PGA Tour pros compete in Arizona on ‘the day the golf world forgets about Charlie Woods’

The Outlaw Tour’s Pard’ner Shootout drew a handful of PGA Tour pros in Arizona for one last tournament on Monday.

The Outlaw Tour promoted its Pard’ner Shootout as “the day the golf world forgets about Charlie Woods.”

Well, the younger Woods is still creating a buzz on the Monday after he and famous father Tiger finished seventh in the PNC Championship.

But the mini tour based in Arizona did draw a handful of PGA Tour pros, a Golf Channel broadcaster and several outstanding local golfers for one last tournament before Christmas.

Joel Dahmen is among the Tour pros in the field. He’s paired with Brandon Harkins, while Max Homa is playing with new Golf Channel on-air personality and good buddy Shane Bacon.

Others in the field: Nate Lashley, Parker McLachlin, Alex Cejka, Sam Triplett, Dylan Wu, Charlie Beljan, University of Illinois and Scottsdale product Michael Feagles as well as Grand Canyon University men’s golf coach Jesse Mueller, who played at Arizona State after a strong amateur career.

The 18-hole outing is being played at Arrowhead Country Club in Glendale and is live on a Twitch livestream.

SCORES: Outlaw Tour Pard’ner Shootout

Dahmen and Lashley are no strangers to the mini-tours. They were among the Tour pros who played in the Scottsdale AZ Open in May during the Tour’s shutdown.

Also in May, Dahmen, while playing with a couple members of the Chicago Cubs, shot a course-record 58 at Mesa Country Club.

Former MLB pitcher Barry Enright beats out pro field in Scottsdale

Former MLB pitcher Barry Enright outlasted former Northwestern star Sam Triplett to win the TPC Champions Classic in Scottsdale.

With a number of professional players near the top of the leaderboard at the Outlaw Tour’s TPC Champions Classic in Scottsdale, former Major League Baseball pitcher Barry Enright would certainly fold in his first-ever pro golf event, right?

Not so fast.

Enright outlasted former Northwestern star Sam Triplett — the son of 17-time PGA Tour winner Kirk Triplett — by hanging on through a lengthy playoff in the Arizona heat to capture the title on Thursday.

Enright, who hails from Stockton and played for the Arizona Diamondbacks and Los Angeles Angels, shot a 66 in the first round on Tuesday, then followed with a 69 on Wednesday. During Thursday’s final round, he faltered on the back nine, posting bogeys on two of the final three holes, forcing a playoff with Triplett and tournament favorite Dylan Wu.

Wu fell out of the playoff after the first hole, and Enright and Triplett continued to battle until Triplett bogeyed the sixth playoff hole.

Jake Byrum of Scottsdale finished fourth while a large group finished tied for fifth that included Andrew Funk, Nick Mason, Chris Korte, Colton Yates and Eddie Olson.

PGA Tour pros tee it up this week at events in Texas, Arizona

There are two golf tournaments this week involving pros, one in Texas to raise money for caddies, another a mini-tour event in Arizona.

As we await the scheduled return of the PGA Tour in June, there are two golf tournaments this week involving pros, one in Texas to raise money for caddies and another in Arizona with real prize money on the line.

The Maridoe Golf Club in Carrollton, Texas, is hosting the Maridoe Samaritan Fund Invitational, which includes heavy-hitters such as Viktor Hovland, Harry Higgs and Scottie Scheffler, as well as former Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo, who, by the way, is making $17 million a year from CBS, in case you hadn’t heard.

A $27,000 purse will be available for the winners, and the event is a fundraiser for the club’s full-time caddies, who have been out of work because of the coronavirus pandemic. The event runs Tuesday to Thursday and will be divided into flights with top-flight groups playing from about 7,900 yards.

Maridoe is scheduled to host the 2021 U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball Championship, an event that was canceled this year.

Meanwhile in Arizona, the GCU Championship is a 54-hole mini-tour event on the Golden State Tour. It’s being played Tuesday-Thursday at Grand Canyon University Golf Course in Phoenix. J.J. Spaun, Dylan Wu and Steven Kupcho – Jennifer Kupcho’s brother – are in the field.

You can find live scoring as well as multiple live streams, provided by the Outlaw Tour.

https://twitter.com/outlawgolftour

There will be a cut after 36 holes for the top 43 and ties. And yes, you can even bet on this event. Prize money is $50,000 with $10,000 going to the winner.

About the course

Five years ago the GCU course underwent a $10 million renovation that lasted about a year as part of a partnership between the university and the city. The former Maryvale Golf Course was a City of Phoenix course, and the overhaul included the demolition of the old clubhouse, which was replaced with one that’s 22,000 square feet. Amenities include team meeting rooms, a pro shop and an onsite restaurant with patio seating. The course is open for public play.

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Alex Cejka, six back with six to go, earns wild win on hidden gem in tiny Parker, Arizona

Alex Cejka is making the most of his time as the golf world awaits the return of top-level tournament action. Mini-tours are still holding competitions in some spots around the country and Cejka has been keeping his game sharp. He won 12 days ago on …

Alex Cejka is making the most of his time as the golf world awaits the return of top-level tournament action. Mini-tours are still holding competitions in some spots around the country and Cejka has been keeping his game sharp.

He won 12 days ago on the Outlaw Tour in the Phoenix area and then again at the Parker Open on Sunday, doing so in the most spectacular fashion.

Cejka, 49 and the winner of more than $13.3 million in career earnings, was the most heralded golfer in the field but found himself down six shots with six holes to play at Emerald Canyon Golf Course.

That’s when he kicked things into overdrive:

  • Birdie on 13
  • Hole-in-one on 14
  • Another birdie on 15
  • Eagle on 16
  • 20-footer for par on 18 to force a playoff

“Awesome tourney, great course and one of my greatest back-nine comebacks to win,” Cejka said in the aftermath of his amazing 11th-hour rally. “The Arizona tournaments have been nice to stay in shape, competitive, and play against young, great and promising players.”

Alex Cejka holds the trophy for the 2020 Parker Open alongside tournament director Steve Benton.

The last time most heard Cejka’s name was after he was disqualified from the 2019 Honda Classic for using “greens-reading materials that did not fit the new scale allowed,” according to a PGA Tour media official.

Cejka’s violation was among the many that occurred in the early part of 2019 as golfers acclimated to a slew of new rules.

Cejka is now about seven months away from eligibility on the PGA Tour Champions.

He turns 50 on Dec. 2 and is doing what he can to stay sharp.

Emerald Canyon a hidden gem

The course has several holes that wind through narrow canyons, the bright green grass of the golf course contrasting sharply with the rocky desert landscape.

The course opened in 1989 with 9 holes. Nine more were built in 1990.

Emerald Canyon Golf Course in Parker, Arizona.

Parker is a town of about 3,000 residents on the Colorado River, the natural border separating Arizona and California. The population swells in during the winter months with part-time residents from Canada, Washington, even quite a few from Minnesota.

On the Arizona side, Emerald Canyon is just down the road from the Roadrunner Floating Dock Bar, with the Sundance RV Resort and Outlaw Saloon just down the way on the California side.

Football legend Gale Sayers has family in the area and has played the course several times.

Emerald Canyon Golf Course in Parker, Arizona. Image courtesy: Google Maps

Calling Parker the middle of nowhere might be slighting the middle of nowhere.

All kidding aside, it’s about a two-and-a-half hour drive southeast to Phoenix, and about a four-hour drive to the west to Los Angeles. If you wanna get to Vegas, head north for about three hours. And if you want to see a slice of U.S. history, drive 23 miles to the south to the town of Poston. World War II historians know Poston because it was home to one of the largest Japanese-American internment camps during World War II.

As one would expect, this desert town gets hot. It’s about this time of year that the temperatures start climbing. It’s already hit 100 degrees there, with 107 in the forecast for Wednesday. That’s generally the cue for winter visitors to head home, but many of them left a several weeks ago. It was mid-March when Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau instructed Canadians to head home because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Sharp decline in green fees

Steve Benton, the PGA Professional and Golf Course Director at Emerald Canyon, said revenues dropped $100,000 during an almost four-week stretch in late March/early April because of all those early departures.

But then came the state of California’s decision to shutter its golf courses. And then a different group of golfers came, this time from over the state line. In droves, Benton said.

“People were driving three, four hours to get here to play golf,” Benton said. “Many of them would spend the night and play again the next day.”

Emerald Canyon Golf Course in Parker, Arizona.

He also saw a huge uptick in replay rounds. Once golfers got to Parker, they were going to make the most of their stay.

The tee sheets filled back up. Two Saturdays ago, 271 golfers played the course, way up from the same weekend a year ago.

In fact, holding the three-day Parker Open and its 120-golfer field actually meant fewer golfers on the property during a time when business was booming.

Benton says he did consider calling off the event. That was partially because of virus concerns but also because not enough golfers were signing up. He decided to extend the deadline to enter and then the entries starting coming in. Including one for Cejka.

Local knowledge

Benton has lived in the area for 28 years. Needless to say, he knows a thing or two about Emerald Canyon, calling it a “tricky” layout, especially for someone who’s never seen it before.

Cejka initially submitted his name for the event but it was a couple days before Benton realized it.

“I was like, ‘Wow, is that THE Alex Cejka?’ ” he said. Benton decided to call him up when he noticed Cejka hadn’t signed up for a practice round. Benton arranged to play with him on Wednesday, two days before the 54-hole event started.

“As we were playing, I’d tell him ‘OK, on this shot, hit it over there’ and he’d hit it exactly there every time,” Benton said.

Getting some local knowledge seemed to pay off. The Parker Open gets some good golfers but clearly Cejka’s game was on a different level from most of the pros that come out. He took home the $4,200 first-place check and left with a strong impression of Emerald Canyon:

“You definitely have your own Amen Corner.”

As mini-tour golf goes on, Sunny Kim becomes second player in a week to post 59

Sunny Kim posted 59 Tuesday at a Minor League Tour event at Fox Club in Palm City, Florida. It was the tour’s lowest round ever on the tour.

Live golf is scarce these days, but at least two players who have teed it up in mini-tour events this month have made the most of the opportunity. Remarkably, the two players recorded a round of 59 within six days of each other, playing on the Minor League Golf Tour and the Outlaw Tour, respectively.

Sunny Kim’s round of 59 went down on Tuesday at a Minor League Tour event at Fox Club in Palm City, Florida. It was the tour’s first round of 59 and was fired – fittingly – by the tour’s career money leader. The day started out ordinarily enough, with Kim only making two birdies in his first five holes. He made four straight from Nos. 7-10. Kim logged two more at Nos. 12 and 13, then played his final three holes in 4 under. He made eagle at the par-4 16th (which was playing 440 yards) and another eagle at the par-5 18th.

Desperate times call for desperate measures. Kim was nine back entering the final round of the 36-hole event and ended up winning by three. Interestingly, on the same day Kim fired 59, he was also celebrating his 31st birthday.

Kim, who hails from Queens, New York, turned professional in 2007. He Monday qualified into the 2010 John Deere Classic, and has three career Korn Ferry Tour starts.

As for the other sub-60 round? Jared du Toit brought in a closing 59 on March 19 at the Outlaw Tour’s Western Skies Classic at Western Skies Golf Club in Gilbert, Arizona. Du Toit had nine birdies (seven of them on the back nine) and an eagle on the par-70 layout.

The 59 followed rounds of 64-68 and left du Toit at 19 under for 54 holes, good for a tie for first with Wil Bateman and Carson Roberts. Bateman won in a playoff.

Du Toit, a Canadian, turned professional in 2017 after finishing his college golf career at Arizona State (he played for two years at Idaho before that). The 24-year-old made earlier 2020 headlines for winning the PGA Tour Latinoamerica Qualifying Tournament in January. He missed the cut at the Estrella del Mar Open earlier this month, his only other start on that Tour in 2020.

Mini-tour golf remains some of the only professional competition the sport has seen these past two weeks. The Cactus Tour, a women’s mini tour based in Arizona, hosted an event in Moon Valley, Arizona, last week that Anna Nordqvist, an eight-time LPGA winner, won in a playoff. The Eggland’s Best Tour is also still conducting women’s events in Florida, though after this week, there is not another event until May 6.

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