THE GOG BLOG SPEAKS OUT-GOLF SEASON FADES

  IT’S AN EPIC YEAR for the Callaway Epic Driver and Woods, see Callawaygolf.com. The Innisbrook North Course has reopened from renovation Innisbrookgolfresort.com.    ______________________________________________________________________

THE GOG BLOG by RORY SPEARS, Editor and Director of Content. Follow Rory on facebook, Linkedin and Twitter @GogBlogGuy At Bay Harbor Golf Club in Michigan, Rory’s Shirt by Antigua Golf Apparel.

IT WASN’T LONG AGO, that the fall golf season was warm weather and sunny days.

Now that is quickly fading and many golfers I have spoke with in the last week feel they have played there last round of the year.

I’m hoping that’s not the case, that somehow Mother Nature will give us that last blast of 2 or 3 days of temps in the upper 60’s or low 70’s. That would be great.

Later this month the golf domes will swing into Mid-season mode, and right behind that are the holidays and the season of cold temps and snow. If you are ready to head south and it’s about that time of year, I suggest a visit to Lenziehmongolf.com where Len has been setting the table for your arrival with recaps on several Florida golf destinations.

After checking out Streamsong, Len visited golf in the Daytona Beach area, and now has the inside scoop on the recently renovated North Course at Innisbrook Resort just north of Tampa. I’ll make my appearance there after the PGA show in January.

I HOPE YOU enjoyed my weekend features from the WGA Black Tie dinner on Friday night. Justin Leonard was an outstanding guest, while Mark Rolfing played the roll of MC.

I spoke with Rolfing about the Chicago Jackson Park/South Shore golf project on the Lake Michigan Lake Front. Rolfing remains optimistic about the project happening, but like one other scribe told me over the weekend, the project is already months behind since in 2016 the group promised work to begin this past summer. It didn’t. Like many things in Illinois, the question is always, where is the money going to come from.

Rolfing is convinced that corporate money will arrive from the big companies in Chicago like it did at East Lake in Atlanta. Unfortunately there isn’t a company like Coca-Cola here in Chicago, to step up and take the lead. Whether a now out of office former President Obama and or just out of court Tiger Woods having their names attached to this project can help, remains to be seen.

SPEAKING OF WOODS..not much talk about a possible suspension for Woods when he is ready to return to the PGA Tour. If a tour player can get busted for smoking a joint in his hotel room at the John Deere Classic, and be booted off the tour for a couple of months. Then Woods should get the same fate after his recent guilty plea in a Florida courtroom. Some recent PGA Tour suspensions that have been made public, are for offenses that are not in the same league as what Tiger recently committed.

WITH HIS WIN at the Turkish Open this past weekend, Justin Rose is now eligible for the World Golf Hall of Fame. Congrats to Rose who is a great guy. It will be interesting to see when he gets in.

RUNNING AWAY FROM THE USGA..the latest major news, is that the Olympic Club is now looking at a 2028 PGA Championship, and a 2032 hosting of the Ryder Cup. If so, it’s not likely they are back on the table for a U.S. Open around 2029. The same can be said for Southern Hills in Tulsa, that is on the table for a PGA Championship somewhere between 2025 and 2030.

Different clubs are looking at different championships with the date change starting in 2019 for the PGA Championships. Some northern based clubs might be out of hosting a May date PGA Championship.

ONE RECENT GOLF CHANNEL feature suggested it was for the USGA to get away from this PIng-Pong style of going from Coast-to-Coast for U.S. Open’s, and skipping everything in between. Not a bad idea.

What is a good idea, is picking a spot for that final outdoor round in the Chicago area for the 2017 golf season. it might be a 50 degree day, but get out one more time before the ground is full of snow.

The Gog Blog returns this week. RS

CAROL RHOADES NAMED 2017 IPGA PROFESSIONAL OF THE YEAR

  THE SAND VALLEY GOLF RESORT, is open one more day. Sandvalleygolfresort.com. NEED WARMER GOLF the Cradle at Pinehurst is open, see Pinehurst.com. #ALLPAR3 ______________________________________________________________________

THE GOG BLOG by RORY SPEARS, Editor and Director of Content. Follow Rory on Facebook, Linkedin and Twitter @GogBlogGuy. With Mike Munro at The Green Street Grille in Bensenville

The Illinois PGA has named Carol Rhoades as the 2017 IPGA PGA Professional of the Year.

Rhoades becomes the first female Professional of the Year in the IPGA Section.

Rhoades teaches at the Golf Channel Academy of Chicago.

“We are privileged to have such an outstanding group of PGA Professionals in the Illinois Section that are dedicated to growing the game for everyone from the junior player to the weekend player to the elite player,” said Carrie Williams, executive director of the Illinois PGA Section. “This year’s Special award winners exemplify all the PGA of America has to offer the experts in the business and game of golf.”

IPGA 2017 Section Award Winners in front of Medinah Country Club

In addition that evening, the 2017 Players of the Year were announced for the section.

Kemper Lakes head professional Jim Billiter was the player of year, edging out Adam Schumacher from the Indian Hill Club.

Jim Sobb the Director of Golf at the Ivanhoe Club, was the Senior Player of the Year.

Rhoades the Professional of the Year is also an instructor at the Cog Hill golf and Country Club in Lemont. Rhoades is the first woman to win the award that has been handed out since 1955.

“I am deeply honored that my fellow colleagues would want me to represent our section. I accept this award with a great sense of responsibility and want to continue to do everything I can to grow and promote the game,” said Rhoades. “making golf fun and helping those that I have taught try to realize the joy of the game and selling the game on the values that make it different is really important to me.”

Carol grew up in Pennsylvania and was introduced to the game by her father. After earning her masters degree from Slippery Rock University, Rhodes moved on to five different clubs before settling in at her current facilities.

She has been a golf coach at two universities, William and Mary in Virginia and then the University of Illinois in Chicago. She is a former LPGA Professional of the Year, and has already won three other IPGA Section Awards, including the Bill Strausbaugh Award in 2002, The Player Development Award in 2008 and the Horton Smith Award in 2010. She has been previously nominated for the section teacher of the year award.

THE REMAINING AWARD WINNERS ARE:

Patrick Lynch-Cantigny Golf, Player Development Award                                                  Nick Cuca-Exmoor Country Club, Assistant Professional of the Year                                Louis Sauer-LS Golf, Teacher of the Year                                                                          Greg Barasel-Cantigny Golf Youth Player Development Award                                          Nick Papadakes-Onwentsia Club, Bill Strausbaugh Award                                                Todd Sones-Todd Sones Inpact Golf, Horton Smith Award                                                Dave Huber-Lake in the Woods Country Club, Bill Heald Career Achievement Award      Dave Schmaltz-Exmoor Country Club, Merchandiser of the Year Award-Private Club      Steve Grille-Randall Oaks GC, Merchandiser of the Year-Public Facility                            Reagan Davis-Eagle Ridge Resort and Spa, Merchandiser of the Year-Resort Facility.

On behalf of everyone at Golfers on Golf, we congratulate all of our IPGA section award winners. Well deserved.

Golfers on Golf, will have a recap of the Illinois Golf Hall of Fame Dinner this coming week.  Stay clicked in.

MARK ROLFING UPDATES JACKSON PARK PROJECT

   THE PAR 3 COURSE at Sand Valley, open this weekend see Sandvalleygolfresort.com True Spec Golf in Highland Park invites you to get fitted the right way, Truespecgolf.com ______________________________________________________________________

THE GOG BLOG by RORY SPEARS, Editor and Director of Content. Follow Rory on Facebook, Linkedin and Twitter @GogBlogGuy. With Justin Leonard at the WGA Black Tie Dinner

During Friday nights Western Golf Association Black Tie dinner, two golf media members held media sessions with members of the Chicago media.

First up was two-time Western Amateur winner, British Open Champion, and 1999 Ryder Cup hero, and now NBC golf commentator Justin Leonard.

Then black Tie dinner MC and NBC golf commentator Mark Rolfing spoke with Golfers on Golf regarding the Chicago based golf project he is heading up.

Rolfing is working to help revitalize Chicago’s Jackson park and South Shore area, and redo the Jackson Park Golf Course, and turn it into a Southside on the Lake Michigan waterfront masterpiece. Here is his update on the project.

Click here to hear the interview with NBC’s Mark Rolfing on the Chicago South Shore/Jackson Park golf course project.

The golf course is part of a plan that would include former President Barack Obama’s presidential library. Stay clicked in for updates on this project as they occur.

JUSTIN LEONARD HEADLINES WGA BLACK TIE

   SAND VALLEY GOLF RESORT, open this weekend, see Sandvalleygolfresort.com. The U.S. Sr. Women’s Open is coming to the famed Chicago Golf Club in Wheaton, volunteer information will be getting released shortly, stay clicked in or see USGA.org.    ______________________________________________________________________

THE GOG BLOG by RORY SPEARS, Editor and Director of Content. Follow Rory on Facebook, Linkedin and Twitter @GogBlogGuy with Justin Leonard at the WGA Black Tie dinner.

Friday night was the annual Black Tie  Dinner and fund raiser for the Western Golf Association (WGA) and Evans Scholars Foundation.

Originally scheduled featured speaker Nick Faldo had a last minute family emergency to attend to, so Justin Leonard the two-time Western Amateur champion at Point O’Woods in Benton Harbor Michigan, filled in on short notice.

Prior to the dinner Leonard sat for a media session, that covered his Western Amateur victories, experiences during the Western Open, the role of the caddie, how not a week goes by without someone asking him about his historic Ryder Cup putt at Brookline in 1999. Leonard spoke his new job with NBC as an on course golf reporter, and shared thoughts about what’s happening on the PGA Tour.

Click here to hear the interview session with WGA Black Tie guest speaker Justin Leonard.

Leonard announced he will work the NBC broadcast of the 2018 Sr. PGA Championship at Harbor Shores next Memorial Day Weekend.  Leonard also spoke about one area golf course is on his bucket list to play, find out which one during the interview above.

MC Mark Rolfing spoke with Golfers on Golf about the Chicago Lake Front Golf Project, coming soon so stay clicked in right here.

A RETURN TO SAND VALLEY GOLF RESORT

 THE SCHAUMBURG GOLF CLUB is nearing completion of Phase 1 of it’s three year renovation program, visit the Schaumburg Park District Website for details. Callaway is having an Epic year, see Callawaygolf.com for news on Epic and Steelhead woods.        ______________________________________________________________________

THE GOG BLOG by RORY SPEARS, Editor and Director of Content. Follow Rory on Facebook, Linkedin and Twitter @GogBlogGuy and to the Sand Valley Golf Resort. On the Par 3 course’s 14th hole.

(Reporting from Nekoosa Wisconsin, and Arlington Heights IL.)

In September of 2013 I traveled to New Buffalo Michigan, to meet with Mike Keiser who would be with architect Jim Urbina that day at his Dunes Club, looking at trees and area’s to cut back that had become over-grown.

When the walk was done, I sat with Keiser and talked about the Dunes Club, and a new project in Canada called Cabot Links. But what came out of that interview was the announcement of a new project in central Wisconsin.

Keiser said the land he was about to buy that December, (about 1800 acres) was sand based and it might get called Sand Valley. That observation was correct, the land had sand (plenty of it), and in the end the Sand Valley name stuck and a resort was born.

During the BMW Championship that September I spoke with Milwaukee Journal-Sentiniel and now Wisconsin Golf Hall of Fame golf writer Gary D’Amato, who told me he would be making a visit to Sand Valley later that fall. I told him I would be happy to join him on that first visit. So in mid-November I followed D’Amato to Sand Valley and he and I became the first two media members to visit the site. Since you could not drive cars back into the property, we met Craig Haltom (who discovered the property and relayed the find to Keiser), and jumped into Haltom’s large 4-wheel drive pick-up truck to tour the property. We still almost got stuck on multiple occasions.

    Top Row L, what Sand Valley was during our first visit in 2013. Gary D’Amato (L) and I during that first visit. Bottom Row (L) my second visit to Sand Valley in July of 2014, with over 600 acres of land already cleared for work to begin (Bill Coore had already staked out a preliminary routing of the Sand Valley course). Bottom (R) Craig Haltom found the Sand Valley site and shared his find with Mike Keiser.

 Above Left, the Par 3, Fifth hole on Sand Valley, (R) the Par 4, 9th hole at Sand Valley.

Keiser at first had his doubts about the site, he first dispatched Josh Lesnik of Kemper Sports to visit the property, telling Lesnik “give me a reason to say no”. Once there it took Lesnik only 30 minutes to call Keiser, and tell him “you better get up here”.

So Keiser made the trip to Wisconsin and it took him about 45 minutes to realize he had to make a decision and quickly. Then just a few months later, Keiser bought the land and the work to create a Midwest version of Bandon Dunes got started. By the end of 2014, shapers were hard at work and the planting of greens, tees and fairways was underway. In early 2016 nine holes had opened. By the 2016 U.S. Open weekend in June the first 13 holes had opened, and I was on my way back to Sand Valley for visit number three.

I arrived at Sand Valley as Dustin Johnson was on the back nine at Oakmont getting ready to win his first major. I checked into one of the four rooms that were open for business at Sand Valley, and then put my golf bag over my shoulder and headed for the first hole.

The first hole on the Sand Valley Golf Course.

A small hut was under construction at the time, right behind the first and tenth tee boxes.

At the time I was told it would be called Craig’s BBQ Shack, it later was named Craig’s Porch ( in honor of Haltom).

Once on the golf course I played the front nine, and then the tenth hole. After the tenth hole, I took the path to hole 16 and played 17 and 18 completing the 13 hole routing. Holes 11-15 were still closed, but three of the holes were open two weeks later, and all 18 by Labor Day weekend. The next morning I played the 13 open holes again, and walked the five holes that were closed. It quickly became apparent that Coore and partner Ben Crenshaw had carved another sensational routing on a remarkable piece of property. Sand Valley was on it’s way.

Shortly after the 2017 golf season started, all 18 holes on the Sand Valley were open and by fall six of the 17 holes on the Par 3 course had opened, nine holes on the second 18 hole course Mammoth Dunes by David Kidd are ready for play. 16 holes can now be played in the resorts last week of being open for business in 2017. The progress made by the resort over the last 16 months called for my recent return, so I go even with poor weather reports in the forecast.

   THE MAIN ENTRANCE is now on the northside of property, with the new clubhouse complete and open for business.

The arrival to Sand Valley is different than it has been in the past. The entrance is on the Northside of the property (Archer Road) and has a wooden sign to greet visitors. This is a big difference from when I first saw the property with D’Amato, that day we entered from the Southside and parked near a stop sign full of bullet holes and hits.

Last year I arrived through the gate on a gravel road, drove through packed down sand and pulled up in front of the lone open villa. Now one drive’s into the front circle of the clubhouse, checks in at the front desk and get your key to a clubhouse room, a villa, or a room at one of the two open lodges. During my recent visit construction was continuing near the clubhouse, as an addition with more rooms was being built.

Your on the first tee of the Par 3 course at Sand Valley. A course not yet named, but has been nicknamed the Sand Box.

There are two lodges now open for business at Sand Valley. The Fairway Lodge sits on a ridge that overlooks the 18th fairway of the Sand Valley course, with most rooms also having a view of the Par 3, 17th green.

The Dunes Lodge also sits over-looking the 17th green, but it’s the 17th and final hole of the Par 3 course.

Yes that’s correct, 17 holes make up the loop on the Par 3 course. Much like at Bandon Dunes, where Keiser told Coore and Crenshaw, here’s the land and just

The 16th green on the Par 3 course, with the Dunes Lodge and 17th green in the background.

go fit in as many good holes as you can. The Par 3 Course at Bandon Dunes is called the Preserve, and it has 13 holes.

But for those golfers who might want more golf after a regulation round of 18 holes, but not another full 18. The short routing’s of a short course can normally hit the spot.

The current holes that are open, are 1,2,14,15,16,17. Some of the other holes looked ready to play right now, but they will officially open next spring when Sand Valley reopens for 2018.

The Par 3, 14th hole on the Sand Valley Course.

If you played the Sand Valley course in 2016, there is a good chance you might not have played all 18 holes, unless you came late in the year.

The last five holes to open were holes 11-15. When I walked those holes in 2016, I found them all to be good holes but one hole really stood out, the 14th.

This little Par 3 (it can play 200 yards from the tips but most tee boxes play 150 yards or less), with some elevation change off the tee’s that sit about 20 feet higher than green level. It gives the look of one of the more well known holes at the famed Pine Valley in New Jersey. At the end of your walk around Sand Valley is the tribute to Haltom, Craig’s Porch, and I must say that the $1.50 Pulled-Pork taco’s are the steal on Sand Valley food and beverage menu. Get more than one, they are good.

Craig’s Porch, behind the 1st and 10th tee’s of the Sand Valley Course. Great BBQ options, that include Pulled Pork and Brisket taco’s.

If your going to be a golf destination you do need more than one 18 hole golf course.

By the time Sand Valley opens in 2018, there will be two open 18 hole courses.

The second course Mammoth Dunes by architect David McLay-Kidd is a real eye-catcher. It won’t take long for the golf course raters of the major national golf publications to visit and pronounce this course as a Best-New or Top 100, it’s that good and I didn’t even play all 18 holes.

Your on the first tee at Mammoth Dunes by David Kidd.

After two laps around the six open holes of the Par 3 course, and then playing Sand Valley during Day 1 on a 57 degree day, things got interesting on Day 2.

The rain I’m told is coming, but it is only 41 degrees and the wind is howling. But one look at Mammoth Dunes from the clubhouse and you tell yourself, not only does this course look incredible, but if this is Ireland or Scotland golfers would be out playing.

So on go the layers of warm clothes and heavy-duty all weather suit and out you go. Standing in the shadows of the Sand Valley clubhouse is the Mammoth Dunes putting green and first tee box. After a solid drive down the middle of the first hole, you feel much better about your decision to play. After all you are not alone, there is a foursome headed out 30 minutes after you. But until they tee off, you have Mammoth Dunes all to yourself, something that will rarely happen for any golfer going forward.

   (L) The approach shot on the par 4, second hole. (R) The Par 3, 16th hole from the elevated tee box.

Kidd did a tremendous job creating the routing he did, after Kidd’s “Plan A” didn’t totally meet with the outlook Keiser had for Sand Valley. When Keiser went to see Kidd’s first routing, he found holes that would require cart paths and carts to get the golfers around.

That wasn’t what Keiser wanted, and neither did Kidd. So it was back to the drawing board for Kidd, and when he was finished this time around, he had hit a Home Run.

When it comes to blind shots, there is always a mixed reaction from golfers on those who don’t mind them and those who do. What Kidd did in a magnificent way on Mammoth Dunes, was to create your share of partially blind shots. The best place to be in the fairway, might leave you a carry over the corner of bunker, or a dune. But you will see the flag or at least the top of it.

  The 18th green on Mammoth Dunes requires a solid approach shot, and this par 5 at only 523 yards from the tips is a handful when played into the wind.

I was only able to play 9 holes of Mammoth Dunes, but with the rain coming and winds picking up during the round, it was enough. I did get a good look at holes 6 and 14 that I didn’t play but are solid, and I hear the last two holes that are still not open 11-12, are incredible. Current open holes are 1-5 and 15-18.

If you didn’t make it to Sand Valley this year, you will want to make the drive up in 2018 when all the golf holes are open. Keiser says the resort did more rounds than expected this year, I can see that being a trend. The biggest questions now are, who will design the third 18 hole course, and how long until the facility hosts a tournament.

My recommendation is put Sand Valley on your bucket list for 2018. You can make reservations at (888)-651-5539 or visit Sandvalleygolfresort.com. Drive time from the Chicago area is 3 hours and 20 minutes from where Rt. 53 and 90 meet near Woodfield Mall in Schaumburg. I know I’ll make my fifth visit when the calendar hits 2018.