The Bahamas had a super fun celebration after winning an Olympic basketball qualifying tournament

This was HISTORIC for the Bahamas.

Although the Bahamas did not qualify for the FIBA World Cup, the national team just went on a wildly impressive stretch of play.

The team played four games in a FIBA Olympic Pre-Qualifying Tournament over the course of the last week. Despite a low world ranking (56) in FIBA, they won four games in a row, including two shocking wins over Argentina (ranked fourth in the world) while playing at Estadio Ciudad in Santiago del Estero, Argentina

By winning this tournament, the Bahamian national team can make a bid for the 2024 Olympics in France at the FIBA ​​Olympic Qualifying Tournaments next year.

The Bahamian national basketball team has never competed in the Olympics, so this was obviously exciting and the joy was palpable:

The Bahamas were led by Phoenix Suns teammates Deandre Ayton (15.5 ppg, 13.8 rpg and 1.3 spg) and Eric Gordon (20.3 ppg, 2.0 rpg, 2.3 apg, 1.3 spg). Gordon finished with 27 points while shooting 6-of-7 on 3-pointers.

Pacers wing Buddy Hield (19.8 ppg, 4.8 rpg, 3.3 apg, 2.3 spg) also played a massive role during the four-game tournament as well.

This was a huge step in the right direction for the Bahamas, coached by Warriors assistant Chris DeMarco. We wish we could see how they would fare in the upcoming FIBA World Cup!

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Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods together? Their names will be linked on this gorgeous Bahamas stretch known as Jack’s Bay

The new championship layout is expected to cost around $20 million to build and will sit on the thin island of Eleuthera.

As if Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods haven’t already shared enough sacred ground, now the two names will be forever linked in one of the prettiest places on the planet.

Nicklaus Design announced this week that the company’s first Nicklaus Heritage course will be located at Jack’s Bay in the Bahamas. The new championship layout is expected to cost in the neighborhood of $20 million to build and will sit on the thin island of Eleuthera, which is known for stunning white and pink sand beaches.

A short course already sits on the property, one designed by Tiger Woods and TGR Designs. “The Playgound” was completed in March 2020 and has holes ranging from 71 to 163 yards.

As for the new Nicklaus endeavor, it’s the first under a new moniker, one that, according to the company, will showcase “the senior designers from Nicklaus Design who have been personally trained by Jack Nicklaus over several decades. Nicklaus Heritage designs incorporate the design philosophies and values imparted to Nicklaus designers over their careers working with Jack on world-famous golf courses under Nicklaus Design’s Jack Nicklaus Signature brand.”

This project will be led by Chad Goetz, who has a portfolio of high-profile Spanish properties under his belt as well as redesigns or renovations projects at Royal Palm Yacht and Country Club in Boca Raton, Florida, and the Great Waters course at Lake Oconee, Georgia.

“It’s going to be spectacular,” Goetz said. “A number of holes stretch directly along on the ocean and even the land off the ocean has remarkable topography, featuring a rolling terrain of elevation changes, lakes, deep water ‘blue holes’ to the ocean, and caves. What Mother Nature has provided us is rare and we plan to preserve the natural integrity and enhance the beauty of the island.”

The project is expected to be completed in 2025. Here’s a look at the stunning property:

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Separate but spectacular: Disparate nines are just part of what makes Baha Mar such an interesting story

Bahamas resort offers opulence via three hotels and a scenic Jack Nicklaus golf course with separate but spectacular nines.

NASSAU, The Bahamas – From the 16th tee at Royal Blue, perched high above the green on the spectacular Jack Nicklaus Signature Golf Course at the uber-elegant Baha Mar Resort, there’s a sense you’re taking in the best the course offers.

The green isn’t on an island, rather a peninsula that juts into Lake Cunningham, taunting those above with a come-hither look but a difficult-to-hold putting surface. Although turquoise waves lap at Cable Beach close by, the lake water along the picturesque 16th is typically calm and dark, an unfortunate grave for far too many mis-hit shots.

Nerves are certain to be tested by this point in the round, as the course has wound through an irregular diet of holes, some that appear to be former swamp and others that look as if they could have been carved through the limestone-laden Queen’s Staircase, a popular tourist attraction in nearby Nassau.

Baha Mar in the Bahamas
Baha Mar in Nassau, the Bahamas, features three hotels: the Grand Hyatt, the SLS and the Rosewood. (Courtesy of Baha Mar)

Either elated or infuriated, players making their way out to the 16th green often have an epiphany of sorts — the look back toward the tee is even more striking as it reveals a series of rockscapes that look as if they could have been traversed by Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin. As odd as it may sound, it might be more interesting to look back on the 16th hole than to look forward. And considering how magnificent the view is looking forward, that’s an accomplishment.

But it’s also a perfect encapsulation of the entire resort, one that has risen from the ashes after once flaming out. Looking back at Baha Mar’s history might be just as interesting as looking ahead to its certain-to-be-brilliant future.

Because Baha Mar isn’t just a story of opulence and indulgence, but perseverance and persistence.

Before Royal Blue came to pass, another golf course sat on this property just west of the Bahamian capital, an additional chunk of bait used to lure potential travelers to this remote paradise. The course, then known as Cable Beach Golf Club, was loosely associated with the British Colonial Hotel nearly four miles to its east, and offered Floridians (and others from the nearby Southeast United States) a slice of home — a flat, tricky run of holes with a constant threat of water.

Baha Mar in the Bahamas
Jack Nicklaus designed the Royal Blue course at Baha Mar. (Courtesy of Baha Mar)

When Nicklaus’ group came in to revamp and add to what is now Royal Blue, designers stuck to the game plan, and smartly so. Although the front feels familiar, it’s an interesting run with just enough places to bail out and avoid the wet stuff.

As long as you can stay dry, the first few holes at Royal Blue ease you into the round. Views of the resort are ever-present in the opening stretch. Aside from the lengthy second hole, which is lined by a lake, it’s within reason for even average players to post a good number at the turn. Of course, staying dry isn’t exactly easy as considerable water hazards line eight of the first nine holes. Only the par-4 fifth is without water on the front, and that hole has so many bunkers it feels like an entire nearby beach must have been sacrificed.

And who’s to say any of this is easy? The resort itself has had trouble avoiding hazards, even those that seemed simple to navigate.

Originally a can’t-miss project in the hands of a billionaire native son – whose father had made his fortune through a monopoly of sorts in the peanut industry – the financial crisis of 2008 brought plans to a screeching halt. A Chinese conglomerate produced financing to pick the project back up, but then a steady flow of Chinese workers was imported, bypassing a largely unemployed island workforce. This wasn’t well-received by locals, who would often ridicule the project as a folly.

In 2016, before ever opening its doors and with work nearly complete, the resort declared bankruptcy, and it appeared this pristine combination of golf and surf would never get its day in the sun.

Fortunately a Hong Kong-based holdings company finally got the ball over the goal line, and guests have been coming ever since to three hotels — the aptly-named Grand Hyatt, which houses the vast majority of Baha Mar’s 2,300 rooms, the ritzy SLS and the super-swanky Rosewood.

As you’d expect, there’s more to do at Baha Mar than golf, as the largest casino in the Bahamas is surrounded by more than a dozen high-end restaurants, bars and lounges, including my favorite, Costa, offering upscale Mexican fare inside the elegant Rosewood. (I recommend lobster tacos and a side of brussels sprouts and mole.)

Baha Mar in the Bahamas
A lazy river flows at Baha Mar (Courtesy of Baha Mar)

But if you make it to Baha Mar, you do need to golf, mostly to be able to see a back nine that weaves its way through limestone and fun, starting with the short but interesting 10th hole, which drops from an elevated tee into what feels like a quarry. 

Unlike the front, there’s almost no water on the back aside from the aforementioned 16th and the fairways aren’t quite as tight, but there’s still plenty of trouble to be found. On No. 14, for example, the second shot on the par 4 comes into a green that’s unprotected on the front. Pull the ball left, however, and you’re certain to find jail in a thick batch of Caribbean pine that will be tough to wriggle free from. Misjudge the distance and hit it long, which is easy to do with an uphill approach, and you’ll find a 15-foot-tall limestone embankment that has been known to rocket the ball back as fast (and almost as far) as it came in.

After the tricky shot on 16, a pair of holes climb to the finish with 18 again using a wall of limestone and some well-positioned bunkers to give players one last thrill ride.

With a series of free-flowing tee boxes, Royal Blue can play as long as 7,189 yards, but it’s best to see the course from the distance that suits you best. “They’re suggestions,” said Andy Deiro, the director of golf and resident Kansas City Chiefs fan, when asked about the tee placements on the massive staging areas. “Have fun with them.”

Baha Mar in the Bahamas
A pool at Baha Mar (Courtesy of Baha Mar)

After the history Baha Mar has survived and emerged from, that’s probably good advice. 

The future looks bright at a resort that wound up costing more than $4 billion to complete. Royal Blue has triumphantly risen to No. 1 in Golfweek’s Best rankings in the Bahamas and top 20 overall on the 2022 list of top golf courses in Mexico, the Caribbean, the Atlantic islands and Central America.

But there have been many bleak moments in the not-too-distant past when it looked like this piece of paradise might never see players again come through. 

With a lack of drawbacks — perhaps the only one I can even muster is a lack of genuine beachfront views — there’s plenty to look forward to, for certain. Looking back at the property’s history makes that view even more worth savoring. 

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Akshay Bhatia tied for lead after two days at Korn Ferry Tour’s Bahamas Great Exuma Classic at Sandals Emerald Bay

Akshay Bhatia won for the first time on the Korn Ferry Tour this time last year.

Akshay Bhatia won for the first time on the Korn Ferry Tour this time last year. Nearing the halfway mark of the 2023 Bahamas Great Exuma Classic at Sandals Emerald Bay, he’s closing in on win No. 2.

Bhatia was 19 and making his first KFT start one year ago when he won. Here in 2023, he opened with a 67 Sunday – the KFT season opening tournament is a Sunday-through-Wednesday affair – and posted a 69 on Monday. He had four bogeys (and two birdies) on the front but closed with four birdies over his last eight holes, including Nos. 15, 16 and 17. Monday’s 67 came despite a double bogey. He is at 8 under. Play Monday was suspended due to darkness with 14 golfers still on the course.

Shad Tuten is also at 8 under after rounds of 69-67. Three golfers – Daniel Miernicki, Chandler Phillips and Cody Blick – are a shot back tied for third, although Blick is only through 15 holes.

Other notables in the field include Chase Seiffert (T-10), Grayson Murray (T-13), Camilo Villegas (T-48) and Willie Mack III (T-93).

First-round leader Jeremy Paul followed up his 65 with a 79 in the second round.

The purse this week is $1 million, with $152,272 going to the winner.

 

Watch: Shark turns on diver after botched feeding attempt

Dramatic footage shows a shark turning on a researcher who was trying to feed a fish to the predator with a pole spear.

Mauricio Hoyos Padilla, a Mexico-based shark researcher, has spent the past week diving in the Bahamas and sharing his adventures via social media.

On Friday, Hoyos Padilla shared a misadventure involving a shark that appeared to ram him after his failed attempt to feed the shark with a pole spear.

“I was killing lionfish in the Bahamas but when I was about to give the fish to the shark it got released from the spear and the shark was not happy with me,” Hoyos Padilla explained on Facebook. “I am ok, the shark never bit me at all.”

ALSO: Stunning footage shows ‘way of the orca’ while hunting dolphins

The dramatic footage (posted below) shows his attempted offering. But just before the shark tried to bite the lionfish it fell from the spear and the shark bit the spear tip instead.

That provoked a swift reaction to charge toward the diver before swimming off. Hoyos Padilla was not injured.

It’s worth noting that sharks are accustomed to being fed at some dive sites in the Bahamas. Also, divers and fishermen are encouraged to kill highly invasive lionfish because they threaten native marine life.

2022 Hero World Challenge merchandise is heavy on Tiger Woods and Nike

The gear in the merchandise shop, which is the club’s golf pro shop, is heavy with Nike products.

When Tiger Woods has felt the need to escape the rigors of competition, he’s headed to Albany Club, the luxury resort community on the southwestern end of the island and host of the Hero World Challenge this week.

This week, the gear in the merchandise shop, which is the club’s golf pro shop, is heavy with Nike products. No surprise there.

You can get yourself a TW hat and plenty of tournament logo editions. Nothing out of the ordinary – lots of tournament flags, shirts and headcovers – but if you want to rep the logo of a club where Tiger parks his yacht, Privacy, and Adam Scott, Justin Rose and others have prepped for the Masters, this is your chance to get a casino chip ball marker for your collection.

Check the yardage book: Albany for the Hero World Challenge

StrackaLine offers hole-by-hole maps of the Ernie Els design at Albany in the Bahamas, site of the Hero World Challenge.

The golf course at Albany in New Providence in the Bahamas – site of this week’s Hero World Challenge – was designed by Ernie Els and opened in 2010. It ranks as No. 24 on Golfweek’s Best list of courses in Mexico, the Caribbean, the Atlantic Island and Central America.

On the island of Nassau, the layout features five par 5s and five par 3s. Part of a resort community, it plays to 7,414 yards with a par of 72.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the players face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.

Notre Dame dismantles Ball State, 95-60

The Irish keep rolling.

The following is courtesy of Notre Dame athletics:

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — The most complete performance to date.

That was the way Karen & Kevin Keyes Head Coach Niele Ivey unquestioningly described her team’s 95-60 dismantling of Ball State (2-2) on Sunday at Purcell Pavilion to move to 4-0 on the year. No. 9 Notre Dame left little to no doubt from the start, scoring 27 points in both the first and second quarters and holding Ball State to just nine points in the second 10 minutes. Notre Dame led by as much as 39, and five Irish players finished with 10+ points for the second time this year.

A huge piece of that first-half deluge came as a result of guard Dara Mabrey’s five three-pointers before the break, the first time she’s had such a showing since sinking seven threes against Oklahoma in last year’s NCAA Tournament. Mabrey finished with a total of 19 points, three rebounds and three assists.

“Dara’s one of the best three-point shooters in the country,” Ivey said. “Seeing her light it up from the perimeter right away from the beginning of the game [is awesome].”

Notre Dame topped the Cardinals in every category, including bench points (41-17), fast breaks (19-11) and second chance points (15-6). The Irish blocked eight shots, including a season-high three from center Lauren Ebo. She had her first double-double in a Notre Dame uniform on Sunday, finishing with 11 points and 10 rebounds.

A couple of newcomers posted career highs in the points category against the Cardinals; graduate student and Stanford transfer Jenna Brown had 10, while freshman KK Bransford posted 16.

“It was special for me, and it was special for my teammates to see what I can bring to the team,” Bransford said after the game. “Tonight I felt really confident just knowing that [my teammates] have my back.”

Bransford went 8-8 from the free throw line and posted six rebounds as well. She is the lone freshman currently on the team, but she played like a veteran on Sunday.

The depth and contributions across the board bode well for Ivey, who has hopes of making the Final Four for the 10th time in program history.

“I think that we’re just scratching the surface.”

Notre Dame heads to the Bahamas this week to play in the Goombay Splash for a Thanksgiving tournament. First up is a match against American (0-3) on Thursday at 4:15 p.m. The contest can be streamed on FloHoops, and additional information about the tournament can be found here.

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Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

Tiger Woods announces field for 2022 Hero World Challenge, including seven of the world’s top-10 players

Seventeen of the world’s top 21 players will tee bound for the Bahamas this winter.

Professional golf’s best will be bound for the Bahamas once again this winter as Tiger Woods announced the initial field for his 2022 Hero World Challenge on Tuesday morning.

Seventeen of the world’s top 21 players will tee it up Dec. 1-4 in Albany, Bahamas, including defending champion Viktor Hovland, world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler and past champions Jon Rahm (2018), Hideki Matsuyama (2016) and Jordan Spieth (2014). Will Zalatoris, Cameron Young, Sungjae Im, Max Homa and Tom Kim will all make their Hero World Challenge debut, with three further exemptions to be announced at a later time.

Check out the initial field for the 2022 Hero World Challenge below (official world ranking as of Oct. 2 in parentheses).

2022 Hero World Challenge field

  • Scottie Scheffler (1)
  • Xander Schauffele (5)
  • Jon Rahm (6)
  • Will Zalatoris (7)
  • Justin Thomas (8)
  • Collin Morikawa (9)
  • Matt Fitzpatrick (10)
  • Viktor Hovland (11)
  • Sam Burns (12)
  • Jordan Spieth (13)
  • Tony Finau (14)
  • Cameron Young (15)
  • Billy Horschel (16)
  • Max Homa (17)
  • Hideki Matsuyama (18)
  • Sungjae Im (19)
  • Tom Kim (21)

Golf Channel will broadcast the event for all four rounds, with the third and final rounds airing on NBC. Tickets are available here, with proceeds benefitting the TGR Foundation, Tavistock Foundation and Bahamas Youth Foundation.

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Notre Dame heading to Bahamas for Thanksgiving weekend tournament

How would you like to spend Thanksgiving with the women’s basketball team?

We don’t know what will happen to Notre Dame this season. What we do know is the team will enjoy Thanksgiving dinner in a tropical paradise. That’s because the Irish are one of six programs to be invited to the 20th edition of the Goombay Splash in Bimini, Bahamas. The tournament begins Nov. 24, this year’s date for Thanksgiving, and ends Nov. 26 with each team getting either two or three games along the way.

The Irish’s first game will be played Thanksgiving against American, a first-time opponent. Arizona State awaits both teams regardless of the result because it plays the loser of the Thanksgiving game the next day and the winner the day after. George Mason and LSU face each other in the Thanksgiving game to determine who will play on which day.

If you have to be away from your family during a major holiday, it’s hard to pick against the Bahamas as a location. Don’t believe me? Let’s go back a few years and watch Central Michigan’s reaction to going to the inaugural Bahamas Bowl, which was held on Christmas Eve:

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Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89