How music mogul Irving Azoff, an Apple exec and designer Gil Hanse teamed to create an ultra-exclusive desert gem

This covers a sprawling 165 acres with an 18-hole regulation course, a nine-hole par-3 course.

It sits at the end of a half-mile gravel road leading to what was once 306 acres of lemon and mango trees in Thermal, 10 miles south of downtown Coachella. It is located where no desert golf course has been built before.

For more than a year, Ladera was the Coachella Valley’s mystery golf course, known mostly for who was building it and its rumored ultra-exclusive future. Few people knew about the project and fewer had seen the course during its construction and opening months of play.

Now, one of the co-owners of the layout is unafraid to say what he hopes the golf course’s stature will be in the desert and across the country.

“When people talk about the Coachella Valley, Palm Springs, I want them to say that’s the home of the Coachella (music festival), home of the (BNP Paribas Open) tennis tournament, home of The American Express, home of the Acrisure Arena and home of Ladera,” said Irving Azoff, a long-time music industry mogul and co-founder of Oak View Group, builder of arenas and other venues including Acrisure Arena in Palm Desert. “That’s really what I care about.”

The first design by the team of Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner in the golf-rich Coachella Valley that features 120 courses, Ladera covers a sprawling 165 acres with an 18-hole regulation course, a nine-hole par-3 course and native landscape surrounded by what is still a working lemon farm. The landscape slopes 140 feet from the high point near the Santa Rosa Mountains across once-level land.

But the golf course — Golf Digest reported the course alone cost $40 million to build and does not include flood control and other costs — is only part of what Azoff and his best friend and co-owner Eddy Cue, a senior vice president for Apple, envision for Ladera. The experience of the course for the exclusive membership should be like no other course in the desert, Azoff said.

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“I want them to go out there and say I had the most peaceful, enjoyable, relaxing, one of the greatest golf days ever,” Azoff said. “I want it to be an all-day experience.”

The golfers enjoying the course, for the most part, won’t be Coachella Valley residents. Ladera is designed as a destination golf course, meaning members can be from anywhere in the United States who spend time in the desert or who fly into the area specifically to play their golf course. That’s similar to the idea of the national membership at Augusta National Golf Club, home of the Masters in Georgia.

“If someone said you can come to Augusta or you can come here, without hesitation, it’s 100 percent here,” said Rich Bressler, who fits the course’s membership profile as president and COO of media firm iHeart Radio. “I really do feel like the experience here is second to none.”

Bressler is one of just over 40 members at the club now, with Azoff saying perhaps the membership could grow to 100 in coming years. The membership needs to fit a certain devotion to golf, Azoff said.

Friends and golfers

“What we want for the membership is really a group of our friends and business associates. You have to have respect for golf, the game of golf,” Azoff said. “You don’t have to be a great golfer, but you have to have respect for the game of golf, and you have to be able to appreciate why there are no cart paths, why there are no ponds, why there are no palm trees. And you might look at the greens and go, well, that one might have been inspired by Seth Raynor (an architect active in the 1910s and 1920s).”

Among current members and friends of Azoff who are members include Bressler, Golden State Warriors co-owner Fred Harman, Rob Light, the managing partner of Creative Artists Agency, and even English pop star Harry Styles.

Other tributes to the game at Ladera include a preference for walking the expansive course, though golf carts are available. It’s all a spirit of the game and a membership size and demographic that appeals to Paul Marchand, the director of golf at Ladera.

Marchand is well known in golf circles as a long-time coach for Fred Couples, but he is also a member of the Texas Golf Hall of Fame and was for years the director of golf at places like the 1,200-member Houston Golf Club. Marchand met Azoff and Cue when he was director of golf at Madison Club in La Quinta, where the co-owners of the new course explained their concept of a club honoring the purity of the game and the golf experience.

“At all high-end private clubs, the head of the pro staff is trying to help create or maintain a wonderful experience that is unique to that place,” Marchand said. “A place with a smaller club or a place with a big staff where you can have time to be in that lane yourself, to be the leader and actually spend time with the members, which is what I prefer to do, like hands on, one on one, spending time on the lesson tee or on the golf course, that’s my passion.”

Azoff, who is also the head of entertainment rights company Iconic Artists and at one time owned TicketMaster, is a member at golf courses ranging from Madison Club to Riviera Country Club in Los Angeles. He also travels the world with his family to play the game. So why would he and Cue build a golf-centric club like Ladera in the Coachella Valley?

“I guess it’s because we can,” Azoff said. “I’ve worked hard for over 50 years, 55 years and it’s just the opportunity came up. I’m spending a lot of time down here at my house at Madison Club. Eddy and I were sitting there one day and he said to me, ‘let’s build our own golf course.’ I was just in the middle of opening the (Acrisure) arena, and I knew I was going to be spending a lot of time down here and our family has such a great affinity for the desert.”

Large white sand bunkers, a tribute to George Thomas bunkering at Riviera Country Club in Los Angeles, are a major part of the look at Ladera Country Club in Thermal. (Photo: Channing Benjamin/Special to the Desert Sun/USA Today Network)

Like Azoff, Bressler says the experience at Ladera is what compels him to live in Miami but search out the Thermal course.

“What is so interesting about the experience is not that it feels different the first time. Everywhere feels different the first time,” Bressler said. “But the 10th time or the 12th time, you feel the way you felt the first time you come here. You still have that and you grow with the experience. Every time you are here, you feel a little bit different about the experience.”

Hanse and Wagner’s first desert course

As for the course itself, the first Palm Springs-area design by Hanse and Wagner, who are perhaps best known as the designers of the Olympic course in Rio de Janeiro for the 2016 Summer Games, the layout is unlike other area courses. Ladera does not feature any homes on the course, and the course sits away from any other development, giving it the feel of being part of the native desert.

The first 18-hole course built in the Coachella Valley since 2008, Ladera’s fairways can be 70 or even 80 yards wide, but there is no rough on the course. Off the fairways are areas of native desert landscape, either natural or recreated through the moving of 2 million cubic yards of earth. The black tees measure 7,365 yards, though the course with five par-5s and five par-3s can stretch back to more than 7,700 yards and also has several sets of shorter tees.

Throughout the course are large, white-face bunkers, a tribute to architect George Thomas and his bunkering at Riviera Country Club. A barranca that cuts across the fairway of the par-5 first hole is also a tip of the hat to Riviera’s first hole. Many of the white-sand bunkers are large cross bunkers in fairways or deep greenside bunkers making precision shots into sloping and undulating putting surfaces vital. Azoff laughs that many of the bunkers are ornamental and may never see a golf ball. Rugged, often jagged bunker lips are a reflection of nearby mountains that aren’t part of the course but serve as a backdrop for many shots.

“The 15th (a 320-yard par-4) is kind of inspired by No. 10 at Riviera. The only difference is instead of the sand, you have the big runoffs,” Azoff said. “You noticed on the par-3 12th, there is a biarritz (a gulch running through a green). Well, we did kind of a half biarritz, with the dip in the back of the green.”

The design is Hanse’s interpretation of what Azoff and Cue wanted.

“Gil asked us questions about what we liked. He asked what do you think about barrancas,” Azoff said. “The one thing we all spit out at that time was no palm trees, no ponds. This is not a Palm Springs golf course. We want the desert to feel natural. We want the mountains to feel natural. And we wanted to keep some sort of tradition from the lemon trees.”

A day at Ladera can end on a nine-hole par-3 course where golfers can basically hit from any tee box to any green.

As for the legacy of his new course, Azoff says he and Cue want to pass Ladera down to their sons. Azoff’s two sons are strong players who pulled their father into the game, Cue is a golfer who wants his own sons to embrace the game. Azoff admits he wants the course on top-100 lists as a way to add luster to what he feels is the faded glory of Palm Springs golf. He also wants people to understand his excitement about the course and its place in golf.

“It’s the spirit of the place. It’s the staff, it’s the practice facilities,” Azoff said. “Look, I’ve built a lot of stuff, and usually if it comes out 75 percent of what you have envisioned, it’s great. This came out 200 percent. It nails it as far as we are concerned.”

If Anthony Kim really is coming back to pro golf, here are some things to remember

Kim found ways to be exciting, thrilling, confounding and brilliant on the course.

Here are a few things you might want to know about Anthony Kim as rumors of a golf comeback for AK, on some tour at some time soon, swirl about.

First, he’s the best junior golfer to ever come out of the Coachella Valley in Southern California. Kim won his CIF-Southern Section Individual title in 2001 when he was a sophomore at La Quinta High School. He was done with high school golf after that year, instead focusing on his future career in golf.

Kim was brilliant at every level of golf he ever played. He was the newcomer of the year for the Big 12 during his freshman season at the University of Oklahoma. He was the team’s No. 1 player as a junior, the year he left to play professionally. In the next few weeks, he finished second in the 2006 Valero Texas Open.

He was known as a stickler for the rules of the game, not one to give a two-footer in even a recreational round.

He had confidence in his game to burn. But he was never one to embrace the Tour lifestyle, telling me once in an interview at the old Bob Hope Classic that he almost quit the game after his rookie year because he disliked Tour life so much.

He hasn’t played professional golf in 12 years. The last of his three Tour wins came 13 years ago. He beat Sergio Garcia in singles in the Ryder Cup 15 years ago. People forget Kim was so intensely focused during that match that after he had closed Garcia out, Kim started to walk to the next hole to keep playing. Garcia had to call him back.

Kim found ways to be exciting, thrilling, confounding and brilliant on the course. In the 2009 Masters, he made 11 birdies in the second round, still a single-round record for that event. He shot 65. He was touted as the next Tiger Woods in the very era of Tiger.

Yet by 26, it was over, a result of wrist and ankle injuries and a nice, plum insurance policy. Like Bo Jackson in football and baseball, golf fans were left to wonder what could have been.

Anthony Kim raises the trophy after winning the Wachovia Championship golf tournament in Charlotte, N.C., Sunday, May 4, 2008.

Long-awaited return?

Maybe now we will find out. All due respect to other golfers on Tour, but the return of Anthony Kim, now 38, would be one of the two or three biggest stories of the year, and perhaps the biggest story if he resembles the old AK (remember that massive belt buckle?)

In any other time, fans could be excited by the prospect of Kim’s return. Is he missing the game that he didn’t seem to miss all that much when he left 12 years ago? Is his game up to the standard of representing AK?

But as with everything in golf today, the potential return of Anthony Kim includes the prospect of a PGA Tour return vs. a LIV Golf debut. The PGA Tour offers stability and a road back through a past champion’s status and sponsor exemptions that any tournament would be foolish not to offer. LIV offers money up front, but perhaps not the kind of money a 26-year-old Kim could have demanded.

Kim has to make several decisions if he is to come back, and some of those decisions might have already been made. Is his game good enough to put on display for the public? Does he long for the traditions of the history of the PGA Tour and its four-day, 72-hole events, most with 36-hole cuts? Or does LIV’s different format of 54 holes and no cuts and team play hold an appeal, even if critics don’t believe it’s real golf?

Maybe, just maybe, Kim decides not to come back at all. Kim was always a different kind of golfer, so remaining a non-golfer wouldn’t be a surprise.

But if he does come back, at least for a while, Kim would be a red-hot story for the game.

Larry Bohannan is the golf writer for The Desert Sun. You can contact him at (760) 778-4633 or at larry.bohannan@desertsun.com.

Epson Tour Championship is officially heading to Southern California. Will other events follow?

Officials are making no secret that they want to bring the LPGA back to the Coachella Valley at their courses.

The Epson Tour will play its biggest golf tournament at the Indian Wells Golf Resort in 2024, but officials from the City of Indian Wells and the golf resort are making no secret that they want to bring the LPGA back to the Coachella Valley at their courses.

“First, it puts us back in the game,” said Robin Graf, the new general manager at the Indian Wells Golf Resort. “It gives us an opportunity to potentially host more events in the future, and bigger events.”

The Indian Wells City Council voted 5-0 on Thursday to approve a one-year $100,000 sponsorship for the 2024 season finale of the Epson Tour, the developmental tour for the LPGA. That event, to be called the Epson Tour Championship at Indian Wells, will be played on the Players Course of the golf resort on Sept. 30-Oct. 6.

While the Epson Tour Championship becomes the biggest golf event played at the golf resort for now, city staff and council members talked openly about the prospect of an LPGA event for the city in the future. The LPGA left the desert after the 2022 Chevron Championship at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, with the major championship moving to Houston. That left the Coachella Valley without an LPGA event for the first time in 51 years.

The Epson Tour event could show the LPGA that a regular LPGA event is viable for the desert in the fall, and that the Indian Wells Golf Resort is the place to hold such a tournament.

“Let’s not lose sight of the fact that we have had a golden opportunity dropped into our laps,” council member Greg Sanders said during council discussion of the sponsorship. “The Dinah Shore, the ANA tournament, the last year it was here it was sponsored by Chevron, I think. They moved out. I’m going to ask Visit Greater Palm Springs what the economic spinoff was from the ANA. I guarantee you it is huge.”

Sanders added the idea of the Epson Tour sponsorship is to get the LPGA to see Indian Wells as a top-flight candidate for an LPGA event.

“I see this as a strategic investment,” Sanders added.

Photo courtesy Epson Tour/Ben Harpring

City, residents benefits

The council chose a $100,000 sponsorship over a $50,000 option for the Epson Tour event. City manager Christopher Freeland explained that the $100,000 level includes everything the $50,000 level features including the city name and logo incorporated into tournament promotion and advertising, pro-am teams in the tournament, participation in a meet the pros party and VIP passes for the four days of the 72-hole professional tournament. But the $100,000 level also includes discounted tickets for city residents and a designated seating area along the 18th green for residents. Freeland also pointed out the $100,000 sponsorship might be viewed more favorably by the LPGA for any future tournament discussions.

Indian Wells is already the home of the two-week BNP Paribas Open at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden each March, the Ironman 70.3 Indian Wells-La Quinta in December and has a sponsorship deal with the Coachella Valley Firebirds hockey club. For golf, the city hosted a PGA Tour Champion event at The Vintage Club from 1981-92 and at the golf resort in 1993 as well as three years of the LG Skins Game from 2006-08.

“Golf is the epicenter of Indian Wells. It always has been since the 1980s,” council member Bruce Whitman said. “I think golf is our past, our present and our future. And so our golf resort, that campus with the hotels and the golf courses, that is the economic engine of our city. All we can do to encourage more golf in this city can only benefit this city.”

Council member Dana Reed said he supports the sponsorship deal, but would like the city staff to audit claims about the golf tournament and other sports sponsorships the city has. One such claim is the Epson Tour saying the Tour Championship will produce 1,930 room nights in area hotels, with Freeland acknowledging some of those room nights could be in other desert cities.

Freeland added that while the sponsorship voted on by the council Thursday is a one-year deal, it could lead to a multi-year agreement with the Epson Tour and deeper discussions with the LPGA about a tournament on that larger tour.

As the developmental tour for the LPGA, the Epson Tour has 24 events across the country, including one in Beaumont each March. Purses for Epson events are between $200,000 and $375,000, with the Tour Championship featuring a $250,000 purse last month in Florida.

The top 10 money winners on the tour each year earn LPGA exemptions for the following year, with the Tour Championship the final event of that exemption chase. Top players on the LPGA who have graduated from the Epson Tour include major championship winners Nelly Korda and Lilia Vu, with Epson Tour graduates winning more than 400 LPGA titles.

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Could the Epson Tour Championship be moving from Florida to California? An upcoming vote might decide

The proposal is a one-year deal, but the city and Troon might be interested in extending it.

The LPGA may have taken a major championship out of California’s Coachella Valley after 51 years, but women’s professional golf is poised to return to the desert with the biggest event on its developmental tour.

The Indian Wells city council will vote Thursday whether to spend as much as $100,000 to sponsor and host the Epson Tour Championship in the fall of 2024 at the city-owned Indian Wells Golf Resort. The Epson Tour Championship is the final event of the developmental Epson Tour’s season, with the top 10 players from the tour’s money list earning LPGA exemptions for the following year.

“After discussing funding options, the time during the year when the tournament is played, the consumption of existing tee times, and negotiated Resident Benefits, the Finance Committee recommends the Council consider the $100,000 Host City Sponsorship,” a city staff report to the city council suggests.

The event, to be played Oct. 3-6, would be the first Epson Tour event held in the desert, though the tour does play an annual tournament in March at the Morongo Golf Club at Tukwet in Beaumont. The championship has been held in Florida every year since its inception in 2008, with the lone exception of 2020, when it was played at River Run Country Club in Davidson, North Carolina.

“The chance to bring women’s golf back to the Coachella Valley and the chance to bring championship golf to the city is something that we look forward to,” said Christopher Freeland, city manager for Indian Wells who prepared the staff report. “And the idea that at the end of the week 10 players will get their LPGA cards is great.”

The LPGA has a long history in the Coachella Valley dating back to an event in 1953 at Tamarisk Country Club in Rancho Mirage. The best-known LPGA presence in the desert was the 51-year run of an event hosted by television and recording star Dinah Shore under various sponsorship names at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage. That tournament, which started in 1972 and was elevated to a major chainpionship in 1983, ended its run in the desert in 2022 as the Chevron Championship before moving to Houston for the 2023 season.

While the proposal to be voted on Thursday is a one-year deal, Freeland said be believes the city and Troon would be interested in extending the Epson Tour’s deal to play at the city’s golf resort. He added that by showcasing the resort and the Coachella Valley in October, it might be possible that a successful Epson Tour Championship could influence the LPGA to think about returning to the desert with an official LPGA event.

Alexa Pano of USA plays her shot on the third tee during the first round of the Epson Tour Championship at the Champions course at LPGA International on October 06, 2022, in Daytona Beach, Florida. (Photo by Mike Stobe/Getty Images)

Resident discounts included

If approved by the city council at the $100,000 sponsorship level, the new event will be known as the Epson Tour Championship at Indian Wells. City residents would receive discounts on grounds tickets, VIP hospitality and pro-am berths, and the city would receive advertising opportunities on the live stream of the event.

“This opportunity is consistent with the City Council’s goal to increase tourism to Indian Wells and expand the City’s brand as a golfing destination,” the staff report says.

The report says if the $100,000 sponsorship level is approved, staff has $62,200 in the Golf Resort fund to be allocated for the Epson event. That would still require $37,800 in an appropriation. The council will also consider a $50,000 sponsorship opportunity, or could turn down the chance to host the event at all. Freeland sid he was optisitic about the council vote.

“I would expect some sponsorship to be approved,” Freeland said. “I don’t know if it will be the $100,000 level or the $50,000 level, but I think something will be approved.”

For its part, the LPGA is estimating more than 1,900 hotel room nights from Sept. 30 to Oct. 6, a traditionally slow shoulder month period for the city, spinoff revenues at local restaurants, especially the golf resort itself. Receptions and parties, a pro-am for 150 amateurs, the LPGA card ceremony at the end of the event and an estimated $2.5 million in media exposure for the city are all part of the LPGA pledge for the event.

The Epson Tour Championship was played this year in Daytona Beach, Fla., at the LPGA International, but Freeland said the LPGA, through IWGR management company Troon, asked about moving the tournament to the IWGR. While the staff report does not say which of the two 18-hole courses at the golf resort will be played, Freeland said he has confirmed that the Players Course, renovated by John Fought from an original Ted Robinson design, will be the tournament course.

The Indian Wells Golf Resort has hosted professional events before, starting in 1993 with the Gulfstream Aerospace Invitational on the PGA Tour Champions, an event won by Raymond Floyd. The LG Skins Game was played at the resort starting in 2006 and ending in 2008 when the Skins Game itself ended. In recent years the resort has hosted the Southern California Open, an event conducted by the PGA of Southern California.

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See how a California desert town is using golf to market its new minor-league hockey team

One or two members of the club said they had no interest in hockey, but that might change with a hometown team to root for.

Grant Fuhr, who knows plenty about hockey and golf, has a quick answer for why so many hockey players are also good golfers.

“We get summers off,” said Fuhr, a five-time Stanley Cup-winning goalie with the Edmonton Oilers and a Hockey Hall of Famer. “So you get a chance to play golf.”

That may be true in areas like Canada and the Midwest and Northeast of the United States, where winter is a time to focus on hockey with golf courses under a few feet of snow. But for the Coachella Valley Firebirds, the desert’s newest professional team, the hockey season is also prime golf season. So it’s natural that the Firebirds and the golf world would cross paths.

One such crossing came Wednesday when front office members of the Firebirds appeared at Marrakesh Country Club in Palm Desert, where the men’s club was holding its first tournament of the new season. It’s the kind of community outreach, especially in a golf community full of snowbirds from Canada and the Pacific Northwest, that the Firebirds crave.

“It’s crucial. I think you take for granted sometimes that you come in and you think everybody knows,” said Troy Bodie, director of hockey operations for the Firebirds after finishing his round Wednesday. “But especially in this community where everything is seasonal, it’s tough to get that word out sometimes and get people on your mailing list. So just getting out in the community that you are around and you are ready to go.”

Bodie and Fuhr, who will do some television and radio work for the Firebirds this year and who dabbled in professional golf after his playing days, were met with a receptive crowd at Marrakesh.

People walk around the putting greens during Shots in the Night at Indian Wells Golf Resort in Indian Wells, Calif., on Monday, Nov. 14, 2022. (Photo by Taya Gray/Desert Sun/USA Today Network

The Firebirds made a pitch for season tickets, half-season tickets and group sales, though some members at the club have already bought season tickets for the Firebirds. Others seemed not to know what the Firebirds even were, but were willing to learn. One or two members of the club said they had no interest in hockey, but that might change with a hometown team to root for.

As for that seemingly easy transition for athletes from the ice to the golf course, Fuhr said there are some natural carryovers from one sport to the other.

“If you look at the way a guy shoots a puck, and the way the golf swing is at the bottom, they are pretty similar,” said Fuhr, a long-time desert resident.

New season, old friends

As much as it was a chance for the Firebirds to make their introductions, the day also was about kicking off a new season for Marrakesh, which opened from overseeding less than a week before the event. It was a chance for golfers who had just returned to the desert to renew acquaintances over a round and a lunch as well as learn about how the desert is changing with the Firebirds coming to town for their home opener Dec. 18.

It was not unheard of on the day for a foursome to have one player in his 60s, another in his 70s, another in his 80s and still another in his 90s. It was a scene that is being repeated throughout the desert in November as courses reopen from overseeding and snowbirds return to the desert for a few weeks before the holidays.

As for the influence of golf on the Firebirds, Bodie laughingly said the team will take care of that.

“I’m a big believer in letting people do whatever they do away from the rink and enjoy themselves,” Bodie said with a smile. “But we certainly judge them for what they do in the rink and on the ice if something else is distracting you, we deal with that.”

Larry Bohannan is the golf writer for The Desert Sun. You can contact him at (760) 778-4633 or at larry.bohannan@desertsun.com. Follow him on Facebook or on Twitter at @larry_bohannan. Support local journalism. Subscribe to The Desert Sun.

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With Chevron leaving, PGA Tour Champions brings new golf tournament to Palm Springs area

The event will be played on the Dinah Shore Tournament Course at Mission Hills Country Club.

Just two weeks after the LPGA Tour played the Chevron Championship in the Coachella Valley for the 51st and final time, another professional tour will take advantage of that void by bringing a new event to the desert on the same course.

The PGA Tour Champions, a division of the PGA Tour for male golfers 50 and older, will hold a new event in the desert March 24-26, 2023.

The event, to be called the Galleri Classic, will be played on the Dinah Shore Tournament Course at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, the same course that hosted the LPGA major championship for 51 years. The Chevron Championship was played for the last time in the desert earlier this month, with the event moving to Houston in 2023.

The senior tour will make an official announcement along with revealing other details of the new tournament at a news conference Tuesday at Mission Hills Country Club.

“It’s not only very exciting for our tour, it’s something our players have wanted for a very long time, but it is exciting to keep and bring consistent professional golf to the Coachella Valley,” said Miller Brady, the president of the PGA Tour Champions division of the PGA Tour.

Brady said the new tournament came together quickly with sponsor Grail, Inc., a Menlo Park, California-based biotechnology company. One of its products is Galleri, a test for those adults, particularly over 50, who have elevated cancer risks.

Part of the birth of the new tournament, Brady confirmed, was the LPGA’s announcement last October that it was leaving the desert.

“We didn’t think that the area could sustain one of our tournaments with the PGA Tour (The American Express) and the women there all in the first quarter,” Brady said.

The second and third quarters of the year can’t host a tournament in the desert because of high temperatures, Brady said, and the fourth quarter for the PGA Tour Champions is already filled, including the Charles Schwab Cup playoffs.

Brady said that long before he took over as president of the PGA Tour Champions in 2018, players from the tour have asked why the tour doesn’t hold a tournament in the Coachella Valley.

“They have great memories there,” Brady said. “And the demographics there are perfect for us.”

While The Dinah Shore Course will host the tournament in 2023, Brady said the tournament could move around the desert to other courses starting in 2024. He said the tour will soon check out other potential desert courses.

“Whatever it is, it has to work for us,” Brady said.

A statue of Dinah Shore overlooks the 18th green at Mission Hills Country Club Tournament Course in Rancho Mirage, Calif., March 24, 2022. 

The Coachella Valley has not hosted an official PGA Tour Champions event since 1997, the last of three years for the Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf at PGA West in La Quinta. The desert also was home to one of the first senior golf events, the Vintage Invitational, sponsored by Gulfstream Aerospace. That event at The Vintage Club in Indian Wells started in 1981, when the tour was known as the Senior PGA Tour, and moved to the Indian Wells Golf Resort in 1993, the last year the tournament was played.

Other desert tournaments that included senior golfers in the 1990s included made-for-television events The Diners Club Matches and the Lexus Challenge, both short-lived tournaments in the desert.

Players who were stars on the PGA Tour and now play a majority of their golf on the PGA Tour’s senior circuit include two-time Masters champion Bernhard Langer, a winner of 43 Champions events, along with major championship winners Ernie Els, Retief Goodson, Vijay Singh and Fred Couples and top senior players like Scott McCarron, Colin Montgomerie and Miguel Angel Jimenez. Other golfers who play at least some golf on the PGA Tour Champions include Phil Mickelson, Jim Furyk and Davis Love III.

“Most of our guys play every tournament,” Brady said. “We don’t have a depth of field problem. Unless there is an injury or they have a wedding to go to or something like that, our guys are all in.”

Among the golfers who won The American Express is David Duval, who famously captured the 1999 title with a final-round 59 to overcome a seven-shot deficit. That win helped push Duval to No. 1 in the world rankings. Now a rookie on the PGA Tour Champions, Duval is eager to play again in the Coachella Valley.

“It does make a lot of sense, and especially the timing of it,” Duval said of the new Coachella Valley event. “It falls into a great spot on the schedule, and it fills a great gap.”

Duval, who has made five starts so far as a PGA Tour Champions rookie, says the senior tour can appeal to fans in different ways.

“I think there is excellence, excellence in the golf being played,” Duval said. “There is also some nostalgia that is involved with it, because these are the players that so many people are familiar with, you know, watching and admiring. And I think the fact that the players are that much more approachable on the Champions, friendly and engaging.”

Bob Ragusa, CEO of Grail, said the union of the PGA Tour Champions and the Coachella Valley made sense for his company and its new cancer detection drug Galleri.

“You think about the guys on the PGA Tour Champions, all over 50, and at some point they have all been touched by cancer in some way, them or their family or friends,” Ragusa said. “So to be able to partner with the PGA Tour Champions and spread awareness of our Galleri product for the next five years makes sense to us.”

Ragusa also said that he considers Grail to be a California company rather than a Menlo Park company, so being part of a PGA Tour Champions event in Rancho Mirage works well for the company,

“It’s more than just the golf course,” Ragusa said. “It’s the scenery. It’s the atmosphere. It’s just everything,”

While PGA Tour events feature between 144 and 156 players playing four days with a mid-tournament cut, PGA Tour Champions events are generally three days and 54 holes with a field of around 80 players and no cuts. The tour does play five major events, which are four-day tournaments, including the U.S. Senior Open and the Senior PGA Championship. The PGA Tour Champions events are usually broadcast on Golf Channel, and purses for regular events range from $1.6 to $2.5 million.

The PGA Tour Champions will play 27 events this season. For next year, the desert event will follow the Hoag Classic in Newport Beach, played this year March 4-6 and won by Goosen.

The other California event on the senior tour is the Pure Insurance Championship to be played Sept. 23-25 in Monterey.

The LPGA’s Chevron Championship, with Chevron as the new sponsor, will be moving to the Houston area in 2023 with the promise of a new May date, NBC as a television partner and a purse increase to $5 million which began the year.

Larry Bohannan is The Desert Sun golf writer. He can be reached at larry.bohannan@desertsun.com or (760) 778-4633. Follow him on Facebook or on Twitter at @larry_bohannan. Support Local journalism. Subscribe to The Desert Sun.

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The music industry’s ‘most powerful person’ wants to build a 50-member private golf club, but not everyone’s thrilled

A total of eight people per membership would be allowed on-site at any given time.

THERMAL, Califonia — A proposal from music industry executive Irving Azoff is poised to bring a private golf course to eastern Coachella Valley, though not everyone is supportive of the project.

Azoff and his team of developers have proposed building an 18-hole golf course, along with a 9-hole practice course, on an existing citrus and mango grove, located on roughly 300 acres of land northeast of the intersection of Van Buren Street and 70th Avenue. The site is owned by the Bakersfield-based company Anthony Vineyards.

Azoff is the chairman and CEO of Azoff MSG Entertainment but previously led Ticketmaster and Live Nation, and in 2012 he was named “the most powerful person in the music industry” by Billboard Magazine.

Access to the private golf course, known as the Jeule Ranch Golf Club, would be extremely limited, with only 50 memberships available for the course, and a total of eight people per membership allowed on-site at any given time. The golf club would allow a daily maximum of 25 people to use the course.

The project, which gained approval in a Riverside County Planning Director’s hearing Monday, has drawn criticism from some community members and activists, who argue the project has no place in Thermal, where the poverty rate is more than double the statewide average, according to American Community Survey data.

In a letter submitted to the county, the project’s director, David Smith, outlined several commitments that the course developers have made to the surrounding community, similar to the approach recently taken by developers of the nearby Thermal Beach Club.

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The golf club has made promises to hire Thermal residents at the club, establish a staff scholarship program, provide guidance to Coachella Valley high school golf teams and offer maintenance services to local elementary and high school playing fields.

Additionally, while roughly 30 acres of citrus trees will remain near the course post-construction, many of the remaining trees will be distributed to local community facilities, Smith wrote.

In a follow-up letter to the county, Smith also committed to contributing $100,000 to the Desert Recreation District for its planned park in Thermal, which recently received state funding, along with a handful of other parks in the valley.

“Already approved as part of the Desert Recreation District’s long-range park plan and recently the recipient of a state grant, we are pleased to contribute to the Desert Recreation District’s construction of this new park that will provide much needed recreational opportunities for the Thermal community,” Smith wrote in his letter.

Smith also spoke during the hearing Monday, noting the course does not include any housing developments adjoined to it. During the discussion, Smith introduced Gil Hanse, the golf course’s architect who has designed several prolific courses, including the 2016 Olympic Golf Course in Rio de Janeiro.

Hanse, who noted “very few” courses in the Coachella Valley solely offer golf, explained the course will attempt to blend in with the surrounding area, with plans for a citrus grove to line the perimeter of the course.

The course is not the first Coachella Valley development promoted by Azoff, who is widely considered one of the most influential people in the music industry. Azoff has also been a leading co-investor in the Coachella Valley’s new hockey arena, set to open next year, and he contributed $20,000 to Riverside County Supervisor V. Manuel Perez upon the project’s approval by the county earlier this year.

‘I’ve had enough with developers using our communities as their little sandbox’

However, the project has not gained unanimous support from residents of Thermal. Earlier this month, the Leadership Counsel for Justice and Accountability, a community organization that has opposed other luxury developments in the east valley, submitted a letter to the county with 10 local residents co-signed in opposition to the course.

During the hearing Monday, Thermal resident Brenda Ortiz said she was “filled with disappointment” upon learning recently about the planned course.

“I’ve had enough with developers using our communities as their little sandbox, because we are real people with real lives,” Ortiz said. “We’ve been fighting for clean water, livable housing and better infrastructure for years, yet a golf club is a priority?”

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Earlier this year, the course developers held a meeting with the Thermal-Oasis Community Council to gather input on the project. However, Ortiz — the only resident to testify during the hearing — argued the community outreach wasn’t adequate, stating she was never aware of the council meetings despite living in the area her whole life.

Omar Gastelum, a policy director with LCJA, reiterated the point about inadequate community outreach, noting many Thermal residents lack internet access and, thus, the ability to attend virtual meetings.

Regarding the community benefits outlined by the course’s developers, Gastelum said he was appreciative of the effort, but he requested the project developers to commit to a deadline for the community benefit funds to be distributed before the project begins construction.

At the conclusion of his comments, Gastelum reiterated the project “is simply not an appropriate for the community of Thermal and a desert setting in general.”

“The Coachella Valley already has well over 100 golf courses to choose from,” Gastelum said. “To place an additional one in the community that, for years, has been asking for basic infrastructure and accessible amenities, such as green spaces, recreational facilities, clinics and community centers, is simply inappropriate and an irresponsible use of resources.”

Despite the project’s approval from the planning director’s designee Monday, it’s unclear when the project could break ground in the coming months, as Smith and Hanse did not mention a timeline for the project in their presentation. However, a county planning document mentions the golf course could be ready for use by January 2023.

Tom Coulter covers politics. He can be reached at thomas.coulter@desertsun.com or on Twitter @tomcoulter_.

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Where to play golf in the California desert: Palm Springs, La Quinta and PGA West

La Quinta Resort and PGA West offer a fabulously diverse set of golfing options, all with amazing pedigree in the posh California desert.

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There are a handful of places in the U.S. where golfers congregate in such numbers that we are the majority. At Pinehurst in North Carolina and Pebble Beach in California, announcing yourself as a proud golfer isn’t just accepted, it’s expected. 

It’s the same in Palm Springs, California, and its neighboring communities, located a mere 90 miles southeast of Los Angeles. Here, golf is it. Tennis is popular, too, but the fairways, as far as many residents are concerned, are the essence of desert life. 

Back in the day when we let our fingers do the walking and the Yellow Pages was an essential part of life, the local Palm Springs phone book dispersed golf tips on how to grip the club, keep your eye on the ball and follow through on the swing among the volume’s various classified ads. Now that’s a city consumed with golf, one that fills tee sheets with its geriatric golf-loving residents and visitors at more than 100 courses. 

With its idyllic weather consisting of 350 days a year of sunshine, Palm Springs has been a tourist haven and Hollywood getaway since the 1920s. It is a desert oasis cradled between tall, picturesque mountains – the San Jacinto Mountains to the west, the Little San Bernardino Mountains to the east and the Santa Rosa Mountains to the south. 

“The Desert” is what locals call Palm Springs, itself shorthand for the 30-mile string of seven communities – including Cathedral City, Rancho Mirage, Palm Desert, Indian Wells, La Quinta and Indio – that more or less ooze into each other and make up the Coachella Valley.

La Quinta Resort
La Quinta Resort (Courtesy of La Quinta Resort)

Everything about Palm Springs, the best known and farthest west of the Desert communities, is dreamy, from the red bougainvillea draping the Spanish-style buildings to the renovated mid-century modern buildings giving it its charm. Running a close second to the smorgasbord of forgiving fairways in Palm Springs is its culinary treats. It can stand on its own two feet as a bona fide foodie destination. (Unfortunately, my trip was during the pandemic and restaurants were only doing takeout, so circumstances were less than ideal for reviewing the food.) 

The palm trees that line streets named after Bob Hope, Frank Sinatra, Gene Autry and Dinah Shore really do sway in the breeze, and lounging poolside here is a sport, if not an art. Palm Canyon Drive, the main thoroughfare of Palm Springs, is packed with alfresco restaurants with views of the bustling sidewalks and the latest boutique shops. 

Yes, in this bastion of Bentleys and bling, worldly pleasures rule. It begs a question of where to enjoy this paradise: to stay close enough to walk to the first tee, or in the heart of Palm Springs at any one of a handful of the decadent spa resorts? The answer is: Choices abound. Palm Springs tends to cater to those seeking a tax shelter, not a night’s shelter. Nonetheless, affordable lodgings are fairly abundant, especially in summer when the mercury rises into triple digits. 

La Quinta Resort
La Quinta Resort (Courtesy of La Quinta Resort)

Since the dual purpose of my visit was to watch the PGA Tour pros at The American Express in January, I set up shop in La Quinta, at the other end of the valley about a 45-minute drive to Palm Springs. La Quinta Resort is considered the granddaddy of them all. This posh hideaway introduced the first golf course to the Coachella Valley in 1926 and remains a gem. The 45-acre enclave, with 41 pools on property, 23 tennis courts, both hard and clay surfaces and a top-notch teaching staff, harks back to the golden era of Hollywood when film stars lined up at the door. Guests still gather in the lounge, with its deep sofas, high-vaulted beamed ceiling and wood-burning fireplace that gives off the fragrance of mesquite. In a day of high-rise mania, low-rise La Quinta with its quaint Spanish-Colonial style casitas rates at the very least five stars for service, five hearts for romance. 

 

ANA Inspiration: What might have been, and what will September look like?

Originally scheduled to tee off last Thursday but postponed weeks ago, the ANA is more than just a tournament for the women players.

“What might have been” has become a kind of lament for sports in the world of coronavirus.

It’s not that sports fans and athletes, both professional and amateur, don’t understand the severity of what is going on in the world. It doesn’t make sense to crowd thousands of people into an arena, a stadium or even a golf course at a time when the key phrases are “social distancing” and “abundance of caution.”

That doesn’t mean there aren’t pangs of emptiness with the passing of each event that was supposed to be played but was either wiped out completely or postponed for months and months. And so it was with the ANA Inspiration last weekend in the desert.

More: September leap: ANA Inspiration announces new date amid coronavirus threat

More: ANA Inspiration the biggest, but not only California golf cancellation because of coronavirus threat

Originally scheduled to tee off last Thursday but postponed weeks ago along with eight other LPGA events (by now, 14 events have been canceled or postponed), the ANA is more than just a tournament for the women. It’s the first major championship of the year on either the men or women’s tour. For many fans, it is the reintroduction of women’s golf for a new season, even though the season begins in January.

1994: Dinah Shore was a singer, noted TV celebrity and long-time friend of the LPGA. She founded the California tournament that eventually became the ANA Inspiration, one of the LPGA Tour’s five majors.

And it is a chance for fans to see a familiar and challenging golf course in the Dinah Shore Tournament Course at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, the only course that the event has ever called home.

But the tournament is more than that to the desert. You don’t do something for 48 consecutive years without it becoming part of the fabric of your life. That is true of the ANA Inspiration. Desert golf fans who have supported the event through the decades have a right to be proud about how the event kick-started the LPGA in 1972 with television, big money and an iconic host in Dinah Shore.

Players from the 1970s and 1980s still get choked up talking about Shore and how much her support for the women’s game meant, as well as the impact of Colgate-Palmolive head David Foster. They made Rancho Mirage and Mission Hills Country Club the epicenter of women’s professional golf, and that still resonates today.

It seemed like this year’s tournament was on track to be compelling from the opening tee shots Thursday morning.

First, there would have been the Dinah Shore Course. Everything was trending for the golf course to be in ideal condition, since the desert had such a great growing season for turfgrass. Was the rough going to be three inches high? Four? The greens would have been firm, but running 12 feet on the stimpmeter, maybe?

Remember, this is the favorite golf course on tour for scores of players.

Can the event be reproduced in September?

The tournament would have had the appeal of having the No. 1 player in the Rolex World Rankings as the defending champion. Jin Young Ko’s victory in the ANA Inspiration last year, a three-shot win over M.H. Lee, was her second win of the year, her first major, and it vaulted her to No. 1 in the rankings. She has stayed there ever since, with two more wins, including another major. Ko would have been a big focus for the week trying for a second consecutive ANA title.

Then again, this is the ANA Inspiration, and there are some other players who pop up on the leader board seemingly every first week of April. Brittany Lincicome loves the tournament and is looking for a third ANA title. Stacy Lewis is looking to return to the winner’s circle she visited in 2011 and nearly found again in 2015. Inbee Park won the title in 2013 and the Hall of Famer remains a threat, having won the last LPGA event played in February in Australia.

And there is Lexi Thompson, the best player in the event in the 2010s with five finishes in the top seven in the last six years, including a win in 2014 and a famous, or infamous, second-place finish in 2017 that was the talk of not just the golf world, but the sports world because of those four penalty shots she had to take.

A first-time winner against a Hall of Famer in an epic and record playoff. That’s what the ANA Inspiration can provide. That and a cold dip into Poppie’s Pond. The tournament and its great winners have been a part of the rhythm of life in the desert. It will be interesting to see how all of that translates to Sept. 10-13, the rescheduled dates for the event this year.

It will be different, but it will also be the same course and the same players and the same major impact on the winner’s career. And the same pond, though the water might be a bit warmer.

Larry Bohannan is The Palm Springs Desert Sun golf writer. He can be reached at (760) 778-4633 or larry.bohannan@desertsun.com. Follow him on Facebook or on Twitter at Sun.@Larry_Bohannan. 

Coronavirus and golf: Californians say golf’s the same as walking, cycling

The debate over golf is evident in California, where some courses have never closed despite orders that golf courses should shut down.

Craig Kessler agrees with the argument that most golfers and those running golf courses in the Palm Springs, California, area are making about golf being a healthy and safe activity.

Many insist courses should remain open during the COVID-19 pandemic.

But there is a difference between being correct in fact and correct in the eyes of the public.

“They are right, but this is a case, as is so many things, where you are right, but there are other things that are right and maybe trump that in terms of public policy,” said Kessler, the director of governmental affairs for the Southern California Golf Association.

Kessler, whose job is to be a liaison between the golf industry and various governmental agencies, has been swamped in the last three weeks among orders from state and local authorities to shut down courses while many golf courses craft arguments to stay open.

The debate over golf in a pandemic world is evident in California, where some golf courses have never closed despite orders that public and private golf courses should shut down, with an updated date of June 19 for the closures to remain in place.

Now, at least two golf courses that had been closed are re-opening, touting the health and recreational aspects of the game as well as modifications and restrictions aimed at keeping golfers safe.

Two courses re-opening this week

Desert Horizons Country Club, a private 18-hole course in the resort town of Indian Wells, and Terra Lago Golf Resort, a 36-hole public facility in Indio, both said play would resume on their courses Wednesday after being closed for a week or more. However, later in the day Wednesday, Terra Lago was closed again.

Each course provided a list of safety precautions the facilities were following, including closing of clubhouses, restaurants and other facilitates, limits of one rider per golf cart, advising golfers not to touch flag sticks, eliminating rakes form bunkers and modifying cups so the ball doesn’t drop top the bottom of the hole.

“Based on all of the above, your Board believes that Desert Horizons Country Club has met its obligation under the Governor’s Order by closing all golf facilities and services,” the memo to members said. “Your Board of Directors also recognizes that the golf course is owned by golf members of DHCC. The Board believes golf, provided social distancing is strictly observed, is an open space activity which greatly promotes healthy living that benefits everyone.”

The re-openings come on the heels of a petition signed by 21 desert country club general managers sent to Supervisor Manuel Perez asking that the county re-assess its order to close all public and private courses while still allowing the courses to be maintained.

“We believe that golf should be treated the same as walking, running, cycling and other outdoor recreational sports and activities that offer the benefits of social distancing,” the petition reads. “By the game’s nature, golfers play more than six feet apart and, in most cases, remain up to hundreds of feet apart.”

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The petition came with a list of suggested modifications for clubs that closely mirrored the actions at Desert Horizons and Terra Lago.

Kessler said the Riverside County order is not the strictest in the state – that honor might go to the County of Los Angeles – but that the order is clear: Shut down your golf course.

Staying open or re-opening in violation of county orders might actually do more harm than good for the game, Kessler said.

“To the degree to which golf has made and sustained a powerful argument that it is to be among the first of the activities to come back online when we unravel this stay-at-home order, it could harm (golf), all of the game, not just a handful of courses,” he said.

Too many inconsistent rules

Kessler knows first-hand the issues of the last few weeks, having been part of conference calls and press conferences on a state, county and local level. He knows that in Orange County, which has an order similar to Riverside County, authorities are going to clubs in violation and shutting them down. But in San Luis Obispo Country where there are “fewer golf courses than there are in a two-block area of Palm Desert,” he said, golf remains open.

Organizations like the SCGA, the Southern California PGA and the California Alliance for Golf are focusing now on having authorities view golf as a recreation like walking, running, cycling or hiking, not as a separate activity that deserves separate orders.

“I think it is two things,” Kessler said of the industry focus. “To get a consistency (of rules) across the board, and to make sure the game takes its rightful place as an activity that can and should come back online, when the curve of the virus says to come back online.”

While Kessler agrees with the points being made by many throughout the industry – that the game can be safe in the pandemic, that the very nature of the sport promotes social distancing and that the game is a proper recreational activity for these times – he says those arguments are lost in the court of public opinion.

“Once that happened, the very elected leaders who said the game could be played suddenly changes, because that’s the court they listen to the most,” Kessler said. “And from that point, things got tighter and tighter and tighter.”

Kessler also believes that people who are caught up in arguing the case for golf might be missing the larger picture of the pandemic. As the pandemic numbers grow and death numbers grow, Kessler said we could come to a point with an overtaxed healthcare system where a 20-year-old is given a ventilator and a 50-year-old is denied one.

“Which means we’ve just decided that someone is going die,” he said.

Kessler said that while some courses have been called out on social media or even helicopters for television stations showing play on a supposedly closed course, enforcing the Riverside County rules on golf can be as difficult as telling someone not to throw a football in a park. But the industry as a whole wants to be ready when social distancing ends and recreational activities return.

“I’m pretty confident that the golf industry will develop a set of disciplines so that when golf comes back online, it will be a disciplined day,” he said.

Larry Bohannan is The Palm Springs Desert Sun golf writer. He can be reached at (760) 778-4633 or larry.bohannan@desertsun.com. Follow him on Facebook or on Twitter at Sun.@Larry_Bohannan.