"IF YOU LIKE GOLF"

online golf column
by
Chris Dortch

July 28, 2011

I applaud the vision of all the decision makers involved in renaming the Nationwide Tour’s Chattanooga Classic the Children’s Hospital Classic.

For the tournament, which hasn’t been able to pin down that one well-heeled corporate benefactor, the benefit is to be able to interact with the many businesses that deal with Erlanger on a regular basis and also represent the worthiest of causes. For the Children’s Hospital, the affiliation with the PGA Tour is a public relations boon.

“It’s a win-win for both sides,” said Doug Fisher, Erlanger’s vice-president for government and corporate affairs. “If this tournament doesn’t raise a dime for the benefit of Children’s Hospital—which we hope that it does—but if it doesn’t, just the affiliation with the PGA Tour and this organization [Friends of the Festival, which manages the tournament]. … These are the right people to be affiliated with.

“The marketing opportunity to get our name out there is worth thousands of dollars. If you look across the country and you talk to the tour, they will tell you very quickly that some of the most successful events are either affiliated with adult hospitals, cancer centers, or children’s hospitals, with children’s hospitals perhaps the most successful.”

The tournament and the Children’s Hospital both have messages to send. The October date isn’t ideal because it competes with football, but a Nationwide event offers golf fans a chance to see future PGA Tour stars. Twenty-four players who participated in the 2010 Chattanooga Classic earned their 2011 tour cards. And of the tour’s four rookie winners in 2011, three of them—Gary Woodland (Transitions Championship), Brendan Steele (Valero Texas Open) and Keegan Bradley (Byron Nelson)—played in Chattanooga last season.

Erlanger’s hope is that more and more people will become aware of the Children’s Hospital and its wealth of services.

“Erlanger is the only [children’s] hospital in the region,” Fisher said. “It’s a safety net provider hospital, which means we take all, regardless of your ability to pay.

“One of the messages that I hope people will start to hear and understand—not that we’re saying anything against St. Jude’s, for instance—but most people don’t realize we have all the same protocols right here in Chattanooga, Tenn. The only thing we don’t do here in Chattanooga is bone marrow transplant. There’s not anything we don’t do. It’s an amazing place, and hopefully this partnership brings even more attention to the mission that goes on there, and what we’re trying to do.”

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Chattanooga’s Brooke Pancake, about to enter her senior season at Alabama, has had a good week. Last Saturday, she battled with Vanderbilt signee Kendall Martindale for the Tennessee Women’s Open title, losing out by a stroke. And this week comes news that she’s earned the prestigious Edith Cummings Munson Golf Award.

The award goes to the student-athlete who is an upperclassman as well as an NGCA All-American Scholar and a NGCA All-American. If more than one student-athlete qualifies, the one with the highest GPA receives the award. Pancake had no problems with tiebreakers; she carries a 4.0 GPA as a marketing major.

Last season Pancake earned first-team NGCA and Golfweek All-America honors and was also chosen a first-team Academic All-America. In three seasons, she’s compiled a school-record 73.27 career scoring average and has racked up 15 top-10 finishes and 23 rounds of par or better. She won her first tournament last season—the Tar Heel Invitational, where she shot 11-under-par 205. Pancake is a two-time SEC Women’s Golf Scholar-Athlete of the Year and a three-time All-SEC pick.

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The summer is going away all too quickly, but some important state and national amateur tournaments remain on the calendar.

The Honors Course jumps back into the USGA’s rotation Sept. 10-15 when it plays host to the U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur. This will be the fourth USGA event at the Pete Dye masterpiece, which previously hosted the 1991 U.S. Amateur, the 1994 Curtis Cup, and the 2005 U.S. Mid-Amateur. It’ll be interesting to see how the country’s top women’s amateurs (50 and above) will fare against a course that always presents a stern challenge, regardless of the caliber of players.

I’m looking forward to seeing if University of Memphis senior Jonathan Fly can continue his domination of state golf. No less an expert than Tennessee Golf Hall of Famer Tim Jackson told me recently that Fly is “by far the best player in the state right now.” If Fly wins the Tennessee Amateur, which will be played Aug. 2-5 at Jackson’s home club Colonial Country Club (South) in Cordova, he’ll definitely have put together one of the most impressive runs in recent history.

Fly won the Amateur a year ago, and last spring he also claimed the Tennessee Open at Brentwood Country Club.

Council Fire will play host to the Tennessee Senior Amateur on Aug. 16-18. Chattanooga amateur legend Lew Oehmig won that tournament so often—from 1969 to 1973—it was discontinued until 1980. No player since has dominated like that, but it’s going to be interesting in a couple of years if Jackson and Danny Green decide to renew their 20-plus year rivalry on the senior circuit.

Council Fire has hosted its share of tournaments since it opened, including the PGA Tour’s 1992 Chattanooga Classic, three Tennessee PGA Championships and the Tennessee Mid-Amateur.

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