Photos: The PGA Show in Orlando is back in a big way

The event typically attracts more than 40,000 PGA of America professionals, manufacturers, media members and golf industry insiders.

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ORLANDO — It feels like old times at the Orange County Convention Center as the crowds and many of the vendors have returned to make the annual PGA Show a vibrant gathering in the Sunshine State.

The annual Demo Day was held at Orange County National on Tuesday and a week of exhibits and education runs through Friday at the convention center.

The event, which was held virtually in 2021 and in a smaller form in 2022,  typically attracts more than 40,000 PGA of America professionals, manufacturers, media members and golf industry insiders.

The crowds have yet to be tallied, but the numbers appear to be healthy for the show, which had been rumored to be in trouble just a few years ago.

Here’s a look at the fun:

Mike Brey: Freshman Ven-Allen Lubin will start to begin season

Surprised by this?

Notre Dame will have plenty of experience this season. An incredible six players on the roster are listed as graduates, including returnees [autotag]Nate Laszewski[/autotag], [autotag]Dane Goodwin[/autotag], [autotag]Cormac Ryan[/autotag] and [autotag]Trey Wertz[/autotag]. All of those players figure to get significant playing time, but there is one freshman who apparently will begin the season in the starting lineup. We’re not talking about [autotag]JJ Starling[/autotag] (although he should at least merit consideration), but rather a freshman forward, at least according to Jon Rothstein of CBS Sports:

[autotag]Mike Brey[/autotag] putting his trust in a freshman forward like this is nothing short of incredible. But still, who is this [autotag]Ven-Allen Lubin[/autotag]? Well, he stands at 6-foot-8 and was a four-star recruit out of Orlando, Florida. Perhaps Brey can put it best in his quote on Lubin’s official profile:

“Ven-Allen is a positionless basketball player. He has the ability to post up, face up, run and change ends. He also brings great length on the defensive end.”

Sounds like a winner to us. How about you?

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Disney World renovates its Magnolia Course, adding new holes and resurfacing every green

Extensive changes will be made to four holes and all 18 greens will be resurfaced.

Walt Disney World in Florida has temporarily shuttered its Magnolia Course, located near the Magic Kingdom, for the summer as each green is upgraded and holes 14 through 17 are renovated. The course is expected to reopen later this year.

Arnold Palmer Golf Management, which operates Disney World’s courses, hired One Club Limited and its head golf course designer, Ken Baker, to oversee the work at the course, which was designed by Joe Lee and opened in 1971. The work to the Magnolia follows extensive changes to Disney’s Palm Golf Course in 2013, Disney’s Oak Trail Golf Course in 2014 and 2018, and Disney’s Lake Buena Vista Golf Course in 2018.

In a media release announcing the renovation, Disney unveiled the following changes:

  • Hole 14: Currently a par 5, will become a par 4 with a new green location
  • Hole 15: Currently a par 3, will shift location and become a long par 5 with a dogleg to the right
  • Hole 16: Will shift location and remain a par 4 but will now have a dogleg to the left
  • Hole 17: Currently a par 4, will become a par 3 with new tee box locations
An artist’s rendering of the new 16th hole on the Magnolia Course at Walt Disney World in Florida (Courtesy of Walt Disney World)

“We were fortunate to have some existing property area available for the redesign of these golf holes,” Baker said. “It has allowed us to create a more dynamic collection of golf shots that also blends seamlessly with the surrounding natural environment. …

“From the first day we began reimagining these golf holes, we took great care in preserving the scenic beauty, challenge and thrill players have enjoyed as they’ve walked the fairways of Disney’s Magnolia. Joe Lee created much of the existing design dynamic of this course with ‘push-up’ golf feature areas. The existing tees, greens and bunkers typically rise above the surrounding terrain and create a classic look and feel to the course. The routing adjustments made to holes 14 through 17 have allowed us to maintain this classic appearance while also incorporating subtle design features that will create some new and exciting challenges for future guests.”

An artist’s rendering of the new 15th hole on the Magnolia Course at Walt Disney World in Florida (Courtesy of Walt Disney World)

Baker also said a new sandy waste area will be added between Nos. 15 and 16, and similar features will be added at other areas of the course. A new bridge through a forest will be constructed to connect Nos. 16 and 17, several bunkers throughout the course will be renovated and new tees will be added on several holes.

The Magnolia was last updated in 2015, when its bunkers and cart paths were renovated.

“We’ve assembled an incredible team that is devoted to creating the best possible experience for our guests from around the globe who travel here for a championship-caliber golf vacation,” Bruce Gerlander, general manager of Arnold Palmer Golf Management, said in the media release. “For more than four decades, Disney’s Magnolia served as a favorite stop on the PGA Tour, and we have been methodically planning for this massive project for years.”

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Arnold Palmer Invitational: It’s survival of the fittest with Bay Hill ‘on a knife’s edge’

Bay Hill bites back with dry greens, windy challenges as Talor Gooch, Billy Horschel share third-round lead.

ORLANDO – Graeme McDowell stiffed his approach at 18, tapped in for birdie and signed for 3-under 69 at Arnold Palmer’s Bay Hill and Lodge for one of just seven rounds in the 60s on the third day of the Arnold Palmer Invitational. But that doesn’t mean the former U.S. Open champ wasn’t spent after a trying day on the course.

“It’s a stressful golf course with a lot of shots that stress you out,” he said.

McDowell, who lives in the City Beautiful, planned to kick up his feet, check out the remainder of the broadcast, fire up the grill and watch the rest of the field get roasted by baked-out greens.

“I might have to drink a little less wine than I was going to,” said McDowell, who teed off more than three hours ahead of the leaders Saturday. “It’s very difficult out there and not getting any easier.”

By the end of the day, McDowell stood tied for sixth at 3 under. The wind blew and scores soared. Just ask rookie Hayden Buckley, who skied to an 84 and ditched his putter outside scoring and left his caddie to retrieve it. At least he finished the round with his short stick. Australian Matt Jones heaved his into a lake in frustration.

“It’s just on a knife edge,” said Rory McIlroy, who struggled to 76 and was tied with McDowell after three rounds. “The last few years, we sort of know what to expect coming here. It just seems to be this way over the weekend. It’s just hard. It’s hard not to get frustrated.”

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McDowell described the greens as icy and the rough as U.S. Open length. Add in the crosswinds and it was a recipe for disaster.

“If you don’t hit the fairway, it’s almost impossible to hit a green,” McIlroy said.

Billy Horschel was one of the few, the proud to shoot in red figures, sinking a 30-foot birdie putt from just off the green – after taking a fortunate free drop from the rough because of a sprinkler head – at 18 to post 1-under 71 and share the 54-hole lead at 7-under 209 with Talor Gooch. Those who embraced the challenge, such as Horschel, seemed to fare better.

“This is awesome golf. It’s testing and it wears you down,” he said. “I can’t even say we all enjoy it all the time, but we do enjoy because it does reward fairly good golf shots on a regular basis. It rewards people who think their way through a shot and how it needs to be played to really turn out properly.”

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“It was not fun, but it’s the right test,” said Max Homa, who made a hole-in-one at the 14th en route to a 73 and attested to Scottie Scheffler tying for low round of the day with 68. “I played with a guy who’s one of the best players in the world, and he played a really good round of golf and made it look pretty easy.

“If you’re out of position, you have no chance, but you put yourself out of position. So I think it’s quality that’s going to separate the field into who played really well, who played well, who played OK and who didn’t play well. I think that’s the way golf should be.”

To his point, only 16 of the 78 players that made the cut were in red figures after three rounds. For a time it looked as if Viktor Hovland might run away with the tournament. The 24-year-old Norwegian holed out for eagle from 38 yards in a greenside bunker at the par-5 sixth hole to offset a shaky bogey-bogey start to his third round.

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“I kind of thought I was in no-man’s-land, just try to chunk it out there and give myself a putt at it. Came out really soft and landed in the first cut and just died and went in,” he said. “That was really nice for at least the next few holes, and I was really in a good rhythm until some bad shots on the back nine.”

He was 10 under for the tournament and leading Gooch by four strokes at the turn after a birdie at No. 8. That happened to be his final birdie of the day, and he sprinkled four bogeys on his inward card including at the final two holes to shoot 75 and trail the co-leaders by a shot.

When asked if he enjoys playing a tournament where single digits could very well be enough to win Sunday and earn his first victory on U.S. soil, Hovland said, “To be honest, not really. I think now it’s maybe on the border where everything kind of becomes a scrambling competition. As I’ve said before, that’s not really the strength of my game. But what I think is cool at least is I’m able to be in contention in a tournament under these conditions that don’t really play into my hands.”

Horschel, who was born and raised in Grant-Valkaria, Florida, about 90 minutes from Bay Hill, said he expected Sunday to be an emotional day, especially if he were to slip into the winner’s red alpaca sweater.

“It would be very special. You said I grew up an hour from here, came here as a kid, caddied in the Pro-Am multiple times. A lot of family and friend support around here,” he said. “Then you add on Arnold Palmer’s name to it. It would be something very special that at the end of my career I could say that was a special victory.”

Golfzon Leadbetter Academy to set up new headquarters at Reunion Resort near Orlando

Leadbetter Academy’s new location near Orlando will feature technology to help players of any level.

The Leadbetter Golf Academy’s world headquarters is planning a move across Interstate 4 south of Orlando, having announced Thursday it is leaving ChampionsGate Golf Club to set up new residence at Reunion Resort this year.

Leadbetter Golf Academy was acquired in 2018 by Golfzon, a South Korean company best known for its indoor golf simulators. The company is now officially known as Golfzon Leadbetter and operates 38 academies in 15 countries. Leadbetter Academies was founded in 1983 by instructor David Leadbetter, who has worked with numerous tour professionals and 26 major championship winners, with perhaps his most famous student being Nick Faldo.

Reunion Resort is home to three golf courses designed by Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Tom Watson. It is the former home of the ANNIKA Academy, which closed in 2016. Kingwood International Resorts bought Reunion in 2019.

Leadbetter Reunion
David Leadbetter on the range at Reunion Resort near Orlando (Courtesy of Golfzon Leadbetter)

“I have taught golf all over the world and there are few places as well suited for golfers to learn and play as the Reunion Resort and Golf Club,” Leadbetter said in a media release announcing the move. “We share Kingwood International Resorts’ vision for offering the very best golf experience at Reunion. Reunion already has three great golf courses; now they’ll have a golf academy to match. I can’t wait to give the first lesson from the new facility.”

The new academy at Reunion will feature plenty of technology, including lesson studios with launch monitors, 3D swing analysis, radar-based tracking of shots on the range, club fitting, fitness and biomechanics. The facility also will include a Golfzon TwoVision simulator studio to host virtual tournaments, the release said. The coaching staff plans to host a wide range of players from beginners to tour stars.

“Reunion Resort and Golf Club gives us the perfect location to expand the Golfzon Leadbetter business as well as offering golfers a unique facility to work on every aspect of their game, whatever their level of play,”  Benedict Riches, CEO of Golfzon Leadbetter, said in the release.

“This new partnership is a natural fit, bringing yet another legend to our resort with the Golfzon Leadbetter World Headquarters,” said Anthony Carll, general manager of Reunion Resort. “We are absolutely thrilled to be able to offer this experience this fall with such a respected legend in the golf community.”

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Check the yardage book: Ritz-Carlton Golf Club, Orlando, Grande Lakes for the PNC Championship

Tiger Woods and 19 other pros will play with family members at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club.

The Ritz-Carlton Golf Club, Orlando, Grande Lakes – site of this week’s PNC Championship – was designed by Greg Norman and opened in 2003 less than 10 miles from Walt Disney World.

After pro-ams Thursday and Friday, 20 teams will compete in the tournament proper Saturday and Sunday. Originally named the Father-Son Challenge, the current format includes pro golfers partnered with either a parent or child. The main attraction will be the return of Tiger Woods to competitive golf as he pairs with son Charlie less than a year after a single-car crash in California left the 15-time major champion with significant injuries.

Grande Lakes will play at 7,122 yards with a par of 72 for the pros. Thanks to yardage books provided by Puttview – the maker of detailed yardage books for more than 30,000 courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the pros face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.

Tiger Woods-backed PopStroke breaks ground on location in Orlando, with further expansion planned for 2022

The concept combines food, drink and putting, with further expansion planned in 2022 in Florida, Texas and Arizona.

The Tiger Woods-backed PopStroke, an experiential golf and casual-dining business, has broken ground on the east side of Orlando as the company plans to open seven new locations in 2022.

PopStroke currently has two locations open, one in Fort Myers, Florida, and another in Port St. Lucie, Florida.

Each PopStroke location features two 18-hole putting locations designed by Tiger Woods and his TGR Design, which also designs full-size courses. Other amenities at each location will include a jumbotron screen with a putting leaderboard, an outdoor gaming area with pingpong and other games, an open-air restaurant, an ice cream parlor and a playground. PopStroke said in a media release announcing the fresh groundbreaking that the golf experience will be designed for players of all skill levels.

PopStroke, Tiger Woods
A finished PopStroke facility (Photo submitted)

The Orlando location in Waterford Lakes is one of seven that are scheduled to open in 2022 in Sarasota, Florida; Houston; Salt River/Scottsdale, Arizona; Glendale, Arizona; Tampa, Florida; and Delray, Florida.

The Orlando location is scheduled to open in April and was the second groundbreaking among the list of announced new locations. The Sarasota facility is scheduled to open in March, with the others in line behind that, according to popstroke.com.

“Orlando has long been recognized as one of the premier entertainment destinations in the world and a natural fit for PopStroke’s continued expansion,” company founder Greg Bartoli said in the media release. “We look forward to being a part of such an exciting and rapidly expanding community as we introduce the PopStroke brand to people of all ages across Central Florida.”

Founded in 2018, PopStroke is co-owned by Bartoli and Woods’ TGR Ventures. The company is headquartered in Jupiter, Florida.

PopStroke, Tiger Woods
PopStroke, Tiger Woods

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Notre Dame’s all-time record against remaining Big 12 programs

How have the Irish done against the rest of the Big 12?

With Texas and Oklahoma on their way out of the Big 12, who knows what the future holds for one of the Power Five conferences? What we do know is that Notre Dame won’t be playing any of the current Big 12 members during the regular season anytime soon. The Irish’s deal to play five ACC schools a year, plus their usual rivalry games with the likes of Navy and so forth, only can mean there isn’t a lot of room for these schools on future schedules. There simply aren’t enough games over the course of a season to schedule everybody you would like to.

Still, with college football coming to a crossroads yet again, this is a time to look back. Even though the Big 12 and Notre Dame don’t have an existing relationship, it’s worth looking back on what the schools that will remain in the conference for now have done against the Irish:

Orlando waives VFL Jordan Bone

Former Vol Jordan Boned placed on waivers by NBA’s Magic.

The Orlando Magic have placed guard Jordan Bone on waivers.

Bone, a guard and former University of Tennessee basketball standout, was waived after the Magic’s 123-108 loss to Toronto on Feb. 2.

The Ensworth School product and Nashville native had three points, four assists and two rebounds, while logging 17 minutes in the contest against the Raptors.

Bone was signed to a two-way deal by the Magic just before the 2020-21 season began and was slated to split time between Orlando and its NBA G-League affiliate in Lakeland.

He was placed on waivers to make room for Frank Mason III, who inked a free agent deal with the Magic.

Mason III is the NBA G-League’s reigning Most Valuable Player.

Bone appeared in 14 games for Orlando this season.

He averaged 4.0 points, 1.7 rebounds and 1.3 assists per game, while shooting 42.6 percent from the floor and 31.3 percent from beyond the 3-point arc.

During his time with the Volunteers, Bone was a Second-Team All-Southeastern Conference standout in 2019.

He was drafted by New Orleans in the second round of the 2019 NBA draft.

Bone previously played for the Pistons and the G-League’s Grand Rapids Drive, where he was coached by former UT head coach Donnie Tyndall.

Big changes announced for former Grand Cypress Resort near Orlando

A new Jack Nicklaus-designed 18 holes is planned for the massive resort in Orlando while the popular New Course will remain open until 2023.

Players who want to sample a homage to links-style golf near Orlando should not wait too long to play what was Grand Cypress Resort and its New Course, because the 1,100-acre property is in store for massive changes through 2023 as it is transformed into the Evermore Orlando Resort.

Those changes include a new Jack Nicklaus-designed 18 holes, while each of the previous courses at the massive resort are shuttered or will be by the end of 2023.

Developer Dart Interests announced this week that it is planning a $1 billion renovation of the property just east of Disney World. The Dallas-based Dart Interests acquired a majority stake in Grand Cypress in 2014, according to the Orlando Sentinel.

Until 2019, Grand Cypress was home to the Nicklaus-designed New Course as well as three other nines – the North, South and East – that could be played in various combinations as an 18-hole layout. The nine-hole courses were host to several LPGA tournaments, most recently the 2011 CME Group Titleholders.

The three individual nines were shuttered in 2019, while the New Course remains open for the next several years during construction of the resort’s many amenities.

The New Course, named in honor of the Old Course at St. Andrews, is intended to play as a links-style layout. The parallel first and 18th holes mimic those same holes at the Old Course, with a giant shared fairway as the holes run in opposite directions. Other nods to St. Andrews include a creek that somewhat replicates the Swilcan Burn. Being in Florida, the course rarely played with true, bouncy links conditions, but it has been a fun, almost treeless layout popular with locals and tourists alike since it opened in 1988.

Dart Interests said it plans to maintain the course through completion of resort construction in 2023, then replace it with a new Nicklaus-designed course on part of the site that previously held the nine-hole tracks. Details of the new Nicklaus course have not been announced, but a news release on Evermore’s website says the 18-hole layout will “pay homage to the legacy of golf excellence at Grand Cypress.”

A projection of how Evermore Orlando Resort, which will replace Grand Cypress Resort near Disney World in Central Florida, will look after construction wraps in 2023. (Courtesy of Hilton)

In all, the new resort said in the news release on its website that it will offer more than 10,000 bedrooms in a variety of settings including a 433-room Conrad Orlando at Evermore hotel, 69 rental houses ranging from five to 11 bedrooms each, 76 four-bedroom flats, and 41 two- and four-bedroom villas.

“We are incredibly excited to expand on our strong presence in the Orlando market and introduce the Conrad brand to a new city,” Danny Hughes, Executive Vice President and President of the Americas for Hilton, said in the release. “Conrad Orlando at Evermore will undoubtedly be a sought-after destination for Orlando travelers and will provide guests with outstanding service and impactful experiences when they visit the city.”

One of the more interesting and expansive components of the Evermore will be an 8-acre lagoon-style pool that will feature zero-entry swim areas, bars, cabanas, private fire-pits and an aquatic adventure area with a waterslide, rope swing and watersports.

“With the launch of the Evermore project, Dart is introducing an entirely new hospitality category that will change the landscape of vacation rental homes,” Christopher Kelsey, President of Dart Interests, said in the news release. “We are creating the first-ever wholly owned, large-scale community of purpose-built vacation rental homes and operating them with hotel-quality standards and world-class resort amenities. Our approach solves the No. 1 problem for vacation renters: uncertainty in the quality of the home.

“Almost all vacation rentals are owned by individuals, each with their own unique tastes and willingness to maintain the properties. Our centralized ownership model makes it possible for our guests to be certain that they are getting a first-class home with superior safety standards.”

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