff. Yaun chipped in from off the green on the 18th hole to win the tournament.

2022 Folds of Honor Collegiate
Liberty’s Jonathan Yaun won medalist honors at the 2022 Folds of Honor Collegiate at American Dunes Golf Club in Grand Haven, Michigan.

“That was by the grace of God, that’s all I can tell you,” said Yaun. “Underneath that pressure, without his peace out there, just walking and that freedom, I don’t I could’ve done that. Definitely going to give props to the lord there.”

For many people, including Jonathan, the game of golf came second this week. The real importance was honoring the fallen soldiers who sacrificed their lives for our country.

“I played for God and country this week. I played for people who, unfortunately, passed away. It’s very powerful, what they’ve (fallen soldiers) have done. I am very thankful to be able to honor those people today,” said Yaun.

Arizona senior Chase Sienkiewicz shot a course-record 5-under 67 in the final round Wednesday and credited his play to Tyler Pickett, an Army Staff Sargent who was killed in the line of duty in 2008.

“I wrote TP on my ball today because I played in the Patriot All-America Invitational last December. I played for Tyler Pickett. I had his name on my bag all week, so I thought I’d carry him with me today. That was really cool to play for,” said Sienkiewicz.

Sienkiewicz finished T8 at 2 under. As a team, the Arizona Wildcats finished in second at 5 over.

Alex Gelman is the current Ron Balicki Scholarship Award winner.

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Illinois men’s golf takes control; Brian Roberts, Jonathan Yaun tied for individual lead at 2022 Folds of Honor Collegiate

Illinois has raced out to an 11-shot lead at American Dunes Golf Club.

Illinois has raced out to an 11-shot lead at American Dunes Golf Club in Grand Haven, Michigan, in the inaugural Folds of Honor Collegiate.

Adrien Dumont de Chassart, Tommy Kuhl, and Piercen Hunt all shot 3-under 69s for the Fightin’ Illini while Jackson Buchanan shot a 2-under 70. Illinois is 7 under and 36 holes and the only team under par.

“That’s what we look for. That’s Illini golf. We closed effectively. … it was good to see,” said Mike Small, head coach of Illinois.

Senior Tommy Kuhl made just one bogey on his card Tuesday and has just three bogeys this week.

“I hit it really solid today,” said Kuhl. “I put myself in the right spots and played solid golf. I knew the conditions going into today were going to be pretty difficult and I know at this golf course, you’ve got to put it in the right spots to score well, and that’s what I did.”

Fold of Honor CollegiateTeam scores | Individual

Florida State is in second heading into Wednesday’s final round at 4 over. Liberty and Arizona are tied for third at 7 over. Kansas is solo fifth at 9 over.

“We came out, we got on it pretty early. We got off to a good start which helps. We hadn’t done that in the last event (Olympia Fields). It definitely helps to come out strong and we carried the momentum into the back-nine and finished well,” said Kuhl.

Despite the big lead heading into the final round, Coach Small says their mentality stays the same.

“Tomorrow is zero-zero. Let’s go play golf. Have that same look we had today and play Illini’ golf,” said Smalls.

Last week, Illinois hosted the Fightin’ Illini Invitational and finished in second place, behind Stanford.

“At Olympia Fields we didn’t close like we wanted to, but today we did, and that’s progress,” said Smalls.

Florida State’s Brian Roberts and Liberty’s Jonathan Yaun are tied atop the individual leaderboard at 6 under. Yaun, who led after Day 1, has posted back-to-back rounds of 69.

Roberts, after he shot 70 in the first round, kept his rhythm, and shot a 4-under 68 on Tuesday. Through two rounds of golf, the Seminole junior is 7 under on the par 5’s. He eagled the 6th on Tuesday after hitting the green in two shots.

“That was the only one I went for. The rest has been just a lot of wedges and hitting some good shots, close in there,” said Roberts.

Playing a tournament at the Folds of Honor course is significant to Small.

“I think it’s a great educational experience,“ he said. ”I think it’s great for the kids to see this and learn more about the Folds of Honor organization so that they can rally behind it at an early age. You need young people to do that, to foster that. We’d like to win, play well tomorrow, and finish it off, but that’s not the ultimate thing. The ultimate thing is to carry yourself with respect and pride and play in the spirit of this event.”

Wednesday is the final round of the Folds of Honor Collegiate. The leaders will tee off at 8 a.m. ET.

Alex Gelman is the current Ron Balicki Scholarship Award winner.

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Florida State, Jonathan Yaun lead after Day 1 at inaugural Folds of Honor Collegiate

Eighteen teams are at American Dunes Golf Club for the inaugural Folds of Honor Collegiate.

Eighteen universities teed off Monday morning at American Dunes Golf Club in Grand Haven, Michigan – the Jack Nicklaus Signature Golf Course – for the inaugural Folds of Honor Collegiate.

On Day 1, the players were dealt a pristine golf course, yet winds that reached almost 20mph and rain was on-and-off throughout the round.

The Seminoles handled the weather nicely, shooting 1 under in the opening round and securing themselves the lead heading into the Tuesday’s second round. FSU was led by junior Brett Roberts, who shot a 2-under 70. Despite starting the tournament with a bogey on the 10th, Roberts battled back, including birdies on all three par 5s.

Fold of Honor Collegiate: Team scores | Individual

“He’s just getting better and better and better. Once again, there’s another example of a player from Miami, that as a freshman, would not have embraced this,” said Trey Jones, head coach of Florida State. “It really shows his growth, accepting that this is the way it’s going to be and he went out and played really good golf.”

Liberty’s Jonathan Yaun shot 3-under 69 in the first round. Through 16 holes, the senior was bogey free. After a drive that leaked to the right and missing a 9-footer for par, he’d bogey the 17th, a 428-yard, par 4. Yaun kept his head down and rallied, birding the final hole and finishing with the clubhouse lead.

“The 18th was really everything today. One shot at a time, staying patient, really paid off there,” Yaun said. “I stayed really patient today. I was really proud of myself, just taking it one shot at a time. It was really tough out there.”

American Dunes was built in tribute to the U.S. military and commemorates the birthplace of Folds of Honor. All proceeds from this week’s event benefit the Folds of Honor.

“You know your playing out there for more than just yourself. I think that’s been the key for me today too,” said Yaun. “Playing for fallen veterans and people who fight for our country. It gives me that sense of confidence out there. You gotta be a warrior in those conditions and that’s what they did.”

Alex Gelman is the current Ron Balicki Scholarship Award winner.

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Michigan State to host inaugural Folds of Honor Collegiate in 2022 at American Dunes Golf Club

“Being the host institution for the Folds of Honor Collegiate is one of the greatest opportunities of my career.”

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A new men’s collegiate golf tournament is set to hit the schedule in 2022.

The Folds of Honor Collegiate will debut Sept. 26-28 at American Dunes Golf Club, a Jack Nicklaus Signature Golf Course in Grand Haven, Michigan, along the coast of Lake Michigan. Proceeds will benefit the Folds of Honor and the Golf Coaches Association of America Presidential Scholarship Fund.

“When we dreamed of building American Dunes with Mr. Nicklaus and hosting a collegiate tournament that represented our values of God and country, golf was a top goal,” said Folds of Honor founder and CEO Lt Col Dan Rooney via a release. “The Folds of Honor Collegiate will be a trailblazing event with great college golfers playing the game for a greater purpose supporting Folds of Honor recipients.”

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Michigan State will host 17 other schools for the inaugural event: Air Force, Arizona, Army, Central Michigan, Clemson, Eastern Michigan, Florida State, Grand Valley State, Illinois, Kansas, Liberty, Navy, NC State, Oregon State, Texas Southern, UCLA and Virginia Union. Forty-one percent of Folds of Honor recipients are minorities; each year the tournament will feature two Historically Black Colleges and Universities programs. In 2022, the HBCU teams will be Virginia Union and Texas Southern.

“Being the host institution for the Folds of Honor Collegiate is one of the greatest opportunities of my career,” said Michigan State head coach Casey Lubahn. “We look forward to working tirelessly to make this event impactful to all those involved.”

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Your 2021 picks: Our top 10 golf course architecture/travel stories (No. 1 is a famous track reincarnated)

There are some really beautiful courses featured on this list of the top golf travel stories.

As you’re relaxing during the holiday break, taking stock of your year in golf and thinking about where you might play in 2022, we figured this would be a good time to run through the numbers and tally up which travel stories drew your attention.

For the final days of 2021, we’re offering up a snapshot of the top 10 stories from each of Golfweek’s most popular sections, including travel, the PGA and LPGA tours, instruction and amateur golf. Here’s what we’ve already counted down.

Here’s a look at the top 10 golf travel stories, as clicked on by you (we should note, this doesn’t include lists, which will be featured on Friday):

Why American Dunes Golf Club feels like a Fourth of July party while honoring fallen soldiers

Inspired and uplifted. Thankful and touched. A most amazing 18 holes. And it had nothing to do with the golf.

GRAND HAVEN, Mich. – Everything stopped.

Bartenders, cooks and waiters came from the clubhouse and stood silently on the patio at American Dunes — a new golf course that feels like a July Fourth party held at a monument for fallen soldiers.

Up and down fairways, golfers paused and took off their caps. Those on the patio faced a giant American flag that loomed over the course.

A trumpet played “Taps” over the loudspeaker system, which happens every day at 1 p.m. – 1300 hours, standard military time. It was followed by 13 chimes, representing the 13 times a flag is folded at a military funeral.

I kept standing, the emotion building in my gut.

I’m not much of a golfer but playing American Dunes was a surprising, incredible, inspiring and reverential experience. It’s like going to Washington, D.C., to visit the monuments — you walk away feeling pumped up with patriotism and awash with thankfulness for those who fought for our freedoms.

The golf course was designed by Jack Nicklaus and it’s simply beautiful, but the golf was actually secondary for me.

Because of what this place stands for.

Walking in the paths of those who served

You feel it as soon as you arrive at this course in west Michigan, built on the sand, not far from Lake Michigan.

You walk across the parking lot toward a memorial in front of the clubhouse. Nicklaus’ words are emblazoned on an 8-foot wall: “I love the game of golf, but I love my country even more.”

His “Bear” logo was changed to Red, White and Blue.

Nicklaus waived his normal $3 million design fee to turn the Grand Haven Golf Club into American Dunes because this course is unlike any other. The profits are given as scholarships to the children of fallen military members through the Folds of Honor Foundation.

The memorial looks like an open-air tunnel, the walls covered with 13 plaques honoring fallen soldiers. You walk down the path, reading about the soldiers — and it hits you in your gut.

You look at the ground and the soldiers’ boot prints are cast in bronze; it’s as if you are walking with them.

Or maybe, they are walking with you.

American Dunes Golf Club
A soldier’s boot print is cast in bronze on the grounds of the American Dunes Golf Club in Grand Haven, Michigan. Photo by Rodney Coleman-Robinson/Detroit Free Press

“This place is so special,” said Wesley Bauguess, whose husband, Army Maj. Larry Bauguess, was killed in action while serving with the 82nd Airborne Division in 2007 in Pakistan.

A plaque there honors him.

“There’s just a sweet spirit there,” Wesley Bauguess said. “The course is majestic, but there is a deeper meaning. I think it is exceptional. American Dunes is pristine. Just breathe in the patriotism, breathe in the respect for our country and breathe in the respect for our service members.”

Wesley Bauguess’ two daughters have been given scholarships from American Folds, a foundation that has given out more than 29,000 scholarships worth about $145 million — 41 percent to minorities.

“A Folds of Honor scholarship far outweighs the dollar value,” Bauguess said. “It represents a group of amazing patriots who are remembering Larry. They’re remembering his daughters. They’re remembering us as a family.”

A most patriotic welcome

The pro shop reminded me of a Team USA store at the Olympics. Everything is Red, White and Blue.

The bar is decorated like a fighter pilot lounge. A missile is fixed to the wall and it has been turned into the beer tap. If nothing else, military people remain resourceful.

American Dunes Golf Club
The pro shop at American Dunes Golf Club in Grand Haven, Michigan. Photo by Rodney Coleman-Robinson/Detroit Free Press

Two miniature jets hang from the ceiling and the walls are covered with pictures of fighter pilots.

I played American Dunes with three close friends from college. Before playing, we went to the bar, and one of my friends asked the bartender to give us the full experience.

“You gotta have a shot of Jeremiah Weed,” she said.

My friend ordered a round of Jeremiah Weed, a chilled 100-proof whiskey favored by fighter pilots.

We raised our glasses and downed the shots.

Smooth as kerosene.

Golfing for a purpose

The greens fees are steep at $150 a round but easy to justify, at least in my mind: it’s for the children of fallen soldiers.

The golf carts are decked out with a fantastic speaker system, a Bluetooth connection and a video screen with a GPS system that gives yardage to the hole.

But that screen did something surprising.

As we left the clubhouse and headed to the first hole, Nicklaus automatically appeared on video and talked about the mission of the course.

American Dunes Golf Club
American Dunes Golf Club in Grand Haven, Michigan. Photo by Rodney Coleman-Robinson/Detroit Free Press

At the first tee, a worker gave each of us a nickel without explaining why, just hinting we would need it later. I slipped it into my pocket and forgot about it.

The course was tough but fair, and nearly every hole looked like a picture out of a golf magazine.

Near each tee, different plaques honored a fallen service member and one of Nicklaus’ 18 majors.

“I wanted to put everything in this place; it was really sacred and important to me,” said Air Force Lt. Col. Dan Rooney, the founder of Folds of Honor and the driving force behind American Dunes. “It’s the culmination of my life experience. American Dunes is the manifestation of my soul, as a PGA member and a pilot.”

Last fall at a news conference, Rooney leaned over and talked to Nicklaus.

“Have you ever been to a golf course opening like this in your career?” Rooney asked.

Nicklaus paused.

“I’ve never been to anything like this in my life,” Nicklaus said.

Rooney met with Nicklaus in February 2018 to discuss his vision and construction began in March 2019. The course opened this spring.

“We had weather issues,” Rooney said. “We had COVID issues. Literally, every week, there was another challenge or setback that presented itself. We got a massive windstorm that went through and did significant damage during construction. I mean, it was crazy, right. But we made it. And thank God we did.”

An honorable 18 holes

Near the 17th tee, there is a giant cross and players are urged to toss nickels in the grass in honor of the fallen, a long-standing tradition of pilots.

So I tossed my nickel at the monument.

I never served in the military but I covered the war in Iraq as an embedded reporter. I crossed the Iraq border in a truck, sitting on a box of explosives, shoulder to shoulder with Marines. I’ve stood on an aircraft carrier, watching jets take off. And I’ve sat in a bunker, wearing a gas mask, as missiles flew overhead.

American Dunes Golf Club
A cross sits between Nos. 17 and 18 at American Dunes in Grand Haven, Michigan. Photo by Jason Lusk/Golfweek

I’ve talked to commanders at the Pentagon, written about the injured at Walter Reed and have covered military funerals from Arlington National Cemetery to little towns across Michigan.

I can’t tell you how much respect I have for the military. They are true heroes, and I am in awe of their courage and sacrifice.

But the thing that always touched me, perhaps more than anything, was talking to the families of the fallen.

The wives — or husbands — left behind. The children growing up without a parent. Their sacrifice is profound.

When I finished this round of golf, I felt overwhelmed, thinking that in a small way, I was helping a family.

“It’s crazy because the golf course is so good but it’s the fifth thing somebody talks about,” Rooney said. “We wanted golf to be the reason they showed up but not the why. And I think that’s the thing that resonates in my heart. Most people talk about the memorial, they talk about the nickel in the grass, they talk about 1300. They talk about being in the bar. And they’re like, ‘Oh, yeah, Jack. Yeah, we played one of Jack’s courses, and it was one of the best we’ve ever played in our lives.’ ”

It was that and more.

As you leave the course, you walk through the memorial one last time, past several slogans: “Freedom is not free.”

“Honor their sacrifice. Educate their legacy.”

When I left, I’ve never felt so good after a round.

Inspired and uplifted.

Thankful and touched.

It was the most amazing 18 holes of my life.

And it had nothing to do with the golf.

Contact Jeff Seidel: jseidel@freepress.com. Follow him on Twitter @seideljeff. To read his recent columns, go to freep.com/sports/jeff-seidel.

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American Dunes Golf Club is expensive, but you should be lining up to play it. Here’s why.

All the profits from American Dunes go to Folds of Honor, a foundation Rooney created in 2007 for the families of American service members.

I’ve played a lot of special golf courses. Pinehurst No. 2, the Links at Spanish Bay and Arcadia Bluffs were certainly great experiences, but also very costly ones that left me feeling guilty when I tried to justify the green fees I paid.

That’s why I experienced sticker shock when I found out what it’s going to cost to play American Dunes Golf Club, a new course in Grand Haven that will have a grand opening May 2 after two years of construction.

The full summer rate for 18 holes: $150.

Call me old-fashioned, but there’s something that still feels exorbitant about green fees over $100.

Then I spoke with Air Force Lt. Col. Dan Rooney, who came up with the vision and spearheaded the effort to build American Dunes. And suddenly the price made sense. In fact, it more than made sense. It seemed like the best bargain in golf.

Carlos Monarrez is a staff writer for the Detroit Free Press, part of the USA Today Network.

That’s because 100% of the profits from American Dunes will be donated to Folds of Honor, the foundation Rooney created in 2007 that has provided over 29,000 scholarships totaling over $145 million for the families of deceased or disabled American service members.

“For me, I don’t look at it as a green fee,” Rooney said. “I look at it as the opportunity to change the life of a military family who’s had somebody killed or disabled defending your freedoms. And it feels very different.”

I visited the course in September when Jack Nicklaus, who waived his $3 million design fee, showed up to raise the flag for the first time. The course was still very much under construction, but I could see the beginnings of what Rooney was talking about. When I spoke with Rooney recently about the course, I got an even stronger sense of what will make the course and the experience of playing a round at American Dunes unique.

There are a lot of nice touches that honor service members, but the most striking and solemn touch is the memorial everyone must walk through to enter the course. It features 8-foot tall concrete walls and boot prints cast in bronze of soldiers killed in action.

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“It’s just very, very real,” Rooney said, “to look down and see their name and see the year they were born, the year they died and the theater in which they gave their life in, be it Iraq or Afghanistan, and then their family story right next to their boot prints. It’s a really emotional place.”

Every day at 1 p.m., or 1300 hours in military time, golf will pause on the course for a playing of “Taps” and a bell that tolls 13 times, signifying the 13 folds that bring the flag to its triangle shape.

There will be plaques at every hole honoring Nicklaus’ 18 major victories along with the story of a fallen military member.

Don’t worry, it’s not all about sad memorials. Rooney is an F-16 fighter pilot who served three tours of duty in Iraq, but he’s also a PGA teaching professional with a good sense of humor and an easy laugh. Heck, the guy’s call sign is “Noonan.” Appropriately, the club will feature the aviation-themed Squadron Bar, which looks exactly like the place cocky “Top Gun” pilots would hang out.

American Dunes has been so popular that sponsors have lined up to give the course, which from 1965 to 2018 was a tree-lined local favorite known as Grand Haven Golf Club, new life as a rugged dunes course near the Lake Michigan coastline. My favorite sponsor perk comes from Titleist, which donated Pro V1 range balls. That’s a little like letting a teenager use a Corvette for driver’s training.

“Not one penny of Folds of Honor money has been used to construct or operate this place,” Rooney said. “It’s all people stepping up saying, ‘Hey, let’s memorialize the birthplace of (Folds of Honor) and hopefully create an ongoing revenue source to generate more funds for scholarships.’ ”

OK, so let’s talk about the course itself. I haven’t played it but I’ve spoken with people who have and it sounds promising. Rooney said Nicklaus took the project to heart, visited the site eight times and crafted a fun but challenging course.

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“He poured it all in and everybody could see that,” Rooney said. “When you have a guy like Mr. Nicklaus pouring it all in, it makes a wake. You kind of get out of the way and sit there in awe and watch him hand sketch every contour on this golf course. And I’ve never designed one with him before, but I’m told that’s not that common.”

Nicklaus borrowed from his influences, like the par-3 12th hole that’s reminiscent of the Cypress Point’s famous 16th hole. Rooney leaned on his own influences as a fighter pilot, saying he wanted the course to play like a wild roller coaster through the sand dunes.

“And it does,” he said. “These dunes are just blown and cut and it’s just really fun. It’s certainly challenging from the back tees, but we didn’t build it to be brutally hard.”

If you want it to be hard, it can be hard. It has five sets of tees, though most will play it at 6,131 or 6,701 yards. But it tips out at 7,213 yards and features the 678-yard 14th hole into the wind that U.S. Open champion Gary Woodland sponsored.

“We tried it,” Rooney said with a laugh. “I can’t get to the fairway over the dunes.”

Sometime soon the course reviewers will arrive, pass judgment and perhaps bestow some rankings and honors. But before any of that happens, American Dunes is already taking flight. Rooney said about 40% of this year’s tee times are booked before the course even opens.

“We pick up the phone and we take a tee time and it’s a 10-minute discussion from the guy from Toledo who’s a Vietnam vet who’s bringing all his buddies up there,” he said. “But this is why he is coming. And that’s when you start realizing that we’ve touched a very patriotic nerve with people who love the game but who love their country as well.”

Then Rooney said something that touched me. He said American Dunes promises to be “the most patriotic round” you’ll ever play. I asked him what he meant.

“Because you’re playing for somebody else,” he said. “Golf is about the most myopic game in the world. But this is a round that you’re going to tee up on behalf of the 29,000 families that Folds of Honor has sent to school. It’s not about you. It’s going to be part of something bigger, to honor the sacrifice of our men and women and educate their legacy.”

Many of us have family and friends who have served in the military. I certainly do. My dad was in the Army and my father-in-law was stationed in England when he served in the Air Force during World War II. Neither man ever draped himself in the flag or crowed about his service but was proud to have done his duty. I respect the hell out of that.

“I think that’s what we’re seeing resonate with veterans but also people who love our country,” Rooney said. “And there’s a lot of those people out there who are seeking refuge or a place that they can come and say, ‘Hey, I love my country. It’s not perfect, but I love my country and I want to come celebrate it within the confines of the game I love to play.’ ”

It’s the kind of thing that makes you think there are more important things than green fees.

“I don’t think people are going to come to American Dunes and ever leave and not go tell 10 people about their experience,” Rooney said. “It’s that palpable and emotional. … And the first four or five things you’re going to tell them have nothing to do with the golf course you just played.”

Or the $150 you spent.

Contact Carlos Monarrez at cmonarrez@freepress.com and follow him on Twitter @cmonarrez.

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Folds of Honor: Countdown is on to opening of American Dunes Golf Club

It’s a big year for Folds of Honor. After having top billing this past weekend once again at the Atlanta Motor Speedway for the NASCAR race, the countdown is on to the May 2 opening of American Dunes Golf Club in Michigan. Later in May is the annual …

It’s a big year for Folds of Honor.

After having top billing this past weekend once again at the Atlanta Motor Speedway for the NASCAR race, the countdown is on to the May 2 opening of American Dunes Golf Club in Michigan. Later in May is the annual Patriot Golf Day over Memorial Day weekend.

The opening of American Dunes is what really makes 2021 a big year for Folds of Honor.

Jack Nicklaus, architect of more than 425 courses in 40 countries, has renovated what used to be Grand Haven Golf Club. It’ll reopen as American Dunes near the eastern shores of Lake Michigan. Grand Haven hosted the first golf tournament that would inspire the formation of Folds of Honor and Patriot Golf Day.

Once the tee sheet opens, all profits from American Dunes – a Jack Nicklaus Signature Golf Course – will be donated to Folds of Honor.

Nicklaus is one of many giving an assist to Folds of Honor, which started in 2007 and has more than 28,000 educational scholarships for spouses and children of disabled veterans and fallen soldiers.

Over the weekend, the NASCAR race provided another great opportunity for Folds of Honor to remind sports fans what its mission is about.

Folds of Honor
Ryan Blaney celebrates his win in the Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 NASCAR race at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Sunday, March 21, 2021, in Hampton, Georgia. (Photo: Curtis.Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via Associated Press)

Folds of Honor was started by U.S. Air Force Reserve Lieutenant Colonel Dan Rooney, a pilot, who was once a decent golfer but not good enough to make a career out of it.

“Thank God I wasn’t a great putter because I probably wouldn’t have gone in the military, and Folds of Honor would have never happened,” Rooney once told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Rooney’s efforts are most evident every Labor Day weekend, when Folds of Honor conducts Patriot Golf Day to raise money that helps fund the scholarships. The deadline to submit a scholarship application is March 31.

Golfweek’s Jason Lusk contributed to this article.