"Gleneagles’ “Go Fund Me” Campaign Needs You!"

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The wokesters and non-top 100 collectors would be descending on San Francisco’s Gleneagles next month when the PGA Championship hits San Francisco. But with that event postponed and rescheduled for August, the “speakeasy of golf courses” needs help, as does another San Francisco brand, State Apparel.

The Save Sharp Park crowd has posted this unbylined story on the efforts to help Gleneagles and show support for the area’s golf brand.

This Spring, the 1-2 punch of the COVID-19 pandemic combined with high City water bills and maintenance costs that did not go away when the City ordered golfers to keep away, has the City’s lessee Tom Hsieh with his back against the wall. So he is conducting a fundraising campaign on “Go Fund Me”, where Tom explains his plight in a heartfealt letter – which we urge you to read in full. An excerpt:

"It appears that without financial assistance, I will not be able to continue operating Gleneagles nor will I be able to maintain it, even minimally in the coming weeks or months. So if you have a soft spot for public golf like no other,  and hope to one day play another round at a community based golf course,  please help. I know there are many more urgent causes out there and I urge you to support them first.  If you have any more capacity then please point it towards Gleneagles.”

Acushnet Brands Offering Incredible Experiences To Benefit COVID-19 Relief

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Nice to see on of golf’s biggest companies going big with its giving back, serving up an auction of experiences to benefit three organizations.

You can view them all here including the early clubhouse leader, a Pebble Beach day fronted by breakfast and a first tee announcement by Jim Nantz, and a 19th hole playing of his backyard 7th hole.

For Immediate Release:

TITLEIST AND FOOTJOY ‘CHIPPING IN’ WITH ONLINE GOLF AUCTION

Raising Funds for COVID-19 Relief with One-of-a-Kind Golf Experiences

Fairhaven, MA (April 23, 2020) – Golfers will have an opportunity to tee it up with a top-ranked tour player, schedule their next golf lesson with a world-renowned instructor, get fit like a professional, or even experience Pebble Beach with a local resident, while ‘Chipping In’ to make a difference with the COVID-19 Relief Charity Golf Auction

The week-long online auction, which begins today at 10:00 a.m. EDT and closes on April 30 at 9:00 p.m. EDT, is being presented by Titleist, FootJoy, Vokey, Scotty Cameron and Kjus.

One hundred percent of the proceeds from these one-of-a-kind experiences will benefit the relief efforts of three deserving organizations: CDP COVID-19 Response Fund; the United Way chapters of Greater New Bedford and San Diego County, supporting the local communities where the majority of the Titleist and FootJoy U.S. associates work and live; and, following the lead of the PGA of America and other golf organizations, the Golf Emergency Relief Fund.

Among the 12 unique golf experiences, are rounds of golf with Justin and Mike ThomasWebb Simpson and Ian Poulter; personal instruction and golf with Butch HarmonPeter KostisJames SieckmannCameron McCormickMichael Breed and Brad Faxon; wedge and putter fittings with Titleist designers Bob Vokey and Scotty Cameron; and a once-in-a-lifetime Pebble Beach experience provided by the longtime voice of Titleist and auction host, Jim Nantz

This auction is a continuation of multiple initiatives Acushnet has implemented since the outbreak, including:

• Donating more than 100,000 masks and other PPE supplies to hospitals and those in need in the communities in which we operate around the world.

• Retrofitting processes in our Massachusetts manufacturing facilities to produce PPE items and components.

• Donating 15% of all purchases made on Titleist.comFootJoy.comScottyCameron.comVokey.com and Kjus.com, from April 8-30, to the CDP COVID-19 Response Fund.

• Participating in Rain Suits for Responders, a program to collect new or gently used golf rain suits and deliver them directly to healthcare workers on the frontlines.

“Like so many others, the Acushnet team is committed to being a positive force in support of front line health care workers, the local communities in which we operate, golf professionals, and others in the industry who have been most affected by this pandemic,” said David Maher, President and CEO, Acushnet Company. “We are grateful to our many partners, brand ambassadors and associates for their contributions as we work together to endure these challenging times, and collectively look forward to the better days that lie ahead.”

"Right now, every day is Sunday in the cradle of the game."

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Bunkered’s Michael McEwan files as uplifting a look as you can when visiting a locked down St. Andrews.

He covers all elements of the town, operation and details of the limited course maintenance allowed since the lockdown started March 23 to combat COVID-19.

Up and into the heart of the town, there’s only the faintest pulse of life. Auchterlonie’s Golf Shop, celebrating its 125th anniversary this year, is shut, as are all of the town’s most famous 19th holes: The Dunvegan, The Keys, The Whey-Pat, The Westport, Greyfriars Inn, Ham’s Hame, The Criterion and more.

The cobbles of Market Street are empty. The six bells of St Salvator's Chapel Tower on the university campus don’t chime. The students have nearly all skipped town. The tourists who top up the population have yet to arrive.

Golf Reset: The Professional Game Is Not The Game

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Pick any costly, suboptimal golf trend and the origins inevitably can be traced to professional golf.

Certainly, the ties between the recreational and the professional games give those who identify as golfers plenty to enjoy. And those ties also explain how a couple million people can stay awake watching some telecasts that would induce sleep in an Adderall addict.

Naturally, there is some connection between the recreational and the professional game to be valued, maintained and respected. That tie is mutually beneficial. But to let the professional game dictate the direction of the sport is problematic at best.

Consider this: after the worst of this pandemic has passed, what are you most excited about? Taking out the clubs and playing golf, or watching a professional event? I can run a poll just to see if sitting inside and watching more golf on TV over getting outside and playing reaches 10%.

From an economic perspective, what generates more jobs, stability and community accord? The recreational side could lay up on all the par-5’s and still win that one 9&8.

Nearly every unsustainable trend in golf history has been fueled by attempts to replicate professional characteristics (green speed, bunker primping, 7000 yards) or to shape rules around the needs of the pro game (see the lack of bifurcation or rules simplicity). While the contradictory needs of the daily and pro games have long presented issues, something seems different these days. A shift toward prioritizing elite level golf feels like it’s never been more profound or oddly desperate.

The very best certainly deserve our admiration. They sometimes inspire people to take up the sport. As golfers, we know there are few skills in all of sport more remarkable than the ability to play golf at a high level. We know this after seeing how foolish the sport has made some of the world’s greatest athletes look, even after they make valiant efforts to play competitively. Yet those superbly coordinated folks never quite master the sport or even look quite right swinging the club.

But the ability to play the game at a high level does not guarantee supreme privileges or wisdom. Appeasing a consortium of a few thousand at the (literal) expense of 25 million golfers, should not ever happen.

Notice how during this awful pandemic, it has been small golf companies that made efforts to give back along with governing organizations like the PGA of America, USGA and R&A who stepped up with funds assisting those losing work in the golf industry. The professional tours, however, have been noticeably quiet. Several players have stepped up on their own. Many others inevitably will because the game still produces above-average citizens who take pride in giving back. But in general, the Tours and those who run them have focused on themselves. These are member organizations with different priorities than the greater good.

From the early replies, I do not believe I’m alone in feeling this way. Reader Allen sent in this thought when learning of the game reset topic:

“Probably mentioned by others, but in the realm of economically (and by extension, environmentally) sustainable recreational golf facilities, I would hope that existing golf facilities and developers of them would lead the golfing public to realize that the elite competitive golf is not what is best for 99.99% of golfers or facilities. Clubs and public courses SHOULD NOT be 7K yards long, have 100 bunkers with pure white sand, greens running at 11+ on the Stimpmeter, and lush green grass wall-to-wall.”

I’d include equipment rules that are outsmarted by manufacturers to help elite players while reaping price point benefits. If only the companies also increased efforts to create more forgiving or affordable equipment to serve the regular game? Remember, no law prevents manufacturers from making lower cost or more forgiving non-conforming equipment to “grow the game”. But they expect the rulemakers to grow their customer bases while battling the efforts to do what they deem best best for the game.)

The sport’s future health depends on shaking loose from the notion that everyday golf is an offshoot of the pro game. Take away the 25 million or so recreational players, and the pro game’s niche TV audience would disappear. But if every professional golfer retired tomorrow, the recreational game would march on unharmed and maybe even see more sustainable values take hold.

Professional golf, as great as it can be, is not Golf.  

From The Met: "The golf industry has to re-imagine old practices before the recovery can begin"

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The Journal News’s Mike Dougherty files a lengthy and informative piece on the state of golf in the “Met”.

Given that the area is home to this year’s U.S. Open, some America’s most famous clubs and a huge number of others who influence the golf world, the overall Met golf region is still uncertain how things will play out.

Dougherty covers many aspects of the business, but this was of note:

The demographic is generally secure financially. While most respondents expect to curtail spending due to the corresponding economic crisis, their outlook is not yet considered grim.

“We think predictions about mass resignations of members are overblown,” said Frank Vain, the president of McMahon Group during an NCA webinar.

An online campaign has resulted in more than 10,000 form letters being sent to members of congress seeking inclusion when the next round of aid is finalized.

“Some clubs are well capitalized and can withstand a little more,” Trauger added. “Others will be significantly impacted by a downturn. It’s too early to say how many clubs might close, but right now they are figuring out the best way to hang on and take care of their employees the best way they can.”

Golf’s Reset: An Occasional Series Considering What Values Need Changing And Which Are Worth Saving

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The COVID-19 pandemic has already changed lives, fortunes and our future. Exactly how the world returns post-virus to some form of normalcy anyone’s guess both in scale and timing. But in our small world of golf, we already knew certain values were evolving before this. The pandemic seems poised to expedite changing attitudes while forcing a reconsideration of other ideals.

Over the coming weeks, as golf courses reopen and potentially millions seek solace by teeing it up at facilities that never closed, the sport may be a viable recreational option in a function-deprived world.  

The word “opportunity” suggests anything about this pandemic is a good thing. It is not. Still, every sector of the world will evolve from this and golfers will recognize chance to highlight golf’s benefits and the need to rethink elements which have not evolved for the good of the sport.  

Some of the ideas I’m going to toss out will be as first world as they come (bunker rakes), certain topics will offend (pro golfers are not bigger than the game), while other matters (green speeds) will hopefully seem like sensible improvements to pursue.  Others will (again, hopefully) be built off suggestions from you after I ease into this topic in still-sensitive times.

As always, I’d love to hear your thoughts on here or Twitter or via email, perhaps with some follow-up thoughts share here based on your remarks or polling.

Jack And Ernie Among Those Challenging Clubs To Give Back During COVID-19 Crisis

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Victor Garcia at FoxNews.com explains the ClubsHELP cause supported by Jack Nicklaus, Ernie Els, Kris Tschetter and others to push golf and country clubs to give back to their community front line workers.

From Garcia’s story:

According to the organization, "Clubs HELP encourages clubs and members to connect with hospitals in their respective local areas to provide a much needed support network in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic."

The nationwide foundation has golf clubs that "adopt" local hospitals to give them the support and supplies.
"Barb and I are proud to be part of a children's hospital in Miami, one that bears our name with 17 outpatient clinics," Nicklaus said in the video. "And we have many, many workers down there. They all need our help too.  The workers at these hospitals have worked tirelessly, put through lives on the line for their work with COVID-19 virus."

"They need our help. We need to raise money," Nicklaus added. "We need to raise money the best we can."

Here is the signup page at ClubsHELP.

Jack Nicklaus issuing his challenge to Nicklaus-designed clubs and others:

Ernie Els’ message:

John Daly Has A Coronavirus Cure, Because Of Course He Does

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Posted on the Trump Organization YouTube page, John Daly offers his cure to the COVID-19 virus. If you’re not looking to hit the play button below, the shortcut: Belvedere and McDonald’s Diet Coke. Just one a day. The key, of course, is the McDonald’s Diet Coke in the way New York pizza is influenced by the tap water there.

I do believe we’ve bottomed out, though exactly how I’m not sure…unless, of course Long John was joking, in which case we’ve hit a new low in different ways.

"Why a Second Wave Could Be Even Worse for Sports"

If you’ve been following the likes of Dr. Scott Gottlieb on Twitter or watching the (sadly) prescient Netflix documentary, Pandemic, you know that second waves have often been worse than initial pandemics outbreaks.

So as the PGA Tour positions itself to be the first (and still only major sport) to schedule a return without fans (first four weeks), the inability of other sports to set return dates makes clearly some leagues are fearful of being the sport that starts a second wave.

Thanks to reader John for sending along Louise Radnofsky and Ben Cohen’s Wall Street Journal piece considering the dangers of a second wave setting the sports world back should such a gathering be responsible for another outbreak.

While the story focuses on the danger of crowds, even a gathering of athletes who then go off to airports and hotels and another city a week later, could be disastrous.

Scott Gottlieb, the former Food and Drug Administration commissioner who is advising the Trump administration on its coronavirus policy, says he sees a high risk of a second wave in the fall. He’s been pushing for a staggered return of activities. His plan calls for gradually scaling back up again, based on the size of the gatherings and their significance, and monitoring the effects at each stage.

Mass gatherings for sports games are at the bottom of his list. The sight of fans in stadiums is contingent on a “quiescent” fall and robust system of testing and contact tracing to identify and isolate new cases— as well as measures that include fever guns, hand sanitizer handouts and masks inside stadiums.

“We could bring lawn maintenance crews back at the end of the month with very low risk, but we can’t fill up stadiums,” he said Wednesday. “I think the entertainment venues are going to be some of the last things we bring back… Sports are going to be played with no fans for a while.”

The Shack Show Podcast With Guest David Owen

One of my goals for the Shack Show is to talk to interesting folks after news breaks. Clearly these are not days where the golf news warrants conversations based on news, but today’s word on Marion Hollins finally joining the World Golf Hall of Fame provided a fine excuse to chat with David Owen.

A New Yorker staff writer since 1991, Owen has written about a wide array of topics outside of golf. But it’s his work for Golf Digest and as a book author we value. His officially sanctioned The Making of The Masters remains an underrated work in the pantheon of important sports books, with Owen ably handling the warts-and-all information uncovered in club archives with the obvious desire to portray the club’s founders in a positive light.

In researching that book, Owen knew little about Marion Hollins but after much research, helped explain her small, but incredible role in shaping Augusta National.

We also discussed where golf will land after the COVID-19 pandemic, David’s buddies trip to Wales that’s been cancelled and the joys of discovering lesser-known links courses.

David’s site of blog posts and articles is MyUsualGame.com. You can find some incredible writing there on a wide array of topics, including the best of links golf.

Here is the GolfDigest.com story, Back Roads Scotland, that we discussed during the show. David has also posted photos and more insights about these gems on his site.

As for the Shack Show, please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts, but for some guidance, here is the Apple podcasts option and below, the iHeart embed.

COVID-19: 48%: U.S. Golf Course Closure Rate Declines A Bit

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From 44% last week, with a margin of error of +/-3%, the National Golf Foundation’s surveying suggests a sizeable number of courses remain open during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The findings reflect the at-times uncertain nature of golf operations in states like Texas and New York, where recent amendments to executive orders specified that golf is a non-essential business.

While the governor of Texas, which has the fifth-most courses in the country, last week said golf was a non-essential business, he later clarified that they can continue to allow play provided they maintain safe distancing practices and adhere to adjusted operational guidelines prescribed the CDC.

In the Northeast, New York’s various golf associations said last week that the state’s recent “non-essential” advisory didn’t affect non-commercial recreation activities — an interpretation that would potentially pertain to hundreds of private clubs in the region.

An Alternative To Raised Cups: The EZ Lift

Nice spot by Alex Myers at GolfDigest.com to post this device in use at Cobblestone Golf Course in Acworth, Georgia.

It’s an upgrade to raised cups, though who actually makes it, I’m not sure.

PGA Tour To Players Uncomfortable With June Return : "You're an independent contractor. You're not required to be at any PGA TOUR event."

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The PGA Tour rolled out an ambitious 2019-20 schedule completion, followed by a 2020-21 schedule start (minus the suddenly-defunct Greenbrier Classic and cancelled Canadian and Barbasol stops). But this comment from the PGA Tour’s Andy Pazder is certainly accurate, though insensitive to players who have COVID-19 concerns.

From a teleconference featuring operations heads Andy Pazdur and Tyler Dennis in support of the schedule rollout:

Q. What about the players who don't feel comfortable? There are going to be players who don't feel comfortable coming back. What happens to those players if you start and they're not comfortable coming back playing again?

ANDY PAZDER: That's a question I think you need to direct to individual players. My only experience with anything like this I guess would be the first few tournaments following 9/11. We had players that were uneasy about air travel. That's one of the beauties of being a PGA TOUR member; you're an independent contractor. You're not required to be at any PGA TOUR event. So they have that discretion to play tournaments where they favor the golf course or tournaments in this instance, to your question, they may or may not feel comfortable. But that's an individual player decision.

So I would direct you to reach out to some of the players that you know to get their direct perspective. I can't speak on their behalf as it relates to that.

Athletes in other sports have already begun to openly question the sanity of quarantining in the same hotels. For example, in baseball, which has considered a concept of stationary games and hotels, normally not-outspoken players are sensing their safety and sanity is not being taken into account (Bill Shaikin reports on the comments of Mike Trout and Clayton Kershaw).

The PGA Tour’s plan is to have robust testing, as Rex Hoggard reports, and the repeated mention of this key point was reassuring. So was the plan to only go forward if testing is not being taken away from those on the front lines or more in need.

Details of how things work on course are still being worked out:

TYLER DENNIS: Yeah, so that's another part of our analysis that we've been working on, you know, from a health and safety point of view, but even with the rules officials, for example. So if you think about how a player and a caddie travel throughout their daily competition routine, we've looked at -- we've mapped out and are still in the process of finalizing what that day looks like, because we know that golf can be played in a safe way that abides by social distancing guidelines, and we're seeing that in many spaces across the country, by the way, at the amateur level. But we can apply some of those same principles to golf on the PGA TOUR.

So anyway, from the driving range to the first tee, all kinds of little details, scorecards and bunker rakes and flagsticks and how we can make sure all that is done in a socially distanced way and make sure that things stay safe and clean and sanitized. So there's a big project going on to think about those details, and as we get closer, we'll certainly share with you guys those details of how that day would look.

But in general I think that the daily life of a PGA TOUR golfer and his caddie won't be tremendously different. We're just going to have to have some nuances to relate to social distancing and safe sanitation practices.

Not addressed and still not clear beyond safety and logistics: the optics of returning and using resources in markets that are still under strain, and what damage that could do to the PGA Tour’s reputation.

Pros And Cons Of Push Playing Pro Golf Again In June

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Eric Patterson at The Score lays out a smart list of pros and cons to the PGA Tour pushing to be playing in June, making it likely the first major sport to return. He calls it an “aggressive approach” and says the Tour has a chance to provide a “template” for other leagues.

So as Friday’s likely rollout, as other components to President Trump’s vision for reopening the economy are presented, keep on the look out for signs the Tour has secured testing and presented other safety-first ideas to get sports started again.

On the pro side he writes:

A successful return to play would provide other professional leagues the opportunity to determine exactly what's required to run a sporting event during the coronavirus pandemic. Lessons learned from the Tour's efforts to efficiently test players, safely travel between states, and piece together broadcasts with reduced crews could help accelerate the returns of other sports.

Unfortunately, there is no financial perk in setting that table.

Another “pro” left out: never having to see those virile and virus-friendly bro hug/shakes that we won’t have to endure again. Ever.

The con side makes you wonder what the insurance costs will be to play events when portrayed this way:

The PGA Tour can't really be confined to a single city or state, a luxury other professional sports have the opportunity to explore. Not all players can afford to charter private flights, either; pros will be frequenting airports, staying in hotels, and eating at restaurants on the road.

Imagine the backlash if a player tests positive for COVID-19 after returning to action and the PGA Tour is forced to shut down yet again. This single con might outweigh all the pros combined.

PGA Tour To Unveil June Restart Schedule And Replace Weeks Of Other Tournaments Cancelled By COVID-19

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I hope that headline was not too subtle.

Yes, postponed or cancelled events like the Olympic Games, U.S. Open and Open Championship will be replaced by PGA Tour events. It’s a little hard to picture, but we’ll go with it and watch how this is rolled out. Namely, will there be any suggestion of measures taken to ensure all can safely travel to and play in these events?

What precautions are being taken for everyone else besides players?

One big change from rumored concepts: the RBC Heritage Classic that would be played this week will now move to the end of June as the second stop after Colonial. Travel between states remains a huge concern, while the U.S. has a travel ban on visitors from many parts of the globe.

From Brian Wacker’s GolfDigest.com exclusive:

After the Charles Schwab Challenge, the Tour has an opening on its calendar for a “Potential PGA Tour Tournament” from June 18-21, when the U.S. Open was to be held before the USGA announced its postponement to September. Scheduling conversations at the Tour remain ongoing and fluid, but according to multiple sources, the RBC Heritage, originally scheduled to be played this week at Harbour Town Golf Links on Hilton Head Island, is likely to fill that slot.

He goes on to present a schedule which, absent a massive outpouring of COVID-19 tests and data, along with signs that travel will return to normal, makes this an wildly optimistic. Also, several of the markets targeted just may not be ready for any kind of event by then given the still-unfolding and increasing loss of life.

On a lighter note, no word yet on the Wyndham Rewards points ramifications, though layoffs, salary cuts and other struggles for the hotel chain might influence that.

The schedule sent to players: