"IF YOU LIKE GOLF"

online golf column
by
Chris Dortch

April 18, 2008

Another golf season is upon us, which means we’ll be filling this space every couple of weeks until October. As always, we’ll also cover several of the Chattanooga area’s top amateur events.

Speaking of that, the entry deadline for the Brainerd Invitational is April 29. The tournament will be played at the venerable Donald Ross course May 3-4. It’s easier than ever to enter, now that we’ve put the forms on this website (click here to enter).

I was just looking at the list of past champions in the Brainerd—the first tournament was played in 1945—and the list is impressive. Some of the best amateurs in the city’s history have won there: Ira Templeton, Ed Brantly, Larry White, Mickey Mabry, Hunt Gilliland, Mike Nelms, Kep Henley, Gibby Gilbert III, Richard Keene, Michael Morrison, Andrew Black, etc. etc.

---

It was an unusually busy off-season for movement among area golf professionals. Usually, one or two will change jobs, but this year, there were a lot more than that, definitely worthy of mentioning here.

The Honors Course replaced long-time head professional Todd Killian with Henrik Simonsen, who comes from Spanish Oaks Golf Club in Austin, Texas. Simonsen inherits a busy schedule, tournament wise, for the next three years, as The Honors will play host to the Tennessee Women’s Amateur in June, the Tennessee Men’s Amateur in 2009 and the NCAA Championships in 2010. Most local golfers recall that the 1996 NCAAs were played at The Honors in what turned out to be Tiger Woods’ last collegiate tournament. He won despite a final-round 80.

Several other area golf pros are now working out of new courses:

• Jay Underwood, former assistant at The Honors, has taken over as head professional at Signal Mountain. His new assistant is Mike Miller, formerly the head pro at Eagle Bluff. That duo will be well liked by the members, trust me on that.

• Scott Hare, formerly the head pro at Signal, moves over to Chattanooga Golf Center, where he’ll work as an instructor under Colt Helton, who took over managing the facility after former manager Corey McKay returned to his native Canada.

• At Lookout Mountain, former Chattanooga Golf and Country Club head professional Billy Buchanan has taken over as club manager. Tad Holley is still the head professional.

• WindStone made a great hire when it chose Jeff Craig as its new head professional. Craig had formerly worked as the golf professional at The Farm in Dalton, Ga. and before that, as an assistant at Signal Mountain.

Craig has done a tremendous job running the city’s junior golf program for the last several years, even doing so after he left the area for The Farm.

“He called me after he left for The Farm,” said Chattanooga District Golf Association past president Mike Jenkins, “and said ‘Is there any chance you would let me continue to run the junior golf program?’ I said, ‘Let you run it? Are you kidding me? It’s yours.’ ”

Keeping track of the junior circuit is a big, often thankless job. Craig’s organizational skills, work ethic and good relationships with players and parents have been a huge plus for the program.

---

NOTEBOOK: In addition to the ZCup Points Standings, Chattanooga Golf Center will now sponsor the Z Golf Scoreboard, which can be found on this website. … The point standings have been tweaked to allow players who record top-20 finishes in regular-season tournaments to still have a chance to play in the season-ending Chattanooga TPC. In the past, when a star system was used, players could earn one star for a top-20 finish. Three top-20s were generally enough to earn a spot in the TPC. When the tournament switched to a points system last year, that would have left some players out of the tournament, unless Jenkins (with helpful advice from some close observers) hadn’t noticed the flaw in the points system and corrected it. This year, players will earn the same amount of points for finishing 11th through 20th, which will correct the problem and reward players for consistently placing in the top 20 (click here to see new points list).

###

*** Feedback ***
click here to give me your comments about this article,
 or suggest a subject for a future article