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.
Twenty years ago, the Supreme Court affirmed Casey Martin’s right to use a golf cart in PGA Tour events. Two decades later, it’s not clear that the story has a happy ending.
Augusta National’s failure to make a clean break with its ugly past leaves fans clinging to a flimsy distinction between the club and the tournament it hosts.
Even by golf’s standards, golf course architecture badly underrepresented Black people. That failure endangers the game’s viability for Black and white players alike.
No other group so strikingly represents golf’s institutional racism than the PGA Tour, and no other group in golf is so well positioned to do something about it.
The Ryder Cup points system is designed to avoid arbitrariness. But COVID-19 has undermined that system’s objectivity. Instead of clinging to the illusion of objectivity, then, the U.S. should embrace the moment’s chaos.
“Am I gonna be nervous? Absolutely. But I’m gonna look at it as that the worst thing that could happen is that I don’t hit a good golf shot. I made it, I earned it, I qualified. No matter what happens, I made it, and I’m gonna enjoy the walk.“
“So they turned Molinari’s number over first, they turned Finau’s over next — and everybody was just sitting there — and then they turned Tiger’s over, and it was “14” again. And there was just this huge roar, like you were watching Jack Nicklaus in ’86.”