The widow of Tom Weiskopf fought through tears as Black Desert Resort made its PGA Tour debut

His widow told Golfweek the 1973 British Open champion would have enjoyed the rave reviews.

Sitting in the recently completed and luxurious lobby of the Black Desert Resort near St. George, Utah, Laurie Weiskopf needed a minute to get control of her emotions. The widow of World Golf Hall of Famer Tom Weiskopf knew she might get choked up a little when seeing the finished project that was the last 18-hole golf course her late husband designed, but the grandeur of the red rocks, black lava flows and stunning resort proved too much for her to handle.

As players rushed to praise the new course, which was shoehorned into the FedEx Cup Fall schedule, Laurie Weiskopf fought through tears while talking with Golfweek about how the 1973 British Open champion would have enjoyed the rave reviews the course received.

The layout has quickly climbed the rankings and is No. 1 in Utah on Golfweek’s Best list of public-access courses, No. 26 among all resort courses in the U.S. and No. 81 among all modern courses in the country.

“He would have been just thrilled. Really thrilled,” Laurie Weiskopf said. “You know there was talk of a PGA Tour event potentially coming as he was building it, but Tom thought that was super aggressive thinking. It would be a surprise to him that it came in 2024. I’m not saying he’d be shocked, but this would have been a surprised to him.”

Opened in 2023, Black Desert was the last course designed by Weiskopf before died of pancreatic cancer. Phil Smith, Weiskopf’s partner in golf architecture, finished the job.

More: What are PGA Tour players saying about the stunning Black Desert Resort this week?

While Laurie admired how much love her husband had for each of the courses he designed, and he has over 70 to his name, she also knew his doggedness would make it difficult to slow down as he became more ill. In a famous story, Weiskopf tumbled into the black lava rocks at Black Desert while he was on there putting the project together. Laurie remembers her husband coming with bloodied hands, but he simply wouldn’t stop working on the project.

“The whole thing was scary for me,” she said. “He fell more than once. I sent him out with the best boots, but he came home with blood all over his hands and I had gloves for him the next day. But I knew he wasn’t going to stop. For him, this wasn’t work. Well, most of the projects weren’t work.”

Tom Weiskopf at Augusta National Golf Club during the 1982 Masters. (The Augusta Chronicle)

While Laurie was thrilled to see Tom’s legacy on display at this year’s Black Desert Championship, she wasn’t as thrilled that it took her husband’s death before he entered the Hall of Fame. The induction ceremony was held in June at Pinehurst. Weiskopf was part of a class that included Padraig Harrington, Sandra Palmer, Johnny Farrell and Beverly Hanson, who joined the remaining seven of the 13 LPGA Founders.

Laurie felt her husband should have gotten the call while he was living, rather than having to come to the family posthumously.

“That’s a hard one for me, to be honest,” she said. “That’s more bittersweet than joyful.

“It’s just frustrating when you know it’s just a popularity contest and you don’t like something about someone and you’re not just looking at what the person’s done. That’s the way I look at it.”

Up next for Black Desert: LPGA will host an event at the southern Utah resort in 2025

The LPGA said about a month before the course opened in 2023 that it would play there in 2025.

The PGA Tour made its first stop in Utah since 1963 over the weekend with the Black Desert Championship. The field lacked most of the tour’s big names but the course itself stepped in as the headliner, with stunning views of the red rocks serving as a magnificent backdrop to the black lava rock lined fairways.

In 2025, the LPGA will bring its tour to the scenic sights of southern Utah. The LPGA announced in May of 2023, about a month before the Tom Weiskopf-design officially opened, that it would stage an event there.

“We are thrilled to welcome Black Desert Resort into the LPGA family as a tournament partner and title sponsor,” Ricki Lasky, LPGA Chief Tour Business and Operations Officer, said at the time.

Neither a tournament name nor a title sponsor has been announced, and the LPGA has yet to officially schedule a date for the tournament but it’s certainly something for fans of the women’s game to look forward to in 2025.

Opened in 2023, Black Desert was the last course designed by Tom Weiskopf before his death caused by pancreatic cancer. Phil Smith, Weiskopf’s partner in golf architecture, finished the job.

The layout has quickly climbed the rankings and is No. 1 in Utah on Golfweek’s Best list of public-access courses, No. 26 among all resort courses in the U.S. and No. 81 among all modern courses in the country.

Black Desert Resort will have a 148-room hotel. A village of condos focused on golfers, another focused on families. A 3,000-foot boardwalk promenade of shops, restaurants and entertainment venues. There will be a PGA Tour event this fall, an LPGA event next year – both of those come on the heels of an Epson Tour event in 2023 in which players were feted with luxuries not normally reserved for that tour.

Golfweek’s Beth Ann Nichols and Jason Lusk contributed to this article.

Utah feels like it’s having a moment at PGA Tour’s inaugural Black Desert Championship

You’ve got the makings of a Utah coup in a sports world that’s typically dominated by metropolitan regions along the coasts.

IVINS, Utah — It feels like the Beehive State, once known for Mormon temples, a bougie ski resort and the largest saltwater lake in the Western Hemisphere, is having something of a moment lately when it comes to the sports world.

Both BYU and Utah are snugly in the middle of the most recent US LBM Coaches Poll, with the Cougars at No. 15 and the Utes just two spots behind. The Utah Jazz recently locked down All-Star forward and former Most Improved Player winner Lauri Markkanen to a five-year deal worth $238 million and this season Salt Lake City will enjoy its first as a National Hockey League city with the Arizona Coyotes relocating to the mountain paradise.

Throw in the PGA Tour’s first return to this geographically diverse region in 60 years at this week’s inaugural Black Desert Championship and you’ve got the makings of a Utah coup in a sports world that’s typically dominated by metropolitan regions along the coasts.

Black Desert: Leaderboard | Photos

That might explain why pro golfers are puffing their chests out a little this week as the Tour’s FedEx Fall rolls through picturesque St. George, a southern municipality that’s closer to Las Vegas than it is Salt Lake City.

“It’s exciting. Utah is kind of the state of sport, so another big event coming to Utah is awesome. Utah fans, people get behind the Jazz and we got a new hockey team, you know, and BYU and Utah and all the colleges,” said Zac Blair, who’s seeking his first PGA Tour victory in the same state where he was reared.

Black Desert Resort Utah
The Tom Weiskopf/Phil Smith-designed Black Desert Resort Golf Course opened in May of 2023 in Ivins, Utah. (Courtesy of Black Desert Golf Club/Brian Oar)

“This is just another big event that I think we’ll get a lot of people coming out to. It’s exciting to have something in your home state. Growing up you dream of playing on the PGA Tour and stuff like that, but never really thought we would have a PGA event here in our home state. Going to be a cool opportunity.”

Although many of the game’s top names will not be on hand — including native son Tonu Finau, who had previous engagements — there won’t be a lack of made-for-TV moments as southern Utah’s red rock mountains will get their day in the sun, literally and figuratively. The par-72 Black Desert Golf Course designed by Phil Smith and the late Tom Weiskopf has been welcomed onto the Tour schedule with rave reviews, rocketing up lists of the nation’s top golf course, including Golfweek’s Best. The design marked the final project from World Golf Hall of Fame 2024 inductee Weiskopf, who died in 2022.

This isn’t the first time Utah has hosted professional golf. The PGA Tour first appeared in Utah in 1930 when World Golf Hall of Fame member Harry “Lighthorse” Cooper won the Salt Lake Open. Seven years later, the Tour returned to Salt Lake City in 1937, when Al Zimmerman won the first of back-to-back Utah Open titles.

The historic Western Open, now known as the BMW Championship, made a stop in the Beehive State a decade later, when seven-time Tour winner Johnny Palmer captured the 1947 tournament in Salt Lake City.

In 1948, the state hosted the Utah Open Invitational, where Lloyd Mangrum edged George Fazio in a playoff. The event was played three more times (1958, 1960, 1963), with the 1963 edition – won by Tommy Jacobs by a stroke over Don January – the last time the Tour played in the state.

While the PGA Tour returns to Utah for the first time since 1963, the Beehive State has been home to the Korn Ferry Tour’s Utah Championship presented by Zions Bank since the Tour’s inaugural season in 1990. Contested at Oakridge Country Club since 2017, past champions of the tournament include John Daly (1990), Zach Johnson (2003), Brendon Todd (2008) and Cameron Champ (2018).

But there is a different feel in this region, a mixture of Arizona heat and Colorado elevation that could give those from the area a distinct advantage, right?

“Of course,” said Patrick Fishburn, who has four top-10 finishes in 2024 and played his college golf at BYU. “Playing at altitude is definitely different for sure. I grew up in Ogden, playing Ogden Country Club, which is probably 4,000 feet elevation and we’re probably 3,000 here. The ball just does different things.

“With the heat this week, there is just a lot of different factors. If you’re maybe not used to that it’ll cause a few more calculations going on in the brain, which for me personally, less calculation is better.”

Golfweek’s Adam Schupak contributed to this report.

Here’s the (very legit) reason why Utah native Tony Finau is skipping the inaugural Black Desert Championship

The Black Desert Championship will make its debut without one of its favorite sons.

With the PGA Tour headed to the Beehive State for the first time in more than 60 years, the organizers of the inaugural Black Desert Championship decided to trot out as many Utah natives as they could – from Tour members Zac Blair and Patrick Fishburn to 65-year-old veteran Jay Don Blake, who is expected to make his fond farewell from the game after his 500th start. (Current BYU golfer Zac Jones and former Cougar stars Peter Kuest and Mike Weir, not long after his role as International Team captain at the Presidents Cup, also are representing in Ivins, Utah, as is 18-year-old Utahn Kihe Akina, who is making his Tour debut, and Dustin Volk, who qualified through the Utah PGA Section.)

But one local product is missing – world No. 24 and fan-favorite Tony Finau isn’t teeing it up this week. Even though his status for next season is locked up and he technically has nothing to gain (other than further lining his pockets, which added more than $5.7 million to date this year in official earnings), he’s a shoo-in to play a Tour event in his own backyard, no, and bring some much-needed star power to the brand-spanking new event?

The Thanksgiving Point All-Stars are headed to the PGA Jr. League 13-and-under championship.

Well, it turns out Finau has a legit excuse and he doesn’t need a doctor’s slip for it. Finau, 35, is the assistant coach for the PGA Junior League’s Thanksgiving Point All-Stars, which are competing in the 13-and-under division of the National Car Rental PGA Jr. League Championship. Finau has a conflict with coaching duties – his 12-year-old son Jraice is a member of the team – and will be in Frisco, Texas at Fields Ranch West, Oct. 10-13.

“It was a tough decision but it really wasn’t a decision at all,” Finau told Golfweek at the Presidents Cup two weeks ago. “I’m committed to being a coach and I’ve got to help coach the team.”

2024 PGA Championship
Tony Finau reacts after a putt on the first green during the second round of the PGA Championship golf tournament at Valhalla Golf Club. (Photo: Jon Durr-USA TODAY Sports)

The Thanksgiving Point All-Stars also include Nicklaus Miller, grandson of Hall of Famer and former NBC lead analyst Johnny Miller, who recently qualified for the National Finals of the Drive, Chip and Putt at Augusta National.

The Thanksgiving Point All-Stars took care of the Bend Bombers 1 All-Star Team, 11-1, in match play on Sept. 8 to advance to the finals in Frisco. Jraice Finau got the Utah team off to a fast start when he chipped in for eagle on the first hole. The team, led by Coach Tele Wightman, PGA, returns to the championship after finishing as runners-up in 2023. This hasn’t been fact-checked but going out on a limb to say there aren’t too many other Jr. League teams with a six-time Tour winner and member of the victorious U.S. Presidents Cup team who serves as an assistant coach.

So, the Black Desert Championship will make its debut without one of its favorite sons but the tournament is signed up for the next four years. Hopefully, Finau will be able to bring his many talents to the lone pro event in his home state before too long.

PGA Tour jazzed for return to Utah in 2024, Black Desert Championship announced

The PGA Tour is headed to the Beehive State for the first time in more than 60 years.

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The PGA Tour is headed to the Beehive State for the first time in more than 60 years.

The Tour and Black Desert Resort announced on Friday a new tournament, the Black Desert Championship, set to debut in 2024 during the FedExCup Fall. As part of a four-year agreement, the Black Desert Championship will mark the first PGA Tour event contested in Utah in more than six decades. A celebratory kickoff announcing the event was held in Greater Zion with Utah Governor Spencer Cox in attendance along with representatives from Black Desert Resort.

The Black Desert Championship will be part of the PGA Tour’s 2024 FedExCup Fall as a full-field event. Tournament dates will be announced at a later time. Black Desert will also host an LPGA Tour event in 2025.

Photos: Black Desert Resort opens gorgeous new Tom Weiskopf/Phil Smith course in Utah

“In introducing the PGA Tour – and the LPGA the following year – to a new market, we look forward to collaborating with the Black Desert Resort team in their vision for professional golf in the Greater Zion community. Competitively, our members will enjoy the challenges and incredible views that define the Black Desert Golf Course,” said PGA Tour executive vice president Tyler Dennis.

Played against the backdrop of southern Utah’s red rock mountains, the par-72 Black Desert Golf Course was designed by Phil Smith and the late Tom Weiskopf, the final design from the World Golf Hall of Fame 2024 inductee.

The PGA Tour first appeared in Utah in 1930 when World Golf Hall of Fame member Harry “Lighthorse” Cooper won the Salt Lake Open. Seven years later, the Tour returned to Salt Lake City in 1937, when Al Zimmerman won the first of back-to-back Utah Open titles.

Black Desert Resort Utah
The Tom Weiskopf/Phil Smith-designed Black Desert Resort Golf Course opened in May of 2023 in Ivins, Utah. (Courtesy of Black Desert Golf Club/Brian Oar)

The historic Western Open, now known as the BMW Championship, made a stop in the Beehive State a decade later, when seven-time Tour winner Johnny Palmer captured the 1947 tournament in Salt Lake City.

In 1948, Utah hosted the Utah Open Invitational, where Lloyd Mangrum edged George Fazio in a playoff. The event was played three more times (1958, 1960, 1963), with the 1963 edition – won by Tommy Jacobs by a stroke over Don January – the last time the Tour played in the state.

More: LPGA announces new stop in Utah beginning in 2025

While the PGA Tour returns to Utah for the first time since 1963, the Beehive State has been home to the Korn Ferry Tour’s Utah Championship presented by Zions Bank since the Tour’s inaugural season in 1990. Contested at Oakridge Country Club since 2017, past champions of the tournament include John Daly (1990), Zach Johnson (2003), Brendon Todd (2008) and Cameron Champ (2018).

The 2024 Black Desert Championship will be televised on Golf Channel, Peacock and PGA Tour Live on ESPN+.

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LPGA announces new stop in Utah beginning in 2025

Black Desert Resort will feature 150 hotel rooms, 1,050 residences, on-property trails and more.

The LPGA will head to Utah in 2025, the tour announced on Tuesday. The new event will be hosted at Black Desert Resort Golf Course in Ivins, Utah, near St. George.

The Tom Weiskopf design features generous fairways, a pair of drivable par 4s and the presence of ancient basalt rock formations.

Upon completion, the Black Desert Resort will feature 150 hotel rooms, 1,050 residences, on-property trails for exploration and adventure, a wellness spa for relaxation, and 80,000 square feet of retail and restaurant space for shopping and dining.

“We are thrilled to welcome Black Desert Resort into the LPGA family as a tournament partner and title sponsor,” said Ricki Lasky, LPGA Chief Tour Business and Operations Officer.

Courtesy Black Desert Resort Golf Course

“This spectacular venue will undoubtedly provide an incredible test to our LPGA Tour athletes. We also greatly appreciate the dedication of the Black Desert Resort team to elevating the stature of the women’s game by making this partnership a key element of their corporate platform as they welcome golf fans to their venue for the first time this week.”

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