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"Where Amateurs Play Like Pros"
Senior Amateur Golf Tour
Triad and Raleigh-Pinehurst Tours
Forward this e-Letter to Friends & Invite Them to Join You on Tour - Use Link on Bottom Left.
WELCOME TO THE
2014 SENIOR AMATEUR GOLF TOUR
Pinewood Country Club Tournament
3rd Major of the Season
June 26, 2014
e-newsletter
June 20, 2014
As always, if you have any questions, or need any assistance, please call me at 336-495-6556, or email me at behgolf@aol.com. I look forward to hearing from you.
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Raleigh/Pinehurst Senior Tour Point Standings
Triad Senior Tour Point Standings
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WELCOME
2014 Senior Tour
CELEBRATING
THE 20th SEASON OF THE AMATEUR GOLFWEEK TOUR!
This private course offers enough variety of terrain to challenge all of the flights within the tour. There are trees and water hazards that come into play throughout the course. However good scores can be had - just look at the defending flight winners from last year.
Over twelve years ago, the course underwent several changes. "If you played the course then, you noticed that a pretty good shot near the middle of some fairways would sometimes take an erratic bounce and roll into the rough. Many fairways were too high in the middle, sloped too severely to the sides. They fixed that and also did some mounding on the sides along with some waste bunkering to alleviate some good-shots-gone-bad situations.
In addition, they reshaped the greens areas and put in some bunkers to catch errant shots that would ordinarily be in deep trouble."Plus, they redid the greens and installed A-1. Pinehurst No. 8 has that grass, and it was put in at Pinehurst No. 2 during their recent renovation. The signature hole is #8, a 215-yard, par 3 from the back tees, requiring a tee shot over water.
You should enjoy this course for its challenge to your game and the fact it was recently rated 4 stars by the Triad Golf Panel. What a treat.
In the last few years, Pinewood has hosted the following events:
Expect your peers to have already signed-up as this tournament is sold out.
For the waiting list, call Bruce Hallenbeck at 336-495-6556 or email him at behgolf@aol.com.
Pinewood Country Club –
247 Pinewood Road –
Asheboro, NC 27203 PH: 336.629.4266
336-495-6556
behgolf@aol.com
Please add sandhillsgolf@amateurgolftour.net to your address book.
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Click Here For Tour Schedule
2012 Senior Amateur Golf Tour Schedule Pinehurst/Raleigh/Triad Tour
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Tournament at Pinewood
Event Info:
Thursday, June 26, 2014
Pinewood Country Club
Fee is $65.00
10:00 AM Shotgun
Physical Address:
247 Pinewood Road -
Sign-up for Tournaments & Pay Online
2013 Defending Flight Winners &
Top 3 Places:
Pinewood 2013 Defending Flight Champion -
B Flight Winner - Jerry Widdowson
Pinewood 2013 Defending Flight Champions (L to R) Championship Flight - Eric Ardery;
A Flight -Randy Bunn
CHAMPIONSHIP 6495 (yds)
Eric Ardery, Durham 74
Gary Roberson, Burlington 75
Rick Luzar, Pinehurst 75
A FLIGHT (6155 yds)
Randy Bunn, Zebulon 73
David Coolidge, Greensboro 74
Cecil Lockley, Creedmoor 76
B FLIGHT (6155 yds)
Jerry Widdowson, Durham 79
Travis Jones, Greensboro 79
Ron Vanderklok, Advance 80
Tim Ward, Greensboro 80
C FLIGHT (6155 yds)
John Hall, Raleigh 86
Jeff Brown, Youngsville 87
Mike Hunter, Greensboro 88
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"Improve your golf mental toughness 10-fold"
Every golfer has heard the saying "It's all in your head" or "Golf is 90% mental" or "Golf is the most mentally demanding sport in the world." Yet what do golfers do about it? Well, most often absolutley nothing! Not necessarily because they don't want to, but sometimes golfers actually think the mental game doesn't matter to them!
Click Here to Unlock Your Mind and Shoot Better Golf
EVERY golfer can benefit from increasing their mental toughness and harnessing the full power of thier mind!
Many golfers naively get stuck into thinking that the mental game only matters for elite players or pros who make a living golfing. Nonsense! EVERY golfer needs to use their mind properly.
It is your mind that determines how well you learn when taking lessons. (and this training course is packed with accelerated learning techniques that will have you absorbing more from lessons)
It is your mind that will allow you to set up to the ball correctly and commit to your swing (or not!).
It is your mind that will either stay focused under pressure and get you to make a smooth, fluid stroke when you need to drain an 8 footer for the win, or have you choking like a dog and collapsing like a house of cards when the heat is on!
"When you have a chance to shoot the lowest score of your life, you won't choke - You Will Go Low!"
THE SENIOR AMATEUR GOLF TOUR
STONEY CREEK GOLF CLUB
TOP FIVE SCORES BY FLIGHT
HEAT SOARS AS SCORES DROP ON SENIOR TOUR EVENT AT STONEY CREEK
Whitsett, NC
June 19, 2014
Over 100 players showed up to play the Senior Amateur Golf Tour event at Stoney Creek Golf Club with temperatures also pretty close to that 100 mark.
Despite the heat, scores across the board were impressive. It took a very low number to be "in the money" in 3 of the 4 flights.
"The heat must have helped these guys hit the ball a long way", mused Tour Director Bruce Hallenbeck, "because this is a fair but challenging golf course".
Leading the parade of flight winners with strong efforts was Raleigh's Rick LaFata who fired a 1-over 72 to grab the top spot in the A Flight. He edged Winston-Salem's Jim Blaylock by a single shot. The top six players in the flight were separated by only 4 strokes.
The B Flight saw Sanford's Dick Kuehl out-duel Cary's Chris Riggsbee in a sudden death shootout after both shot 76s in regulation play. Kuehl made quick work of it on the first hole of the playoff with a par when Riggsbee failed to get up & down from a green-side bunker.
John Henely bettered his best score of the 2014 season by 7 strokes in taking the C Flight crown with an 80. "John had failed to break 90 in 10 of his last 12 Tour outings", said Hallenbeck, "it was good to see him break through. Henely needed every good shot he hit as he bettered Zebulon's Willie Brady by one shot.
In the Championship Flight multiple Tour winner Craig Sturdivant again proved to be the class of the field with a 74 that nipped Greensboro's David Coolidge by a single shot. "Although Craig and the other Championship Flight guys play from tees that are considerably longer that the other flights, his consistency this year has been very impressive. Going into each event I like his chances", said Hallenbeck.
The next Tour stop is the season's 3rd Major Championship at Pinewood CC in Asheboro. That event is sold out.
STONEY CREEK GOLF CLUB EVENT
CHAMPIONSHIP (6327 yds)
Craig Sturdivant, Sanford 74
David Coolidge, Greensboro 75
Joey Moffitt, High Point 77
James Dill, Cary 77
Arch Reed, Pinehurst 79
Mike Hallisey, Colfax 79
A FLIGHT (5983 yds)
Rick LaFata, Raleigh 72
Jim Blaylock, Winston-Salem 73
Jim Powers, Advance 74
Tom Fagerli, Yadkinville 75
Steve Williams, Reidsville 76
Randy Bunn, Zebulon 76
Joe Preirie, Asheboro 76
B FLIGHT (5983 yds)
Dick Kuehl, Sanford 76
Chris Riggsbee, Cary 76
Dick Schuler, Pittsboro 77
Glenn Wright, Pittsboro 77
Patrick Warren, Chapel Hill 80
Parker Whitt, Winston-Salem 80
Dawson Strider, Advance 80
C FLIGHT (5983 yds)
John Henely, Pinehurst 80
Willie Brady, Zebulon 81
Anselmo Arellano, Greensboro 83
Charles Gunn, Greensboro 83
Doug Harvey, Knightdale 85
Richard Glick, Raleigh 85
Where Will You Be in the 2014 Season Ending Point Standings Race?
There are only two ways to get to the year ending National Tournament - win one of the four majors or be one of the Top 15 point earners in your flight.
As you plot your tour schedule, be cognizant of the fact, only the top 15 are guaranteed access. Usually, most flight races are tight and depends on how well you play and of course how many tour dates you participate in during 2014.
Do you know how many tournaments you will need to play and what place you will need to finish in each tournament to ensure you have your automatic invitation?
During the 2014 Tour, To see where you stand* click below:
Click Here for Sr. Tour 2014 Schedule
Senior Amateur Golf Tour Schedule
Triad and Raleigh-Pinehurst Tour
Rules Review
It has been suggested that there should be a series of Rules scenarios for you to solve. So begins a series of problems titled What's the Score?
Doc Miller has graciously agreed to allow me to share these with you that he has been sending since July 2009.
I will include one each week. You should try to determine the answer based upon your knowledge of the Rules when ever possible and then use your Rule book to confirm.
There will be no trick questions or hidden information.
If you do not have a Rules of Golf book handy, go to: usga.org/Rule-Books and-Decisions
THE RULES OF GOLF
Rule 4-4
Over a recent crowed and busy weekend, your helpful Golf Rules Committee did a random club count on member’s bags. Out of slightly over 100 checked, 11
were found to have in excess of 14 clubs. If that less than scientific survey is accurate, then approximately 10% of the membership knowingly breaches Rule
4-4 every time they play.
You may be thinking, sure they had more than 14 clubs, but on the first tee, they declared the excess clubs out of play. Guess what? That does not comply with
the Rule.
Rule 4-4, Maximum of Fourteen Clubs, states in section “a”, very first sentence:
The player must not start a stipulated round with more than fourteen
clubs.
That’s it. It doesn’t say he can show up with more than fourteen, provided the excess clubs are declared out of play. It is clearly written that way for a reason.
If you start the round with more than 14 clubs, there is no way you can avoid the penalty. And the penalties for not complying are severe:
· In Match Play – At the conclusion of the hole at which the breach is discovered, the state of the match is adjusted by deduction one hole for each hole at which the breach occurred; maximum deduction per round of two holes.
So in the case of showing up at the tee for a match, acknowledging to your opponent you have in excess of 14 clubs, and after declaring the excess clubs out of play, at the conclusion of the 1st hole, you will have
one hole deducted. If you win the first hole, you would be all square; if you halve the first hole, you would be one down; and if you lose the first hole, you would be two down.
· In Stroke Play – Two strokes for each hole at which any breach occurred; maximum penalty per round – four strokes (two strokes at each of the first two holes at which the breach occurred.)
If you show up at the first tee for a stroke play event with more than 14 clubs and despite declaring the excess clubs out of play, you will still have to add two strokes to your score on the first hole.
· Fourball Match Play & Stroke Play – If one partner breaches Rule 4-4, then the side is penalized. That means you and your partner suffer identical penalties as
described in the top two bullets.
This is the lesson you must understand…if you are playing in some sort of official event, particularly with prizes or trophies for the victors, then the event probably has an official Notice to Competitors or Conditions for the Competition in print.
Guaranteed; 99% of the time the notice will state something to the effect that the competition being conducted under the Rules of Golf as written by the USGA. It may also include a reminder to all competitors that a maximum or 14 clubs is in effect. This is a no-brainer, all you fellow competitors. Do not begin the
stipulated round with more than 14 clubs—you cannot avoid a penalty if you do.
If you have a weighted training club that meets the definition of a club as published in Appendix II of the Rules of Golf, then it counts as a club.
You may carry such a club during the round, but it counts as one of your 14 clubs. Make sure the training club conforms if you take this path. You may not place the excess club somewhere in your cart and escape the fact that you still have more than 14 clubs in your possession.
Give it to the starter, or better yet, leave it in your car, locker or with the shop before you arrive at your starting hole. This is particularly critical for shot-gun starts as there is nobody to give it to.
Rule 4-4c states that upon discovery of more than 14 clubs, the player must declare the excess clubs out of play to his opponent in match play or to his marker/fellow competitor in stroke play. Failure to act immediately after discovery results in disqualification.
Once discovered and a club is selected and deemed out of play under Rule 4-4c, it may not be used for the remainder of the stipulated round under penalty of disqualification. (There is one special exception to that last sentence, which I am reluctant to bring up; but for the curious, see Decision 4-4c/2).
Finally, what you do in your casual, non-event rounds is your business when it comes to your club count. If your playing companions tolerate your excess clubs, then it makes little difference to the Handicap Committee or Rules Committee.
What does matter is that you know you have to clean up your act for certain events.
Senior Amateur Full Leaderboard
Stoney Creek Golf Club
TEES BY FLIGHT:
Champ: Blue Tees: Rating; 69.8 Slope-131 Ydg-6227
A,B & C: White Tees; Rating-68.4; Slope-127; Ydg-5958
2014 Senior Amateur
Golf Tour Schedule
Raleigh/Pinehurst and Triad Tours
TTour Weather Guidelines
Primarily, we adhere to the same guidelines that the PGA Tour uses: If Primarily, the course is open, we're going to play.
The only exception to this is that I'll never put any of you in harm's way during an event because of dangerous weather. (i.e. - lightening or severe cold and wetness).
In other words, I won't let the course "bully" us into playing where an unsafe condition might exist.
Because I arrive at every event at least two hours prior to the start time and I generally have to leave my house at least an hour before that to get to the course, there is no sense calling me just before the event, because I won't be at the office. The best avenue to take is to call the course if the weather seems threatening.
If you are on the roster for the event, and you do not get a cancellation notice from the course after calling them, you are expected to show up in time for the scheduled shotgun start.
Please forward this e-mail to your friends, peers, relatives or anyone you think would be interested in putting their golf skills to a test against others.
Check out our links section for additional info or call, write or email Bruce Hallenbeck at 336-495-6556 or behgolf@aol.com or
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