Monday
Jul312023

Flossmoor bounces back, hosts Illinois Open

Writing from Flossmoor, Illinois

Monday, July 31, 2023

It was four years ago, and Flossmoor Country Club was on its last legs. Members were leaving, bills were starting to pile up, and the odds that the club where golf was first played in 1900 would shut its doors for good at the end of 2019.

Enter George Goich, who with the rest of his family grew up as members at nearby Olympia Fields Country Club. Goich, a golf professional by then headquartered in New England, inquired about purchasing the club on Western Avenue. His brother David, a former Olympia Fields club president, and an acquaintance were brought in as partners.

Things were so dire, they began paying utility bills to keep the lights and heat on before the deal was completed early in 2020.

Exit Flossmoor Country Club. Enter Flossmoor Golf Club, concentrating on the game and not the frills surrounding it. Tennis is no more. Evening dining is out. The pool is now run separately. It’s golf first and foremost.

A club comprised greatly of town residents that was down to 89 members now boasts about 270, just short of Goich’s self-imposed limit of 300.

“I thought that Beverly had a great model, one of being golf-centric, and that it would work further south,” Goich said last week.

He thought correctly. This week, Flossmoor shows itself off by hosting the 74th Illinois Open, running today through Wednesday.

“This is the biggest showpiece we’re allowed to do here,” said Goich, understanding that the parking lot holds only so many cars.

The 168-man field will tackle a course primed to test the best in the state, and a bit beyond its borders. The distance of 7,136 yards will be maxed out, the par of 72 a sturdy test, especially since it hasn’t rained since Thursday night. Goich boasted the greens have been pushed to a speed of 14.5 on the Stimpmeter recently, and would like to see that again.

“We have an incredible canvas at Flossmoor,” said Brad Slocum, who oversees tournaments for the Illinois PGA. “If it stays dry, by Wednesday this course could be a monster.”

Slocum and executive director Carrie Williams emphasize they don’t want carnage, but instead a test befitting championship golf. Flossmoor is a course that has brought the best player to the top of the pile before. In Illinois Opens alone, Bob Harris (1955) and Lance Ten Broeck (1984) triumphed there, along with Jock Hutchison in the 1920 PGA Championship and Chick Evans in the 1909 Western Amateur.

“It tests every part of your game relentlessly,” said Brian Payne, a Flossmoor member who won the Illinois Open in 2002 and is the house threat this week.

Depending on the setup, there are a pair of drivable par 4s – the fourth and 14th – and a 626-yard par 5 that, if the wind is from the south, will be a driver-3-wood-4-iron combination for much of the field.

“There are 18 distinct, memorable golf holes here,” Slocum said.

To which Goich added, “If you play it when it’s firm and fast, there’s a double-bogey lurking on every shot. It’s a very difficult golf course from the sides of the holes. You have to pay attention.”

The nine past champions in the field include defender David Perkins, Mike Small, Ray Biancalana, Korn Ferry Tour regulars Tim “Tee-K” Kelly and Vince India, and Curtis Malm. While Small, the University of Illinois head men’s coach, is in the same classification, no club professional has won the Illinois Open since Chicago Golf Club assistant Todd Tramaglio at Orchard Valley in 1998.

The purse is expected to be at or over $100,000, as it has been the last several years, with about 20 percent dropped in the winner’s pocket.

Tim Cronin

Sunday
Jul302023

Crowe flies high as Fishburn sinks in NV5

Writing from Glenview, Illinois

Sunday, July 30, 2023

Trace Crowe wears a rubber bracelet on his left wrist. “No complaining,” it reads.

“I still complain,” Crowe quipped after winning the fifth NV5 Invitational at The Glen Club on Sunday evening.

With a trophy for his first career victory and $180,000 in his pocket, nearly sextupling his season earnings on the Korn Ferry Tour and almost doubling his career PGA Tour/Korn Ferry earnings, the 26-year-old Auburn graduate is a good bet to carry on the tradition of the NV5 champion not coming back the following year to defend.

It’s too early to say that Crowe, who beat Patrick Fishburn with a par on the second hole of sudden death after they tied at 25-under 259, will become the next Scottie Scheffler. Nobody knew Scheffler would be the first Scheffler when he won in a playoff in 2019.

Crowe, the leader by two strokes at daybreak, was dead in the water soon after starting, having triple-bogeyed the second hole. He looked at his bracelet then but ignored the suggestion. That happens when you pull your drive into the right round, airmail the green and fail to find your ball.

On the Korn Ferry Tour, full of eager players who will step over a dead body to get to the PGA Tour, he was suddenly in third place, two strokes in arrears.

The good news for Crowe was all the time left, and despite the bundle of birdies bagged on a daily basis on the KFT, strange things can happen.

In the next four hours, plenty did, beginning with Ryan McCormick, who needed a particular model of Titleist’s Pro V1 ball on Friday to continue play, and who got a couple from Crowe when the word spread. McCormick, who started the week with an 11-under 60, finished with 65 for 260.

Playing alongside McCormick, Crowe recovered to birdie seven holes in a stretch of 12 after losing his ball for a closing 5-under 66 for 25-under 259.

“I just hung in there and hung in there and started making birdies,” Crowe said.

In normal tournaments, that would be good enough to win, but the NV5, the WGA’s entry on the PGA Tour’s development series, is not a normal tournament.

Crowe’s par 5 at the last via laying up was only good enough to secure a tie, for immediately ahead of him, Fishburn, who had led in the middle stages of the round, regained a share of the lead by sinking a 45-foot downhill putt at the 18th for an eagle, a 64 and a 259. The several hundred on hand went wild, thinking they saw the winning shot.

Not quite. Not after Crowe matched his total to force extra holes.

They matched birdies on the 18th in the playoff, Crowe sinking a 30-footer that he thought surprised Fishburn, then went back to the tee to give it another go.

This time, Fishburn seemed to have the advantage even after driving into a bunker between the pond and the green. Crowe had sailed his tee shot to the right rough and remained there on his approach. He had to keep laying up because he took his 3-wood out of play after the second round in favor of a 6-wood and 2-iron.

“The wind made it a bad number,” Crowe said. “I was 10 yards shorter than I thought I was going to be each time."

Trophy to Fishburn, right? Lucky there wasn’t an engraver on site, for Crowe pitched smartly to 20 feet with his third shot, then saw the unthinkable. Fishburn, his head lifting up and his body turning too quickly, left his bunker shot in the sand. It nearly rolled back to his feet.

“I got lucky,” Crowe said. “There was a lot of sand under it.”

Fishburn chopped out his fourth shot 16 feet past the hole, and after Crowe left his birdie putt within a foot, tried to match Crowe’s sure par. He could not, rolling it past the hole. Crowe tapped in for par and his first career victory, leaving Fishburn winless on the circuit.

For Crowe, it means vaulting to 36th on the KFT standings, a far cry from the 139th-place spot he started the week in. The top 30 advance to the PGA Tour, and Crowe now is locked into the KFT playoffs, where he can continue to climb.

“It’s a crazy feeling,” Crowe said of winning. “It’s been a long, tough, interesting season. I’m blown away about how good everyone is. I feel I played unreal the last couple days.”

Around The Glen Club

Illinois grad Adrien Dumont de Chassart finished 10th with a closing 68 for 18-under 266. … Vince India finished at 16-under 268 after a closing 4-under 67. … Mark Wilson also finished with 67 for 14-under 270. … It’s the second playoff in a row at the NV5, Harry Hall beating Nick Hardy on the third sudden-death hole last year. Scheffler knocked off Marcelo Rozo in a playoff in the inaugural. … The par-71 course averaged 68.156 strokes for the week, only four holes finishing over par. Sunday’s average was 68.342 strokes. 

Tim Cronin

Sunday
Jul302023

Crowe's nest is The Glen Club

Writing from Glenview, Illinois

Saturday, July 29, 2023

Trace Crowe is a 26-year-old South Carolinian who went to Auburn, stands 797th in the world ranking, has yet to win a professional tournament of national scope, and has made about $225,000 in 31 starts on the PGA Tour – where he’s made two of three cuts – and the Korn Ferry Tour.

Start No. 32 might be his breakthrough. Crowe has stitched together rounds of 66, 64 and 63 at The Glen Club, including a closing 29 on Saturday, to earn the lead in the fifth NV5 Invitational with a round to play. Even at 20-under-par 193, his lead is only a stroke, with Ryan McCormick a stroke behind and Patrick Fishburn and Chris Gotterup two back. A rampaging horde of birdie-seekers follow.

One of those, Ben Kholes, is trying to win his third Korn Ferry tournament of the season. That would give him immediate promotion to the PGA Tour, where the money is about 10 times larger week-to-week. So Crowe’s sleep might be fitful.

Crowe has only three bogeys this week, against an eagle – Saturday on the par-5 first – and 21 birdies, 15 of which have been poured in on the back nine. Saturday, he needed only 22 putts.

To humans, The Glen Club is a difficult test. To these guys, it’s a big green dartboard. Overnight rains have softened the Tom Fazio layout, but still, 20-under through 54 holes seems like a typographical error until you realize how long the younger set hits it, and how precise their approaches are.

“I started struggling with my swing a little bit, but I was making everything on the green,” Crowe said. “I was just like if we can just manage this and get in the clubhouse, then go work on it after, that would be good. We got it, just made a lot of putts coming in.”

Crowe’s season has been curious. He squeezed into the Wells Fargo on the PGA Tour and finished 27th, winning $134,125 – that went with a tie for 63rd in the Honda Classic – but he’s missed seven of 11 cuts on the Korn Ferry Tour. Last week, he finished 44th and made $4,521.43. A big finish this week, even if it doesn’t include a trophy, would be huge.

“Just a revolving mystery, this game,” Crowe said. “It feels great just finally be in this position, to have a chance to win on Sunday. I'm excited, this is what you work for.”

As does everyone else in the field, including McCormick, who opened with an 11-under 60 on Thursday and nearly ended up out of the tournament on Friday. He somehow started the second round with a different version of the Titleist Pro V1 than he had played last year. The PGA Tour uses the one-ball rule, which means in a given round, you have to play the same model of ball. There are several different Pro V1s, and his 2023 model is different from the 2022 he teed off with.

“I was in the hotel putting around (Friday morning) and just threw it in my bag, didn't think of it,” McCormick explained. “I got up on 11 green and noticed it was different. So I played it on 10 and 11 and realized that I didn't have any other balls, because like the one-ball rule, can't play any other (type of) ball, so I had one ball to play.”

Literally, that one ball, the only one of that model he had.

“It was like insane,” McCormick said.

The insanity was only beginning.

“Hit it in the fescue on 12 and I'm honestly thinking (I’m) DQ’d,” McCormick said. “Like if I don't find this ball, like I'm going home.”

It was found, and eventually, a rules official was able to supply a handful more, including a couple cadged from Crowe, who was several groups away.

“Just tried to not lose it for like – I mean, it was insane. I mean, that aside, I'm just happy to be playing, it's nice. It was stressful.”

McCormick followed Friday’s insane 69 with a 6-under 65 on Saturday, and is in the final twosome of Crowe at 1:15 p.m. Sunday. Kohles starts at 12:31. Local notables include Vince India 12-under 201) at 10:05 a.m. and Daniel Hudson (13-under 200) at 11:15 a.m.

Live from Glenview

The unique aspect of the NV5 is the television broadcast on barstool.tv, the website of chats and podcasts that has dabbled in live sports in recent years. Perhaps it’s fitting that Barstool breaks into golf here, as the first broadcast of golf in television history was just a few miles away, the 1946 Tam O’Shanter carnival from Niles covered on WBKB-TV with one camera on the clubhouse roof using a telephoto lens borrowed from RCA.

Visually, the telecast resembles one from the early years of Golf Channel, or the early 1970s on network TV, albeit in high definition. PGA Tour Productions is supplying the pictures, enough cameras to document but missing the special aspects – close-ups on every tee, drone shots, etc. – that the biggest-budget productions have.

Still, you can see the ball, plenty of holes are covered, and the commentary by the Barstool crew has been expectedly irreverent while covering the tournament well. There have been plenty of player interviews, and some verbal surprises. Within 30 seconds of tuning in Thursday someone was talking about his bladder. Not even Gary McCord did that before he was banned from Augusta National over his “bikini wax” comment.

On Friday, when Tom Whitney missed a 4-inch putt on the back nine, the gaggle was in disbelief. “Jesus!” one of them yelped – sorry, we as yet can’t precisely identify who’s who in their seven-man crew. Another, perhaps Sam “Riggs” Bozoian, called it the shortest missed putt in history, clearly not knowledgable enough to recall the 1983 British Open, when Hale Irwin fanned on a putt at the lip of the cup in the third round. That whiff subsequently meant Irwin would miss tying winner Tom Watson by a stroke.

At one point Thursday, there were around 150 people watching through one of the outlets Barstool was employing. Ideally more are watching on the weekend, for the Korn Ferry Tour’s coverage on Golf Channel has diminished this year even as the quality of the golf has improved.

The Tour believes this could be a path to more coverage, and to a younger audience. In his memo on more pressing topics this week, PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan wrote to the players, “We hope to come out of this test with a multi-event model that will provide fans with more opportunities to see live competition coverage of the Korn Ferry Tour in 2024 and beyond. Please tune in for a bit this week and let us know your thoughts.”

Tim Cronin

Tuesday
Jul252023

Stairway to the stars comes to The Glen Club

Writing from Glenview, Illinois

Tuesday, July 25, 2023

If you want to gauge the growth of professional golf in America, look no further than the Korn Ferry Tour.

Born as the Ben Hogan Tour in 1990 – the Hawk, asked his advice for the first players, said, “Watch out for busses” – it’s bloomed from a series of 30 $100,000 tournaments with $20,000 first prizes to this year’s 26 tournaments with purses of $1 million, winners collecting $180,000 each, with the playoffs at $1.5 million a shot.

In other words, today’s KFT is 1990’s PGA Tour in financial terms, only with the stars of the future rather than the stars of today.

One of those future stars is Harry Hall, who won last year’s NV5 Invitational at The Glen Club over the Memorial Day weekend. It’s back at The Glen Club this weekend, a four-round show commencing at 6:30 a.m. Thursday, in the middle of summer, but Hall is not. His success in the WGA-sponsored NV5 and at other KFT tournaments last season earned him a promotion to the PGA Tour, where he’s made over a million bucks so far this year.

Hall knocked off local favorite Nick Hardy of Northbrook last year by scoring five birdies in his last seven holes to tie Hardy and then bagging a trifecta of birds in a sudden-death playoff. But feel no pain for Hardy, for he also made the big tour and already has a win in his pocket, having teamed with Davis Riley to win the Zurich Classic in New Orleans.

“It just goes to show the quality of the players who play in the tournament,” Hall said. “To win is a big boost of confidence to get to the next level. Hopefully I can continue to do that; I’ll always cherish that victory.’

“I was so grateful to be in contention (last year), because coming in I was 94th on the points list. We were halfway through the season and I hadn’t really had the success I thought I was going to have.”

Then he hit the jackpot, ensured his spot in the Korn Ferry Playoffs, and from there made the PGA Tour. So far this season, he’s made $1.4 million with three top-10 finishes and ranks 83rd in the point standings. That’s not enough to make the revamped playoffs – the first tournament has only 70 players this year, compared to last year’s 125 – so he’ll have to step on it to have a shot at the pot o’ gold in the Tour Championship.

Winning on the Tom Fazio-designed layout last year gave him that chance to succeed, as it did Scottie Scheffler, the current world No. 1, in 2019, in the inaugural then-titled Evans Scholars Invitational, Curtis Thompson in 2020 and Cameron Young in 2021. The 156 players in this year’s field want to duplicate that, from Ben Kohles, currently No. 1 in the KFT standings and one of 11 winners from this season teeing it up, to Monday’s eight qualifiers, each of whom had to shoot at least 7-under at either Stonewall Orchard or White Deer Run to earn a ticket for the weekend.

Players to watch include a gaggle of notable locally-connected players:

• Adrien Dumont de Chassart, the recent Illinois graduate who won his KFT debut in South Carolina the week before the U.S. Open;

• Ricky Castillo, a frequent contender in the Western Amateur who matched Dumont de Chassart by winning his KFT debut the week after, and who will be grouped with him at 12:12 p.m. Thursday;

• Brad Hopfinger, who captured the 2014 Illinois Open at The Glen Club and has been a KFT regular since 2015;

• Patrick Flavin, the 2017 Illinois Open winner at The Glen Club and a KFT member since 2020;

• and Mark Wilson, a five-time PGA Tour winner who has called Elmhurst home in the past and realistically, at 48, is tuning up for the Champions Tour.

The tournament will be telecast for the first time, and by an untraditional outlet. Barstool.tv, an Internet operation, will provide four-day coverage from 2:30-5:30 p.m. CT with a technical crew supplied by the PGA Tour and with a crew of commentators headed by Sam Riggs Bozoian, who goes by his middle name, and Jake Marsh. It’s the first time Barstool has televised live golf, though their Fore Play podcast covers the game.

Tim Cronin

Saturday
Jul222023

Koo comes through, wins Women's Western Am

Writing from Naperville, Illinois

Saturday, July 22, 2023

At Wednesday’s dinner honoring the 32 match-play qualifiers for the 123rd Women’s Western Amateur, each competitor received a few tokens of the accomplishment, including a bracelet with the phrase, “Make History,” on it.

Most of the players put the bracelet on immediately.

Jasmine Koo not only did that, but took it to heart.

The 17-year-old from Cerritos, Calif., had already qualified third, with a total of 7-under-par 137, an impressive pace at White Eagle Golf Club.

Then she put her foot down. Three days and five matches later, Koo was also wearing the gold medal symbolic of the oldest continuously-played championship in American women’s golf, her 4 and 2 victory over Sadie Englemann of Austin, Tex., the capper on a spectacular week of precision play.

Koo missed only one green and made six birdies in those 16 holes, running her total to 34 for the week across seven rounds and 116 holes. She had only seven bogeys in that span, and none in her final two matches. The total of 27-under for the week might be a Women’s Western Amateur record.

“It’s a lot of pressure,” Koo said of the grind. “Match play got me to thinking, hit the best shot possible.”

She hit shot after shot, and made putt after putt.

“I always putt better on pure greens,” Kool said, complementing superintendent Jim Canning’s staff. “I just really felt comfortable on these greens.”

Englemann, entering her senior year at Stanford with U.S. Women’s Open and Augusta National Women’s Amateur appearances and an NCAA team title to her credit, did nothing wrong in Saturday morning’s final, except she only made two birdies in a match where only birdies won holes and bogeys were nowhere to be seen. With Koo making birdies the way McDonalds makes burgers, two was not enough.

“I played to the best of my ability and she just had a better day than me,” Englemann said. “I’m pretty proud of how I played. Getting to the final is an achievement for me, because I’ve struggled in match play in the past. I’ve worked pretty hard on getting the strategy down. This shows me I can play it.”

Koo, the youngest winner since Chakansim “Fai” Khamborn triumphed as a 15-year-old in 2015, was all square with Englemann through six holes, Koo making a birdie on the par-5 second and Englemann answering with a birdie 3 on the next hole. Then Koo, miffed at a missed birdie putt on the incorrigible sixth green, went 3-3-3-3 on the seventh through 10th holes, with hole-winning birdies on Nos. 7, 9 and 10, to take a 3-up lead.

“I got kind of angry with myself that I missed that,” Koo said of the putt on the sixth.

Englemann birdied the 12th hole, but that was it. Koo closed with birdies on the 15th and 16th holes from five and 15 feet, respectively, to take the title.

“On 16, I hit a 3-hybrid,” Koo recalled of the 161-yard tee shot. “That was just a really good shot to top everything off to finish the match. I was like, ‘I want to win in style.’

“Walking down 16, I was (thinking), I didn’t win yet, I didn’t win yet. Then it dropped, and ‘Oh, I won!’ ”

(Later on Saturday, Koo's older brother Joshua scored a 1-up victory over Ben Bordiga of Shoreline, Wash., in the championship match of the Pacific Northwest Amateur at Chambers Bay near Seattle.)

Engelmann entered the week 68th in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, Koo 178th, her three junior wins over the last year earning fewer points than Englemann’s achievements. By winning the Women’s Western Am, Koo will move up in the rankings.

The poise she displayed will stand her well, including this fall, when she’ll play her senior season for the Dons of Cerritos High in the 605 League, and ideally, all the way to the state finals at Poppy Hills. Then it will be off to Southern California in the fall of 2024, when the Trojans and UCLA join the Big Ten.

“This prepares me,” Koo said. “I can win events in college. I wasn’t really the favorite coming in. Just being able to play my game and enjoy the course, that helped me play better.”

Koo will surely be back next year to defend her crown, and Englemann said she may return as well. Players often turn professional after their senior-year NCAA appearance, but getting so close and not getting to pose with the trophy might just stick in her craw. But Koo already knows the last back-to-back winner was Meredith Duncan, in 2000 and 2001, and the look in her eye indicated she wants to join the list.

Around White Eagle

The Women’s Western Amateur will be part of the Ladies Elite Amateur series, which commences in 2024, an official confirmed. The men’s version, which began last year, climaxes with the Western Amateur. … Next year’s Women’s Western Amateur will be played at the Onwentsia Club in Lake Forest.

Tim Cronin

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