Former Rhode Island club (designed by Donald Ross) now slated to become a supermarket and 800 apartments

In 2018, Golfweek reported the club was preparing itself for a sale. A group led by Brad Faxon bought it.

EAST PROVIDENCE, R.I. – New renderings of a planned development of the former Metacomet Golf, a historic Donald Ross design, show a supermarket-anchored suburban shopping center flanked by more than 800 apartments.

Developer Marshall Properties purchased the golf course in 2019 and two years later won city approval to build on the 140-acre property off Veterans Memorial Parkway over fierce resistance from neighborhood residents.

Back in November 2018, Golfweek reported on the prospects of Metacomet Golf Club – which had amassed significant debt, primarily in the form of back taxes – as it prepared itself for a sale. Three suitors emerged, with the membership eventually settling on a group that included PGA Tour great Brad Faxon. The reported sale price was $2.2 million.

The plans submitted to the city Waterfront Commission show that the whole development would be branded “The Met.” The shopping plaza, with 163,000 square feet of commercial space over several buildings, would be at the front of the complex, closest to the parkway, the East Bay Bike Path and the Providence River.

A mix of retail stores and apartment buildings

Most customers would enter the complex through a new roundabout built where Veterans Memorial Parkway meets Lyon Avenue. The main access road leads to an unnamed supermarket and an internal roundabout feeding cars to smaller shops and the apartment buildings.

The commercial buildings include restaurants and a drive-through bank. Some of the shops front a walkway that leads to what looks like an amphitheater.

Nine apartment buildings would occupy the northeast half of the development and include 844 rental units, according to a market study submitted to the Waterfront Commission. There would also be 22 duplexes and 24 townhouses.

The study says Marshall intends to rent 10% of the units to residents who make 80% of the Area Median Income.

The apartment buildings range from three to five stories with hotel-style double-loaded corridor layouts. Some feature basement parking garages to supplement the surface parking lots around them. There are 1½ dedicated spaces per unit.

At least three of the buildings are advertised as “senior living.”

Why did neighbors oppose the development?

The first work on the Metacomet site began last year to reduce the 18-hole golf course to nine holes.

The contentious fight over a city zoning change to make way for the development focused on whether the golf course should be developed at all, and, if so, how much open space should remain.

When fully built, the Metacomet development will generate $5.3 million in annual tax revenue to East Providence, 4Ward Planning estimates, $4.9 million when the cost of providing municipal services is deducted. (4Ward did not attempt to estimate the additional educational costs of the new residences.)

Marshall Properties presented the renderings and a video about the development to the East Providence Waterfront District Commission last month.

Waterfront Commission Chairman William Fazioli said Thursday that the developer did not say which parts of the complex would be built first, or if it would happen in phases.

He said the commission will probably begin its review in February.

Lianne Marshall, owner of Marshall Properties, did not return a phone call Thursday. The developer has said little to the media since parting company with a public relations firm after the permitting process.

Metacomet
Metacomet

The renderings show the shops and parking lots overlooking the Frederick Law Olmsted-designed Veterans Memorial Parkway and shimmering Providence River, with downtown Providence in the background.

Candy Seel of Keep Metacomet Green, the resident group that fought the development, said Thursday that in meetings Marshall has described a two-phase development, with the shopping center built first and homes later.

“As to whether Keep Metacomet Green thinks that these renderings look better or worse than we expected, 60+ acres of dense commercial and residential development bordering the historic parkway and the surrounding neighborhoods filled with family residences, an elementary school and a public park is completely out-of-scale no matter how the pieces are put together,” Seel wrote in an email.

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Brad Faxon defends Rory McIlroy’s putting, major record and calls out negative media

“When Rory McIlroy finishes tied for sixth in a major, the world is going to end according to some of the media.”

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Over the last two seasons, Rory McIlroy has finished T-8 or better in seven of the eight majors with the lone outlier being the 2023 Masters where he missed the cut.

Yes, he has yet to break his major drought that stems to 2014, but he has been in the mix more than any other player in the world. In fact, over the last eight majors, McIlroy is 41 under. That’s five shots better than Scottie Scheffler, the next best player who has teed it up in all eight.

Many in the media, many on social media, blame the putter for McIlroy’s inability to get it over the finish line at the game’s biggest events.

Brad Faxon — McIlroy’s putting coach — is tired of hearing it.

“He didn’t have a great putting couple of days but he had a great final round and a great putting week,” Faxon said during an appearance on Golf Channel. “And you know, when Rory McIlroy finishes fifth in a major, tied for sixth in a major, the world is going to end, according to some of the media.

“It bugs me to no end, and what particularly bugs me, and I hope whoever posted this one is listening now, because when other instructors want to criticize Rory’s stroke or Rory or potentially me, when they don’t know anything about how a player thinks and what motivates them, what drives them, it’s beyond reproach.”

McIlroy hasn’t played since the Open, but returns next week for the first event of the FedEx Cup Playoffs, the FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis — he missed the cut in 2022. The Northern Irishman is hoping to win his fourth FedEx Cup at East Lake later this month.

Brad Faxon, Smylie Kaufman officially join NBC, Golf Channel for 2023; new roles announced for other network talent

Last month Golfweek first reported Brad Faxon and Smylie Kaufman would replace Gary Koch and Roger Maltbie.

Last month Golfweek was first to report that Brad Faxon and Smylie Kaufman would be joining NBC Sports and Golf Channel in 2023 to fill the places of Gary Koch and Roger Maltbie. On Tuesday the network made the move official.

Faxon, an eight-time winner on the PGA Tour, will be a hole announcer and contributor for NBC Sports’ studio coverage and will debut next month at the Honda Classic. Kaufman, also a winner on Tour, will join Notah Begay III, Arron Oberholser and John Wood as an on-course reporter. The network also announced that Curt Byrum will serve as an announcer, taking the place of fan-favorite David Feherty, who left to work for LIV Golf.

“We have the deepest roster in the game and are excited to showcase our new voices in Brad and Smylie as well as familiar faces in new roles as we start the 2023 PGA Tour season this week at Kapalua,” said Molly Solomon, Golf Channel’s executive producer.

Maltbie, 71, and Koch, 70, were told the network wanted to “refresh” its team. Meanwhile, Golf.com has reported Mark Rolfing, 73, has re-upped with the network with a multi-year deal that begins this week at the Sentry Tournament of Champions.

Damon Hack and Cara Banks will be reporters for tournament coverage while Dan Hicks and Paul Azinger will return to their respective play-by-play and lead analyst roles for a fifth consecutive year.

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Smylie Kaufman, Brad Faxon to join NBC Sports/Golf Channel in 2023; Curt Byrum gets David Feherty’s seat

Golfweek has learned from multiple sources that Brad Faxon and Smylie Kaufman will join NBC Sports and Golf Channel.

Golfweek has learned from multiple sources that Brad Faxon and Smylie Kaufman will join the NBC Sports and Golf Channel announce team beginning in 2023.

Golfweek was first to report that Gary Koch, 69, and Roger Maltbie, 71, wouldn’t be returning for next season. The network told Maltbie and Koch the decision was made to “refresh” the team for the future.

Faxon, 61, won eight times on the PGA Tour and twice on the PGA Tour Champions and is renowned for his putting stroke. He still works with Rory McIlroy as a putting coach. He broke into the TV business in 2010 with NBC Sports, doing seven events before shifting to competing on the senior tour when he turned 50.

He was the lead golf analyst for Fox Sports for five years when the network held the rights to USGA events including the U.S. Open. Since NBC reacquired those package of events, Faxon has provided analysis for Sky Sports, the subscription-based channel in the United Kingdom and Ireland, which along with NBC and Golf Channel are owned by Comcast.

Faxon is expected to take over one of the tower assignments and will contribute to various ancillary programming such as the popular “Live From” show at majors. Faxon declined to comment.

Rory McIlroy, Brad Faxon
Rory McIlroy and Brad Faxon at a practice round ahead of the 2019 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach Golf Links. (Photo: Warren Little/Getty Images)

Kaufman, 31, played at LSU and won the PGA Tour’s Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in 2015 and played in the final group of the 2016 Masters, but has struggled with his game in recent years and no longer is an exempt player. He worked for ESPN and contributed to coverage of the PGA Championship and NBC’s Peacock coverage of the U.S. Open, as well as the U.S. Junior and a handful of fall events for the Golf Channel.

Kaufman is expected to be an on-course analyst and viewed as a direct response to CBS’s hiring of Colt Knost, who went from a part-time role last year to a full-time gig this season.

Former Golf Channel host Gary Williams said of Kaufman on his podcast “5 Clubs,” that Kaufman has a savant-like ability to talk like himself and give a thought in 12 seconds.

“Is it my path forever? I don’t know,” Kaufman told Williams of doing TV. “But for right now it seems to be what I enjoy doing. We’ll see. I think right now it seems to be the way I’m headed.”

Kaufman didn’t respond to phone or text messages.

Golfweek has also learned that Curt Byrum is in line to be elevated to the top PGA Tour team and work in the “super tower,” assuming the spot of David Feherty, who left to join LIV Golf in late July, and that Justin Leonard will scale back his TV role as he focuses full time on the senior circuit.

Byrum, 63, won the 1989 Hardee’s Classic on the PGA Tour, and has served as an analyst with Golf Channel since 2001. When Golf Channel and NBC merged, Byrum was the one Golf Channel analyst to be bumped immediately up to NBC.

“He’s both underrated and underappreciated,” said one NBC Sports veteran, who was not at liberty to speak on the hirings because details still were being finalized.

When reached on the phone, Byrum said that his current contract expires in December and he’s “thrown his hat in the ring but nothing confirmed as of yet.”

Leonard, 50, has spent the last few years as an analyst and contributor to “Live From.” But the former British Open champion, who last played as many as 13 Tour events in 2015-16, has made the decision to play full-time on the Champions Tour. Last year, he played his PGA Tour swansong at the Valero Texas Open and made four starts on the Champions Tour after turning 50, with a best result of T-14 at Furyk & Friends. Leonard may make a few cameo appearances with NBC, such as at the Ryder Cup. Notah Begay III, who also turned 50 earlier this year and played twice on the Champions Tour, is expected to build his playing schedule around his TV role.

An NBC Sports spokesman responded by saying, “We’re focused on celebrating Roger Maltbie and Gary Koch at the PNC Championship later this month and will be announcing any additional changes to our lineup early in the new year.”

NBC is expected to announce the hirings shortly, but may wait until after the PNC Championship, which ends Dec. 18, out of respect for Koch, who will be doing his last event.

NBC is following in the footsteps of CBS, which in late 2019 cut ties with Peter Kostis and Gary McCord as part of a youth movement in its announcing crew. Nick Faldo, 65, retired in August and The Eye promoted Trevor Immelman, who turns 43 on Dec. 16, to the top analyst position next to Jim Nantz.

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Greg Norman and Brad Faxon are now Florida neighbors

World Golf Hall of Famer Greg Norman reportedly just bought a new home in Palm Beach Gardens near Brad Faxon.

Brad Faxon has a new neighbor. And a former fellow TV analyst.

Faxon and his wife Dory, a real estate agent, live in the Old Palm Golf Club community in Palm Beach Gardens where World Golf Hall of Famer Greg Norman reportedly just bought a new home. Both Faxon and Norman were part of FOX’s golf coverage.

Norman and his wife, Kiki, sold Tranquility, their eight-acre estate on Jupiter Island, for $55.1 million on April 7.  The buyer reportedly is the family of Les Wexner, chairman emeritus of L Brands, owner of Victoria’s Secret.

“I know which house he bought, the Lashingers’ house. I read what he paid for it ($12.2 million) — I never know if that’s true,” said Faxon at the Chubb Classic presented by SERVPRO at Tiburón Golf Club, where Norman designed both courses.

Norman also is the tournament founder and host of the QBE Shootout, the PGA Tour team event played at Tiburón since 2001. This is the first year the Black Course has hosted the PGA Tour Champions tournament. The Shootout and the CME Group Tour Championship on the LPGA tour have both been played on the facility’s Gold Course.

Old Palm’s golf course was designed by Raymond Floyd, and has had several tour pros call it home at some point. Ernie Els was the most recent to leave.

“When we moved down, Ian Baker-Finch lived there, Louis (Oosthuizen), Charl (Schwartzel), Branden Grace, Shane Lowry’s renting in there,” Faxon said. “(Lee) Westwood lived there.”

Rory McIlroy also owned a home there, but reportedly bought Els’ home at The Bear’s Club.

And Faxon said Els has sold his place and moved near Seminole Golf Club.

“Now it’s like everything in Florida is sold out,” he said. “There’s no places left anywhere. It’s crazy.”

Norman’s new 11,837-square-foot house sits on two acres and features six bedrooms, seven full bathrooms and two half-baths. The property also has a tennis court, guest house and a massive resort-style pool with a swim-up bar.

Tiger Woods’ ex-wife,  Elin Nordegren, paid $9.4 million for a home there in September.

Norman has reportedly wanted to return to Australia after battling COVID-19 late last year. Norman also sold his Seven Lakes ranch in Colorado for $52 million in March.

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Brad Faxon on Brooks Koepka’s injury: Range chatter suggests Koepka could be out 6-8 months

When Brad Faxon was asked on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio what he’d heard regarding Brooks Koepka’s injury, he indicated the outlook wasn’t good.

As late as Sunday evening, Brooks Koepka’s plans for the Masters in two weeks remained uncertain. Koepka confirmed to Golfweek that he had undergone surgery on his right knee last week and was undecided whether he’d compete at Augusta National Golf Club next month.

Koepka withdrew from the Players Championship on March 7, and has not competed since. He offered a little more detail about the injury to Golfweek, writing in a text message that he suffered “a right knee cap dislocation and ligament damage.”

In his past two Masters starts, Koepka has finished T-7 and T-2. He’s a monster in majors, which obviously has the golf world talking about how serious this injury really is, and when we might expect to see Koepka return to action.

Brad Faxon was asked that question during an appearance on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio on Tuesday and said that talk around the Honda Classic indicated it’s serious.

“I think this is a really tough question to answer. There was rumors around here, the Honda Classic was last week where I live, I was on the range with caddies and talking, and I have instructor friends, I think this injury is way more serious than Koepka’s letting on,” said Faxon.

“I’ve heard, you know, patella injury, post collateral ligament, PCL. I’ve dealt with multiple ACL injuries, and I’ve heard rumors he’s out for six to eight months,” he continued. “So I don’t think the Masters has a chance. I’m not saying I want that to happen for Brooks in any reason. We need him on the Tour. He’s a hell of a player, but I think he’s going to battle this one. PCL’s a tough injury to get over. Couple that with the other parts of the knee that got injured and we may not know the true story … but I know we’re pulling for him.”

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Brad Faxon on Brooks Koepka’s injury: Range chatter suggests Koepka could be out 6-8 months

When Brad Faxon was asked on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio what he’d heard regarding Brooks Koepka’s injury, he indicated the outlook wasn’t good.

As late as Sunday evening, Brooks Koepka’s plans for the Masters in two weeks remained uncertain. Koepka confirmed to Golfweek that he had undergone surgery on his right knee last week and was undecided whether he’d compete at Augusta National Golf Club next month.

Koepka withdrew from the Players Championship on March 7, and has not competed since. He offered a little more detail about the injury to Golfweek, writing in a text message that he suffered “a right knee cap dislocation and ligament damage.”

In his past two Masters starts, Koepka has finished T-7 and T-2. He’s a monster in majors, which obviously has the golf world talking about how serious this injury really is, and when we might expect to see Koepka return to action.

Brad Faxon was asked that question during an appearance on SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio on Tuesday and said that talk around the Honda Classic indicated it’s serious.

“I think this is a really tough question to answer. There was rumors around here, the Honda Classic was last week where I live, I was on the range with caddies and talking, and I have instructor friends, I think this injury is way more serious than Koepka’s letting on,” said Faxon.

“I’ve heard, you know, patella injury, post collateral ligament, PCL. I’ve dealt with multiple ACL injuries, and I’ve heard rumors he’s out for six to eight months,” he continued. “So I don’t think the Masters has a chance. I’m not saying I want that to happen for Brooks in any reason. We need him on the Tour. He’s a hell of a player, but I think he’s going to battle this one. PCL’s a tough injury to get over. Couple that with the other parts of the knee that got injured and we may not know the true story … but I know we’re pulling for him.”

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Lynch: Brad Faxon’s greatest success at Bay Hill came when Rory McIlroy won there

In 2018, Rory McIlroy ended a long winless spell at the API just six days after he had started working with Brad Faxon on his putting.

ORLANDO, Fla. — Brad Faxon competed in the Arnold Palmer Invitational 24 times and banked more than $600,000 at the tournament, but his greatest success at Bay Hill came in a year when he didn’t play, didn’t even come to the course, and lost $1,800.

That was in 2018, when Rory McIlroy ended an 18-month winless spell at the API with the most dominant putting display of his career. Just six days earlier, McIlroy had started working with Faxon, one of the most celebrated putters in PGA Tour history.

“Look, I think I had a little bit to do with it but I didn’t have a lot to do with it. He’s so talented, just letting him be more like himself is a big part of it,” the self-effacing veteran said Wednesday at Bay Hill, where he twice finished runner-up.

Three years ago, Faxon had been playing a PGA Tour Champions event in Newport Beach, California, when he got a text on Saturday night from McIlroy asking if they could meet two days later at the Bear’s Club in Jupiter, Florida. “I had booked a flight to come home Monday morning out of LAX and it was JetBlue with the big lie-down chairs. I got it for like $300,” Faxon said, still laughing at the memory. “I had to go online to American Airlines and change my ticket. It cost me, like, $1,800.”

He texted his wife, Dory, to tell her he’d be home early on the redeye. “So you like Rory McIlroy more than you like me?” she texted back.

“Right now, yes,” he replied, with an impressive mix of courage and foolhardiness.

Eamon Lynch
Eamon Lynch

Their scheduled hour on the Bear’s Club putting green that March 12 morning turned into three before McIlroy flew up to Orlando. Victory came six days later and since then McIlroy has added wins at the Players Championship, a WGC and the FedEx Cup. He credits his putting guru with helping him to those wins.

“We all get into this mindset out here that you need to do everything absolutely perfectly, and you don’t,” McIlroy said. “That’s one of the big things. That mindset of not trying to get to perfection sort of frees you up. That’s what he’s given me. Any time I spend time with him I feel like I have a little more freedom, or there’s not as much pressure on me to hit perfect shots.”

“I went away from that at Riviera because I was thinking so much about my swing and trying to be perfect. And I was like, ‘Well, that doesn’t work!”

The World No. 8 missed the cut at that Genesis Invitational, his first weekend off since the 2019 Open Championship at Royal Portrush. He begins his latest effort at Arnie’s place coming off another top-six finish at last week’s WGC-Workday Championship. McIlroy is nearing the end of a stretch where he will have played seven events in eight weeks, so Faxon drove up from his home in Palm Beach Gardens Wednesday morning to walk along during the pro-am.

“It’s the whole approach to things, you know?” McIlroy explained when asked what they discussed along the way at Bay Hill. “There’s times when you need to work on technique and focus on that aspect, but sometimes you just need to visualize things and feel it. I went down a path with my putting that was a little more technical, and he’s just brought a little more feel back into it. And that sort of can bleed through the rest of my game, which is nice.”

Faxon admitted that he was apprehensive during that first session with McIlroy. “Rory’s not an intimidating person as far as personality goes. He’s an easy guy to like and to get to know, but I was extremely nervous because I take what I do very seriously,” he said. “I know how good a player he is and how good he wants to be. I didn’t want to screw up my first chance.”

Rory McIlroy, Brad Faxon
Rory McIlroy and Brad Faxon at a practice round ahead of the 2019 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach Golf Links. (Photo: Warren Little/Getty Images)

He didn’t. McIlroy had just 100 putts for 72 holes that week. “Turned out better than I could have dreamed,” Faxon said, laughing. Their relationship today is one of relaxed comfort.

“As I’ve gotten to know him, I can say things that I would have been afraid to say at first. I can throw my opinion out there. I can use my experience,” the coach said. Faxon’s career success—he won eight times on Tour—means that work conversations between he and McIlroy differ from those of a typical putting coach.

“We talk very little about mechanics, about things like path and face rotation,” Faxon said. “We talk more about situations.”

The two play together occasionally at home in Palm Beach Gardens. “I played with him recently at the Grove,” the short-hitting senior said with a wry smile. “Same tee. There were times he didn’t outdrive me by more than 30 or 40 yards.”

He paused for a beat. “There were some that were 60 yards.”

Now nearing 60, Faxon won’t be emulating his student’s prodigious distance. But nor will McIlroy mirror Faxon’s infamous pursuit of a better swing, a quixotic career-long quest that led to him seeing dozens of instructors over the years.

“I do love the fact that he has a curious mind and he’s not afraid to try things,” McIlroy said. Then he added with a grin: “But he’s never gone to see anyone about his putting.”

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Bryson DeChambeau: Camera operator was ‘waiting for me to do something bad’

On Brad Faxon’s SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio show Just the Fax, Bryson DeChambeau offered further explanation on the cameraman incident.

Bryson DeChambeau made headlines heading into the Rocket Mortgage Classic for his rebuilt physique, his voracious appetite, his prodigious length and his stellar play.

He left Detroit on Sunday with his sixth PGA Tour title, a three-shot victory over Matthew Wolff which put another $1.35 million (before taxes) in his bank account.

But the moment that is sticking with many is an incident on the 7th hole, in which DeChambeau castigated a television camera operator for videotaping his mediocre bunker shot and ensuing reaction.

“He was literally watching me the whole entire way up after getting out of the bunker, walking up next to the green. And I just was like, ‘Sir, what is the need to watch me that long?’” DeChambeau told Golf Channel’s Will Gray after his round. “I mean, I understand it’s his job to video me, but at the same point, I think we need to start protecting our players out here compared to showing a potential vulnerability and hurting someone’s image.”

On Monday, during an interview on Brad Faxon’s SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio show Just the Fax, DeChambeau offered further explanation.

I was trying to show, or explain to people that I hope we all have respect for all the players out here because, you know, the guy was videoing me for over a minute after I made my shot and I didn’t understand that. I hope people realize it’s not a knock on the cameraman at all. I understand he’s doing his job. I love all the cameramen that do their jobs out there, but I just feel like, we need to have a mutual level of respect. That’s all. There’s nothing more to be said. I have the utmost respect for them. Hopefully he has the utmost respect for me and has the forethinking, the foreknowledge to be able to say ‘Hey, look, there’s no reason’ to video me for a minute and a half after I hit a shot. But I get that. We’re all entertainers. They’re doing their job, I’m doing my job the best I can. I just felt like he was videoing me, waiting for me to do something bad. But I didn’t. And so I was going, OK man, I’d really appreciate it if you’d, you know, just kind of went off on me, you know, instead of videoing me for a minute and a half after a shot that wasn’t the best.

DeChambeau is taking this week off, forgoing the Workday Charity Open at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio.

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As legal questions swirl, Faxon says ‘full steam ahead’ on Metacomet deal

Metacomet Golf Club, a Donald Ross design in Providence, is expected to be sold by a group that includes Brad Faxon, despite a lawsuit.

In February, it was announced 2020 likely would be the final season for Metacomet Golf Club, a historic Donald Ross design in East Providence, Rhode Island. 

But the club is not slipping away without a fight from several members. 

The club’s ownership group, Metacomet Property Company, which includes 8-time PGA Tour winner and Fox Sports analyst Brad Faxon, announced in February it had reached an agreement to sell the club to Marshall Properties Inc., a Pawtucket-based real estate developer that intends to convert the waterfront site into mixed-use offices and condominiums. 

On Mar. 19, Golf Digest reported a group had filed suit against MPC, which had acquired the club only a year earlier. The seven-count lawsuit cited “breach of contract and good faith, misrepresentation and fraud.” 

The suit is only on behalf of one group of members and would not resolve all potential claims against MPC. Questions popped up if the real estate deal might be in danger of falling apart. 

Eight-time PGA Tour winner Brad Faxon, seen in 2019, is part of a winding tale of a Rhode Island golf club. 

On Mar. 29, Faxon dismissed the notion as “unfounded,” writing in a text message to Golfweek that the deal was moving “[f]ull steam ahead. [The] lawsuit was withdrawn and statement forthcoming from plaintiffs saying they were without cause and developer is proceeding onward.” 

While the plaintiffs’ attorney, Christopher Mulhearn, did not respond to calls and emails requesting confirmation of this claim, publicly available court records indicate that the case is still open, at least for now. On Apr. 6, an Entry of Appearance – a document identifying legal representation for one of the parties in a case – was registered in court. 

Back in November 2018, Golfweek reported on the prospects of Metacomet Golf Club – which had amassed significant debt, primarily in the form of back taxes – as it prepared itself for a sale. Three suitors emerged, with the membership eventually settling on Faxon’s group. The reported sale price was $2.2 million. 

It seemed like a match made in heaven: A golf course with an ironclad “player’s club” pedigree and the bones to reassert itself as one of the best layouts in New England, and an ownership group led by a Rhode Island celebrity and philanthropic leader who also happened to have grown up there. Faxon and his father, Brad Faxon Sr., are former Metacomet club champions. 

In a letter to the club’s board accompanying their proposal, MPC positioned Faxon as their point man for any alterations to the golf course, citing his “unquestioned expertise in golf course design, style, and playability.” 

To help Metacomet dig its way out of its financial hole, MPC proposed to develop real estate on the 11th hole and part of the long par-3 12th. This would necessitate rerouting the golf course, a job that was earmarked for Gil Hanse, a longtime friend of Faxon’s – in the 2000s the pair collaborated on the renovation of TPC Boston in Norton, Massachusetts. 

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However, Faxon said, there were serious impediments to rejuvenating Ross’s layout.

“The course is adjacent to tidal waters and has some smaller internally flagged wetlands that if we did even minor work we would have to get approvals from DEM [Department of Environmental Management], CRMC [Coastal Resources Management Council] and maybe even Army Corps [of Engineers],” Faxon wrote. “Any meaningful work would have required millions of dollars and closing [the] course for at least a year.”

Hanse’s design partner, Jim Wagner, who visited Metacomet in March 2019 – before MPC closed on the sale – said no formal master plan was ever developed for the club.

In 2019 MPC made some improvements – some trees were limbed or removed, the clubhouse interior received new flooring and a lick of paint to freshen things up – but the group also made moves the membership found off-putting. They experimented with allowing outside play at a handful of price points, causing grumbling among members who were still paying private club-level monthly dues. 

The new owners indicated that non-member play was seen in part as an opportunity “to market membership opportunities to all who play.” 

“They changed the logo and the sign out front,” said Eric Churchill, Metacomet’s club president at the time. “[But] they did not execute on their business plan. They never produced a marketing campaign to attract new members. … 

“They were shrinking our access to the golf course to accommodate public play. The public was increasingly using the members’ locker room, and even going through members’ lockers. It wasn’t a healthy environment.”  

Over the winter, events took a dizzying turn. The membership received two letters – one on Feb. 20, another on Feb. 27 – in which MPC announced its intent to sell the club. 

“Our high hopes and primary intent were to grow the club’s membership to levels necessary to support the club with minimal ‘outside’ play and to maintain the club as a private club,” the first letter read. “Based on the golf dynamics of the club and the state, and the downward trends of the golf industry, in general we do not see a path toward our ability to do that as a private or even semi-private club.” 

Just a week later, the group announced the sale to Marshall Properties. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Metacomet’s membership feels blindsided and betrayed by the loss of the club. 

“What’s so disheartening about this whole thing,” Churchill said, “is that when I had to announce the club was for sale [in 2018], we didn’t lose members. I wasn’t sure we’d even survive until the closing, but people offered to pre-pay their dues through the transition period. That was the kind of membership core we had.”

Steve Landi, general manager of Tri-State Golf – the company MPC beat out in the membership’s vote for the initial sale over the winter of 2019 – said they were not contacted by MPC with an opportunity for Tri-State to buy and maintain the club before MPC entered an agreement with Marshall. 

Questions endure in Metacomet’s final chapter. MPC, according to multiple reports, was spooked by losses of as much as $500,000 in its first year. It’s easy to imagine how the group may have felt it had tried to cut off too much of the dogleg, but was a single golf season enough time to really test the viability of its business model? Was it enough time to make the amenity investments that might have helped the club regain its competitive position?

“Everyone was hoping for a white knight to allow what was going on there to continue,” Brad Faxon told the Providence Journal on Mar. 8, “but without a strong capital infusion we were going to keep losing big money.” 

Of course, Metacomet members would be forgiven for believing that they’d already found their white knight – Faxon himself.