Imagine building 26 golf courses at the height of the golf development bubble, with nine figures in public pension money — in an effort that now loses money year after year. Welcome to the Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail.
In theory, 12-hole designs should be cheaper to play, build, and maintain. But in the staid industry of golf course development, there’s been no rush to test the theory. The minds behind Sweetens Cove are ready to change that.
Coverage of the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst failed to tell the full, ugly truth of LIV Golf and Bryson DeChambeau’s complicity in Saudi Arabia’s human rights abuses.
Overlooking the Gulf of Mexico on “the unluckiest island in America,” Isle Dauphine might have more potential than any golf course in the United States.
In a summer caught somewhere between a pandemic and life as usual, a return trip to Pinehurst brought the chance to live — rightly or wrongly — as though things were back to normal.
Whether Pebble Beach is America’s “best” public-access golf course is debatable. But it’s unquestionably one of the worst examples of public-access golf in America.
Aiken GC in South Carolina is a model for small, aging courses: it can’t compete with pedigreed, championship-length designs, so it doesn’t try. It’s unique, and that’s enough.
Three years after winning one of his first college tournaments, Georgia Tech’s Tyler Strafaci has won two straight events — including Pinehurst’s North and South Amateur, which his grandfather first won 82 years earlier.
Like “The Force Awakens,” Eagle Ridge masks some boring moments in the middle by sandwiching them between a fun beginning and a memorable finish. It’s central Mississippi’s golf equivalent of a solid, go-to movie on cable.
“We knew we’re never going to do this again — to kind of go off the grid for 50 days and play golf and be on our own at this beautiful resort that is typically bustling with people.“
As of late March, 45 percent of Americans reported that the COVID-19 pandemic had created a negative impact on their mental health. Who the hell are the other 55 percent?
Phil Mickelson has spent most of the past decade as golf’s real-life version of the Million Dollar Man, all without any discernible cost to his standing among fans.
For Cohen Trolio, the 2019 U.S. Amateur wasn’t gratifying because of his run to the semifinals. It was gratifying because his success proved that the process he’s followed throughout his career is working.
“I’m very aggressive, and I play with a lot of emotion. I simply want to beat anybody that I’m playing with. I’m very competitive. … In match play, the whole time I’m just trying to beat that other person. And I like my chances when I just have to beat one person.”
“I hadn’t won in a really long time. So I didn't know what to expect. You see a lot of fist-pumps and people crying, and I was like, ‘Man, am I gonna cry? Am I just gonna fist-pump? What am I gonna do?’ Then it was just kind of like, ‘OK cool, I won.’”