James Achenbach, longtime Golfweek columnist and Masters Major Achievement Award winner, dies at 78

James Achenbach was one of a kind, writing about the people of golf with unmatched passion and enthusiasm.

James Achenbach – a wily, funny and infuriatingly clever golf writer who worked full-time for Golfweek for 24 years – passed away Friday, April 15. He was 78. His daughter, Omalley Ehren Abel, posted about his death on Facebook.

Achenbach’s initial forays into the pages of Golfweek began in the 1970s and grew into a full-time gig in 1991 after various stints at newspapers around the country, and he became a popular senior voice in golf writing. He attended more than 40 consecutive Masters, earning a personal parking spot at Augusta National Golf Club in 2010 along with the club’s Masters Major Achievement Award. He interviewed all the greats of the game, including Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Byron Nelson and many others. His breadth of knowledge was extensive, his enthusiasm catching.

In a career that started with persimmon-headed drivers and concluded after the introduction of hot-faced titanium rocket launchers, Achenbach put an emphasis on the people of golf. He had a particular affinity for amateur golfers and the many PGA of America professionals who promoted the game. He could hobnob with USGA or R&A executives just as easily as he would listen to the preachings of a local club fitter at a small, independently owned retail golf store. He was always happy to talk golf.

Tour pros were a source of amazement for Achenbach when it came to how they could swing a club, but they did not always receive such love when they strayed into controversial topics. For example, he once assailed Arnold Palmer’s support of non-conforming equipment that threatened to bifurcate the game. He feared the wrath of no one, be it Tour official or advertiser.

Family, his and others, was always special. Private about so much of his own life, his outward passion for people was contagious. Former Golfweek editor Jeff Babineau, on hearing of Achenbach’s passing, said they first met in Sarasota, Florida, while covering the old Bent Tree Classic. Achenbach had written a story about Nancy Lopez and her dad, Domingo, that Babineau says to this day is one of the most beautiful pieces he has ever read. Emphasis on ever, from an editor who has read many of the greats.

“There was no one who ever covered this game more passionate about golf and more passionate about relaying his love of the game to readers,” Babineau said. “He took it personally. Writing wasn’t work to James. It was a calling.”

Achenbach
James Achenbach is presented the Masters Major Achievement Award by Augusta National chairman Billy Payne for his contributions to golf writing at the 2010 Golf Writers Association of America dinner in Augusta, Georgia. (Golfweek files)

He earned multiple awards from the Golf Writers Association of America, and in his quirky way that was all Achenbach, he made his acceptance speech an ode to the copy editor. That seems fitting, as he didn’t like to speak too much about himself, often beginning personal stories with a large sigh to express his frustration and fear of boring a listener about himself. He worked at the Sarasota Tribune, covering Florida State football and Bobby Bowden at one point, and the Mesa Tribune in Arizona – there surely were other beats and newspaper gigs that he never brought up. He owned residences in Orlando, the California desert and Oregon, but his bosses never seemed to know exactly where he was – for writers of his era, that kind of freedom was a gift.

His laugh was like nobody’s, a deep three-part cadence that rose in volume: “Ha. Haaa. HAAAA!” If you heard that laugh down the hall, you couldn’t help but investigate.

I had the greatest pleasure to be his editor on the equipment beat at Golfweek for 10 years until his retirement in 2015, and never have I seen a person so in love with his job. Covering a U.S. Open or writing about hosel length and lead tape, keeping secrets about his whereabouts and scouring the entire world of golf for his next “big, big important story,” Achenbach would vigorously chase any idea deep into a rabbit hole of research and personal testing. No topic was too big, no subject too esoteric.

Achenbach was opinionated and incredibly informed. He earned both through years of banging away on various keyboards, first a manual typewriter and later a laptop. He once grew so exasperated at me for not running one of his stories in print that he wouldn’t pick up the phone for a week – it basically was a story about a stick that could be massaged into sore muscles to make a golfer feel better, but the science behind the premise was dodgy at best. A week after I held the story, he showed up in our Orlando newsroom unannounced, saying he flew all the way from his home in California to apologize for his anger in person. Because Golfweek used to run all the scores from just about every tournament that halfway mattered, I knew he actually was in Florida to play a senior golf event, but that kind of juggling was part of his charm. He was one of a kind, and now I wish I had run that damn story about the stick.

In dealing with personal affairs, Achenbach was a softy of the highest order. He wept when I told him of my wife’s leukemia diagnosis in 2013. I last saw him about four years ago, both of us happy to cross paths at the annual PGA Merchandise Show, and he started the conversation with questions about her treatment and well-being. He frequently checked in on co-workers and friends in such a kind manner, quick with encouragement and congratulations when appropriate. I wish I could tell him of my wife’s remission – he would be beaming.

He was rumored to be an ace at free throw shooting on a basketball court, and he was a single-digit-handicap golfer who couldn’t get enough, playing anywhere with just about anyone, an ever-present and sometimes decaying Yankees cap screwed tight upon his head. He loved golf clubs – absolutely adored them – and would always seem to have some new driver or shaft in his carry bag, a wedge from a small manufacturer, or a putter that promised much even if it never delivered. After his retirement, he loved to compete and write about The Society of Seniors golf organization, still contributing pieces to various publications and websites.

His first piece for a then-fledgling Golfweek – published on May 22, 1975 – introduced his love of amateur golf. His topic was Dorsey Luke’s charge to victory at the DeSoto National Amateur Handicap Golf Championship in Bradenton, Florida.

Achenbach's farewell column 2015
James Achenbach signed off with a retirement column that ran in Golfweek’s print magazine on August 31, 2015.

His retirement column focused largely on his greatest frustration with the game: slow play. His final words after 40 years spent in Golfweek’s pages focused on the problem, as he simply despised wasting time on a course. Published on August 31, 2015, and titled “Retiring from Golfweek, not from life,” that column is posted below:

 

By James Achenbach

I find it amusing that hack is a word equally suitable for bad golf or bad journalism. At times, I have been guilty of each.

However, as I retire and ride into the sunset – with Decisions on the Rules of Golf in my saddlebag – I will not be guilty of talking endlessly about my career. Too indulgent for my tastes.

After four decades involved with Golfweek, it is more important to me to recognize the role of club professionals in boosting golf and promoting fast play. The men and women who choose golf as a profession must be teachers, philosophers, arbiters, confidants and storytellers. They must have sharp minds and accurate memories. Ever try to remember the name of every person you meet? Welcome to the PGA of America.

Ken Morton Sr., a member of the PGA Hall of Fame, runs the 36-hole Haggin Oaks golf facility for the city of Sacramento (Calif.). In 1958, when he was 18, he took his first job at Haggin Oaks. Now, 57 years later, he is a legend.

The entire golf-oriented Morton family, through the Morton Golf Foundation, has raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for local charities. A scholarship program has helped send hundreds of underprivileged young golfers to college.

Another veteran club professional, Tommy Moore of Palmetto Golf Club in Aiken, S.C., is a prominent example of how one person can make a huge difference.

In the 1930s and 1940s, many famous golfers adopted a ritual of practicing at Palmetto before traveling a short distance to compete in the Masters. Eventually, Palmetto fell on hard times financially, and that’s when Moore came to the rescue. Thanks to his persistence, the historic club is recognized today not only as one of America’s great 19th-century (1892) golf treasures but also as a distinguished supporter of amateur golf competition.

Slow play is one of golf’s biggest enemies, but two club pros in the western United States deserve mention for leading the campaign to rid it from golf as if it were a malignant weed.

Dick Hyland, head professional at The Country Club at DC Ranch in Scottsdale, Ariz., has won the Ed Updegraff Award for exemplifying the spirit of golf in Arizona. He also was named 2014 Golf Professional of the Year by the Southwest Section of the PGA of America.

To Hyland, fast golf is a way of life. He likes to play an 18-hole round each week with a different member. As a twosome, they ride. No, they fly.

“We are the first group out,” Hyland said, “and we finish anywhere between one hour and 40 minutes and two hours. We never take more than two hours.”

Golf professional J.D. Ebersberger, co-founder of The Palms Golf Club in La Quinta, Calif., quickly established three hours and 15 minutes as a target time for completing 18 holes.

A big reason for Ebersberger’s 3:15 vision is the course layout. Ebersberger, a member of the Hall of Fame of the Southern California PGA Section, hired architect Brian Curley to create an innovative old-timey design in which greens and tees are close together.

Groups missing the 3:15 mark usually finish within 3:30. The 4-hour round of golf virtually is extinct at The Palms.

Top 10 tips from Hyland and Ebersberger:

  1. Give golf professionals the clear authority to approach and advise plodding groups; Hyland’s first words to any slow group: “What can I do to help you?”
  2. Forget honors entirely; play ready golf at all times.
  3. Concentrate on determining your yardage before it is your turn to hit.
  4. Try this guideline: From the time you pick up your coin, you have 15 seconds in which to hit a putt.
  5. Another guideline: In the age of plastic spikes, experiment with rounds in which continuous putting is mandatory.
  6. The first golfer to hole out should hold the flagstick and replace it.
  7. Never park a golf cart on the front side of the green; park it as close as possible to the point of exit from the green.
  8. After hitting a shot, keep your club in your hand. Replace it in the bag only after the cart has stopped at its next position.
  9. In the age of distance-measuring devices, try this on par-3 holes: Spray paint the exact yardage to the flagstick from various tee locations.
  10. Courses might keep and even post a time sheet, noting start time, turn time and finish time for all groups. “We’re not trying to embarrass anybody,” Ebersberger said. “We’re just trying to make everybody aware of the time involved.”

Now, without a writing job for the first time in decades, what can I do to express myself? Wrestling with slow play would be a worthy cause: writing in depth about fast play and ready golf, organizing qualified speakers, creating leadership awards for speedy players.

Playing quickly should be every golfer’s mandate. We can retire from our jobs, but we can’t retire from the havoc created by slow play.  Gwk

Beloved North Carolina golf writer Howard Ward dies at 84; covered 22 Masters

Ward became one of few writers inducted into the Carolinas Golf Association Hall of Fame in 2011.

North Carolina lost a huge contributor to its sports community this week with the death of former Fayetteville Observer editor Howard Ward, who died at the age of 84.

Ward spent 41 years working at the Observer, with 27 of them as spent as sports editor. In his time leading the department, he hired a core of reporters who would shape the award-winning section for many years to come.

Sammy Batten, who retired last year, is one of those reporters.

“I can say without a doubt he changed my life,” Batten said of Ward.

“He was always a pleasure to be around, always willing to do whatever he could to help you. Howard was so well-respected, especially in the golf community.

“I don’t know if I ever heard Howard say a cross word to anybody. He was just that kind of person.”

Batten also pointed out Ward’s hiring of former Observer reporter Kim Hasty to cover a wildly popular ACC sports beat at a time when there weren’t many women on the sidelines.

“He had the guts to hire her right out of college and she’s one of the most gifted writers I’ve ever been around,” Batten said.

Thomas Pope, Earl Vaughan Jr., Thad Mumau, Brett Friedlander, Sonny Jones, Jim Pettit, Eddie Southards and Scott Keepfer were also among Ward’s hires.

Ad department rack card of Fayetteville Observer-Times sports staff, 1993. Bottom: Earl Vaughan Jr. Middle row, from left: Jim Pettit, Pete Nicas, Brett Friedlander, Eddie Southards. Back row, from left: Jim Wilkie, Thomas Pope, Howard Ward, Sammy Batten

“He gave me a chance when I was a high school part-timer and it turned into a career that lasted 41 years,” said Pope, who retired as Observer sports editor in 2019.

“There’s no telling what in the world my life would be like if I hadn’t gotten that chance thanks to Howard.”

Ward began his Observer career as a printer’s apprentice before moving to the newsroom at the nudging of then-sports editor Ed Seaman.

“This was at the beginning of the 1966 Major League Baseball season, and the Yankees were searching for a replacement for the recently retired Mickey Mantle. I wrote a few paragraphs in longhand on the subject and gave it to Ed. ‘This is good,’ he said. ‘The next time I have an opening, why don’t you apply for the job?,’ ” Ward said in his acceptance speech during his Fayetteville Sports Club Hall of Fame induction in 2016.

Ward got the job, and wound up covering the Masters 22 times and the U.S. Open seven times, retiring in 1997 and then working as a golf writer for The Pilot in Southern Pines.

He became one of few writers inducted into the Carolinas Golf Association Hall of Fame in 2011.

Just over a week into his tenure at the Observer, Batten was sent off to Arizona to cover NC State football playing in what was then the Copper Bowl.

One of Pope’s early assignments was a Michigan State vs. UNC basketball game in which Magic Johnson played.

“He always gave me opportunities,” Pope said of Ward.

“He was easy-going, got along well with everyone, a really good guy to work for because he trusted you to do your job.”

Batten, who loves to tell the story of his hiring by Ward over a sandwich from the Bar-B-Que Hut as opposed to the standard steakhouse fare, added the moniker that his first Observer editor earned from a time when the newspaper offices were downtown.

“As long we’re around, people will be hearing about ‘Hay Street Howie.’ ”

Funeral services will be Tuesday at St. Matthews United Methodist Church on Hope Mills Road. Visitation will be at 1 p.m. and the service at 2 p.m.

In lieu of flowers, donations should be made to the Parkinson’s Foundation.

Fayetteville Observer sports editor Monica Holland can be reached at mholland@fayobserver.com.

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Legendary golf writer Vartan Kupelian dies at 73

Vartan Kupelian, a long-time Detroit News reporter who spent decades as one of the most respected golf writers in the country, has died.

Vartan Kupelian, a long-time Detroit News reporter who spent decades as one of the most respected golf writers in the country and who figured he had covered 168 major championships spanning all the tours throughout his career, died Thursday. He was 73.

His friend, George Eichorn, confirmed Kupelian’s death to The Detroit News.

Kupelian had been battling heart and diabetes complications for some time, having undergone quadruple-bypass surgery in May 2017.

“He could cover anything, he was that good,” said Mike O’Hara, Kupelian’s long-time friend and colleague at The News. “A sport he’d never heard of, he’d write 18 great inches.

“And he broke story after story after story, before Twitter, when you couldn’t recover in 20 seconds.”

Kupelian was born in Germany before moving to Michigan at a young age. He graduated from Highland Park High School, where he lettered in basketball and played golf (“but not very well”) and earned his degree from Wayne State, where he commuted to via bus every day, before eventually landing a job at The News.

He quickly ascended to Red Wings beat writer.

One of his most memorable assignments was to chronicle Gordie Howe’s time, nearing age 50, with the New England Whalers, just before Christmas in 1977.

“Going to Red Wings games with my father was a ritual,” Kupelian wrote following Howe’s death in 2016 — it was Kupelian’s last byline in The Detroit News. “He was a factory worker, but back then, even blue-collars could afford to sit in the upper deck or buy standing room and sit on the steps. That was a different time, in a lot of ways, but always special because we were privileged to see Howe, the greatest athlete I ever covered.”

Hockey was Kupelian’s first specialized beat, covering the Red Wings from 1974-88 — once, on the team flight, Bugsy Watson took and hid his typewriter; “Try explaining to the sports editor that you’ve lost a typewriter,” he once wrote — but wasn’t his last.

In 1994, he became The Detroit News’ golf writer, succeeding Jack Berry — 21 years after Kupelian covered his first golf major, Johnny Miller’s legendary win at Oakmont Country Club in Pennsylvania.

Among the majors he covered were two U.S. Opens at Oakland Hills, Andy North’s win in 1985 and Steve Jones’ in 1996, as well as the Ryder Cup, also at Oakland Hills, a European rout over the U.S., in 2004. He also covered three PGA Championships at Oakland Hills, won by Gary Player, David Graham and Padraig Harrington. Among his most memorable majors in Michigan was the 1991 U.S. Senior Open, when Jack Nicklaus outdueled Chi Chi Rodriguez. That ended in a playoff.

“Chi Chi was the perfect foil, who said things like, ‘I’m a little mouse and he’s a big bear, what chance do I have?'” Kupelian told The News last summer, for a story about the PGA Tour’s long-anticipated return to Michigan with the Rocket Mortgage Classic at Detroit Golf Club. “Any time Jack wins, it’s historic.”

In 2009, after his official retirement from The News, Kupelian began a two-year term as president of the Golf Writers Association of America. In February 2010, he was president when the association unanimously refused to take part in Tiger Woods’ first public comments since his scandal broke the previous Thanksgiving. Woods’ camp wanted to allow just six pool reporters, but the Golf Writers Association of America refused to participate if questions weren’t allowed.

Despite that public mini-dustup, Woods respected Kupelian. Woods would always close his press conferences at the Buick Open at Warwick Hills in Grand Blanc with, “Are we finished, Vartan?”

In 2014, he was elected to the Michigan Golf Hall of Fame, and won the Golf Association of Michigan’s Distinguished Service Award.

“The world of golf and sports journalism lost a great friend this week in Vartan Kupelian,” the PGA Tour said in a statement. “While we at the PGA Tour primarily knew Vartan as the knowledgeable and well-respected golf writer for The Detroit News, he had a legendary career and a loyal following in Detroit and throughout Michigan, covering all major professional sports as well as the Olympics.

“Vartan always had a story to tell and smile on his face that would brighten the days of everyone he encountered on the PGA Tour, especially our communications staff. That smile will be sorely missed.”

Interestingly, Kupelian didn’t play a ton of golf — though he was quite good, between an 8 to 10 handicap at his best. He always told friends, “If you want to play a lot of golf, don’t become a golf writer.” He routinely would avoid tournament pro-ams and media days, believing a journalist accepting free golf wasn’t proper etiquette. That was his personality, always low-key. He wasn’t loud, but he was observant and smart.

Kupelian also covered five Olympics, as well as Super Bowls, Stanley Cup playoffs, the World Series, Rose Bowl, Orange Bowl, Triple Crown and the NBA Finals. His favorite Tiger was Dick McAuliffe, and his favorite Red Wing was Reed Larson.

He also was the Lions’ beat writer — for exactly two days. O’Hara once got mad at another colleague (who shall remain nameless), and abruptly quit, forcing Kupelian into a last-minute road trip to Seattle, until the sports editor eventually got O’Hara to reconsider.

Kupelian wrote on just about every sport for The News, his coverage spanning the globe. He also co-wrote a popular “Behind the Scenes” column for more than 20 years with O’Hara. The column was observational and humorous.

One time, at the 1996 U.S. Open, they took a light jab at Greg Norman, suggesting he left the grounds in his Bell helicopter after avoiding the media. The next day, Norman’s public-relations person was outside the press center, waiting for both of them, with a hand-written note from Norman, saying, “For your information, I left in a Detroit-made Chevy Suburban.” He had a sponsorship deal with Chevy, except he misspelled Suburban. “Hey Vartan,” O’Hara said, “here’s a tap-in.” The News printed the letter, which eventually was auctioned off for a local charity, fetching about $100.

In all, he spent 38 years as a writer and columnist at The News, starting in 1971, and left via buyout the same day as O’Hara, in the summer of 2008, after the PGA Championship at Oakland Hills.

“No looking back,” Kupelian, who was tight with many of golf’s greats, from Arnold Palmer to Woods, wrote in the final “Behind the Scenes” column with O’Hara, published Aug. 15, 2008, their last day. “It was a great run but it’s time to move on. It’s true that when you have a job you love, you’ll never work a day in your life.”

Kupelian and O’Hara met at Wayne State in the mid-1960s, when Kupelian was editor of the student newspaper, The Daily Collegian, and O’Hara wrote columns. After graduation, Kupelian went on to work at the Royal Oak Tribune, and O’Hara joined The News. They reunited at The News in 1971, when Kupelian joined the staff, and O’Hara had just returned from a stint in the Army.

After retiring from The News, Kupelian stayed in the golf-writing business, penning columns for PGATour.com as well as Masters.com. He recently covered the Champions Tour, and throughout his career also covered the LPGA Tour and European Tour, as well as the state’s pro and amateur scene.

Kupelian, of Farmington Hills, wrote four books on golf, one on Woods, as well as historical texts on Oakland Hills and Red Run Golf Club in Royal Oak.

Kupelian, who was to turn 74 next Wednesday, is survived by wife Betty and daughter Lisa. Funeral arrangements were pending Thursday night.