Tuesday
Jun242014

Illinois Golfer Challenge Scoring

    26th Illinois Golfer Challenge Scoring

    Glenwoodie Golf Club, Glenwood

    Girls 13-to-15 Division
    for the Virginia Van Wie Trophy

    5,378 yards, par 72

    Nicole Howard, Crown Point 44-43–87
    Elizabeth Stalla, Evergreen Park 53-49–102
    Hannah McMahon, Chicago 57-57–114
    Danielle Collina, Palos Heights 59-59–118
    MaryKate McMahon, Chicago 60-63–123
    Aine McKillop, Chicago 73-61–134
    Caroline Wallace, Oak Lawn 71-69–140
    Anna Horn, New Lenox 69-72–141
    Suzy Devane, Chicago 69-74–143
    Fiona Reynolds, Palos Heights 66-71–157

    Girls 16-to-18 Division
    for the Carol McCue Trophy

    5,378 yards, par 72

    Kelly Barker, Palos Heights 42-44–86
    Natalie Collina, Palos Heights 46-43–89
    Mary Yonkaitis, New Lenox 49-42–91
    Sabrina Bruozas, Mokena 50-53–103
    Amy Geraghty, Chicago 64-56–120
    Anna Suppes, New Lenox 59-62–121
    Nina Thauer, Evergreen Park 61-68–129
    Sydney Graham, New Lenox 64-68–132
    Anne McGivney, Chicago 67-72–139
    Bailey O’Connell, Chicago 69-74–143
    Shannon Wright, Chicago 85-80–165

    Boys 13-to-15 Division
    for the Marshall Dann Trophy

    6,029 yards, par 72

    Brett Katalnic, Orland Park 37-38–75
    Alex Schiene, Mokena 43-44–87
    Michael Stanton, Chicago 45-46–91
    John Dillon, Tonley Park 42-51–93
    Thomas Rodriguez, Monee 48-46–94
    Jake McFarland, Palos Park 47-53–100
    Danny Misheck, Oak Forest 54-47–101
    Kolbe Kruczyk, Homer Glen 54-49–103
    Eric Niewinski, Oak Forest 56-47–103
    Sean Cramer, Oak Forest 56-49–105
    Hayden Henry, Homewood 54-53–107
    David Kavalauskas, Oak Forest 60-50–110
    Kyle Berry, Tinley Park 60-53–113
    William Manns, Tinley Park 58-61–119
    Cale Hickey, Tinley Park WD

    Boys 16-to-18 Division
    for the Joe Jemsek Trophy

    6,536 yards, par 72

    Rhett Barker, Crown Point 38-37–75
    Michael Barber, Beecher 40-37–77
    Michael Goodman, Dyer 38-40–78
    Ryan Wells, Dyer 45-36–81
    David Karwoski, Oak Forest 42-41–83
    Conner Lille, Oak Forest 47-40–87
    Scott Borden, Midlothian 41-47–88
    Quentin Jones, Olympia Fields 44-45–89
    Kevin Steiner, Flossmoor 41-49–90
    Luke Cahill, Naperville 48-42–90
    James Lund, Flossmoor 48-43–91
    Chris Dykstra, Crestwood 45-47–92
    Josh Crosby, Lansing 48-47–95
    Shane Wright, Alsip 53-43–96
    Anton Ervick, Bourbonnais 44-52–96
    Peter Kolyvas, New Lenox 47-52–99
    Logan Dolehide, Crestwood 43-56–99
    Justin Butler, Frankfort 48-51–99
    Nicholas Thompson, Flossmoor 56-44–100
    Bernie Coderre, Flossmoor 51-49–100
    Andrew Hall, Tinley Park 54-47–101
    Nick Lewandowski, Highland 51-51–102
    Jacob Frencl, Burbank 52-52–104
    Joe DeSpain, Monee 50-55–105
    Brendan Crawford, Flossmoor 55-50–105
    Jacob Kauczek, Homer Glen 54-51–105
    Nick Cueller, Flossmoor 62-63–125
    Jon Dever, Oak Forest 61-64–125

Thursday
Jun192014

IG Challenge groupings are here!

Here are the grouping for the Illinois Golfer Challenge next Tuesday at Glenwoodie. Pardon the shift in columns; that seems to be unavoidable with my server.

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Boys 16-to-18 Division
for the Joe Jemsek Trophy

Time        Player (No. 1 Tee)            City

6:30 a.m.    Jacob Kauczek            Homer Glen
        Peter Kolyvas                New Lenox

6:37 a.m.    Nicholas Thompson            Flossmoor
        James Lund                Flossmoor

6:45 a.m.    Nick Cueller                Flossmoor
        Logan Dolehide            Crestwood
        Nick Lewandowski            Highland, Ind.

6:52 a.m.    Andrew Hall                Tinley Park
        Jon Dever                Oak Forest
        Chris Dykstra                Crestwood

7 a.m.        Joe DeSpain                Monee
        Jacob Frencl                Burbank
        Kevin Steiner                Flossmoor

7:07 a.m.    Shane Wright                Alsip
        Josh Crosby                Lansing
        Quentin Jones                Olympia Fields

7:15 a.m.    Brendan Crawford            Flossmoor
        Justin Butler                Ffrankfort
        Luke Cahill                Naperville

7:22 a.m.    Michael Goodman            Dyer, Ind.
        Bernie Coderre            Flossmoor
        Conner Lille                Oak Forest
    26th Illinois Golfer Challenge Groupings – Page 2

Time        Player (No. 1 Tee)            City

7:30 a.m.    Ryan Wells                Dyer, Ind.
        Scott Borden                Midlothian
        Anton Ervick                Bourbonnais

7:37 a.m.    David Karwoski            Oak Forest
        Rhett Barker                Crown Point, Ind.
        Michael Barber            Beecher

Boys 13-to-15 Division
for the Marshall Dann Trophy

7:45 a.m.    Cale Hickey                Tinley Park
        Michael Stanton            Chicago
        Alex Schiene                Mokena

7:52 a.m.    Kolbe Kruczyk            Homer Glen
        Kyle Berry                Tinley Park
        Sean Cramer                Oak Forest

8 a.m.        Eric Niewinski            Oak Forest
        Jake McFarland            Palos Park
        William Manns            Tinley Park

8:07 a.m.    David Kavalauskas            Oak Forest
        Thomas Rodriguez            Monee
        Brett Katalnic                Orland Park

8:15 a.m.    Hayden Henry                Homewood
        Danny Misheck            Oak Forest
        John Dillon                Tinley Pakrk

Girls 13-to-15 Division
for the Virginia Van Wie Trophy

8:22 a.m.    Aine McKillop            Chicago
        Elizabeth Stalla            Evergreen Park

8:30 a.m.    Danielle Collina            Palos Heights
        MaryKate McMahon            Chicago



    26th Illinois Golfer Challenge Groupings – Page 3

Time        Player (No. 1 Tee)

8:37 a.m.    Suzy Devane                Chicago
        Anna Horn                New Lenox
        Fiona Reynolds            Palos Heights

8:45 a.m.    Caroline Wallace            Oak Lawn
        Nicole Howard            Crown Point, Ind.
        Hannah McMahon            Chicago

Girls 16-to-18 Division
for the Carol McCue Trophy

8:52 a.m.    Mary Yonkaitis            New Lenox
        Shannon Wright            

9 a.m.        Anna Suppes                
        Anne McGivney            Chicago
        Natalie Collina            Palos Heights

9:07 a.m.    Nina Thauer                Evergreen Park
        Amy Geraghty                Chicago
        Bailey O’Connell            Chicago

9:15 a.m.    Sabina Bruozas            Mokena
        Sydney Graham            New Lenox
        Kelly Barker                Palos Heights

    End groupings

Monday
Apr142014

The Challenge opens; Watson wins again

 

    The Monday Nine for April 14, 2014

    Juniors: The IG Challenge at Glenwoodie is June 24

    We’re back with the news that the other tradition unlike any other, the Illinois Golfer Challenge Junior Golf Championship at Glenwoodie Golf Course in Glenwood, returns for its 26th playing on Tuesday, June 24.
    You can find the entry blank here. The best news of all is that the entry fee remains the same – $35, lower than any comparable junior tournament – with all entrants getting lunch, a bag tag, a towel, and a shot at a trophy.
    There are four divisions, two for boys and two for girls. In each case, the age groups are 13-to-15 and 16-to-18.
    The Challenge, which began as the Pulitzer Challenge in 1989 and for most years carried the banner of the Daily Southtown, has attracted anywhere from 60 (in its inaugural year) to 160 competitors. The entry limit is 156, and we’d like to reach it. The more players, the more fun!
    Entries are open now, and close on June 13. So you’ve got two months to get that entry in. Don’t delay, enter today!

    Now, to the usual nine:
    1. In the end, five strokes, two of them barely lacking, decided the 78th Masters.
    The first two were the answering birdie putts by Bubba Watson, matching Jordan Spieth on the fourth and sixth holes. Birds on those two demonic par 3s are hard enough to come by, but answering a deuce with one of your own? Stout, and vital, as they kept Watson two (at No. 4) and one stroke behind Spieth, who played the first seven holes in 3-under and appeared, even with a bogey at the fifth, to be pulling away. Watson prevented that.
    The next two strokes were by Spieth, and were those that lacked a little something. Just a couple of yards. He came up just short on the par-4 ninth, his ball rolling down the false front of the green and down the hill to the flattish area about 10 yards in front of the putting surface. A half-club more there would have helped. And a half-club more on the par-3 12th was absolutely necessary, for Spieth plunked his shot at the heart of Amen Corner into Rae’s Creek, a two-hopper that came off the green and drowned.
    Spieth was fortunate to get away with a bogey on the 12th to match the one on the ninth, but pars on both holes and he’s still in the toonamint, as the say on Washington Road. He’s not two strokes back and reeling. He’s tied with Watson after Bubba’s bogey on the 10th, and still there after the 12th.
    Had he been in that position, what happened next, the final critical stroke – Watson’s booming blast off the tee on the par-3 13th that curved around the bend like a cruise missile and landed 366 yards from the tee, even after clipping a tree – might have been less a body blow.
    Instead, it was like Joe Frazier had shown up and thrown a punch – connecting right on the chin. Spieth had nothing left to answer, parring in for an even-par 72. And he had company.
    Nobody else in the last 11 groups broke 70, while he scored 3-under 69 to finish at 8-under-par 280, three ahead of Spieth and Jonas Blixt. It was similar to the 1991 PGA at Crooked Stick, where another big hitter, John Daly, started the day in the lead and stayed there when he had the best round of the last 16-odd players.
    2. Kudos to Blixt, the unknown golfer. He’s played in three majors and finished in the top four twice. Keep an eye on him at Pinehurst.
    3. The picky in Twitterville and surrounding Internet communities have been complaining since about 4 p.m. Sunday that Watson’s big finish meant a lack of drama, depriving them of the dramatic back nine that The Masters automatically provides. Actually, The Masters doesn’t automatically provide it. Back nines like Jack Nicklaus’ charge of 1986 or Charl Schwartzel’s four-birdie finish of 2011 are rare, and that’s why they’re remembered. In 20 of the last 24 years, the winner at Augusta National has come from the last pairing. That doesn’t exactly shout upset city. It hints at two-horse races.
    What makes Masters Sunday so special, aside from gawking at the beauty of the course, is the potential for a topsy-turvy leader board. There’s usually more movement than there was on Sunday’s back nine, but the front nine provided plenty of excitement. Eliminate the aforementioned two so-so strokes by Spieth, and it would have been a two-man race in the last pairing to the wire. This one happened to end after Watson’s tee shot on the 16th landed dry.
    4. For decades, Augusta National’s various bosses were criticized for failing to televise more than a few hours. We remember when Sunday’s coverage started on the 15th fairway and was in black-and-white, and you were lucky to get an hour on Saturday.
    The need for expanded coverage still rings true on weekdays, where leaders with hot morning rounds can finish before or just as television coverage begins, but the lords of Augusta, along with keeping commercials to a minimum – the four-minute average per-hour has been in effect since around 1965 – are ahead of the game when it comes to online coverage. Between covering two feature groups each day, plus channels dedicated to Amen Corner and the 15-16 combination, and other features, Augusta’s live online offerings pale in comparison to the other majors, regular PGA Tour stops, and other sports.
    If there’s one beef to be had there, it’s that the coverage doesn’t start early enough. But the pictures are amazing, and, via Masters.com, there are no commercials – CBSSports.com adds them in.
    5. If you’re wondering how good Spieth is, this good: He led the field in greens in regulation, he was under par the first three days, and he was so calculating, calm and composed for the first 63 holes, showing emotion – as in burying a club in Stadleresque fashion after a shot on the back nine, and flipping his putter in the air after a miss on the 15th – was suddenly considered immature by some.
    Not really. At 20, chasing a major, 3-under on the day through seven holes, wondering where in the closet the green jacket will so, and so forth, emotions sometimes weave their way into the psyche.
    He’s already mature. Wait until he’s seasoned as well.
    6. Quote of the day came from Spieth: “I’ve worked my whole life to lead at Augusta on Sunday.”
    Yes, all 20 years.
    7. When watching the pre-Masters specials on the Big Three and Nick Faldo, we couldn’t help but be struck with the realization that CBS has all this old Masters coverage sitting around, generally unseen except for the occasional highlight or “Jim Nantz Remembers” version. CBS also has the CBS Sports Network, which fills hours with simulcasts of radio talk shows and rodeos.
    Why not arrange with the lords of Augusta an annual marathon of old Masters broadcasts the week before the big doings in Augusta? How cool would it be to watch Arnold Palmer’s four wins at Augusta as they originally played out?
    8. The big week started a week ago Sunday with the Drive, Chip and Putt competition, an all-junior affair that crowned eight champions, four boys and four girls from a quartet of age groups. That can only get bigger. What kid getting into the game could resist trying to get to Augusta National? What parent wouldn’t like to get inside the gates and watch their lad or lassie on the range or putting on the 18th green with a title on the line?
    Kudos to Augusta, the USGA and the PGA of America for dreaming up golf’s answer to the NFL’s Punt, Pass and Kick competition. (And as far as we know, new Augusta member Roger Goodell, the NFL commissioner, had nothing to do with it.)
    9. The local scene had one big development recently. Chris Flick is the new superintendent at Cog Hill Golf & Country Club in Lemont. Flick succeeds Scott Pavalko, who took a similar post at Bob O Link, the private club in Highland Park. Pavalko was among those who recommended Flick. They worked together at Muirfield Village Golf Club, site of the Memorial Tournament. The 30-year-old Clemson grad was most recently at National Trail in Springfield, Ohio, a three-course operation, so he knew what he was in for at Cog Hill, where he started last Monday.
    Pavalko, who succeeded Ken Lapp, goes from a four-course circus of activity to an outpost where there is only one course and not nearly the amount of play in a month that Cog Hill gets on any of its courses in a week.

    – Tim Cronin

Monday
Mar102014

Doral and the Chicago connection

    The Morning Nine for Monday, March 10, 2014


    If the weatherman is correct – and he has been all too often this winter – spring will waft in today with 50 degree temperatures. That’s a start. Of course, he also says it will snow on Wednesday, never get above 26, and plunge to 16 going into Thursday morning. So think golf dome if you’re thinking about practice at all.
    Having said that, on to the Morning Nine, which, thanks to the weather, is Florida-oriented, albeit with Chicago connections:

    1. The complaints, oddly not so much by players as observers, over the remodeled Doral Blue Monster turning into just that on a windy Friday seem unfounded when the long view is taken.
    The renovation by Gil Hanse included 18 new greens. Very new greens, less than eight months old. A new green has little thatch in it, so shots are going to bounce harder than they would on an established green. Add in rough that’s as new as the green on slopes that lead to ponds, and wind gusting to 33 mph, and shots that aren’t as well struck as they should be are going to die a watery death. That’s why 113 balls found the water during the second round. (There were only four rounds in the 80s among 68 players, so it wasn’t a torture chamber.)
    The course will mature. Players will also learn to play it – as winner Patrick Reed did, playing the 18th hole by laying up off the tee and on his second shot, settling for a bogey 5 to take home the trophy by a stroke over Bubba Watson and Jamie Donaldson.

    2. Here’s how Rory McIlroy – after finishing at 5-over-par 293 – put it into words: “It's a frustrating golf course because you feel like you should be doing so much better, and it just doesn't allow you to. You have to be so precise and just to get the ball close on some of these greens and these pin positions. I don't know if it's because you've got memories of the course before, like going low, and the way it is now it just doesn't allow you to do that.”

    3. Doral was designed by Dick Wilson and Joe Lee in the early 1960s. It earned the Monster appellation soon after, but Wilson didn’t implement all his design strategies, which called for players playing over angles – especially of water – completely.
    That’s likely in part because Doral developer Al Kaskel threw Wilson off the property when the architect, a notorious boozer, turned up hammered once too often. Wilson turned the job over to Lee and underling Robert Von Hagge, going back to Boynton Beach to complete Pine Tree, considered by many Wilson fans his best work.
    But the original plans remained, and Hanse consulted them when planning the renovation. The result is a 21st century version of what Wilson originally envisioned, as interpreted by Hanse. The Wilson-trademark jigsaw-puzzle bunkering and elevated greens remain. The hunch here is that Wilson would be proud of Hanse’s redo.

    4. Wilson’s Chicago connection is Cog Hill. He and Lee were hired by Joe Jemsek in the early 1960s to create 18 holes that became the No. 3 course, then kept on to build Jemsek’s championship layout, No. 4, which he named Dubsdread after an Orlando layout he fancied.
    Dubsdread’s original look, once the land for the current 13th hole was bought, was updated by Rees Jones several years ago, and proved as controversial as Doral has been. The only difference: It was the players in the BMW Championship / Western Open who were complaining about slopes on greens and conditioning at a time the WGA was looking to maximize the annual return, based on the big boost in revenue that came about from the renovation-timed trip to Bellerive near St. Louis.
    Aside from McIlroy, the players at Doral bit their collective tongue with Donald Trump prancing about his property. Cog Hill might have lost the tournament anyway, since it’s easier to make money in the fall from corporate clients on the north shore than in Lemont, but the complaints didn’t give Cog Hill a fighting chance to retain it.
    Phil Mickelson was one of the complainers. But for Doral, he said. “I think it’s really close to being great.” So go figure.
    Meanwhile, for the public without access to Butler National, Medinah No. 3 or Olympia Fields North, Dubsdread remains the toughest place to play in the area – and a fair test from the proper set of tees.

    5. It’s always amazing when players on the PGA Tour complain. They’re playing for millions, they get a free car for the week, they get free food in the clubhouse, people grovel for their autograph, and someone else is carrying their clubs. What’s the beef?
    Those on the lower levels are almost uniformly appreciative when the smallest kindness is shown. Players at last year’s Chicago Open marveled at the free buffet, for instance. On the big tour, someone would probably complain about the wrong kind of salad dressing.

    6. The other chatter post-Doral is about Patrick Reed pronouncing himself one of the top five players in the world. He said so Saturday night on an interview NBC played an excerpt of during Sunday’s round, and repeated himself after winning.
    Three wins since late last year and a climb into the top 20 in the slow-to-react world rankings is mighty impressive, especially since Reed hasn’t played in one of the four pro majors.
    Top five? Of the players who’ve done anything in the last couple of months, yes. Overall?  Win a couple of more and we’ll talk. But the lad’s pluck is admired. Better to have someone crow than “aw, shucks” his way though an interview.

    7. For the second year in a row, there’s no U.S. Open sectional qualifying anywhere near Chicago. The closest site is the so-called Tour qualifier in Columbus, Ohio, at Brookside and Scioto country clubs. The local qualifiers this year are at Dunne National in Oak Forest on May 5, and at the Knollwood Club in Lake Forest on May 12. U.S. Women’s Open qualifying is at Indian Hill Club in Winnetka on May 12.

    8. It’s one thing not to host a U.S. Open since 2003. But no sectional qualifier, which sends players to the Open? It’s not as if the CDGA hasn’t lined up great courses for the 36-hole test in the past. Sometimes, the thinking of the USGA is unfathomable.

    9. Finally, it has nothing to do with golf – yet – but if you have a minute, check out the Paraylmpics on NBCSN. The skiing was absolutely amazing early on Monday, though two skiers had to be helicoptered off the mountain after taking nasty falls. By the way, don’t look for golf in the 2016 Paralympics in Rio, unfortunately. It didn’t make the cut when new sports were added for that carnival.

    – Tim Cronin

Monday
Mar032014

Expect a slow start to the season

    The Morning Nine for Monday, March 3, 2014


    As the deep freeze continues here in Chiberia, some warming thoughts.

    1. Don’t expect your favorite local golf course to open immediately after the last flake of snow melts. (It will melt, won’t it?) A superintendent at a local private club says there’s no way his course will open before April 1, and that’s a stretch.
    The problem won’t be muddy turf after a few people walk or ride over it, it will be the need for the turf, especially greens, to recover from the ravages of winter. Ice is the biggest culprit, killing grass because it effectively smothers it. As the guru explained it, there’s no way for gases to escape, and that causes winterkill. That can mean reseeding or returfing the dead areas, which will look blighted until that happens. And no amount of warm weather will bring back dead grass. Good grass will come back from the natural dormancy of winter and regular snow cover. Dead grass is dead.
    Some courses will open instantly, of course, but don’t expect those fee factories to be in anything near good shape until May or June. Waiting a week or 10 days will pay off in better conditions down the line.

    2. To steal the old line from Ken Venturi, Paula Creamer could have dropped a small bucket on the green and not made that 75-foot swinging putt for eagle to win in Singapore a second time. But she only had to make it once, and she did. Left turns in NASCAR aren’t that severe. Great stuff, and the leading candidate for putt of the year.

    3. It’s hard to believe that Creamer hadn’t won since the 2010 U.S. Women’s Open. It’s also hard to believe she’ll go another four years without winning more. This could be her year.

    4. Meanwhile, the final round of the Honda Classic turned into a demolition derby. Rory McIlroy crashed on the back after taking a three-stroke lead early in the round, and after a four-man playoff in which ol’ Rors was fortunate to be a part of, Russell Henley emerged the winner with a 54-foot two-putt birdie on the first extra hole, the 18th at PGA National in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. All right, not exactly Creameresque, but it got the job done, which McIlroy, Russell Knox and Ryan Palmer did not.

    5. McIlroy, whose birdie on the 18th at least made the playoff a foursome, might be talking to himself still, though he put a good face on his failure to hold the lead after the round. Hey, who hasn’t hit into the water from a bunker? And Knox and Palmer had their chances as well, especially Knox, who dunked a tee shot into the water on the 14th hole.

    6. By winning, Henley gets into this week’s WGC cash cow tournament at the redone Doral Resort near Miami, and also returns to the Masters and PGA Championship. Some regarded him a one-shot wonder when he won in Hawaii last year at the “Big W,” but no more.

    7. There was one other casualty on Sunday. Tiger Woods, who flirted with missing the cut and then threatened to become a contender on the previous two days, withdrew with a bad back after 13 holes. Yes, he was 5-over on the day, but his erratic tee shots were the hint that something was wrong. And back spasms are killer for a golfer walking five miles or more, much less under tournament pressure. Will he back at Doral? Or Bay Hill? Or Augusta? We hope so.

    8. Doral will be interesting if only because the Blue Monster been completely revamped by Gil Hanse since last year. (Ah, the wonder of year-round warmth in which to work.) Most of the Dick Wilson-Joe Lee routing was retained, and the 18th still is a liquid torture chamber, but the Wilson-styled bunkering is deeper, and some holes are completely new. In other words, Hanse did at Doral what Rees Jones did with Wilson’s Dubsdread layout at Cog Hill, only more so.
    All of this bulldozing and shaping and whatnot was underwritten by Donald Trump, who bought the place and is pouring $250 million into the five-course complex and hotel. The name – Trump National Doral Golf Club – is a handful. Then again, so is the mop on the head of The Donald.
    But someone will shoot 65 this week. Notwithstanding the Keystone Kops finish at PGA National, these guys are good.

    9. Finally, are the Oscars over yet? We lost faith in them when “Caddyshack” didn’t win best picture for 1980. (But a tip o’ the Hogan lid to Bill Murray for remembering Harold Ramis, whose death came after the memorial tribute was made.)

    – Tim Cronin