Dennis Berkholtz, Olympic Team Handball & Coach

CLICK here to meet Olympian Dennis Berkholtz

CLICK here to learn about the Olympic Qualifying Process from Dennis Berkholtz

Olympian Dennis Berkholtz pointing to the 1996 Olympic Handball Golf Medalists.

Olympian Dennis Berkholtz pointing to the 1996 Olympic Handball Golf Medalists.

After a Farewell at TPC Sawgrass, the “Journey to Olympic Golf” started in Atlanta which hosted the Summer Games in 1996. I stopped there to capture the spirit of the 1996 Games and that is exactly what happened. I was hosted by 1972 Olympian Dennis Berkholtz who also was an Olympic Coach in 1976. His sport was Team Handball and he can thank Uncle Sam for pointing him in that direction. A gifted athlete, he was “All-Army” in four sports but became the “Forest Gump of Team Handball.” If you are like me, you are thinking American Handball, hitting a small rubber ball, usually in an indoor court, against a wall so that your opponent cannot return it. Team Handball, or Olympic or European Handball is different and played on a larger court with six outfielders and a goalie. You can pass the ball and the objective is to score by throwing the volleyball-sized ball into the goal of the other team.

CLICK here for Team Handball (Wiki)

CLICK here for the USA Team Handball Introductory Video

Andy Reistetter with Olympian Dennis Berkholtz in the Bobby Jones Room at Eastlake Golf Club.

Andy Reistetter with Olympian Dennis Berkholtz in the Bobby Jones Room at Eastlake Golf Club.

The videos I did with Dennis speak for themselves in terms of how to become an Olympian and what it means and feels like to be an Olympian. I had never personally known an Olympian before I met and spent a weekend with Dennis. All I can say is that it was a wonderful experience and I learned so much about the Olympic Spirit from this man. For the first stop on the “Journey to Olympic Golf” trying to define what the “Olympic Spirit is for Golfers” this was a huge first step and will put the rest of the 3-month odyssey in perspective. Thank you Dennis Berkholtz!

More videos, pictures, & posts coming… what would you like me to write about?

 

 

 

 

JTOG Day 1: Farewell Gathering at TPC Sawgrass

Day 1 of the ‘Journey to Olympic Golf (JTOG).’

The day was Friday, October 11th, 2013 and it would be the last day I would be home in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida for the next four months. So it was a day of final preparations and an evening to say farewell to friends at Nineteen in the Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass.

Of course I was dressed in my best Vecci knickers and toting a set of authentic hickory-shafted clubs to raffle off to get The First Tee fundraising started. It was a good night with several surprises and a lot of fun as I remember it now 1-1/2 years later.

The first surprise was meeting Calvin Peete, the 12-time PGA TOUR winner, including the 1995 PLAYERS Champion. He was engaging, humble and very interesting as was his friend Arthur Johnson. Afterwards we went out to the back of the practice range where he hit the golf ball with a hickory-shafted golf club for the first time! If you click on the above link it will take you to our video interviews.

Another surprise was being unveiled by General Manager Bill Hughes. He is a great guy and the heart and soul of TPC Sawgrass and by extension the PGA TOUR and the entire TPC network of golf clubs. If you ever get the chance to met him or hear him speak you will know what I am talking about. That was a fun time!

TPC Sawgrass Farewell for Journey To Olympic Golf

Check out the  videos in the link above to see the unveiling of me and the JTOG by Bill Hughes and the drawing for the set of hickory clubs won by Kerrie Lecker!

Early the next morning, Torch, a.k.a. my Olympic Torch, a 1992 M30 Infiniti convertible and me would begin the “Journey to Olympic Golf.”

I am looking for 100 new friends in the next 100 days to make a $100 donation (or any amount that you are able to make) to The First Tee. Each day I will be reliving the original “Journey to Olympic Golf” and hope to find a new friend in golf. Is that you? Please join me in giving back to the game we all love.

CLICK here to make a donation to The First Tee.

Please select ‘Andy Reistetter’s Journey to Olympic Golf’ on the drop-down menu for the question ‘What inspired you to make a gift today? This is for tracking purposes only, Andy does not receive any part of your donation or anything financially from The First Tee organization.

There are interesting incentives for making your donation to the First Tee…

PLEASE click here to make a donation to The First Tee.

Thank You!

With Calvin Peete (L) and his good friend Arthur Johnson (R).

With Calvin Peete (L) and his good friend Arthur Johnson (R).

Kerrie Lecker with her daughters taking delivery of her old set of hickories.

Kerrie Lecker with her daughters taking delivery of her old set of hickories.

Torch and I were ready for the "Journey to Olympic Golf" after a great farewell at TPC Sawgrass.

Torch and I were ready for the “Journey to Olympic Golf” after a great farewell at TPC Sawgrass.

 

BLOG Update- Friday, 10/11/13 Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida

Friday, October 11th, 11:17 am Home in Creative Condo, Ponte Vedra Beach, FLI am excited to be going to TPC 19 Happy Hour this evening to interview Calvin Peete, winner of 12 PGA TOUR events, including the 1985 THE PLAYERS Championship, and say good bye for a while to my friends here in Ponte Vedra Beach. The highlight of the evening is a drawing for a set of hickory clubs for all who have donate to The First Tee. The goal of the “Journey to Olympic Golf” is to raise $100,000 for the First Tee. Please support this cause if you can!

CLICK here to donate to The First Tee!

Atlanta JTOG all set up! Plans could not have worked out better. Focus in Atlanta is to capture the Olympic Spirit from the 1996 Summer Olympics and the great golfer Bobby Jones. I drive up to Atlanta tomorrow Saturday morning and am staying two nights with a former Olympian. On the schedule are visits to Centennial Olympic Park with the Torch, Bobby Jones gravesite at Historic Oakland Cemetary and Eastlake Golf Club. We are meeting with a group of former Olympians Saturday night and Sunday we are playing Atlanta Athletic Club, home club along with Eastlake to Bobby Jones and where Keegan Bradley won the 2011 PGA Championship. What a great start to the “Journey to Olympic Golf.”

Melissa was an awesome help picking out my new Canon Power Shot SX280HS camera!

Melissa was an awesome help picking out my new Canon Power Shot SX280HS camera!

I love my new Canon Power Shot SX280 HS camera! Thanks Melissa and Best Buy!

On Monday morning I leave for St. Louis playing Glen Echo CC with my hickory sticks. That is golf was last played in the Olympics in 1904.

JTOG: Incentives by Andy to You for Donating to The First Tee…

CLICK here to make a donation to The First Tee.

My goal is to raise $100,000 for The First Tee. I need your help!

I am looking for 100 new friends in the next 100 days to make a $100 donation (or any amount that you are able to make) to The First Tee. Each day I will be reliving the original “Journey to Olympic Golf” and hope to find a new friend in golf. Is that you?

I appreciate your help and will do the following for your donation:

For a $100 donation to The First Tee:

Publish 100 of your words and one picture on Andy’s Golf & Travel Diary about what golf has meant to you and your thoughts on what defines the “Spirit of Olympic Golf.” These 100 words can be anonymous or they can be personalized to remember someone or something  in your life that means a great deal to you. Your name will be entered into a drawing at the end of the 100 days. The lucky winner will receive a set of authentic, professionally restored, nearly 100-year old hickory-shafted golf clubs.

For a $1,000 donation to The First Tee:

In addition to the above, your name will be entered into a drawing with like donators at the end of the 100 days. The lucky winner and their guest will receive four nights lodging in my home in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. My home is a small, one-bedroom creative condo, so I will plan not be here when you and your guest visit. In addition, the lucky winner can select and keep one hickory-shafted golf club and one golf book from a selection of my collection.

For a $10,000 donation to The First Tee:

In addition to the above, your name will not be entered into a drawing. You are already the lucky winner! Here is what you get: the 100 words and one picture publishing (if you like or all donations can be kept confidential and anonymous); a set of authentic, professionally restored, nearly 100-year old hickory-shafted golf clubs; the four nights of lodging; the golf book AND ONE WEEK OF ME! That’s right, 40 documented hours of me writing for you. Here is the chance to get organized, lay out that book you have been meaning to write and get started writing! Reasonable substitutions are allowed. I always wanted to be your butler a la Seinfeld! How can you beat a deal like that?

CLICK here to make a donation to The First Tee.

Please select ‘Andy Reistetter’s Journey to Olympic Golf’ on the drop-down menu for the question ‘What inspired you to make a gift today? This is for tracking purposes only, Andy does not receive any part of your donation or anything financially from The First Tee organization.

PLEASE click here to make a donation to The First Tee.

Thank You!

JTOG: The Genesis of the “Journey to Olympic Golf”…

CLICK here to make a donation to The First Tee.

Everything starts with something.

'Torch' (1992 Infiniti) and my 'Journey to Olympic Golf' began with a farewell party at TPC Sawgrass.

‘Torch’ (1992 Infiniti) and my ‘Journey to Olympic Golf’ began with a farewell party at TPC Sawgrass.

Even something as crazy as hopping in your old 1992 Infiniti convertible and driving down through Mexico and Central America to Panama City, Panama. Then ditching (donating) the car and bopping around South America to Colombia, Peru, Chile, Argentina, Uruguay and finally Brazil in search of the new Olympic Golf Course, reportedly under construction. As crazy as it sounds that is exactly what I did on a wing and a prayer, as they say, starting back in October 2013.

Looking back there were three experiences that came together in my mind, that inspired me and made it my destiny to complete such a bizarre odyssey. Someone I came to know had done something equally outlandish and comical, the trees at Augusta National Golf Course gesticulated that I do so and I actually had one sane and logical thought since I left Corporate America seven years ago. And there you have the genesis for embarking on the “Journey to Olympic Golf.”

There are a lot of interesting people in the golf business. Some out in front of the camera and lots more behind the camera or wandering around the PGA Show in Orlando or outside the ropes out on tour. I was fortunate to meet one of the most interesting of them all—David Wood. A former stand-up comedian, you might have seen him on the David Letterman Show way back when. While I love a good laugh (and gave it a go myself once as a stand-up comedian and failed twice), that is not what inspired me about David.

David Wood and his book 'Around the World in 80 Rounds' inspired me to do the 'Journey to Olympic Golf.' Photo Credit: Amazon.com

David Wood and his book ‘Around the World in 80 Rounds’ inspired me to do the ‘Journey to Olympic Golf.’ Photo Credit: Amazon.com

The first paragraph on the front flap of his book Around the World in 80 Rounds tells the  whole story of how he inspired me: “At forty-seven David Wood sold everything he owned and set out to fulfill every golfer’s dream: For one year, he traveled the world (covering sixty thousand miles and every continent except Antarctica) by plane, boat, train, motorcycle, and rickshaw, to play the game he loves in the most exotic locales, including the world’s highest, driest, hottest, coldest, and most remote golf courses, and lived to tell the tale.”

I wanted to be like David, not Letterman, but the other one—David Wood!

In a coincidental manner, someone you all probably know, if you follow golf and the business of golf whether it be the LPGA then or the PGA TOUR now, planted the Olympic Golf seed in me one night, not far from my home.

I had heard of the World Junior Golf Series (WGJS) and a “Mom & Coach Changing Junior Golf Around the World.” The WJGS came to Ponte Vedra in December 2011 and was personally hosted by Herb Peyton,  at his world class Ponte Vedra Inn & Club Beach Resort. Peyton, a larger-than-life figure in the Jacksonville area and nearly 80 years old at the time briefly addressed the youngsters at the Opening Ceremonies. In his youthful manner, the founder of Gate Petroleum pointed out that the juniors’ golf game may be better that his but there was one talent he had that they did not possess. He then demonstrated that talent by “whistling without moving his mouth” much to the delight and amusement of the youngsters.

But it was the man that followed him, The PGA TOUR’s Ty Votaw and his keynote speech at the Opening Ceremony that brought Olympic Golf and what it means into my mind. Votaw is the person who led an international delegation that gained consensus to get golf back in the Olympics in 2016 in Rio de Janiero and then again in 2020. The last time golf was in the world’s biggest athletic event was 112 years ago in 1904 in St. Louis at Glen Echo CC.

Great players like Bobby Jones, Ben Hogan, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player, Tom Watson and Greg Norman did not have an opportunity to play golf in the Olympics. Ironically, as Votaw pointed out, 77 players competed back in 1904 in St. Louis, 74 from the U.S.A. and 3 from Canada and a Canadian George Lyon won. Votaw looked out over the sea of young faces and wondered aloud who in the room would aspire, prepare and participate in the Olympics perhaps in 2016 but more likely in 2020?

Ty Votaw's keynote speech at the WJGS Opening Ceremony in December 2011 Inspired me to take the 'Journey to Olympic Golf.' Photo Credit: Google Images

Ty Votaw’s keynote speech at the WJGS Opening Ceremony in December 2011 Inspired me to take the ‘Journey to Olympic Golf.’ Photo Credit: Google Images

He seemed to be talking to me, not as a golfer, but as someone who likes to experience golf history in-the-making, especially inspirational golf history in-the-making. In reality, no one alive on Earth has ever experienced Olympic Golf or even had a recent conversation with someone who had. Lyon had lived to be 79 and died in 1938. That night I began to think about what will define the Olympic Spirit of Golf to a new generation and future generations.

With the seed now planted, the water and fertilizer came later the next Spring at the inspirational home of golf—the Augusta National Golf Club and the 2012 Masters Tournament. It was my fourth Masters being there the whole week, sun up to sun down. It was also the third year that the Asia-Pacific Amateur Champion was given an invitation to compete in the Bobby Jones and Clifford Roberts created major. Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama was back for his second consecutive year and won the Silver Cup, which is presented to the lowest scoring amateur. The next year China’s Guan Tianlang at age 14 years, 5 months and 18 days became the youngest ever to make the cut on the PGA TOUR and in a major championship. The next year after that, in 2014, junior golfers, ages 7 to 15, would be playing golf, albeit only on the Tournament Practice Range and the 18th green, at Augusta National Golf Club in the Drive, Chip & Putt Championship. This year Latin America Amateur Champion Matías Domínguez  competed in the Masters. Now every year an amateur from Asia-Pacific and one from Latin America will be playing in The Masters.

The point being, the Augusta National Golf Club along with golf’s major governing bodies are intent on growing the game of golf around the world. Golf is a world-wide sport soon to become an Olympic sport. It was in this spirit that I found myself walking up from the 7th green through the vast parkland area, that used to be the original practice area, towards the clubhouse. I noticed the tall pine trees swaying in the wind. Their movement was almost as if the giant inspirations in my life were walking along with me, waving hello and encouraging me to continue walking down this path of golf voyaging and inspiration-seeking. I thought of my mother and father who passed in their mid-seventies and how short life itself really is. Life is for the living and each day alive is precious.

I have had some inspirational thoughts under the oak tree at Augusta National GC but none better than to embark on the 'Journey to Olympic Golf.'

I have had some inspirational thoughts under the oak tree at Augusta National GC but none better than to embark on the ‘Journey to Olympic Golf.’

I walked along as if mesmerized and made it up to the oak tree that gracefully adorns the clubhouse. I turned around to see all the grace and beauty of the property that Bobby Jones and Clifford Roberts must have seen when they first laid eyes upon it. I knew then that knowing the possibilities of golf travel that David Wood had demonstrated, the vision of Olympic Golf and the answer to a simple question, there was one thing I needed to do.

The simple question was “What will be the biggest thing to happen in the game of golf in the next ten years?” The simple answer is “inclusion in the 2016 Summer Olympics.” This is a new era and a different world full of different people than a century ago in 1904. What was nice back then, but did not ignite anything significant at the time, may be the right catalyst now. This could be golf’s biggest opportunity to become the beloved sport of the world. And beyond that, because golf is a lot like life, who knows what can happen?

That one thing for me to do was to journey from where Olympic Golf was played in 1904 at Glen Echo CC outside of St. Louis to where it is going to be played in the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. I heard they were going to be building a new Olympic Golf Course there. Maybe I could visit Olympic cities along the way, extract the Olympic Spirit and combine it with the history and traditions of golf and discover the Olympic Spirit of Golf. Of course, only the 60 women and 60 men golfers that will be competing in Rio will experience playing Olympic Golf. Maybe they will need a writer to clarify their thoughts?

Little did I know that the “Journey to Olympic Golf” would take 100-days traveling through 14 countries and total 18,471 miles in the winter of 2013/2014.

I will be reliving those “100 Days of the Journey to Olympic Golf” beginning on Monday, April 27th, starting the dialogue on what exactly is the Olympic Spirit of Golf, and raising $100,000 for The First Tee. The reliving of the 100 days will end on Wednesday, August 5th exactly one year prior to the Opening Ceremonies of the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

This is going to be fun!

I am looking for 100 new friends in the next 100 days to make a $100 donation (or any amount that you are able to make) to The First Tee. Each day I will be reliving the original “Journey to Olympic Golf” and hope to find a new friend in golf. Is that you? Please join me in giving back to the game we all love.

CLICK here to make a donation to The First Tee.

Please select ‘Andy Reistetter’s Journey to Olympic Golf’ on the drop-down menu for the question ‘What inspired you to make a gift today? This is for tracking purposes only, Andy does not receive any part of your donation or anything financially from The First Tee organization.

There are interesting incentives for making your donation to the First Tee…

PLEASE click here to make a donation to The First Tee.

Thank You!

 

 

 

 

 

The First Tee Comes Home to TPC Sawgrass!

TPC Sawgrass, everyone knows, is the ‘Home of THE PLAYERS Championship.’

TPC Sawgrass Clubhouse

Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass is all decked out for Military Tribute and Web.com Championship!

The crown jewel of the TPC network is also home to the PGA TOUR. Within a quarter mile of the Clubhouse, in the opposite direction, of the famed island 17th green, is the east and west corporate headquarters buildings of the world’s premium golf tour. On the corner of Championship Way and PGA TOUR Boulevard, is the portrait of three-time PLAYERS champion Jack Nicklaus. A chip shot away is the office of Tim Finchem, the Commissioner of the PGA TOUR.

For the first time, the eighth annual ‘Taste of Golf,’ benefiting The First Tee of North Florida, was held at the Clubhouse during the Web.com Tour Championship. The event marked a symbolic homecoming, in the sense that The First Tee has now matured to the age of ‘Sweet 16.’ Commissioner Tim Finchem and President George H. W. Bush, No. 41, kicked off The First Tee in New York City’s Central Park in November 1997. President George W. Bush, No. 43, took over for his father as Honorary Chairman in 2011. The First Tee was established through the World Golf Foundation and its founding members—the USGA, LPGA, Masters Tournament, PGA of America and the PGA TOUR.

As a sign of the times for the expanding organization, Joe Louis Barrow, Jr., Chief Executive Officer of The First Tee, was not present at the major fundraising event for the flagship North Florida chapter. Instead, he was at the Nature Valley First Tee Open at Pebble Beach, a Champions Tour event that pairs a junior with a professional and they compete together as a team.

Kirk Triplett and Michelle Xie win the 2013 Nature Valley First Tee Open.

Kirk Triplett and Michelle Xie win the 2013 Nature Valley First Tee Open.

This year was another ‘Cinderella Story’ at Pebble Beach with Michelle Xie, from the First Tee of Silicon Valley, playing Cinderella instead of Bill Murray. Kirk Triplett, who won the individual pro tournament, also won the Pro-Junior with Michelle, a 15-year old junior at Palo Alto High School. Two years ago, D.A. Points teamed up with the lovable Carl Spackler, to capture the same double win in the AT&T National Pro-Am.

Over 700 juniors from across the United States have had the incredible experience of playing Pebble Beach with a professional golfer in a golfing competition. The real impact of the First Tee program, is the program—the Code of Conduct, the Nine Core Values and the Nine Healthy Habits. By 2011, the dynamic and proven youth development program had reached over 7 million kids. At that time, the primary goal of the supporting organization was supercharged to reach another 10 million kids by 2017. The First Tee has fully come of age.

To the credit of the coaches and program leaders, the First tee of North Florida quietly communicates a 100% success rate. All of the Jacksonville area kids who have come through the First Tee graduate from high school and go on to college, with an academic or golf scholarship. The program is making a meaningful impact on young people and our communities. The First Tee is the best investment for your charitable dollars.

Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass was transformed into an art gallery for the 'Taste of Golf.'

Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass was transformed into an art gallery for the ‘Taste of Golf.’

The Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass was transformed into an art gallery with many nationally recognized artists participating, with a portion of their sales going directly to The First Tee. ‘Taste of Golf’ Chairwoman Milan Moore and Jen Jones, Executive Director of Jacksonville’s Unity Plaza, recruited Keith Doles, Ted Johnson, Robert Leedy, Peter Blunt, Randy Pitts, Gordon Meggison, Marilyn Antram, Paul Ladiner, Barbara Quigley, Heather Blanton, Will Dickey and Suzanne McCourt, the Lady Artist from Pebble Beach. Suzanne, the neo-realism painter of golf’s historic moments, became the first woman to create the artwork for the Pebble Beach Pro-Am program in 2010.

Remember the night was entitled “A Taste of Golf.” The food delicacies, presented for consumption by the guests, included Shrimp Scampi Dijonnaise (Executive Chef Gary McKinsey, Deerwood CC); Nabchego-Stuffed Duck Meatball (Executive Chef Kira Lewis, Hidden Hills CC); Salmon in Two Preparations (Executive Chef Jason Hall, Certified Master Chef, Hammock Dunes); Beer Braised Pork Cheeks (Executive Chef Michael Ramsay, Jacksonville Golf & CC); Jumbo Lump Crab Tamales (Executive Chef Jerry Snider, San Jose CC); Duroc Pork Belly & Sweet Pea Sea Scallop (Executive Chefs Dan Webber and Marvin McClelland, Sawgrass CC); Grilled Wagyu Beef (Executive Chef LJ Coussin, TPC Sawgrass) and Sweet Potato Gnocchi (Executive Chef Brent Lynch, World Golf Village).

Amazing signs by Tory Eulenfeld of the National Golf Course Restaurant Association (NGCRA)

Amazing signs by Tory Eulenfeld of the National Golf Course Restaurant Association (NGCRA)

For dessert there were a Trilogy of Truffles, Mint Meringue, Chocolate Crunch Macaron and a Chocolate Blood Orange Hazelnut Shooter (Executive Pastry Chef Caitlin Schneider-Frantz, Jacksonville Golf & CC and Chef Nils Rowland, Ponte Vedra Inn & Club).

The festival night at the Clubhouse was memorable, with a lot of dignities including Mr. & Mrs. ‘59’ Jim and Tabitha Furyk, Amanda Balionis and Cole Pepper. There were several auctions and a significant portion of the chapter’s annual budget was raised.

Even more enduring is a trip to the Brentwood Course at the First Tee of North Florida facility. This is the same ground upon which Sam Snead won two of his record 82 PGA TOUR victories in the first two Jacksonville Opens. Brentwood is open to the public. With grass practice tees, inexpensive green fees, along with encouragement to walk, it is an ideal golfing facility.

As good as the golfing opportunity is, the chance to meet and play with the kids is even better. While the First Tee is all about the future, playing Brentwood gives older golfers the ability to reminisce and play like a kid again. One can’t help but notice, and reflect upon, the bridge over the railroad tracks heading to the second tee. Sports and education integrate and lift communities and the same is true at the First Tee of North Florida. These kids are going to go in any direction they so choose. The First Tee gives them that choice.

To donate to The First Tee, CLICK this link, and select ‘Journey to Olympic Golf’ from the drop-down menu for the question, ‘What inspired you to make a gift today.’ The goal of Golf Writer Andy Reistetter’s ‘Journey to Olympic Golf’ is to raise $100,000 for The First Tee.

Kids teeing off No. 6 at Brentwood.

Kids teeing off No. 6 at Brentwood. You could be golfing with them!

Please Make a Gift to The First Tee Today!

Please Make a Gift to The First Tee Today!

Our fun fivesome at Brentwood!

Our fun fivesome at Brentwood!

While there are a few personal reasons to explain why I am embarking on this “Journey to Olympic Golf,” there are many reasons I want to raise $100,000 for The First Tee.

It’s cliché to say I want to give back some of which has been given to me but the reality is that golf continues to give me something each day. It has been six years now that I have started over pursuing a second career in golf and it has been a marvelous journey. The people I have met along the way and the experiences I have shared with them have been great. I see the same good things happening to me during this upcoming road trip to Rio de Janeiro.

In a way golf has always been my life even before I made my life golf. My earliest childhood memory when I was around three years old was hitting golf balls out of snow bunkers with my dad. It was in early spring near where I grew up in Binghamton, New York. I remember my older brother Larry giving me Ben Hogan’s Five Lessons book. More importantly he inscribed it with the following words—“golf is a lot like life, the more you learn and understand about the game, the easier it is to meet its challenge.” I guess I have taken these words to heart.

Ely Park Municipal Golf Course overlooking Binghamton, New York

Ely Park Municipal Golf Course overlooking Binghamton, New York

To me golf is exactly like life. You have good days and bad days. Some good days you know why they are a good day. Some bad days you don’t have a clue as to why it is a bad day. But you learn to deal with it and try to make every day a good day no matter what. Something makes you want to go on and eventually you enjoy the challenge. You get the fact that it is truly a privilege and an honor to be alive and that nothing is ever to be taken for granted.

I was fortunate that my father brought me into the game of golf at an early age. He came to the game out of necessity, being the son of a dirt poor coal miner. As a caddie at Scranton CC he learned some things that made him successful in life as a husband, a father, a city fireman and a competitive amateur golfer. He was someone who truly loved life. Most importantly he passed along his love of life and the game of golf to me. Times when we walked the fairways and played Ely Park Municipal Course were some of our best times together and some of the best times of my life.

I was lucky in life and that is where the First Tee comes into play. Everyone deserves to be as lucky as I was. Everyone deserves to be introduced to this great game of golf. I recently visited the First Tee of North Florida at their Brentwood facility. While there I had the chance to see firsthand how much more there is to the First Tee than golf. These kids are learning some great life skills, some of which have taken me a lifetime to learn.

Andy Reistetter with Matt Moscinski, Director of Programming at the First Tee of North Florida. Matching shirts a coincidence!

Andy Reistetter with Matt Moscinski, Director of Programming at the First Tee of North Florida. Matching shirts a coincidence!

To the credit of the coaches and program leaders, 100% of the Jacksonville area kids who have come through the First Tee graduate high school and not only have gone on to college but have done so with an academic or golf scholarship. The program is making a meaningful impact on young people and our communities. That is why I am asking you to make a gift to the First Tee. Please give what you can. Whether a few dollars or many dollars it will make a difference.

Attending the recent First Tee of North Florida “Taste of Golf” fundraiser at the Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass impacted me greatly. Along with the HEAL Foundation event and last week’s Web.com Tour Championship I am completely convinced that golf is the greatest game ever and more so because of what happens outside the ropes. Let me share a few thoughts with you and then let you go to click away at your computer to make that First Tee donation.

Please Make a Gift to The First Tee Today!

Hosting the First Tee event during the Web.com tournament at the Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass which is the home headquarters of the PGA TOUR had a special significance. Commissioner Finchem and President Bush No. 41 had kicked off the First Tee in New York City’s Central Park in November 1997. The First Tee was established through the World Golf Foundation and its founding members—the USGA, LPGA, Masters Tournament, PGA of America and the PGA TOUR.

Suzanne McCourt, the Lady Artist from Pebble Beach with Tabitha & Jim Furyk. Note the 'Little Girl in the Red Dress' painting.

Suzanne McCourt, the Lady Artist from Pebble Beach with Tabitha & Jim Furyk. Note the ‘Little Girl in the Red Dress’ painting.

While the First Tee Open was being played at Pebble Beach, the event at TPC Sawgrass was sort of a combined Sweet 16 birthday and coming out party. Like the young adult who comes home to thank the parents and grab the car keys, the First Tee is on its way to make an impact in the world. They have reached 7.6 million young people since 1976 and want to touch the lives of an addition 10 million kids by 2017. The First Tee has fully come of age.

Another realization that night was how much people in golf want to reach out to other people and do something good together. Sort of like that playing partner you met on the first tee that helps you find your ball in the woods. Then gives you just the right golf tip at the right time. Along the lines of “you might want to try doing this.” People in golf wan to meet you, network with you and rally around good charitable causes.

While at Pebble Beach for the 2012 Pro-Am I saw two women carrying a rather large painting of Tiger Woods into the Golf Links to the Past shop. I immediately became curious since that year marked Tiger’s first appearance there in 10 years. Well, one woman was, who I now refer to as “The Lady Artist from Pebble Beach,” Suzanne McCourt and the other women her manager Rohana Loschivo. They extended an invitation to lunch in the Stillwater Grill in the Lodge and the rest is history.

Pebble Beach Pro-Am Cover by Suzanne McCourt depicting champion golfer Tiger Woods and celebrating the 25th anniversary AT&T's sponsorship.

Pebble Beach Pro-Am Cover by Suzanne McCourt depicting champion golfer Tiger Woods and celebrating the 25th anniversary AT&T’s sponsorship.

Suzanne, the first woman artist to paint the cover of the program for the Pro-Am in 2010, has travelled eastward to Ponte Vedra Beach twice this year. In May, at the World Golf Hall of Fame Induction, she presented the Venturi family a painting of their at-the-time recently deceased father Ken. Her neo-realism-golf-artwork captured Venturi’s iconic U.S. Open win at Congressional and tells the story of his golfing career. Suzanne’s father, who died when she was 16 years old, was a contemporary of Venturi’s but stayed an amateur playing in Crosby Pro-Ams and The Masters. Golf, like life, is a vehicle for making connections where they mean the most.

The Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass was transformed into an art gallery on the second floor and many local artists joined Suzanne in toasting the First Tee of North Florida fundraiser. Jen Jones, the force behind Jacksonville’s Unity Plaza, which will open in 2014, along with ‘Taste of Golf’ Chairwoman Milan Moore recruited Keith Doles, Ted Johnson, Robert Leedy, Peter Blunt, Randy Pitts, Gordon Meggison, Marilyn Antram, Paul Ladiner, Barbara Quigley, Heather Blanton, and Will Dickey, who painted the night away with ‘the little girl in the red dress’ just outside the VIP room.

Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass was transformed into an art gallery for the 'Taste of Golf.'

Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass was transformed into an art gallery for the ‘Taste of Golf.’

But remember the night was entitled “A Taste of Golf” and let me tell you that, this being the 8th annual, they have it dialed in, the food was awesome. The delicacies included Shrimp Scampi Dijonnaise (Executive Chef Gary McKinsey, Deerwood CC), Nabchego-Stuffed Duck Meatball (Executive Chef Kira Lewis, Hidden Hills CC), Salmon in Two Preparations (Executive Chef Jason Hall, Certified Master Chef, Hammock Dunes), Beer Braised Pork Cheeks (Executive Chef Michael Ramsay, Jacksonville Golf & CC), Jumbo Lump Crab Tamales (Executive Chef Jerry Snider, San Jose CC), Duroc Pork Belly & Sweet Pea Sea Scallop (Executive Chefs Dan Webber and Marvin McClelland, Sawgrass CC), Grilled Wagyu Beef (Executive Chef LJ Coussin, TPC Sawgrass), Sweet Potato Gnocchi (Executive Chef Brent Lynch, World Golf Village). For dessert there were a Trilogy of Truffles, Mint Meringue, Chocolate Crunch Macaron and a Chocolate Blood Orange Hazelnut Shooter (Executive Pastry Chef Caitlin Schneider-Frantz, Jacksonville Golf & CC and Chef Nils Rowland, Ponte Vedra Inn & Club).

While the festival night at the Clubhouse was memorable with a lot of dignities including Mr. & Mrs. ‘59’ Jim and Tabitha Furyk, Amanda Balionis and Cole Pepper what I remember is going out to Brentwood meeting some coaches and kids and playing nice holes on a good golf course. Sam Snead won the first two Jacksonville Opens, a PGA TOUR stop starting in 1945, on the same ground as the kids walk today though only the sixth hole remains from the original Donald Ross masterpiece. As good as the course is the kids are better.

Perhaps there are a couple misconceptions that I would like to clear up about the First Tee. First of all it is not only for the underprivileged or minorities. I think I passed most of the cars I saw in the packed full parking lot on the way to the course from the beach. I mean that passed me. In reality the First Tee goes on the road to suburban locations all the time. It is as diverse as our population.

Bridge over RR tracks at Brentwood golf course.

Bridge over RR tracks at Brentwood golf course.

The second thing you should know particularly about the Brentwood golf course is that it is open to the public. With grass practice tees, inexpensive green fees ($11 on holiday & weekends) and encouragement to walk it is an ideal golfing facility. I put it right up there with that little hidden gem at the UNF campus—the John Hyat Golfplex. Go see Brentwood’s PGA of America Golf Professional John Grzybek and go play!

I knew I was home the minute I pulled into the parking lot. There was lots of activity— parents dropping kids off, small groups of kids around the putting green and practice tee and golfers teeing off No. 1. I knew why it felt like home after teeing off with Coach Tony, Blair, Charles and Chase walking and playing the first hole.

To get to the second hole you walk up a bit of a rise past the 6th tee and cross over a set of RR tracks on a bridge. I took me home to Florence Street in Binghamton where it wasn’t so easy to cross the tracks separating the First Ward and the Westside. Sports and education integrated and lifted the community I grew up in. Same thing for the First Tee of North Florida. I paused on the bridge to consider which way the trains are going for these kids and quickly realized that they are going in any direction they so choose!

Please Make a Gift to The First Tee Today!

Thank You!!!

 

Note my baby M30 now has a First Tee license plate for our 'Journey to Olympic Golf.'

Note my baby M30 now has a First Tee license plate for our ‘Journey to Olympic Golf.’

Donate to First Tee, Win a Set of Hickories!

These beauties can be yours! Donate and enter raffle by Thursday, October 10th.

These beauties can be yours! Donate and enter raffle by Thursday, October 10th.

This beautiful set of hickory-shafted clubs can be yours! One week left to enter the raffle. Make a gift to The First Tee and you are IN! Winner randomly picked and clubs shipped next Friday, Oct 11th morning before I leave for Atlanta & St, Louis to begin JTOG! C’mon now is the time! Plus I want 100 people with me when I tee-off at Glen Echo CC on the 15th! Is that asking too much? So far the First Tee has gifts from $20 to $1,000, any amount is awesome. Please make yours today! Good luck & good golfing with these beauties! (They are authentic, professionally restored and playable!

Select Journey to Olympic Golf from the drop-down menu to the question “What inspired you to make a gift today?”
Send me the ‘Thank You’ email and you will be entered into the raffle.

All the money, 100% goes to The First Tee!

img28369img28370img28371set-of-hickories-for-raffle

TPC Sawgrass HEALS Autism

All eyes are on the golfers as they walk from the 16th green to the 17th tee at the Stadium in Golf at TPC Sawgrass

All eyes are on the golfers as they walk from the 16th green to the 17th tee at the Stadium in Golf at TPC Sawgrass

You are a professional golfer, one of the greatest golfers in the world, competing on the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass for the right to be called THE PLAYERS Champion.

It is Sunday afternoon late in the final round. You have just survived the first of the last three holes which are named The Gauntlet. Water-infested and daunting you know they will determine your fate. You are prepared and ready for the biggest challenge of your life.

While laboring to take that long walk along the water from the 16th green to the 17th tee success is the only thing on your mind. Arriving at the tee the biggest moment of your golfing career is now here. There is only 137 yards separating your teed golf ball and the hole which is located down a slope on the back right portion of the island green.

What will you deliver?

The flag of the victor flies above Champions Circle.

The flag of the victor flies above Champions Circle.

This is golfing drama. No doubt the television folks are flashing back to the fate of Len Mattiace in 1998, Sean O’Hair in 2007 and Paul Goydos in 2008. All three came to the same place in golfing time confident in their ability and the outcome they so desperately desired. Committed to their process each hit their tee shot in the water. That day they failed to become a PLAYERS Champion. How will that experience impact them longer term?

Some say golf is a lot like life or that even life is a lot like golf.

Parents of autistic children know what it is like to have their hearts set on having the perfect child. Like everyone when they become parents their expectations are high. At the moment of birth like everyone they pray mostly for a healthy child and the ability to be a good parent to that child. When they realize something is different with their child as a baby, toddler or adolescent how do they react, what do they do?

TPC Sawgrass hosted the HEAL fundraiser at the Clubhouse.

TPC Sawgrass hosted the HEAL fundraiser at the Clubhouse.

Mattiace went on to win twice on the PGA TOUR and nearly won the Masters catching a bad break tree stymie in the playoff with Mike Weir near the 10th green at Augusta National Golf Club. Most people remember the two balls in the water that PLAYERS Sunday, some remember that he was playing in front of his mother in a wheelchair who died of cancer two months later and few remember the details of his play that day. That Sunday round in 1998 was not to be characterized by the Snowman 8 at the 17th but by the nine birdies including one on the final hole and a more than respectable Sunday score of 70. Mattiace was not only heroic in his golf that day but also as a son and no doubt is the Mother’s Champion at TPC Sawgrass.

O’Hair won once before that day in 2007 and three times afterwards on the PGA TOUR, most recently the 2011 Canadian Open. With Top-10s in the Masters and Open Championship, at age 31 the productive years of his golfing career are ahead of him. The 17th hole at TPC Sawgrass did not define him. It was a stepping stone to personal and professional growth.

Leslie & Bobby Weed welcoming HEAL supporters.

Leslie & Bobby Weed welcoming HEAL supporters.

While Mattiace was 31 years old at the time, O’Hair was 24, Paul Goydos was nearly 44 when destiny came his way in 2009 at TPC Sawgrass. He thought of himself as a ‘lovable loser,’ well before Rocco Mediate lost to Tiger Woods in the 2008 U.S. Open. The adult Teddy Bear was trying to be like Fred Funk, the oldest to win THE PLAYERS at age 48.

Goydos had won twice already on the PGA TOUR the day he bogeyed the 18th hole and had the opportunity to play the 17th again in a playoff with Sergio Garcia. Though he did not win that day he did became the fourth, and oldest player in PGA Tour history to shoot 59 at the 2010 John Deere Classic. Off the golf course he is known to be an endearing father to his two daughters after the loss of their mother in 2009. It’s important to win and win at the meaningful challenges in life.

When Leslie and Bobby Weed gave birth to their autistic daughter Lanier they dealt with the unexpected. Along with two other daughters they made a family complete with three special daughters and then looked outside their selves to help others with autistic children.

H.E.A.L.—Healing Every Autistic Life!

H.E.A.L.—Healing Every Autistic Life!

In 2004 they co-founded the non-profit organization, Healing Every Autistic Life (HEAL. They issue grants to support autistic camps and educational programs. Beginning in 2007, TPC Sawgrass “adopted” their local charity and together they have raised over two million dollars with “Valley of Dreams” events like the one held on September 12th in the Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass.

This year was extra special with the goal of purchasing iPads for Special Needs Classrooms across Northeast Florida. One in 140 Autistic children, like Lanier, are deemed nonverbal, they cannot speak. iPads helps autistic students communicate, finally giving them a “voice.”

General Manager Bill Hughes and News Anchor Patty Crosby led the auction and extra special fundraising for iPADS.

General Manager Bill Hughes and News Anchor Patty Crosby led the auction and extra special fundraising for iPADS.

General Manager Bill Hughes with the help of the lovely news anchor Patty Crosby conducted an auction and raised funds for additional iPads during the evening. The list of roles performed by a great golf professional was just expanded to include No. 32—auctioneer.

For the fans of Country music star Jack Ingram the price of the charity ticket was worth it to hear the good looking Texan sing his No. 1 hit song “Wherever You Are” in an intimate setting. The lyrics of going through rivers of rain and mountains of pain, doing whatever one needs to do and following your heart and dream seemed to fit the occasion perfectly.

Our basic human instinct is to fight the isolation of ourselves, especially in difficult times. Nobody is perfect but what is perfect is the spirit within each of us. Yes the 17th at TPC Sawgrass can be the “Hole of Horrors” but it doesn’t necessarily define a career, a tournament or even a round.

Country Star Jack Ingram performed with the talented Eleanor & Chris Masterson.

Country Star Jack Ingram performed with the talented Eleanor & Chris Masterson.

No person in this world is an island or needs to be imprisoned within their self. When we go into the water we can always swim towards each other. Somehow we meet in the middle and learn to float our way to a new understanding, a new way of living.

HEAL, TPC Sawgrass, Leslie and Bobby Weed and many, many supporters are doing just that for nonverbal Autistic children.

HEAL—an organization’s goal is to Heal Every Autistic Life. Maybe we have it backwards and it is the autistic child that is healing us?

Maybe knowing that is better than acing the 17th to win THE PLAYERS Championship?

Visit www.HealAutismNow.org or call 904.716.4905 for more information.

Andy Reistetter with Leslie & Bobby Weed

Andy Reistetter with Leslie & Bobby Weed

Somewhere in my HEAL experience there is an element of the “Olympic Spirit for Golfers” that I hope to discover on the “Journey to Olympic Golf.” Maybe it has something to do with Bobby being a great golf course architect. Or maybe it is the use of technology where nonverbal autistic children like Lanier are able to communicate with iPADS? Somehow golfers in the 2016 Summer Olympics will reach out with their golfing abilities and touch the world just like Leslie and Bobby have reached out and touched so many through HEAL. Another dimension to ponder as I drive 13,400 miles to Rio de Janeiro…

 

Olympic Spirit of Golf Starts at TPC Sawgrass! (2013 Web.com Tour Championship)

TPC Sawgrass Clubhouse

Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass is all decked out for Military Tribute and Web.com Championship!

I first came to Ponte Vedra Beach in late January 2008. I left a corporate career to pursue a life in golf. Not sure exactly where in golf I was smart enough to choose Ponte Vedra, home of the PGA TOUR, TPC Sawgrass and of course THE PLAYERS Championship each year on the Stadium Course. Soon afterwards I discovered the World Golf Hall of Fame in nearby St. Augustine. In a way the spirit of golf drew me here and now I will take a bit of that spirit with me on a road trip to Rio de Janeiro, site of golf once again in the 2016 Summer Olympics after an absence of 112 years. I hope to discover and define the sense of the Olympic Spirit of Golf. I realized this week during the Web.com Championship on Dye’s Valley Course at TPC Sawgrass that for me that Olympic Spirit of Golf starts right here at TPC Sawgrass.

Championship on Dye's Valley Course at TPC Sawgrass.

Web.com Tour Championship on Dye’s Valley Course at TPC Sawgrass.

What is the Olympic Spirit of Golf? I do not know nor does anyone since it has not existed for 109 years. It has been two or three generations since Olympic Golf was played at Glen Echo CC in St. Louis in the 1904 Olympics. No one on Earth has experienced it or knows someone that has. The concept intrigues me both personally and professionally. It has also motivated me to travel over 14,000 miles to begin to seek out the answer. The closest thing in my mind is somewhere between playing in a Major Championship or a Ryder Cup or a Presidents Cup (and I have been to 18 of them) and being inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame (I have been to the last 4 Induction Ceremonies). “Golf’s Highest Honor” on the World Stage. The golfing spirit I felt at this week’s Web.com Tour Championship seems like a good place to start so here is my thoughts and experiences from the week!

Jim Furyk with my new friends at the Web.com luncheon at the Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass.

Jim Furyk with my new friends at the Web.com luncheon at the Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass.

I like to think of THE PLAYERS and now the Web.com Tour Championship (this year was the first one ever with a combined Tour Championship and Q-School feel) as a golf tournament with Disneyland outside the ropes. Tournament Director Matt Rapp has figured out the secret formula to make these events a family and community experience. During the two professional golf tournaments at TPC Sawgrass this year I have attended an education conference, a women’s leadership conference and this week a small business conference put on by Web.com. Then there are the fundraisers for HEAL (Helping Every Autistic Life) and The First Tee of North Florida among others. Jim Furyk, Mr. 59 himself stopped by our table during lunch and a few minutes later David Brown, Web.com CEO came by and thanked US for attending the seminar!

Military Appreciation Day at the Web.com Tour Championship.

Military Appreciation Day at the Web.com Tour Championship.

With my entrepreneurial spirit refreshed by Web.com earlier in the day I checked out what was going on outside the Clubhouse after play on Friday. I had a front row seat for the Military Appreciation Ceremony featuring remarks from Captain Wesley McCall, Commanding Officer of Naval Station Mayport, and a special presentation by Jim Furyk where he gave the key to a mortgage-free home to a deserving military man and his wife. Jacksonville is a huge military town and the sense of pride and patriotism was prevalent everywhere including American flags replacing the various national flags above the practice facility. Somewhere in that Olympic Spirit of Golf I am sure to find a bit of patriotism but in some sort of fourth dimension of peaceful coexistence?

How could I leave a front row seat on such a beautiful evening? I hung around for the free Blues Travelers concert. John Popper was brilliant on the harmonica with heartfelt vocals. Music surely activates our spirit in so many wonderful ways. Will golf inspire a new definition of the Olympic Spirit?

John Popper, Blues Traveler…

How could I leave a front row seat on such a beautiful evening? I hung around for the free Blues Travelers concert. John Popper was brilliant on the harmonica with heartfelt vocals. Music surely activates our spirit in so many wonderful ways. Will golf inspire a new definition of the Olympic Spirit?

As I mentioned this week seemed to kick-off my “Journey to Olympic Golf.” While there are still 15 days until I tee-off at Glen Echo CC wearing knickers and playing my authentic and professionally

Yours truly Andy Reistetter with the "Funny Caddy" ESPN Reporter Michael Collins.

Yours truly Andy Reistetter with the “Funny Caddy” ESPN Reporter Michael Collins.

restored hickory-shafted clubs there are only 11 days left before I leave home for St. Louis. An unexpected gesture came from comedian-turned-caddie-turned-ESPN reporter Michael Collins who videotaped a feature interview of JTOG. We had a lot of fun, me sitting, him standing eye-to-eye laughing as I explained how I am trying to raise $100,000 for The First Tee. Simple math is 1,000 friends contributing $100 each but I only have like 10 friends (just kidding of course as we are off to a good start to having 100 donators by Tee-Off). I’ll let you know when the video is posted!

Jerry Foltz, Michael Collins and Andy Reistetter on the 17th tee, Stadium Course, TPC Sawgrass.

Jerry Foltz, Michael Collins and Andy Reistetter on the 17th tee, Stadium Course, TPC Sawgrass.

Michael and I happened to be paired with Golf Channel’s Jerry Foltz and his friend Frank, a.k.a “Triple F” (Foltzy’s Friend Frank). So many of the talented people at the Golf Channel whether in front of the camera or behind it or whether on the golf course or in the truck have given me so many great ideas on how to orchestrate this “Journey to Olympic Golf” that I want to thank them all! Hopefully I make it back from Rio de Janeiro for the PGA Show in Orlando in m id January and will buy you all a beer. If not then I am in Paradise South somewhere (Paradise North is Ponte Vedra Beach) and you will have to come find me. For the record Foltzy is eligible age and talent wise for the Champions Tour and I am thinking Michael and him would make a good  player-caddie team. A double Lee Trevino walking down the fairway! I use to be able to hit this green when I aimed for the middle of it. I aimed at the back right Sunday hole location and pulled a ‘Goydos.’

Wedding at TPC Sawgrass during Web.com Tour Championship on "Marriage Day" (Saturday).

Wedding at TPC Sawgrass during Web.com Tour Championship on “Marriage Day” (Saturday).

Where else but TPC Sawgrass do you see not one, but two, or any weddings on a Saturday during a professional golf tournament? Puts a whole new meaning to the term “Moving Day.” It was my first wedding (okay I was watching from the veranda within earshot) in six years at TPC Sawgrass. I was at Bea’s 90th birthday party but never a wedding. The ceremony was fairly brief though I remember the priest sharing something about love being two souls finding one another and realizing how special and precious an occurrence that is. Of course I was thinking about golf and the Olympics finding one another after 112 years. Match made in Heaven and let the games begin… in a little over 1,000 days from now. All I need to do is find one new friend a day…

Chesson Hadley raises his hat to signal victory in the 2013 Web.com Tour Championship on Dye's Valley Course at TPC Sawgrass.

Chesson Hadley raises his hat to signal victory in the 2013 Web.com Tour Championship on Dye’s Valley Course at TPC Sawgrass.

Back to the Web.com Tour Championship. Chesson Hadley, a 26-year old Georgia Bulldog (which is sure to make Billy Kratzert happy) won the Tour Championship with a Sunday 1-under par 69. A rookie on the Web.com Tour this year he won the Rex Hospital Open in Raleigh, North Carolina which is the same hospital he was born in. Though he won the tournament he did not win the FINALS coveted Money Title. LSU’s John Peterson did by 567 dollars by virtue of his steady play in the four postseason events (T5,T3,3rd, T2 finishes). Michael Putnam had won the Regular Season Money Title at the Cox Classic in Omaha, Nebraska on August 25th.

Golf Channel's Jerry Foltz was the Master of Ceremonies for the Trophy and Card Ceremonies.

Golf Channel’s Jerry Foltz was the Master of Ceremonies for the Trophy and Card Ceremonies.

The back veranda of the Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass was the stage for the Trophy Presentation and Card Ceremony for 50 happy Web.com golfers headed to the 2013/2014 PGA TOUR season (the inaugural wrap-around season). Now we will forever be lost in golfing time. Like the millennium, was it really 2000 or 2001, when did golf go to a year-round schedule, in 2013 or 2014? Excited spectators, tournament volunteers and families of the players watched from the expansive back lawn. Golf’s Channel Jerry Foltz mc’d the affair with words well-spoken by Web.com’s CEO David Brown, Web.com Tour President Bill Calfee and PGA TOUR Commissioner Tim Finchem. Definitely not a graduation but a commencement of great things to come!

The 50 players who earned their 2013/14 tour cards are (in order of priority ranking) Michael Putnam, John Peterson, Chesson Hadley, Seung-Yul Noh, Andrew Svoboda, Trevor Immelman, Will MacKenzie, Scott Gardiner, Edward Loar, Ben Martin, Patrick Cantlay, Brendon Todd, Ryo Ishikawa, Brad Fritsch, Kevin Kisner, Sean O'Hair, Troy Matteson, Bud Cauley, Heath Slocum, Russell Knox, Hudson Swafford, Will Claxton, Brice Garnett, Tyrone Van Aswegen, Chad Collins, Billy Hurley III, Danny Lee, Jim Herman, Joe Durant, Troy Merritt, Lee Williams, Andrew Loupe, Ricky Barnes, Peter Malnati, Bobby Gates, Bronson La'Cassie, Alex Aragon, Tim Wilkinson, Jamie Lovemark, Wes Roach, Daniel Chopra, Alex Prugh, Miguel Angel Carballo, Jim Renner, Mark Anderson, Kevin Tway, Kevin Foley, Matt Bettencourt, Will Wilcox, and Benjamin Alvarado.

Welcome Class of 2013/2014! Play begins in one week at the Frys.com Open!

The 50 players who earned their 2013/14 tour cards are (in order of priority ranking) Michael Putnam, John Peterson, Chesson Hadley, Seung-Yul Noh, Andrew Svoboda, Trevor Immelman, Will MacKenzie, Scott Gardiner, Edward Loar, Ben Martin, Patrick Cantlay, Brendon Todd, Ryo Ishikawa, Brad Fritsch, Kevin Kisner,  Sean O’Hair, Troy Matteson, Bud Cauley, Heath Slocum, Russell Knox, Hudson Swafford, Will Claxton, Brice Garnett, Tyrone Van Aswegen, Chad Collins, Billy Hurley III,  Danny Lee,  Jim Herman, Joe Durant, Troy Merritt, Lee Williams, Andrew Loupe,  Ricky Barnes,  Peter Malnati,  Bobby Gates, Bronson La’Cassie, Alex Aragon, Tim Wilkinson, Jamie Lovemark, Wes Roach, Daniel Chopra, Alex Prugh, Miguel Angel Carballo, Jim Renner, Mark Anderson, Kevin Tway, Kevin Foley, Matt Bettencourt, Will Wilcox, and Benjamin Alvarado.

The sea of blue shirted volunteers for this week's Web.com Tour Championship. A spirited team of friends that will accompany me on the "Journey to Olympic Golf."

The sea of blue shirted volunteers for this week’s Web.com Tour Championship. A spirited team of friends that will accompany me on the “Journey to Olympic Golf.”

So what does this all mean in terms of the Olympic Spirit of Golf? Sometimes the spirit of an organization is found in the newcomers- there will be 14 rookies competing on PGA TOUR in the 2013/14 season. Who knows, perhaps one of them will be playing in the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro? I met Argentina’s Miguel Angel Carballo and his caddie David Walker who lives in Panama. Maybe they will not only be on the way to the Olympics but there to compete in 2016? It was another great week at TPC Sawgrass, same as when Tiger Woods won his second PLAYERS Championship five months ago. Along with the ambience of the nearby World Golf Hall of Fame my seeking of the Olympic Spirit of Golf starts here. Come join me on an incredible journey!

Click here to donate to The First Tee, remember to select JTOG!

Here is more information on the “Journey to Olympic Golf”

I tee off in St. Louis with my hickory clubs where golf was last played in the Olympics in 1904 on October 15th and then drive 14,300 miles south through Mexico, Central & South America to Rio de Janeiro where golf will return to the Summer Olympics in 2016!

Part golf promotion, part personal journey to define the Olympic Spirit for Golf, something that has not been present for the last 112 years. After the 3-month journey I will return to Orlando for the 2014 PGA Show in Orlando.

The goal is to raise $100,000 for the First Tee.

Folks who donate before October 11th will receive my personal and intimate behind the scenes journaling during the trip. It can be interactive so if want to tell me to jump off a cliff in Santiago, Chile that is what I will do. In addition you will be entered into a drawing for a set of professionally restored and playable hickory clubs.

But you have to do it before October 11th, in less than 2 weeks. When you use the link below please select “Journey to Olympic Golf” from the drop-down menu for the question “What inspired you to make a gift today?” Please forward to me the ‘Thank You’ note received and I will enter you into the hickory clubs raffle

Will you please share with your golfing friends and folks who have a charitable budget yet to be spent this year?

On behalf of the kids in the First Tee, thank you so much for doing this!

My M30 Infiniti and I will be leaving TPC Sawgrass on October 18th heading to St. Louis to tee off on the 15th, then south through Mexico, Central and South America to Rio de Janeiro.

My M30 Infiniti and I will be leaving TPC Sawgrass on October 18th heading to St. Louis to tee off on the 15th, then south through Mexico, Central and South America to Rio de Janeiro.