Our Averee Dovsek explains how ‘growing the game’ is coming at a high price for families

Unlike sports such as soccer and basketball, golf has a steep start-up cost before you even arrive at the range with equipment.

There’s constant talk about “growing the game,” a convenient catchphrase, but few factor in the price of what it takes to get kids involved in golf and allow them the opportunity to be successful.

Young players are the ones who can indeed grow the sport and while there are some programs in place to help young golfers, the golf community needs to step up and makes this reality more feasible. As someone who funded a large amount of her junior golf and learned the majority of her golf skills from YouTube, I feel strongly about this issue.

I grew up in Southern California where buckets of balls often ran in the neighborhood of $20, and there were only a handful of junior course programs in the area. I worked at a local pizza shop, with every dime going toward tournament fees, green fees, clubs, balls and appropriate apparel.

Sure, it’s important for kids to learn the value of a dollar, but the average family could never afford to get their kid into golf and obtain a college scholarship. Unlike sports such as soccer and basketball, golf has a steep start-up cost before you even arrive at the range with equipment. If junior golfers have aspirations of playing at the collegiate level, college coaches want to see tournaments outside of their high school team as well.

I asked 17-year-old Florida golfer Reese Woodbury what he guesses his family spends on his golf expenses in a single month.

“I would estimate $1,800 to $3,500 a month. That’s with practice, expenses, tournament fees, and any extras, including golf balls, tees and gloves,” Woodbury said.

Yes, there are charitable programs around the country that encourage junior golf at little to no cost such as The First Tee and others, but these can only take kids so far.

Tournament fees in Florida
Tournament fees in Florida. (HJGT)

Once the small hurdles of paying for balls and green fees are tackled, the tournament fees are another beast. Junior two-day tournaments are averaging $250 to $400 a player. When you add gas, hotel and food on top of that (often multiple times a month) it becomes close to impossible to reach the next level for most families.

“One of my good friends struggles to play in events because of financial backing issues. He’s a great golfer, but he doesn’t come from a strong financial household to help him support his love for the game and it is not allowing him to reach the next level,” said Woodbury. “I am extremely lucky and grateful for the family that I have that allows me to chase my dream.”

I understand that these junior tours are a business and trying to make money, but there has to be some flexibility. As a former junior player who tried to balance high school life and golf, it’s becoming increasingly difficult to pull this off.

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If companies and courses are claiming to become an inclusive space for younger generations, changes are in order. Promoting twilight junior rates is one way to encourage play. Discounts on buckets of balls can help immensely and the cost for driving ranges is little to nothing. It’s important to provide a memorable place where kids can feel safe and practice.

If golf is serious about grooming its high-paying customers of the future, small discounts can certainly help to net a big return.

(Editor’s note: Averee Dovsek is a former college golfer and contributor to Golfweek.)

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Junior golf competition calendar full of new events, changes in 2020

The competition schedule for junior golfers in 2020 contains a number of new events and schedule changes.

Juniors golfers with professional dreams can find any number of sound bites from Tour players that link game development and Tour readiness with junior golf. The American Junior Golf Association plays a big role in that, but opportunities extend beyond the AJGA, too. From the U.S. Junior and Sage Valley Junior Invitational, two of the premier events, to smaller regional tournaments scattered around the U.S., there is no shortage of events to play.

Interestingly, the competition schedule for junior golfers in 2020 contains a number of new events and schedule changes. A major event is even expanding its field by more than 100 players. Here’s what you need to know for the upcoming season.

New to the schedule

Mack Champ Invitational

Tour players don’t just talk about junior golf contributing to their success, they put their time and their resources behind the statement. Many current PGA and LPGA players back events on the AJGA schedule, but Cameron Champ is going about the idea of “hosting” a little bit differently.

Champ is using junior golf to honor his late grandfather Mack Champ with the inaugural Mack Champ Invitational. The Cameron Champ Foundation will put on the event, to be played March 20-22 at Memorial Park Golf Course in Houston. The goal of the tournament is to focus on identifying talented players from diverse backgrounds as a way to honor the legacy left by Mack, who passed away in October 2019.

Champ will conduct a clinic during tournament week. The 36-hole event will be divided into four age divisions.

Notah Begay Junior Invitational

One goal of junior golf? Get noticed, preferably by a college coach. The Notah Begay Junior Invitational will offer something quite unusual to its participants: a TV slot on Golf Channel. Players, ages 8 to 18, must qualify into this event, to be played at a yet-to-be-announced location on a yet-to-be-announced date.

Dye Junior Invitational

Players looking for a 54-hole event on a renowned golf course should take note of the inaugural Dye Junior Invitational. The field will consist of 33 girls and 33 boys competing May 25-27 at Crooked Stick Golf Club in Carmel, Indiana. The course has a long, distinguished history as a tournament host, and will host the Western Amateur two months after the juniors play in May.

The championship was created by the Crooked Stick membership as a way to honor Pete and Alice Dye. The field will be filled by invitation only.

Barbasol Junior Championship

PGA Tour starts are a coveted commodity when you’re a junior golfer. One of those is on offer this summer at the inaugural Barbasol Junior Championship, to be played June 29-July 2 at Keene Trace Golf Club in Nicholasville, Kentucky.

The new 54-hole event will be open to boys under the age of 19, and the champion will earn a spot later in July at the PGA Tour’s Barbasol Championship, which is also played at Keene Trace.

Different dates and format changes

AJGA Thunderbird International Junior

When the NCAA Championships move to Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Arizona, for the next three years, it means the AJGA’s Thunderbird International Junior has to move out – at least, it has to change dates.

The Thunderbird, which has divisions for girls and boys, typically has been played at the end of May, but this year, for the first time, it will be played April 9-12, which means, of course, that it finish on Masters Sunday.

Sage Valley Junior Invitational

The Sage Valley Junior Invitational is one of the most coveted junior-golf starts on a player’s calendar. The course, Sage Valley Golf Club in Graniteville, South Carolina, is top-notch and the level of competition is as tough as it gets for junior boys.

This is the first year the tournament will be played in March, as it was previously held in late April. The switch was made mainly to avoid potential conflicts with other tournaments and to ensure it continues to attract an elite 54-player field.

“Moving play to mid-March means the course will be in absolute perfect condition, making for an incredible competition,” Pete Davis, chairman of the SVJI Sports Foundation, said in a release.

Gator Invitational

If the object of junior golf is to prepare for the next step – college golf – then mirroring that experience as closely as possible is key. That’s why it’s a big deal that the Gator Invitational has added a round this year to become a 54-hole event.

The Gator, a junior boys event, will be played March 13-15 at The Country Club of Jackson in Jackson, Mississippi, which also hosts the PGA Tour’s Sanderson Farms Championship. Exemptions into the South Beach International Amateur and the Dogwood Invitational are on the line.

U.S. Junior

The major men’s amateur events on the USGA schedule – think the U.S. Amateur and U.S. Mid-Amateur – require a companion course to accommodate the enormous field. For the first time in the 73-year history of the U.S. Junior Amateur, the USGA will require two courses to accommodate an expanded field, too.

The tournament will start with 264 players playing both Hazeltine National Golf Club and Chaska Town Course in Chaska, Minnesota, before the stroke-play portion of the event switches exclusively to Hazeltine.

The U.S. Junior previously had a starting field of 156 players.

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2020 boys junior golf tournament schedule, results

These are the players who closed out 2019 with a win at season-ending events. As the new year starts, we will continue updating the list.

These are the players who closed out 2019 with a win at season-ending events. As the new season gets underway, we will continue to add to this list of tournaments used to compile the Golfweek Junior Rankings. Missing events and dates will be added when they become available.

A list of girls events and results can be found here.

Dates Event Course City State Winner, results
Dec. 14-15 Toyota Tour Cup Championship PGA West La Quinta CA Ethan Chung
Dec. 14-15 TLJT Alamo Shootout Fair Oaks Ranch G&CC Fair Oaks Ranch TX Jeffrey Zatorski
Dec. 14-16 IMG Academy Junior World Florida Challenge Longboat Key C&R (Island) Long Boat Key FL Natthawat Sakchawanpob
Dec. 20-22 Jones Cup Junior Sea Island GC (Seaside) St. Simons Island GA Maxwell Ford
Dec. 21-23 Doral/Publix Junior Classic Doral Miami FL John Broderick
Dec. 27-28 Allstate Sugar Bowl Tommy Moore Memorial TPC Louisiana Avondale LA Payne Johnson
Dec. 27-29 Donald Ross Junior Championship Pinehurst Resort Pinehurst NC Nikita Gubenko
Dec. 27-29 TJGT La Cantera Holiday Classic La Cantera GC San Antonio TX Treed Huang
Dec. 27-29 RMJT Tournament of Champions McCormick Ranch GC (Palm) Scottsdale AZ CJ Martin
Jan. 3-6 Junior Orange Bowl Biltmore GC Coral Gables FL Andrey Borges

 

2020 girls junior golf tournament schedule, results

These are the players who closed out 2019 with a win at season-ending events. As the new year starts, we will continue updating the list.

These are the players who closed out 2019 with a win at season-ending events. As the new season gets underway, we will continue to add to this list of tournaments used to compile the Golfweek Junior Rankings. Missing events and dates will be added when they become available.

A list of boys events and results can be found here.

Dates Event Course City State Winner, results
Dec. 14-15 Toyota Tour Cup Championship PGA West La Quinta CA Karen Tsuru
Dec. 14-15 TLJT Alamo Shootout Fair Oaks Ranch G&CC Fair Oaks Ranch TX Symran Shah
Dec. 21-23 Doral/Publix Junior Classic Doral Miami FL Paula Schulz-Hanssen
Dec. 27-28 Allstate Sugar Bowl Tommy Moore Memorial TPC Louisiana Avondale LA Avery Weed
Dec. 28-29 Donald Ross Junior Championship Pinehurst Resort Pinehurst NC Kelley Topiwala
Dec. 27-29 TJGT La Cantera Holiday Classic La Cantera GC San Antonio TX Darrelyn Webster
Dec. 27-29 FMJT Tournament of Champions Talking Stick Resort (O’odham) Scottsdale AZ Lucy Yuan
Dec. 28-30 Joanne Winter Arizona Silver Belle Championship Longbow GC Mesa AZ Katherine Schuster
Jan. 3-6 Junior Orange Bowl Biltmore GC Coral Gables FL Mizuki Hashimoto