Day 32: Brandon Stone Rolls to Victory in the South Africa Open

Back to ‘work’ today… at Glendower Golf Club in the City of Ekurhuleni for the third round of the BMW South African Open Championship on the Sunshine Tour & European Tour… first played in 1903… previously won by Bobby Locke, Sid Brews, Gary Player, Harold Henning, Ernie Els, Retief Goosen, Trevor Immelman, Richard Sterne… England’s Daniel Brroks leading after 2 rounds, Branden Grace 2 strokes back… off to see the leaders tee off… who’s that young American kid leading in Maui??? LOL (-: Gonna be a good year in global golf… looking forward to the PGA Show in Orlando… anyone going? (-:   (Facebook Post 6 Pics, Andy Reistetter, 1/9/16)

Enjoyed my first day here at the South Africa Open at @Glendower Golf Club hosted by the City of Ekurhuleni… impacted by weather but looking forward to the conclusion tomorrow Sunday… great golf course, tournament well staged and run, and of course met some great people outside the ropes!   (Facebook Post 19 Pics, Andy Reistetter, 1/9/16)

Golf Journey to Ernie Els Country”… awesome to meet him at his Oubaai Golf Resort & Spa (means Old Bay, pronounced “Oh-Bye,” my read “Oh-Boy,” what a place!)… missed him at his Ernie Els Wines winery in Stellenbosch… good to see him again here at the South Africa Open at Glendower Golf Club in the City of Ekurhuleni (pronounced “e-koo-roo-le-ni)… does this mean I am a stalker or that the Big Easy represents the heart, soul, & inspiration of South Africa… which is that which I am seeking and finding…   (Facebook Post Ernie Els Video, Andy Reistetter, 1/9/16)

WOW, exciting finish to the South Africa Open… walked the back 9 with the leaders… congratulations to Brandon Stone, what a display of perseverance & talent… 6 birdies in last 11 holes to finish a 65 in Round 3… then bogeys 6 of 8 holes mid 4th round and finishes with 4 birdies on last 6 holes to win by 2 strokes! Reminded me of seeing Jordan Spieth win the Australian Open in Sydney last year… keep an eye out for Brandon Stone… might be the start of the Stone Age!   (-:   (Facebook Post 12 Pics, Andy Reistetter, 1/11/16)

Fantastic ‘Play It Like the Pro’s’ Monday After the South Africa Open golf day at Glendower Golf Club… WOW, what a golf course! More than I can handle, 6,914 meters from the tips, firm & fast conditions with uncut rough and Sunday hole locations… still managed to par half the holes and have a great time with Kyle, Boy, and Jason and our caddies Andreas, Killer, Clay & Lucky! Later joined by the great South African golfer Bobby Lincoln! Thanks 15 million rand Sandy! (-:   (Facebook Post 16 Pics, Andy Reistetter, 1/11/16)

Don’t Miss the Diamond Resorts Invitational in Orlando starting January 12th!

_0 DRI 2016Sadly, I will miss being there in person in Orlando to cover the January 12th through the 17th Diamond Resorts Invitational Benefiting Florida Hospitals for Children. It’s the East Coast version of the summer Celebrity Golf Classic staged in Lake Tahoe. With the season change comes a stronger lineup of celebrities competing, especially the off-season baseball players. Hosted this year by The Bear Club at Keene’s Point with celebrities and Diamond Resorts guests staying at the Mystic Dunes Resort & Golf Club, this event will come of age on a national and worldwide level. Since I am on the ‘Golf Journey to South Africa,’ I have to miss it but you don’t—either in person in Orlando or televised on The Golf Channel.

Chad Pfeifer, AZ Pierzynski, Brian Gay & Johnny Damon participated in the media interviews.

Chad Pfeifer, AZ Pierzynski, Brian Gay & Johnny Damon participated in the media interviews.

I did experience it in a way by attending the Media Day in early December. Staying at Mystic Dunes and playing The Bear Club twice I felt like a celebrity or one of those Diamond Resorts guests. All that I missed was the shuttle helicopter ride from the resort to the golf course to insure that the celebrity golfers won’t get caught in Orlando traffic and miss their tee times like the LPGA players did recently in Mexico City!

With the celebrity nature of the event, staying at accommodations like the Mystic Dunes Resort and playing golf courses like The Golden Bear Club, it is easy to miss the main reason for the event—to raise funds for Florida Hospitals for Children. There is no doubt that Brian & Kimberley Gay and the Diamond Resorts International leadership and organization have been focused on the charitable aspect of the tournament and have been for some time.

With professional golfer Brian Gay and his wife Kimberley.

With professional golfer Brian Gay and his wife Kimberley.

Diamond Resorts International first began working with Florida Hospital for Children in 2012 through volunteer participation at hospital events. In 2013, Diamond Resorts Ambassador and PGA Touring Professional, Brian Gay, offered to lend his name to the Diamond Resorts inaugural golf invitational in efforts to help raise money for the Orlando-based hospital. Raising over $1.2 million to date, the Diamond Resorts sponsored golf event returns in 2016 as the Diamond Resorts Invitational benefiting Florida Hospital for Children and will be a live, nationally televised event on Golf Channel. The 54-hole celebrity tournament will feature a Stableford scoring format with a $500,000 purse and will feature a world-class weekend of golf, entertainment and philanthropy, all to benefit Florida Hospital for Children.

The Brian Gay Invitational Celebrity-Amateur Tournament continues in its fourth year on Wednesday the day before the 3-day celebrity competition. Amateurs will compete for spots in the tournament proper. To finish off the week, on Sunday there will be Family Excursions to Orlando Theme Parks because Diamond Resorts is dedicated to the understanding that taking vacations is vital to people’s health, happiness and relationships with their loved ones, and enables experiences that create memories that last a lifetime.

With American Hero, Three-time Warrior Open Champion, and Golf Channel Big Break contestant Chad Pfeifer. What a great guy, what an honor to meet and play golf with him!

With American Hero, Three-time Warrior Open Champion, and Golf Channel Big Break contestant Chad Pfeifer. What a great guy, what an honor to meet and play golf with him!

I can vouch for that having attended the Media Day along with regular Diamond Resort guests. I say ‘regular’ because once you are in the club, everyone has the opportunity to participate in the events I did, namely attend the media conference and play The Golden Bear Club at Keene’s Point and enjoy an intimate dinner and personal concert performance by Colt Ford and his band.

I hope to catch some of the action on the Sports channel here in Johannesburg (sadly and amazingly South Africa does not have their own Golf Channel) and will be following the tournament. No doubt with Brian & Kimberley Gay, Diamond Resorts International and all the celebrities engaged, it will be a fantastic and memorable event!

With Colt Ford after his amazing performance for Diamond Resorts members!

With Colt Ford after his amazing performance for Diamond Resorts members!

Diamond Resorts in Orlando in the winter, better than Tahoe in the summer, unless you are a skier…

If you are a Diamond Resorts member I think you should go to this one! If you are not a Diamond Resorts member I think you should look into it!

Don’t Miss the Diamond Resorts Invitational Benefiting Florida Hospitals for Children at The Golden Bear Golf Club at Keene’s Point in Orlando starting January 12th!

Experience this adventure on Andy’s Golf & Travel Diary as it evolved in real time as chronicled with Facebook posts:

Celebrity WelcomeExcited to be heading to Orlando for a media preview event for the January 12th-17th Diamond Resorts Invitational Benefiting Florida Hospital for Children which includes the Brian Gay Invitational Celebrity-Amateur Tournament on Tuesday. All to be televised on the Golf Channel. With 60 headline celebrities this is the East Coast version of the Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Wondering if local Ponte Vedra Beach golf celebrity Frank Sausedo is playing too? Staying at the Mystic Dunes Resort & Golf Club and playing The Golden Bear Club at Keene’s Pointe… then off to South Africa on Wednesday… http://diamondresortsinvitational.com/ Any Orlando tips? (-: (FB 12/5/15)

The Golden Bear Club at Keene's Point, a Jack Nicklaus gem!

The Golden Bear Club at Keene’s Point, a Jack Nicklaus gem!

Let the Diamond Resorts Invitational Media Day fun begin at the Golden Bear Club… with Brian Gay, Chad Pfeifer & Colts Ford (FB 12/7/15)

Awesome media conference for the Diamond Resorts Invitational benefiting Florida Hospital for Children with Chad Pfeifer, AZ Pierzynski, Brian Gay & Johnny Damon, then played The Golden Bear Club at Keene’s Pointe… Mystic Dunes Resort & Golf Club Diamonds Resorts http://diamondresortsinvitational.com/charity (FB 12/8/15)

Magical evening at Mystic Dunes Resort & Golf Club with Diamond Resorts International … intimate, heartfelt & talented performance by Colt Ford and his band… (FB 12/8/15)

Day 2 at Diamond Resorts Invitational Media Day, stay at Mystic Dunes, play The Golden Bear Club… going to be a great Celebrity-Amateur-Hero with Chad Pfiefer… (FB 12/9/15)

Exciting par-3 11th hole on the Gary Koch designed Mystic Dunes Course.

Exciting par-3 11th hole on the Gary Koch designed Mystic Dunes Course.

Playing golf on the Gary Koch designed course at Mystic Dunes with lots of character this morning, not your ordinary Florida golf course, Love the 17th green and Golfin Around with my buddy Randy Tantlinger was a lot of fun! (FB 12/9/15)

That concludes another amazing golf and life adventure on Andy’s Golf & Travel Diary!

 

 

A Dramatic Finish to the 2015 Web.com Finals at TPC Sawgrass!

The 2015 Web.com Graduating Class being celebrated on the back lawn of the TPC Clubhouse.

The 2015 Web.com Graduating Class being celebrated on the back lawn of the TPC Clubhouse.

No disrespect to the PGA TOUR but can a day of tournament golf ever be more exciting than this day, the final day of the 2015 Web.com season and Finals competition?

Lucas Glover, in the next to last pairing, who is well within the Finals Top 25, bogeys the last hole. Glover, falling from a 3-way tie for 10th place to a 6-way tie for 12th place redistributes the money payout. One of those six in 12th place, Rob Oppenheim, who finished two hours earlier and was on his way home, edges out Eric Axley by $101 to be the final Bubble Boy in 25th place. At the end of the Web.com Tour Championship that bubble never bursts, at least for one year on the PGA TOUR.

Emiliano Grillo stroking his putt and ringing the bell to win the Web.com Tour Championship on the 18th green on Dye's Valley.

Emiliano Grillo stroking his putt and ringing the bell to win the Web.com Tour Championship on the 18th green on Dye’s Valley.

Oppenheim (started 50th and finished at No. 25 after a T12 finish this week with a Sunday 67) was one of five  players to play their way into the Finals Top 25 along with Derek Fathauer (34th, 15th this week with a Sunday 66), Tyrone van Aswegen (44th, 17th, T5 this week with a Sunday 68), Robert Garrigus (33rd, 19th, T12 this week with a Sunday 68), and Thomas Aiken (T95, 23rd, T5 with a Sunday 65 this week). Pushed out of the Finals Top 25 were Eric Axley (started 20th, ended 26th with a Missed Cut (MC) this week), Ryan Spears (21st, 28th, MC), Steve Allan (23rd, 30th, MC), Justin Hicks (24th, 32nd, MC) and Jhonattan Vegas (25th, 33rd, MC).

The sad reality is one needs to make the cut and play well on Sunday to get inside the Finals Top 25 Bubble or it bursts.

Emiliano Grillo (L), Patton Kizzire (C) and Chez Reavie (R) with the hardware they earned this week!

Emiliano Grillo (L), Patton Kizzire (C) and Chez Reavie (R) with the hardware they earned this week!

Then in the final pairing Emiliano Grillo and Chez Reavie come to the final hole tied at 13-under. They have been nip-and-tuck all day with Reavie erasing Grillo’s slim 2-stroke lead at the start of the final round of the Finals. If Reavie wins he also edges out Grillo for the Finals Money List and gets a full exemption to the 2015-2016 PGA TOUR and a THE Players Championship invitation. Grillo is 25-feet away for birdie while Reavie is half that distance on the same line. Grillo drains his putt and Reavie misses to win the Web.com Tour Championship. The Finals Money Title goes to Reavie.

The other golden ticket with a full exemption to the 2015-2016 PGA TOUR and a PLAYERS invitation goes to Patton Kizzire who won the combined Regular Season and Finals Money Title. At $567,865.58 in winnings, his lead was never really in jeopardy this week.

A beautiful Florida sunset highlighted the Awards Ceremony after an amazing week at TPC Sawgrass.

A beautiful Florida sunset highlighted the Awards Ceremony after an amazing week at TPC Sawgrass.

All three, Kizzire, Reavie and Grillo,  are heading up to New York City tomorrow to join Web.com Chief Executive Officer David Brown in ringing the bell at the NASDAQ Stock Market. I remember back to high school baseball days when our pitcher Jim Sweeney’s dad who yell out the encouraging words of “Ring that bell Jim, ring that bell!” Evidently ringing the bell on a stock market is the quite an honor and a symbol of a lifetime of achievement. For this threesome and the 47 other Web.com golfers who earned their PGA TOUR card for next season—congratulations for a job well done.

The week started for me listening to an inspirational 13-year old First Tee participant in the Sunset Room of the clubhouse to kick off the 10th annual ‘Taste of Golf.’ It ended with a beautiful Florida sunset on the back lawn of the Clubhouse with a celebration of what these 50 Web.com golfers achieved this year.

What a perfect and exciting finish this week in the Web.com Tour Championship at TPC Sawgrass!

What an exciting week at the Web.com Tour Championship for Andy's Golf & Travel Diary!

What an exciting week at the Web.com Tour Championship for Andy’s Golf & Travel Diary!

Grillo Leads by Two, Five In, Five Out at the Web.com Tour Championship

Emiliano Grillo is atop the Web.com Tour Championship leader board going into Sunday. Who will win and who will finish in the Finals Top 25?

Emiliano Grillo is atop the Web.com Tour Championship leader board going into Sunday. Who will win and who will finish in the Finals Top 25?

Peak golf season  continues with the Web.com Tour Championship sandwiched in between the PGA TOUR Playoffs and The President’s Cup next week in South Korea. Saturday was as exciting as ever in the fourth and final event in the Finals at Dye’s Valley Course.

Argentina’s 23-year old Emiliano Grillo shot a bogey-free 67 to double his Friday lead to two strokes going into Sunday’s final round. The $180,000 for first place will likely determine the overall money leader for the Finals and who will be fully-exempt on the PGA TOUR in 2015-16 and be invited to THE PLAYERS Championship next door on the Stadium Course.

Chez Reavie who won two weeks ago at the Small Business Connection Championship is in second place after a Saturday 67 to match Grillo’s score and leap frog Lucas Glover who was one stroke behind Grillo to start the day. Glover’s 69 gets him in the next-to-last pairing with Sam Saunders who shot 68. Although it looks like a shootout between Grillo and Reavie for the Finals Money Title, there are eleven players within six strokes of the lead, anything can happen in the final round of the Finals!

Will the winner come out of the final two pairings or be one of eleven players within 6 strokes of the lead?

Will the winner come out of the final two pairings or be one of eleven players within 6 strokes of the lead?

The other full exemption and PLAYERS invitation goes to the overall money leader for the combined regular season and Finals and will likely go to Patton Kizzire. The only player that can overtake Kizzire is Dawie van der Walt and he needs to win outright to do so. He is currently T30 ten strokes back of Grillo.

On the other end of the spectrum is the fight to just get a PGA TOUR card for next season by being in the Top 25 on the Finals Money List. Five players are projected to make the Top 25 Bubble—Tyrone Van Aswegen (T5 after Round 3), Robert Garrigus (T17), Derek Fathauer (T17), Kevin Tway (T7) and Greg Eason (T12) bumping out five players who started the week inside the Finals Top 25—Eric Axley, Ryan Spears, Steve Allan, Justin Hicks and Jhonny Vegas. Those five players were all ranked within Nos. 20 to 25 and all missed the cut! Only Brian Davis who started at No. 22 and made the cut is still projected to remain inside the Finals Top 25 at No. 25!

But nothing is a done deal yet as the pressure mounts. One good or one bad round tomorrow can trigger wild swings in money distribution and impact the final Bubble outcome.

Should be anther exciting Sunday at TPC Sawgrass!

 

I can't wait to see who wins the Web.com Tour Championship and who earns the Finals Top 25 PGA TOUR cards!

I can’t wait to see who wins the Web.com Tour Championship and who earns the Finals Top 25 PGA TOUR cards!

 

 

 

Web.com Bubble Watch: A Round and A Round We Go!

Bubbles sometimes reflect many things in our lives.   Photo Credit: Google Images

Bubbles sometimes reflect many things in our lives. Photo Credit: Google Images

Bubbles can be beautiful, free and floating away soon after we create them in reality, our minds or in our life. They seemingly take on an energy of their own. It is as if when they are getting bigger they become clearer and less dense and are able to go higher and higher, farther and farther than us mere humans. They glisten and sparkle upon creation and relieve our minds of any difficulties at all in life. Perhaps we imagine being safe in that bubble, protected from any worldly issues. Nothing can touch us as we are enveloped in Disneyland as our magical life unfolds.

And then the bubble pops, the bubble bursts and we are left with nothing.

Top 25 performance on teh Web.com  Tour or in the Finals is the only ticket to the PGA TOUR.

Top 25 performance on teh Web.com Tour or in the Finals is the only ticket to the PGA TOUR.

The PGA Tour, via the Web.com Tour, is a bubble blowing machine cranking out 50 new versions a year. For each one of those 50 golfers who get 2016 PGA TOUR cards there is another golfer who loses his card and privilege to compete on the best and most lucrative professional golf tour in the world. Fortunately then, it is not like the bubble that pops or bursts, there is debris that can easily be patched back together into a successful golfing life. There is the well-padded cushioned landing back on the Web.com Tour where the rebound to the main tour is sometimes quick and permanent. There are mini-tours and the chance to qualify for the Web.com Tour if the bubble shatters completely and falls down through the Web.com safety net.

Dye's Valley determines the fate of many professional golfers!

Dye’s Valley determines the fate of many professional golfers!

There is also the realization that competitive professional golf is only the tiny lucrative green bulls-eye in a huge golfing world, business, and industry. There are club pro positions, instructing positions, even broadcast positions available and many, many more business positions that mean a person can be around the game they love and still make a living even if not any longer via their golfing skills.

But the reality of the final event of the PGA TOUR season is upon us. The Web.com Tour Championship, the fourth and final event of the Web.com Tour Finals is being competed this week on the difficult Dye’s Valley  Course at TPC Sawgrass. In the last two years, six golfers have gone safely into the PGA TOUR bubble while six have been extracted. Who knows how many will create their bubble this week and ride it to the 2015-2016 PGA TOUR?

The ultimate bubble is actually three bubbles this week as the winner of the Regular Season 25 (Patton Kizzire), the winner of the Finals 25 (TBD) and the winner of the Tour Championship (TBD) who will be invited to join Web.com Chief Executive Officer in ringing the bell at the NASDAQ in New York City on Monday, October 5th.

Here we go with a round-by-round Bubble Watch:

Round 1 on Thursday, October 1st, 2015

_24 Beautiful 17th  499 yds

The beautiful 499-yard par-4 17th on Dye;s Valley.

The pairings are so designed to present the players around the bubble in the television window to follow the tour card seeking drama. To progress the dream, you have to make money this week which means you have to make the cut on Friday. Like any bubble, what happens in the environment, outside the bubble, what other players do can be as crucial as to what happens inside the bubble, inside any one player’s mind and posted scores. Other players rocketing up or down the leader board impact the money distribution and therefore your bubble too.

I followed the 12:42 pm group of Eric Axley (No. 20), Ryan Spears (No. 21) and Brian Davis (No. 22) on the back nine. Remember the Top 25 in the Finals get their cards. The Regular Season Top 25 are already in and just trying to improve their ranking to be eligible for more tournaments next season.

On a day when the field pretty much averaged an even par of 70 (actually 70.112) and the low score was a 7-under par 63 by Rhen Gibson who rocketed up to No. 2 after starting the day safely at No. 18 on the list of Top 25 to earn a card in the Finals.

It's complicated even with billboards to help explain how the system works to determine the Finals Top 25.

It’s complicated even with billboards to help explain how the system works to determine the Finals Top 25.

Axley started at No. 20, birdied the 2nd and double bogeyed the difficult 503-yard par-4 8th hole making the turn at 1-over 36. On the 408-yard par-4 10th, with water all the way down the right side, his tee ball was left in the trees and close to the out-of bounds. The ball finished out-of-bounds and evidently the marshal signaled a no-good shot by waving and crossing his arms below his knees which in reality is the official caddie signal for a ball in play. After the other guys teed off and Axley apparently wasn’t going to play another tee shot I signaled that the ball was indeed out-of-bounds. My caddie training by Mr. Donald Cross at TPC Sawgrass during the winter of 2009/2010 came in handy but not for Mr. Axley as he was upset with the initial signal and that he hit the next one out-of-bounds. After playing his 6th shot from the fairway he recorded a quadruple bogey 8. To his credit he rebounded with three birides before bogeying the last two and posting a 4-over par 74 for the day. For us it would have been a double mulligan par on the 10th and a 90 on a good day.

Ryan Spears in orange putting out on the 18th as Eric Axley (black) and Brian Davis (blue shirt) and their caddies look on.

Ryan Spears in orange putting out on the 18th as Eric Axley (black) and Brian Davis (blue shirt) and their caddies look on.

Spears started at No. 21, was even on the front before making four bogeys with a lone bogey on the par-5 16th on the back and posting a 3-over par 73 for Round One. With the normal par-5 8th and 17th playing as long par-4s it must seem like forever after playing the par-5 first hole for another reachable par-5 to appear. Spears was frustrated with the slowness of the greens leaving downhill, down-grain putts short and having it feel like 4 less feet on Stimp Meter versus a week ago on the Scarlet Course at The Ohio State University in the Nationwide Children’s Hospital Championship. We have experienced the opposite effect from slow to fast if you have ever played a firm-and-fast golf course the day after a professional tournament. The fairways do get narrower and the greens, well beyond this golfer’s capability!

Davis started at No. 22, was 1-over on the front, bogeyed the 10th but birdied the 12th and 16th on the way to the big Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass. Even with an even par 70, Davis was projected to fall to No. 25 and become the Bubble Boy for Round Two while Axley (No. 26) and Spears (No. 28) fell out of the desired Top 25 in the Finals competition.

Round 2 on Friday, October 2nd, 2015

Round 2 at the Web.com Tour Championship is no ordinary Cut Day on the Web.com. For those on the bubble, missing a cut today means missing out on the opportunity to make money and advance up the Money List and solidify the chance to be in the Top 25 of the Finals and earn a PGA TOUR card for next year. With six players entering the Finals Top 25 in the last week since the inception of this new format, a player just inside the bubble can be a sitting duck. That being said, there are mathematical probabilites where even though a player is not playing his position can be improved. Usually because a non-Top 25 player is playing well and is projected to win a lot of money and end up as one of the Top 25 at the end of the tournament. So if you are not playing, you can’t help yourself and can only hope for some quirky nature of fate to give you buoyancy into the Finals Top 25.

Today I joined the 12:31 pm group of Steve Allan, Justin Hicks, and Jhonattan Vegas, respectively Nos. 23, 24, and 25 at the start of the week on the 10th hole. With some 30 inches of rain in the last 45 days, Dye’s Valley was still a bit soggy with Life, Clean & Place in effect for the second day in a row. Like yesterday, today would be rain-free. Play golf, earn a card to the 2015-2016 PGA TOUR.

The 11th hole was wide open for play after the Hicks delay on No. 11.

The 11th hole was wide open for play after the Hicks delay on No. 11.

I watched this group for only three holes but it seemed like a lot longer time as it took a while for Hicks to determine where his golf ball last crossed the water hazard on the difficult 229-yard par 3 11th hole. By the time he took his drop and made bogey there were two groups on the tee and a wide open 12th hole waiting to be played. Maybe there should be a 5-minute time limit of making a decision on where to drop!

Allan’s lone birdie in Round 2 would come at the first on his way to a 38-40=78 and a missed cut by nine strokes. Hicks would shoot a 70 with two closing birdies on Nos. 15 and 16 but his 143 would miss the cut by three strokes. Vegas needed a good back nine to follow a good front nine of 1-under 34. He found water right on the 10th and took a double bogey. Later, so focused on his target on the par-5 16th, knowing he needed an eagle to make the weekend, he inadvertently pulled a 3-iron instead of a 4-iron and found the water hazard long. Though recovering with a par and then birdieing the long par-4 17th he missed the cut by two strokes.

Of the six Bubble Boys I watched, Nos. 20 to 25, only one, Brian Davis made the cut that came at Even Par 140 and he made it right on the number with an opening pair of 70s.

I caught up with the 12:20 Smylie Kaufman, Bill Lunde and Brad Fritsch group on the 14th green and followed them in. Lunde at No. 29 and Fritsch at No. 30 were outside the bubble looking in at the start of the week. Kaufman, true to his first name, was all smiles as he had already earned a card by finishing No. 13, well within the Regular Season Top 25 to earn his card for next season. The 23-year old LSA graduate who won the United Leasing Championship in May double bogeyed the par-5 16th and missed the cut by one strokes.

It all came down to the 18th for Lunde and Fritsch to make the cut on Friday.

It all came down to the 18th for Lunde and Fritsch to make the cut on Friday.

Lunde and Fritsch hopes of playing the weekend all came down to a potential short chip-in on the last green. Lunde, with three birdies in the last six holes, needed another one at the 18th to make the cut. He missed the green just long and had a makeable chip. I remember seeing Lunde chip in on the final green to win the 2008 Nationwide Children’s Hospital Classic. Could he do it again. Close but no, missed cut.

Fritsch, needing a par to make the cut, made it interesting as his ball nearly found the water hazard left off the tee. With an awkward stance he was forced to chip out and then missed the green. His makeable chip was more difficult and came out heavy. As fate would have it he knocked in the 15-footer for bogey, also missing the cut by one stroke.

On Friday the field average score was 69.860 and the cut to 72 players came at even par.

Amidst the Bubble Watch a golf tournament is breaking out.  Argentina’s Emiliano Grillo shot 66-64 to take a one-stroke lead over 2009 U.S. Open Champion Lucas Glover heading into the weekend of what surely will be an exciting finish to the 2015 Web.com season!

 

 

Tis the Season at TPC Sawgrass for the Web.com Tour Championship!

Tis the season at TPC Sawgrass for the Web.com Tour Championship!

Tis the season at TPC Sawgrass for the Web.com Tour Championship!

As a golf aficiondo, I am very fortunate to live in Northeast Florida. Not only is TPC Sawgrass home to the PGA TOUR organization, it is also home to THE PLAYERS Championship in the Spring and the Web.com Tour Championship in the Fall. In between there is the late Summertime Junior PLAYERS Championship and of course in the Winter this is a Mecca for snowbird golfers from the north. But right now, this week at tis the season at TPC Sawgrass for the Web.com Tour Championship!

This is the Final of the Web.com Tour Finals. Hope is still alive for 25 more golfers to earn their 2015-2016 PGA TOUR cards. For World No. 1  and No. 1 on the Fed Ex Cup Points List, Jordan Spieth down to No. 125 Jeff Overton, a tour card for next year is a done deal. Breathe, relax and take a holiday until the season opener in two weeks at the Frys.com Open at Silverado CC in Napa, California.

Life size mural of Carlos Ortiz, 2014 Web.com Player of the Year, hangs in the Media Center.

Life size mural of Carlos Ortiz, 2014 Web.com Player of the Year, hangs in the Media Center.

For the 2015 Web.com Tour Season Winner, No. 1 on the Money List after the 21 regular season events, Patton Kizzire down to No. 25 Patrick Rodgers, their main mission is done having earned their golden 2015-2016 PGA TOUR card, same as the Top 125. Well not exactly, the 4-week Finals series is a chance to improve their ranking going into the PGA TOUR season, the best they can do is to be right there immediately following the Top 125. For full field 164-player events it might not matter but for smaller fields and invitational events with limited daylight hours it can matter a great deal. Breathe, relax and spin the wheel one more time with only upward possibilities.

In the Merry Mixup of Nos. 126 to 200 from the PGA TOUR and Nos. 26 to 75 from the Web.com Tour there are 25 additional tour cards at stake this week on Dye’s Valley Course at TPC Sawgrass. After the first three Finals events, Chex Reavie is at the top of the Finals Money List and Jhonattan Vegas is at the bottom of the additional Top 25.

Only $253.57 separates lucky now Johnny Vegas from Billy Hurley III, $641.42 from Scott Langley and $1,871.42 from Andrew Yun. The total purse this week is $1,000.000 with $180,000 to the winner, $27,000 for solo 10th place, and the last person in the money potentially winning $2,000. So if Vegas’ luck runs out and Langley makes the cut, holding all other things constant (which never happens even in engineering school with PV-nRT), Langley gets the tour card, Vegas does not.

So it will be an exciting week on the golf course, the Finals’ Final of the Qualification to earn a tour card if you will, but not the old Q-school, to see who comes through at the end. Off the course it will be another amazing week, as the pictures will attest to, for tis the season at TPC Sawgrass for the Web.com Tour Championship and the exciting conclusion of the Finals!

 

Wouldn't you love to walk into the President's Cup Library at the TPC Sawgrass Clubhouse and register with Kelli (L) and Kathy (R) as a player for the Web.com Tour Championship?

Wouldn’t you love to walk into the President’s Cup Library at the TPC Sawgrass Clubhouse and register with Kelli (L) and Kathy (R) as a player for the Web.com Tour Championship?

With Darling Darlene in her diner feeding the volunteers in  29 THE PLAYERS Championship, 7 PGA TOUR Championships and now 5 Web.com Tour Championships.

With Darling Darlene in her diner feeding the volunteers in 29 THE PLAYERS Championship, 7 PGA TOUR Championships and now 5 Web.com Tour Championships.

Players this week tend to go in and out of the front door of the Clubhouse to get to Dye's Valley but have hopes of walking out this tunnel next May.

Players this week tend to go in and out of the front door of the Clubhouse to get to Dye’s Valley but have hopes of walking out this tunnel next May.

2015 DSGO: Maggert the Magnificent Wins the 2015 Dick’s Sporting Goods Open!

Jeff Maggert, the 2015 DSGO Champion with his trophy, in the Media Center after a bogey-free 66 seized his 4th win of the year!

Jeff Maggert, the 2015 DSGO Champion with his trophy, in the Media Center after a bogey-free 66 seized his 4th win of the year!

Jeff Maggert, the Champions Tour star of 2015 , won for the fourth time, including two majors, closing with a spectacular bogey-free 6-under 66 at the municipal owned En Joie Golf Course in Endicott, New York. Under firm and fast conditions all week long the winning score of 14-under par was lower than all but one of the first nine Dick’s Sporting Goods Opens (DSGO).

Maggert did the hard work easy birding six of the first ten holes then finishing with eight straight pars as the next best score out of the final two threesomes was a 70 by playing partner Ian Woosnam. Goydos was Maggert’s closest pursuer on the back nine but his last birdie came at the par-5 12th and his tee shot on the difficult par-4 15th found the water right. After a good pitch on the short par-4 16th Goydos missed the short birdie putt and was unable to drain two makeable birdie putts on the way to the clubhouse and a solo second place finish.

The video scoreboard congratulating Jeff Maggert during the Awards Ceremony on the 18th green.

The video scoreboard congratulating Jeff Maggert during the Awards Ceremony on the 18th green.

Corey Pavin put on a gallant charge all day recording his fifth birdie with no bogeys with a masterful chip in at the par-3 17th to get within two strokes tied with Goydos. The UCLA bruin was drawing his tee shots for distance and hitting a power fade for control off the tee all day long but his tee shot on the 18th found water left and he finished with a disappointing double bogey to fall to a T3 finish With Ian Woosnam, David Frost (71), Peter Senior (65) and Jerry Smith (67).

Second round leader Rod Spittle shot a 74 to finish T12 while his playing partners in the final pairing John Huston (72) and Scott McCarron (75) failed to make a charge. Spittle had four bogyes and only one birdie. The 2011 DSGO Champion Huston’s demise was a 5-iron right on the par-3 7th that found water and resulted in a triple bogey while McCarron started with a bogey on No. 1 and suffered a triple bogey on the 15th hole. This year’s low tournament round was a 64 versus last year’s historic 59 on Saturday by Kevin Sutherland.

The Stack Family of Dick's Sporting Goods being honored by Broome County Executive Debra Preston.

The Stack Family of Dick’s Sporting Goods being honored by Broome County Executive Debra Preston.

Maggert the Magnificent joins  the tradition of champions in both the Champions Tour’s Dick’s Sporting Goods Open and the PGA TOUR’s B.C. Open. The first as professional golf came to Broome County in 1971 was Harmon. It was his first and only win as he went on to become the famous golf instructor, author and television broadcaster. World Golf Hall of Famers Tom Kite, Fred Couples, and Bernard Langer have won at En Joie.

Local professional golfer Richie Karl won here in 1974. I remember that one at age 14 running out to see him sink a 35-foot birdie putt on the 15th green, the first hole in a playoff with Bruce Crampton. Joey Sindelar won in 1985 and while Mike Hulbert won in 1989.

From Nancy Lopez’s clinic earlier in the week, to the Johnny Hart Memorial Christian Fellowship Breakfast on Thursday, to the Lady Antebellum concert on Friday night it was another memorable Dick’s Sporting Goods Open in the Valley of Opportunity, Hart & Faith.

Large crowds turned out all week at En Joie.

Large crowds turned out all week at En Joie.

There was outstanding competitive professional golf once again at En Joie, the golf course originally built by built by George F. Johnson, the benevolent owner of the Endicott-Johnson Shoe Company. Mr. Johnson loved the game of golf and couldn’t see any reason that his employees shouldn’t love it as well. Well the relatives of those workers do love the game and come out to support one of the best events on the Champions Tour.

Jeff Maggert closed his champion interview, when asked what was the best thing about returning to the Triple Cities area, with “it’s nice to see things haven’t changed.” With plans to retire in my hometown of Binghamton, New York I agree wholeheartedly with Maggert the Mangificent, the 2015 DSGO Champion.

Other articles from this week:

DSGO & the Triple Cities; Still the Valley of Opportunity, Hart & Faith

A Tribute to Mr. Perry, Kenny Perry’s Dad

Admittedly Addicted to Spiedies at the Dick’s Sporting Goods Open

With Fred Funk Mike Goodes & Loren Roberts (R to L) at the Johnny Hart Memorial Christian Fellowship Breakfast on Monday.

With Fred Funk Mike Goodes & Loren Roberts (R to L) at the Johnny Hart Memorial Christian Fellowship Breakfast on Monday.

With authors Jim Maggiore (L) and Mike McCann (R) at their Barnes & Noble book signing on Tuesday night.

With authors Jim Maggiore (L) and Mike McCann (R) at their Barnes & Noble book signing on Tuesday night.

I might be the 'i' in Dick's but spiedies has two 'i's and me!

I might be the ‘i’ in Dick’s but spiedies has two ‘i’s and me!

2015 DSGO: Admittedly Addicted to Spiedies at the Dick’s Sporting Goods Open

My spiedie salad at Ely Park triggered my week long addiction to spiedies at the DSGO.

My spiedie salad at Ely Park triggered my week long addiction to spiedies at the DSGO.

My earliest childhood habit that I can recall is going on family picnics out to Chenango Valley State Park. It was a daylong affair of playing games, swimming and satisfying the hunger created by exercise by eating spiedies. I can remember the routine of hunting for wood, starting the fire, adding the charcoal and lovingly cooking the spiedies in the special spiedie sauce. I readily admit that I became addicted to spiedies at a relatively young age.

En Joie-ing a spiedie on the run at the 14th in the DSGO!

En Joie-ing a spiedie on the run at the 14th in the DSGO!

Spiedies give me tremendous energy and this week is just another example of their spirited effect on me. My first day here was Monday and I started off with a visit to Ely Park Municipal Golf Course. Not to golf but to have a spiedie salad for lunch up in the bar restaurant now referred to as cafe bar. The spiedie salad was delicious as you can see in the picture.

Maybe I should do a food column? Thanks to Lupo’s on the 14th tee here at En Joie I am now eating spiedies three times a day—late breakfast compliments of the

Media Center, late lunch at the 14th compliments of Lupo’s and this evening a spiedie BBQ celebrating a dog’s birthday.

The Lupo's team of Cole, Patti & Pat on the 14th. Spiedies Extraordinaire!

The Lupo’s team of Cole, Patti & Pat on the 14th. Spiedies Extraordinaire!

So is my life when home and addicted to spiedies. Throw in the tasty Filet Mignon sandwich at Lampy’s that always hits the spot and Mario’s Pizza onsite for the Wednesday (sausage sandwiches) and Thursday (meatball subs) Pro-Ams and here you have a food column for the Dick’s Sporting Goods Open. Oh I almost forgot the gnocchi and meatballs on Wednesday at the Oaks Inn. So far I have managed to stay clear of the reportedly exceptionally tasty french fries but it is still only Saturday.

No this is a golf tournament, a very important one as the Champions Tour winds down to the final Charles Schwab Cup stretch. Only five more events after the Dick’s Sporting Goods Open (DSGO) this week to see if close pursuers Jeff Maggert and Bernard Langer or someone else can overtake Charles Schwab Cup Points leader Colin Montgomerie.

Rod Spittle's advantage is one stroke and 25 years in Corporate America resting his body as he looks for his second Champiosn Tour victory on Sunday.

Rod Spittle’s advantage is one stroke and 25 years in Corporate America resting his body as he looks for his second Champiosn Tour victory on Sunday.

In Round 1 on Friday Gene Sauers opened up with matching 6-under 66s. They were trumped by the consistent 68-66 play of Rod Spittle in Round 2 on Saturday which earned him a one-stroke lead going into Sunday’s final round. A sensational holed-out pitch on the 17th for eagle provided Spittle with the lift to keep ahead of the young Scott McCarron (71-64) and long hitting John Huston (67-68). With a historic 59 recorded here last year by Kevin Sutherland, another 64 on Saturday by Stephen Ames (72-64, two strokes back) and a firm and fast golf course, the final round promises to be a spectacular Sunday shootout. There are 20 golfers within five strokes of Spittle with a chance to go low and win the ninth consecutive DSGO.

While high on spiedies this has been a whirlwind week in the Valley of Opportunity, Hart & Faith—a.k.a. as the Triple Cities of Binghamton, Johnson City and Endicott.

Up at Ely Park with Ray Linsky checking out the original drawings of the golf course from 1925.

Up at Ely Park with Ray Linsky checking out the original drawings of the golf course from 1925.

Champion amateur golfer Ray Linsky, who has won the most club championship titles of anyone up at Ely Park, surprised me with the original 9-hole course layouts from 1925 and 1933. In 1907, S. Mills Ely tendered to the City of Binghamton a 140 acre tract of land on Mount Prospect for park purposes. I had always assumed the golf course idea was tied to the Civilian Conservation Corps initiative after the Great Depression of 1929 which tied to the documented 1933 opening date of the golf course. With Ray’s discovery, the idea of golf in Binghamton has as much to do with the growth of the game in the Roaring Twenties as it does as a project to create jobs.

Ely Park is a special place to golf and enjoy life!

Ely Park is a special place to golf and enjoy life!

If you ever get a chance, go play Ely Park, perched high above the Chenango and Susquehanna River valleys  on Mount Prospect. The view includes downtown Binghamton and the confluence of the two rivers that led to the development and prosperity of the area way back in 1802. Close to Heaven, Golfing Atop Mount Prospect is quite the golfing and spiritual experience. Jim Maggiore, a retired IBMer, and Mike McCann, a 20-year veteran of the Johnson City Fire Department, just came out with Golf in Broome County, a great book about professional golf at the B.C. Open and the Dick’s Sporting Goods Open.

I might be the 'i' in Dick's but spiedies has two 'i's and me!

I might be the ‘i’ in Dick’s but spiedies has two ‘i’s and me!

Time to head out to the 14th far another spieidie fixing so here is the rest of the story in pictures.

For the record, per Wikipedia, a spiedie consists of cubes of chicken, pork, lamb, veal, venison or beef. The meat cubes are marinated overnight or longer in a special marinade, then grilled on spits over a charcoal pit. The traditional method involves serving freshly prepared cubes of lamb, chicken, or beef on soft Italian bread, and occasionally drizzled with fresh marinade.

I am drooling now. Gotta go.

I am admittedly addicted to spiedies during the week of the Dick’s Sporting Goods Open.

With Coach Jorie Ftorek and the talented and fun Binghamton High School golf team up at Ely Park.

With Coach Jorie Ftorek and the talented and fun Binghamton High School golf team up at Ely Park.

With authors Jim Maggiore (L) and Mike McCann (R) at their Barnes & Noble book signing on Tuesday night.

With authors Jim Maggiore (L) and Mike McCann (R) at their Barnes & Noble book signing on Tuesday night.

With Fred Funk Mike Goodes & Loren Roberts (R to L) at the Johnny Hart Memorial Christian Fellowship Breakfast on Monday.

With Fred Funk Mike Goodes & Loren Roberts (R to L) at the Johnny Hart Memorial Christian Fellowship Breakfast on Monday.

2015 DSGO & the Triple Cities; Still the Valley of Opportunity, Hart & Faith

Cartoonist Mason Mastroianni created this artwork for this year's breakfast. One lucky raffle winner took it home after breakfast.

Cartoonist Mason Mastroianni created this artwork for this year’s breakfast. One lucky raffle winner took it home after breakfast.

The Champions Tour event—the Dick’s Sporting Goods Open (DSGO) is in the Triple Cities of Binghamton, Johnson City & Endicott, New York this week. So am I, now 55, I am lucky to have three hometowns and be back where I belong and where I lived the first 17 years of my life. If you have a few minutes, let me tell you why this, the Valley of the Susquehanna River (and the Chenango River in Binghamton), is still the Valley of Opportunity, Hart and Faith.

On this, the fourth day of being back home, I set the alarm for 6:30 a.m. Up, I showered, got dressed and headed over to The Johnny Hart Memorial Christian Fellowship Breakfast, hosted by the Hart Family at the Kalurah Shrine on Dickson Street in Endicott, not far from the En-Joie Golf Course, host to the DSGO since 2007. I have always wanted to attend this breakfast and I guess today was the day for me to do so.

Isn’t it funny how things in life, at times, seemingly so disconnected in time, suddenly become focused, clear and connected again? It was a good breakfast but I couldn’t tell you what I ate. I can tell you why it was good, long after the experience, because as you know I am a note-taker, a journeying journaler for some 15 years now. A producer at the Golf Channel once called me a “golf voyager and documentarian,” and I like to quickly add that I only like to document what I voyage.

See, it’s all about me and it is all about you and once we figure that out individually then we can celebrate it collectively. Have I lost you yet?

With LaVon and Skip, a lovely Christian Couple in life!

With LaVon and Skip, a lovely Christian Couple in life!

I sat down at a table and met a couple to cherish with the names of LaVon and Skip Hausamann. His full name is Erwin Werner Hausamann Jr., that’s why they call him Skip. She was from Texas and he from Massachusetts so of course I was intrigued as to how they met and how they came to live in the Triple Cities on the Southern Tier of New York, about a three hours drive time upstate from New York City.

He was a drill sergeant in the Air Force stationed at the Lackland Air Force Base outside San Antonio, Texas. She grew up a Southern Baptist (though now a Methodist) in a small town of Rogers, Texas. Her family and her church reached out to serviceman by inviting them over for Sunday dinner. Her family invited him and though forbade somehow they connected and made a go of it. Next year they,a long with their three children and eight grandchildren, will celebrate their 60th wedding anniversary.

It was a packed house at the Kalurah Shrine for the 9th Annual Hartfest.

It was a packed house at the Kalurah Shrine for the 9th Annual Hartfest.

My thoughts of LaVon and Skip were interrupted by “It’s a joy to be with you,” the words of Emrys Tyler, the Teaching Elder of the Ninevah Presbyterian Church giving the Invocation, one of the most inspiring invocations I ever heard.

Of course, I knew who Johnny Hart was. Growing up I religiously read his B.C. comic strip in the newspaper each day. Remember newspapers? Yeah, and the Sunday comic section? I remember his cartoon characters on site at the B.C. Open, the old regular PGA TOUR event held at En Joie Golf Course from 1971 through 2006, though the final event was held at the Turning Stone Resort & Casino in Verona due to a flooded golf course. I wanted to know more about the person, his creativity and his faith.

In his Invocation, Elder Tyler delivered on all three of my wants as he started his invocation with a Johnny Hart story. Evidently Johnny baked his favorite lemon meringue pie for a friend’s party and while delivering it he dropped it on the guy’s driveway. He grabbed a fork, knelt down and started eating the now upside down pie from the bottom side. I could feel his sense of patient presence and humor. I could visualize him making the best of a sad situation. Why wouldn’t he?

Elder Tyler then took me to where I needed to be noting that sometimes our reality in life is flipped upside down—from slavery to freedom, from sorrow to joy, from darkness to light and from where we are today to eternity. Make it so in Jesus’ name. Amen.

With Mason Mastroianni. I laughed when he used the word awkward. His eyes seem to think I am a bit awkward too. I am!

With Mason Mastroianni. I laughed when he used the word awkward. His eyes seem to think I am a bit awkward too. I am!

After tuning out for a moment or two to once again assess my upside-down life, I came back to the present moment just as Johnny Hart’s grandson, Mason Matroianni, who has been doing the comic strip now for nine years after the death of the self-described title B.C. character in life, utter that they “did not skip a beat” in the transition. I looked over and smiled at Skip and his lovely wife wondering if I had somehow skipped a beat or two in my life?

CLICK HERE for a Video Interview with Mason Mastroianni, Cartoonist, B.C. Comic Strip

Listening to Mason I could see how the comic strip kept beating along even with the sudden and unexpected death of its creator. Mason’s message was humble and direct. His grandfather was the father figure in his life and taught him everything he knew about life. Like his grandfather he is at home here in the Triple Cities and lets life come to him and then turns it around, maybe turns it right side up, sketching it back to us in prehistoric terms we can all understand. He thanked us all for honoring the memory of his grandfather.

Right then I was actively targeting him for a post-breakfast interview. Somehow, Hart’s heart and humor, compassion and creativity, was passed along and enhanced. There was inspiration there. I am an inspiration seeker.

Fred Funk at the podium. Loren Roberts on the left with the microphone. Mike Goodes in the middle right where his dream and God took him!

Fred Funk at the podium. Loren Roberts on the left with the microphone. Mike Goodes in the middle right where his dream and God took him!

The main show of the breakfast hour came alive with Champions Tour players Fred Funk, Loren Roberts and Mike Goodes on stage with live microphones.

Fred told the first story. Playing with Jack Nicklaus at Doral, golf’s all-time greatest player asked him to play a practice with him and Arnold Palmer the guy who popularized the game of golf. at the Masters. After eager anticipation, he did so with goose bumps, disbelief and standing ovations all day long. The 2005 PLAYERS Champion readily admitted he could only handle playing with one legend at a time. Two was too much. One at a time… makes sense…

Loren’s greatest golfing experience was partnering with Arnold Palmer in the 2007 Wendy’s Champions Skins Game. His entry ticket was being the Charles Schwab Cup Champion, Mr. Palmer’s was being the King.

If Arnold was Mr. Golf Personality & Performance, then Loren was Mr. Golf Perseverance. admittedly a late bloomer, his first win on tour came at Arnold’s Bay Hill in 1994 at age 38, twenty years after turning pro, thirteen years after getting his first tour card on his fifth attempt at Q-School. Then he properly defended his title to the extreme the next year and went on to win a total of eight times on the PGA TOUR and thiriteen times on the Champions Tour, including four Majors.

Some things in life and golf take time…

Mike Goodes has o 1 win (2009 Allianz), 22 Top 10s in 187 dream starts on the Champions Tour. Photo Credit: Google Images

Mike Goodes has o 1 win (2009 Allianz), 22 Top 10s in 187 dream starts on the Champions Tour. Photo Credit: Google Images

Mike Goodes is like you and me, the ultimate dreamer and late bloomer—the dream of  every aging amateur golfer. Never a golf professional or professional golfer until age 50. Maybe you have to dream to become a dream reality for others. His biggest thrill coming out on tour was finding out that the guys he was watching play golf on TV were Christians too.

We live in an upside-down world, don’t we?

As Fred Funk shared, the tour is really a traveling circus and there is a need to keep in touch with reality and stay grounded. Whether you are on the move and doing the moving or stationary with the world moving around you we all need to be grounded somehow, somewhere.

Where in our whirlwind world can we find that foundation for life?

It’s probably more of an emotional and mental challenge than a physical one in reality.

Golf is a selfish sport. Whether an amateur or a professional, if we are not playing it, we are practicing, if we are not practicing, we are thinking about it. There can be a fear of losing one’s skill, one’s talent, one’s ability to compete and succeed in golf and life. We are born, we grow, we live, we decline and then we die. How do you deal with that if you want to be in control of everything?

We all can easily get sidetracked in faith even if we were raised in a religious family was how Loren started to share his testimony of how he came to Christ. He was down and out of money, everything he owned was in his car and he missed another cut. He came back to his hotel room and got down on his knees and accepted that Jesus Christ had died for our sins.

Today may be that day. Coming to Christ will change the rest of your life and beyond. Photo Credit: Google Images

Today may be that day. Coming to Christ will change the rest of your life and beyond. Photo Credit: Google Images

A new perspective and prioritization in life came upon him and others who have done so.

No longer was he identified only as a golfer and the score shot that day.

Somehow the damage golf and other selfish pursuits was now minimized.

Grounded in God and the Bible somehow calmed the whirlwind of the world.

If Jesus is in our minds we can only think of one thing at a time.

We see the big picture instead of only our own smallness.

We question our personal mission in light of God’s mission for us.

If we respect God’s will and live out our faith our mission will be God’s mission.

If you can do it, it is a gift.

We don’t have to be perfect in life. Why not be as accepting, loving and compassionate to ourselves as we are to our family and friends? Why not cleanse our hearts, minds and body of fear, resentments, dishonesty and our own egotistical self.

Johnny Hart, cartoonist and creator of the comic strips B.C. and Wizard of Id. 1931-2007 Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Johnny Hart, cartoonist and creator of the comic strips B.C. and Wizard of Id. 1931-2007 Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Remember what Johnny Hart would say—”God is God and you are not.”

Why not turn ourselves upside-down?

Chaplain Tom O’Connor the Benediction noting that in a few minutes we will all go our separate ways. I had already done that when I graduated from Binghamton Central High School in 1977. The theme of our prom was “We must go our separate ways.”

We do but not necessarily alone.

These are all inspiring words and thoughts that came to me during The Johnny Hart Memorial Christian Fellowship Breakfast

We can only play with one legend at a time.

We can skip through life and feel our hearts beat and our lungs breathe.

We can, as inspired by Wally Armstrong, take the Big Mulligan.

You take a mulligan in golf, why not take one in life?

Our best golf and our best life is in front of us.

The best golfer this week will win the Dick’s Sporting Goods Open.

What will you win this week?

The Triple Cities—still the Valley of Opportunity, Hart & Faith.

Amen.

With Loren Roberts, Mike Goodes and Fred Funk. It was an honor and a privilege to hear their testimony and be inspired to write this story. Grateful. (-:

With Loren Roberts, Mike Goodes and Fred Funk. It was an honor and a privilege to hear their testimony and be inspired to write this story. Grateful. (-:

Danny Balin, Champion Person, Now Champion Golfer.

Danny Balin, the Champion of the 2015 Guatemala Stella Artois Open.   Photo Credit: Google Images & PGA TOUR Latinoamerica.

Danny Balin, the Champion of the 2015 Guatemala Stella Artois Open. Photo Credit: Google Images & PGA TOUR Latinoamerica.

As I am currently reliving the 100-day, 14-country, 18,471-mile ‘Journey to Olympic Golf,’ I was saving Danny Balin for JTOG Day No. 70 because that was the day I met him in Lima, Peru. But the word is out as of yesterday when he won his first professional golf tournament, the Guatemala Stella Artois Open on the PGA TOUR Latinoamérica. His victory came at The La Reunion Golf Resort & Residences on the Fuego Maya Course in Antigua, Guatemala, another stop on my odyssey to Rio.

Well the word was already out well before his first professional win if you know Danny Balin or someone that knows him! He is a great guy and I can attest to that! I was making my way down the west coast of South America with a stop in Lima. I met a guy named Billy Gorbitz who took me over the ridge to see his club called La Planicie and have some cerviche. That day they happened to be hosting the grand finale event for the Development Tour of the PGA TOUR Latinoamérica. I looked at the scoreboard and saw only one American—you guessed it, Danny Balin!

Later that evening I am taking the elevator down at the Hotel & Spa Golf Los Incas and a guy gets on heading down to the lobby to pick up a pizza. I introduced myself and he told me he was there competing in a golf tournament. I told him that he must be Danny Balin and he was!

CLICK here for the Full Video Interview with Danny Balin from November 2013 in Lima, Peru.

Interviewing Danny Balin in November, 2013 in Lima, Peru.

Interviewing Danny Balin in November, 2013 in Lima, Peru.

He granted me an interview and though as impressive as that was there was more to follow that made me an immediate Danny Balin fan! Along the way on the Journey to Rio I began to accumulate golf books. First at Glen Echo, then at the Golf Club of Mexico and another one about the first 100 years of golf in Mexico. Without Torch and her trunk my backpack and roller bag were starting to buldge. Golf books are heavy! A few days later I was flying out of Lima to Santiago and there I met Danny again and explained my situation. Without hesitation he offered to take my books back to the States for me. What a guy that I just met to offer to be a book mule for me!

Danny Balin's name on the board at La Planicie CC, now at the top of the leaderboard at the 2015 Guatemala Stella Artois Open!

Danny Balin’s name on the board at La Planicie CC, now at the top of the leaderboard at the 2015 Guatemala Stella Artois Open!

At that time (November 2013), Danny’s claim to fame was competing in four straight PGA Championships, having qualified through the PGA Professional National Championship. Even more impressive is that he picked up golf in the last year in high school and never had an amateur career. But he made up for that with all he has accomplished in the last 10 years, including being a 3-time Met Section Player of the Year after coming out of the Professional Golf Management Program at Penn State.

A Michael Breed protege? Watch the video and you decide!

In addition to the four majors he competed in the 2014 Puerto Rico Open. In addition to the 29 PGA TOUR Latinoamérica events, Danny has competed in 8 PGA TOUR CANADA events. If my math is right, his win in Guatemala came in only his 42nd professional event at age 33 after a little over a decade of preparing for and going after his dream.

It is exciting and inspiring to see a guy following and living his dream!

I agree with Danny, the sky is the limit!