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Dream day at St. AndrewsOne of my best golf experiences occurred last summer when my family took a long-awaited trip to Scotland, my first to the reported birthplace of golf and the homeland of my wife’s parents. We were there for my son to play in the British Mid-Amateur at Muirfield, a thrill in itself. But another highlight of the trip was when we arrived in St. Andrews on a Sunday. Golf courses there on Sundays are closed to golfers and transformed into parks for the public.We arrived to a very sunny day and the thrill of walking around the Old Course at St. Andrews with literally hundreds of other visitors. And no one disturbed the golf course! We were able to take all of the important pictures, including the one with my son on the Swilcan Bridge where Jack Nicklaus had walked in his final British Open only a few weeks before. When we played the course, I managed to par the famous 1st and 18th holes, but the 17th, with the road hole bunker, was another story. My drive cleared the hotel, one of the most unusual shots in all of golf, but my second shot reached the famous road hole bunker. It took me four to get out. — Dave Fiskum |
Phil Doud President, John and Phil’s Toyota
Home course: Trysting
Tree
Dream course: Pebble
Beach; a trip to play Plantation in Maui is coming up
How often do you golf:
Three or four times a month, in spurts. I play more when
I’m away from home.
Most famous golfing
partner: Don’t have one; my favorite partner is my
son, Matt, who worked at Pebble Beach as a caddy.
Best golfing
experience: Playing Pebble Beach and Spyglass with my
good friend, John Mills, my son, and the golf pro from
Trysting, Sean Arey. We had a great time.
Most memorable bad
shot: It was actually a series of shots on a hole I
played in California. I dubbed my drive and muffed my second
shot. I topped my third shot, it went down the fairway, ran
over a hose, skipped within 3 feet of the pin, and I sank the
putt for a ho-hum par.
Best golf advice: Take
lessons. It’s best to start when you’re 12 or 14,
but no matter how old you are, stop and take lessons from a
good teaching pro.
Ken Smith Management supervisor, Wieden+Kennedy
Home course: Heron
Lake, Portland
Dream course: Old
Course at St. Andrews
How often do you golf:
At least once a week
Favorite golfing
partner: My wife, Barbara
Best golfing
experience: A golfing trip I just took with my dad
through the heartland of Scotland.
Most memorable bad
shot: On the first tee, the first time I played Bandon
Dunes, I shanked it straight into the shed; hung it right
inside.
Best golf advice: Keep
your hands relaxed.
John Mazzocco Principal, Bluedot Communications
Home course: Pumpkin
Ridge
Dream course: Cypress
Point
How often do you golf:
Twice a week
Most famous golfing
partner: Don Johnson
Best golfing
experience: 70 at Witch Hollow. All luck.
Most memorable bad
shot: My last 3 iron
Best golf advice: Buy
a rescue club!
It was a birdie — really!One day I had a birdie at Cypress Point. Hit driver to 3 feet. No one believes me, but I happen to have the picture you see here to back it up. I had hit out of turn just before we took the picture. If you zoom in you can see my ball right of the pin. As I was walking up to the green, I said hello to the greens-keeper, who had an OSU hat on, as did I. He congratulated me and then hopped in his cart and rode away. I finished the round (took a quadruple bogey on 17) and walked up the hill to the clubhouse.Out of the clubhouse comes Jim Nance from CBS, who comes up to me and says, “Heard you had a birdie on 16. Pretty rare, great shot.” — John Mazzocco |
Tom Hughes Marketing manager, Adidas America
Home course: Whatever
course I have been invited to play that day.
Dream course: Pacific
Dunes
How often do you golf:
30 times a year
Most famous golfing
partner: Leslie Nielsen and Robert Trent Jones Jr.
Best golfing
experience: A day with my best friend, Ted Byers, on the
Sheep Ranch at Bandon Dunes. We teed off at sunrise and played
until noon with no one else on the course. Nothing like having
your own private oceanfront golf course for a morning.
Most memorable bad
shot: 8th green at Pebble Beach. Trying to be cute with
a lob wedge, over a trap onto about 10 paces of green. Great
shot ‘til it landed, rolled, rolled some more and off
into the Pacific. Can’t imagine a prettier place to
double-bogey.
Best golf advice:
Leave any temper or attitude you might have somewhere other
than the course.
Honoring a friendI throw a charity golf tournament, the MMH Invitational, as a memory to my best friend Matson Haley. It also helps fund a scholarship at Santa Clara University in his name.For 13 years we’ve gathered 20-40 friends of Matson’s from Santa Clara and Jesuit High School and ventured off to Sunriver for three days. We’ve played Harbour Town GL for the fifth and 10th anniversary events. Needless to say, there are thousands of stories from Hilton Head to the Owl’s Nest. Unfortunately, I can’t reveal any of them without ruining the reputations of people throughout Northern California and the Portland area. — Tom Hughes |
John Mills Recently retired after 29 years with Hewlett-Packard
Home course: Trysting
Tree
Dream course:
I’d love to play the Augusta national course in the
spring someday.
How often do you golf:
Average 30 rounds per year
Most famous golfing
partner: The Pac-10 men’s golf championship was
held at Trysting Tree in 1992. I carried a leader board with
the group that contained Phil Mikelson, Notah Begay and a
player from UO. I walked 18 holes with them, and they all shot
69 or better. It was a phenomenal day, watching these guys up
close that were going to be such great pros.
Best golfing experience: I shot 68 at Trysting Tree six
years ago, 4 under par with no bogeys. That was a great day,
and I did it playing with Steve Oien, a great friend who
I’ve played with hundreds of times — my most
familiar and friendly match play partner.
Most memorable bad shot: Well, I’ve never hit
anybody with a ball. I did dunk it into the ocean off the 18th
tee at Pebble Beach. I got caught up in the moment.
Best golf advice: Other than lessons from a teaching
professional, I would advise golfers to play regularly with
someone who plays off a lower handicap than yours.
They’ll make you better
Jack who?Jack Nicklaus and his wife had a connection with the Seattle Symphony during the 1980s. Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer were playing a match at Sahallie Country Club as a benefit for the Symphony. The morning of the match, Nicklaus had not yet appeared out of the clubhouse while Palmer and two great Northwest pros — Don Bies and Rick Acton — were warming up at the first tee. Palmer raises up and asks loud enough for all to hear, “Don, who’s our fourth today?” There were probably a thousand people watching, and they all burst out laughing. Truly a favorite golf memory of mine.— John Mills |
Zeta Rennie Principal,
Staffing Solutions, LLC
Home course: Riverside
Golf and Country Club
Dream course: Bandon
Dunes
How often do you golf:
Every weekend
Most famous golfing
partner: Writer for Golf Digest and two college golf
coaches
Best golfing
experience: Golfing vacation in Thailand; we played golf
with the senior amateur of Thailand, and my score was lower
than his! He left after only playing nine holes.
Most memorable bad
shot: I only remember the good shots.
Best golf advice: Play
to play great.
Darren Welborn President/CEO, WRG Design Inc.
Home course: Columbia
Edgewater Country Club
Dream course: Augusta,
St. Andrews
How often do you golf:
Once a per week
Most famous golfing
partner: Michael Jordan at Rancho Sante Fe Farms Golf
Club. Lost $24.
Best golfing
experience: Pinehurst and Kapalua — Plantation
Most memorable bad
shot: I have erased them from my memory.
Best golf advice:
“Never break your putter and your driver in the same
round or you’re dead.” — Tommy Bolt
Thomas P, Luersen Regional vice president and managing director, Destination Hotels and Resorts
Home course:
Crosswater
Dream course: St. Andrews
How often do you golf:
Once or twice a month
Most famous golfing partner: I have had the pleasure of
playing in several ProAms over the years, but my most memorable
experience was playing with John Daly and Greg Norman at the
TPC in the Woodlands, Texas.
Best golfing experience: “Walking in the
ropes” at Augusta for the Masters with Jeff Maggert, who
won second place that year and at Crosswater, walking John Daly
and Fred Couples in the Shell Wonderful World of Golf.
Most memorable bad shot: On the range in Kingsmill
Resort in Williamsburg, Va., my playing partner shanked a shot
that went 180 degrees to his right and hit an older gentlemen
on the range, in the chest.... Ouch!
Best golf advice: Play
for the love of the game and the friendships that are made on
the course!
Palmer makes surprise visitI was involved in the opening ceremony at a new Palmer Course in the Woodlands in Texas. The event included Arnold Palmer and Ed Ceay entertaining our members and then playing a 9-hole event. On the same day, the Golf Digest Tournament was being hosted at the TPC in the Woodlands, where a young college player was getting a lot of attention...Tiger Woods. Following the Palmer opening and a successful, delightful day with Mr. Palmer, I was in the limo taking him back to the airport. Spontaneously, he said he wanted to “stop by the TPC and say hello.”To the unbelievable surprise of the Golf Digest organization and the college players, Mr. Palmer arrived during their lunch banquet. He was greeted with a warm welcome and he was asked to speak from the podium. He gave a classy and appropriate speech about the game and their roles as great players of the future. However, as he was given a standing ovation, he quickly stopped where he was exiting, turned around and returned to the podium. Much to everyone’s surprise, he was visibly upset. He stood in front of the hundred golfers or so, and proceeded to scold them and their coaches about their lack of respect and class. They had not taken their hats off during their meal. He reminded them all of the proud and rich history of golf and that gentlemen of golf would never wear their hats during lunch. Then he promptly left the room and loaded into the limo. I sat in the limo wondering what he would say. All he said was, “I hope these young men and their coaches understand their importance in the future of game.” It was a memorable day for me and those golfers and coaches who were there. — Thomas P. Luersen |
Monte Mendenhall Regional community manager, PacifiCorp
Home course: Stone
Ridge
Dream course: Pacific
Dunes
How often do you golf:
Once a week
Most famous golfing
partner: Chuck Cottier, former manager of the Mariners.
He was my minor league manager with the Quad City Angels. His
winning percentage with the Mariners was no better than .457.
He was actually a better manager than a golfer.
Best golfing
experience: Shot one over par at Bandon Dunes a couple
of years ago.
Most memorable bad
shot: Broke a window on a home across the Smith River
(California) from my buddy’s backyard. It was a $120
shot.
Best golf advice:
Nothing increases your golf score like witnesses.
Coni Crone Office manager, Bullard Smith Jernstedt Wilson
Dream course: I would
love nothing more than to golf at Augusta.
How often do you golf:
Weekends, weather permitting
Most famous golfing
partner: I haven’t golfed with anyone famous yet,
but I have met a lot of wonderful people on numerous
courses.
Best golfing
experience: Weekly golfing vacations. For me, this is
total relaxation. I’ve only experienced this twice so
far, but plan on doing this a lot more often. Of course,
getting a hole in one was quite an experience as well!
Most memorable bad
shot: Last year on my birthday, I was playing at the
PHRMA Annual Golf Tournament and walked up to the ladies’
closest to the pin hole. I hit a 5-wood, off the cart path, off
a tree and stuck it on the green, right next to the pin. I won
the KP that day. Pretty awfully amazing!
Best golf advice:
Relax and enjoy.
Jim Edmunson Owner, attorney, Cary Wing Edmunson P.C.
Home course: Diamond
Woods
Dream course: Grand
Cypress, Orlando
How often do you golf:
Weekly or more
Best golfing
experience: At Bandon Dunes soon after it opened several
years ago. Wind and rain howled the first day and no one scored
well. The second dawned sunny and calm. I placed a 3-wood
perfectly in the fairway, hit the green and birdied. Although
the highest handicapper by far, I had the tee for the second
hole and put my drive next to the cup. Four hours later, I
strode down the final hole at only 10 over par — my
personal best score by a mile at that time. A triple bogey on
the 18th didn’t take any luster off a magical round that
still ranks as shot-for-shot my best ever.
Most memorable bad
shot: On the first tee box, at Trysting Tree in
Corvallis. My drive sliced straight for a group in the next
fairway. I yelled “FORE!” and three of the players
ducked — but not the fourth. I watched in horror as he
was hit and dropped to the ground shaking. I raced to his aid,
only to discover he was convulsing in laughter. “I heard
you shout,” he said. “But I thought there is no way
your ball was going to hit me.”
Best golf advice: Play
courses that test you and improve your game. Avoid courses that
present few obstacles, even though it is gratifying to score
low.
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Current Issue | DEC 08 |
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