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Badgett takes break after summer in fast lane, including U.S. Amateur TV time, pairing with Charlie Woods

Pennson Badgett would have had an easy time writing a compelling composition about what he did on his summer vacation, though it might have been tough keeping his paper short.

The Pilot Mountain native, who has committed to playing next year at the University of Tennessee, had a star-studded summer in the amateur golf spotlight. His traveling took him to two of golf’s most revered courses, Bethpage Black and The Olympic Club. He turned down a trip to Japan.

“It happens fast,” Badgett said in early September. “You don’t really have time to step back and realize what you’ve done. It’s been a pretty cool summer. I’m just chilling out right now. I’m not in a hurry for anything.”

A few quick highlights: Badgett played with Charlie Woods, Tiger’s son, in the final group in the final round of the Junior PGA Championship and eventually finished fifth in the national tournament.

No, neither Tiger nor ex-wife Elin Nordegren, attended. Instead, Badgett strode the fairways at Purdue University with a few of Woods’ bodyguards and his agent.

Badgett didn’t expect Tiger in the gallery. As most of the players, he had been unable to find the world’s most famous golfer in the gallery during the tournament.

But he enjoyed playing with Charlie. The two had played together earlier in the spring in a small international field at Sage Valley near Aiken, South Carolina.

“He is a really good kid,” Badgett said. “He’s really fun to play with because of the crowd. There was a big gallery. There were a lot of people out there.”

A few weeks later, Badgett was back in the spotlight, advancing to the match play round at the U.S. Amateur, getting the 64th and final spot in a 19-player playoff. Friend Mason Howell of Thomasville, Georgia, also a rising senior in high school, eventually won the tournament after getting the 63rd spot in the playoff.

“It could have been me,” Badgett admitted of the surprises that often accompany match play.

Though he had a cushion of a few strokes coming down the stretch in the final round of stroke play, Badgett suffered a double-bogey on his 16th hole (No. 6) after he slipped and fell into a fairway bunker during his swing on his second shot.

His feet against the lip of a bunker in the left side of the fairway, Badgett slipped during his swing, falling back into the sand and moving the ball only 40 yards or so.

“I’d never had that happen before,” he said.

Though he lost his opening match to All-American Preston Stout of NCAA champion Oklahoma State, Badgett was shown making a birdie in the match during live coverage from Golf Channel. 

Badgett’s coach Brad Luebchow, who teaches out of Maple Chase Country Club, had been at Olympic during the practice rounds but left before the tournament started. Playing with older brother Anderson, who was under the weather, carrying his bag, Badgett lost to Stout, whose OSU coach Allen Bratton caddied for him.

The Badgett family stayed in San Francisco an extra day to take in various attractions. They saw redwoods, the Golden Gate Bridge and Alcatraz and visited Pier 39 and Lombardo Street.

“I think that was one of our better days out there,” Badgett said. “Just being out there with my family.”

Badgett also played in a few of the nation’s top amateur events, such as the Sunnehanna Amateur in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, that are typically dominated by top collegiate golfers.

He said he expects to play in a few fall tournaments. A wing player on the East Surry basketball team the past three years, the 6-footer is undecided on whether to play as a senior, though he enjoys the camaraderie on the team.

“I want to play with my boys,” Badgett said. “It’s kind of a tough decision.”

Badgett said he will play his final season on the East Surry golf team with hopes of leading the Cardinals to a state title. Badgett was medalist as a freshman to lead the team to the 2023 Class 2A title.

Though he hasn’t won this summer while playing against elite competition, Badgett has seven top 10 finishes in his last eight tournaments.

“Coming into year, my goal was playing more consistent,” he said. “I feel I accomplished that. I played real good golf all summer.”

Badgett has come a long way in a short time. Less than two years ago, he was fighting to get into top events. Then in a span of weeks in 2024, he won three high-profile junior titles.

“It happened really fast,” Badgett said. “I just shot up rankings and it really changed my life.”

New Triad par-3 course targets fall opening

Old Field, a six-hole, public par-3 course is expected to open this fall, adjacent to Colin Creek Golf Club in Mocksville.

Matt Tullos is transforming the former Colin Creek driving range with the help of Stephen Edwards of Winston-Salem.

Edwards said he thought a soft opening in October was possible.

The architectural firm of Smyers, Craig and Coyne designed the course, with construction from Landscapes Unlimited. Edwards said Landscapes Unlimited, a giant national firm, provided its services at a significant discount while it had crew in the area for other projects.

Old Field will have greens similar to those on regulation courses. Some of the walks from tee to green will be surrounded by high vegetation mimicking links-style layouts. 

Some unique features include a double green for Nos. 2 and 4 and a deep bunker expected to draw attention. Hole lengths will range from 68 yards to 149 yards with 631 total yardage.

Lights from the Hickory Hill driving range remain on the property. The facility will include a “Himalayan-style” putting course and a practice area. Future plans at Old Field are expected to include building a pro shop/snack bar.

At first, Old Field will be run out of the Colin Creek pro shop.

Edwards said it had yet to be determined whether the lights from the former driving range would be used.

Though he wouldn’t reveal the cost or budget for Old Field, Edwards said they would be modest. The entire course will be planted in Tahoma 31, a durable Bermuda often used as fringe on top courses. The greens are simple “push-up” style.

Sodding and sprigging were finished in July.

“We’re trying to build something affordable on the front end, so there’s not a lot of pressure to make money at the beginning,” said Edwards. “We want it to be well maintained but community oriented.”

Edwards said Old Field will have modest membership options for the range and practice area.

Edwards is founder and president of Twilight Golf, an organization with about 200 of its more than 300 members in the Triad. Other members hold events in the Triangle and Charlotte area.

The group, a Carolinas Golf Association affiliate offering USGA handicaps, holds weekly golf events during the summer and other events throughout the year. Membership is $55 per year with some of the money going to the First Tee.

First Responders of the Triad teams with Tunnel to Towers for annual fundraiser at Greensboro National

The seventh-annual First Responders of the Triad (FROT) is set for Oct. 3 at Greensboro National Golf Club, where organizers hope to raise $200,000 for first responders.

Last year’s event raised $125,000 — $50,000 of which was donated to the Western North Carolina Association of Firefighters to help first responders cover insurance deductibles for personal property losses caused by Hurricane Helene.

The event dates back to the summer of 2019 when FROT was born, the result of the desire of Herb Parks and Patrick Donnelly, partners in residential development company, Byron Donnelly Development LLC, to give back for their success. Attorney Marc Isaacson offered to form the 501(c)3 without charge.

Greensboro National Golf Club, and an ideal setting for a charitable event operated by Byron Donnelly, and members of the building industry are the contributors, with 100% of the net proceeds going to those involved as First Responders, who were helping other victims of the disaster while facing financial obstacles of their own caused by the hurricane.

FROT had already made an aggressive fundraising goal of $100,000 for its 2024 event when just a week before the event, wind and flooding from Hurricane Helene devastated North Carolina on Sept. 27, primarily in its western Appalachian region.

The 2024 event went on as scheduled, with many of their participants in affected areas helping with the devastation, and through the support from the region’s land development partners, contractors, vendors, and builders the event raised nearly $125,000. All net proceeds were donated to organizations including God’s Pit Crew, Danville Life Saving and First Aid Crew, City of Greensboro Fire Department, American Red Cross, and the Western North Carolina Association of Firefighters.

As a proud supporter of the Tunnel to Towers Foundation, FROT is amplifying a mission born from the ashes of 9/11 — to “do good” by providing mortgage-free homes to Gold Star and fallen first responder families with young children, building specially adapted smart homes for catastrophically injured veterans and working tirelessly to end veteran homelessness.

Above all, Tunnel to Towers and FROT share a solemn vow to ensure America never forgets September 11, 2001. Together, FROT and Tunnel to Towers are a movement of hope, resilience, and gratitude. They remind us that even in the face of tragedy, communities can rise, united by the courage of first responders and the generosity of those who honor their sacrifice.

Join them in their mission to uplift, rebuild, and inspire — because together, we can make a difference that echoes for generations.  

On Jan. 8, 2024, Tunnel to Towers paid off the mortgage on the home of Sgt. Philip Nix, an off-duty Greensboro policeman shot and killed only nine days earlier when he attempted to intervene in a crime he witnessed at a gas station in Colfax. Tunnel to Towers’ quick support and commitment to first responders prompted FROT to partner with the organization this year.

For information on sponsorship or playing opportunities, contact Patrick Donnelly at pdonnelly@byrondev.com 336-282-2440. The tournament includes breakfast, lunch and dinner and awards prizes to the top teams.

Triad golf course sold to local owner

A Triad public golf course has a new owner.

Bobby Evans purchased Pine Knolls Golf Club in Kernersville from Jim Butler, according to the Kernersville News. Evans and Butler each live in the community surrounding the golf course.

Evans told the newspaper that he wanted to preserve the golf course and prevent it from a sale to corporate owner. He also said he did not want to develop the property.

Forsyth County listed the excise tax as $7,400, making the sales price $3.7 million.

(Photos) Tanglewood clubhouse opens

The new clubhouse at Tanglewood Park opens Tuesday morning. TriadGolf.com and Triad Golf Magazine took the below photos late last week as workers moved furniture, equipment and merchandise into the new facility.

The two Forsyth County public courses had operated in a trailer adjacent to the first leg of the par-4 ninth hole for more than a year during construction.

Olde Beau offers spectacular beauty, challenges at a relaxing mountain retreat

The dramatic ascents and cascades from tee to green combined with the spectacular vistas of the surrounding Blue Ridge Mountains from the Olde Beau Golf Club consistently leave visitors in awe with one overriding question.

Check that. Two overriding questions.

How did Billy Satterfield manage to craft such an outstanding – and playable — golf course on the rugged Olde Beau Resort and Golf Club property?

Who or what is Olde Beau?

The first question remains a wonder. Carving a competitive and fun golf course though the mountainous terrain in isolated Roaring Gap was an amazing achievement.

The second question is easy, a big clue coming from the English bulldog on the Olde Beau logo. Olde Beau was the faithful companion of Satterfield, who developed the resort in the early 1990s, two decades after developing Bermuda Run.

The Olde Beau golf course is routed across dramatic terrain through scenic forests.

Somehow, Satterfield accomplished his mission. Olde Beau is a course like no other. It’s mountain golf at a beautiful extreme, requiring shots not encountered anywhere else. 

“It’s instantly memorable,” said Olde Beau general manager Tommy Maines. “You’ll play it one time and remember most, if not all, the holes. It was some of the most dramatic and awe-inspiring views of any golf course in North Carolina.”

There’s no more memorable experience than the spectacular panoramic view of the Blue Ridge Mountains from the hilltop green at No. 15. From the back of the green, which sits on a bluff, players can see for miles into Virginia.

The Roaring Gap location is also unique among mountain golf hot spots. Located about 25 minutes north of Elkin on twisting U.S. 21, the tiny summer destination has a post office, a church, a gas station/convenience store, a few charming local shops and three golf courses – the other two are private. That’s about it.

Fortunately for visitors, Olde Beau offers a variety of accommodations – from rental homes to studio and two-bedroom villas – plus a restaurant and various activities. Stay and Play packages with lodging and discounted golf rates are available.

The Olde Beau clubhouse has a spacious back deck looking down over the 18th green with a beautiful view of the surrounding mountains.

The golf course is also open to non-resort guests at a price comparable to many Triad courses.

The resort is especially popular during the summer, when temperatures are significantly milder than non-mountain areas, and the fall, when spectacular fall colors add another attraction.

Other amenities include a fitness center, a seasonal outdoor pool, tennis and pickleball courts.

What makes Olde Beau different?

Several holes force players to hit blind approaches to hilltop greens. Some include blind tee shots, including the par-5 17th featuring the most jaw-dropping approach on the course. 

Shots hit short of the green can roll back several yards, leaving blind uphill pitches or nestle down in grass. Either way, the pitch is from a steep sidehill lie.

Once reaching the greens, players want to stay below the hole on the quick bent grass putting surfaces.

The approach shot to the par-5 17th features a dramatic carry of 200 yards from the edge of a bluff to a green at the bottom of the drop.

“Greens are always in fantastic shape and roll true,” Maines said.

While the rough can be rough, including some awkward sidehill lies, the fairways are maintained in pristine conditions.”

But the descriptions are deceiving. Golf at Olde Beau is fun. Though filled with challenge, the course is highly playable. Club selection is important – driver isn’t always the best choice off the tees. Taking an extra minute to ride up ahead and look for targets is especially crucial on some holes.

The par-72 layout measures only 6,482 yards from the tips, but most holes play either shorter or longer due to the significant undulations. From four other sets of tees, the course plays to 6,036 to 4,455 yards.

Olde Beau offers a collection of challenging approach shots, including an option to reach the par-5 second hole in two over water.

“The course places a premium on accuracy off the tee,” Maines said. “You can get in trouble if you miss the fairway, but it’s very scoreable if you’re in the fairway.”

Each of the four par-5s are reachable with heroic options.

The first eagle opportunity comes at No. 2, which officially measures 540 yards from the back markers, offers a second shot of about 180 yards over water to the green with a well-placed tee shot. A safer option is to play left on the dogleg right and lay up.

The last is at the unforgettable 17th, where a solid blind drive left of a target boulder in the middle of the fairway puts players on the precipice of a deep gorge, offering a carry of 200 yards or so to a green built atop another slope.

Can’t hit it that far? A modest-width fairway extends back from the green perhaps 100 yards at the bottom of the gorge. The front of the putting surface is guarded by steep slopes, sand and gnarly grass.

Of the par-4s, a dramatic descent down a hill from the clubhouse at No. 10 provides a good preview of what’s to come. At No. 15, first-time visitors should bring their phones to the green to capture the panoramic view across the mountains.

The 15th green offers a majestic view of the surrounding mountains.

The par-3s are more fun than scary with dramatic drops with greens guarded by terrain that often funnel wayward shots back into play. At No. 8, which spans the sides of a ridge, correct usage of a two-tiered putting surface can direct approaches toward the hole.

Olde Beau is an ideal destination for visitors, especially golfers who have never played anything like it.

“It’s a challenge, but a ton of fun for players of all levels and abilities,” Maines said. “As our profile has grown over the past few years, we’ve seen more players make the trip up from Charlotte and also the Triad region — and they come back year after year and bring their friends.”

Wake transfer claims medal in Deacons victory at Bryan Park

Wake Forest won the Bryan National Collegiate Sunday by 25 strokes at Bryan Park Champions Course.

Wake’s Nicholas Prieto, who transferred this summer from Arizona State, won the event by two strokes with 13-under-par 203.

The Demon Deacons shot 24-under 840 for 54 holes. Wofford finished second in the 14-team tournament. UNC Greensboro placed fifth at 877.

UNCG, Wake open men’s season at Bryan Park

The Triad has a handful of players on Division I men’s teams this fall as the season kicks off locally at Bryan Park with the Bryan National Collegiate, hosted by UNC Greensboro on Saturday and Sunday.

Kyle Haas, a junior who played at Forsyth Day, was a regular in the Wake lineup last season. The son of coach Jerry Haas has three top-5 finishes in his first two years at Wake. Haas shot 66 in the final round of the Amherst Regional to help the Demon Deacons rally to qualify for the NCAA Championship.

The Deacons will also play at Bryan Park.

Tanner Cadieux, who played sparingly as a freshman last season for N.C. State, has transferred to Virginia Commonwealth. Cadieux played at Page High.

Alex Martin, a senior from Thomasville, is a senior at Appalachian State. He had four top-25 finishes last season for the Mountaineers.

Jack Boyer, who played at Ragsdale High, will be a junior at Gardner-Webb, also in the Bryan Park tournament. Boyer was a second team all-Big South Conference selection last season.

David DeLille, who played at High Point Central, is a senior at East Carolina. DeLille has played in 10 tournaments for the Pirates. His top finish in four events last year was a tie for 20th place.

Hayden Magnussen, a recent Wesleyan Christian graduate, is on the roster for Western Carolina.

College women tee off with Triad players on rosters

Several Triad women fill the rosters on NCAA Division I teams entering the fall season.

Macy Pate will start her junior year as the top returner at Wake Forest. She’ll be joined by former Reagan High teammate Morgan Ketchum, a three-year standout at Virginia Tech who will finish her career as a graduate student.

Pate has been chosen as a third-team preseason All-American by Golf Channel, which named Wake No. 12 in its preseason rankings. North Carolina was No. 15 in the rankings led by Stanford. Pate received ACC Freshman of the Year and has been All-ACC.

Ketchum won a tournament at Oklahoma last season and led the Hokies in scoring average as a freshman and as a sophomore.

Wake opens the fall season Sept. 8 at the Annaka Intercollegiate in Minnesota.

Anna Howerton, who played with Pate and Ketchum at Reagan, returns to High Point University as the Big South Conference Player of the Year in 2024-25. The junior won Big South Freshman of the Year in 203-24, when she was also All-Big South. Howerton has two collegiate victories. HPU opens Sept. 7 at the Golfweek Fall Challenge at Caledonia in Pawleys Island, South Carolina.

Leah Edwards got the nod for the No. 1 slot for Western Kentucky, which opened its season on Labor Day at the Boilermaker Classic at Purdue University. A freshman, Edwards won back-to-back Class 4A individual state high school titles for Northwest Guilford.

Macie Burcham, a regular member of the East Carolina lineup the past two seasons, returns for a redshirt senior year with the Pirates. The Wesleyan Christian graduate has won three Carolinas Golf Association Parent-Child tournaments with father Jeff Burcham.

Ellen Yu of Greensboro is a freshman on a UNC team that returns all five members of its starting lineup. A homeschooler, Yu won an AJGA tournament in 2022 at Carolina Trace in Sanford and won the 2019 U.S. Kids World Championship. The Tar Heels open Sept. 8 in Michigan at American Dunes Golf Club in the Folds of Honor Collegiate.

EC Niebauer, a grad student at Western Carolina, finished 31st in an 11-team field Aug. 26 at 7-over 149. Niebauer played at University of the South and Queens after graduating from High Point Central.

Katelyn Griggs, who played at Gray Stone Day in Lexington, is a senior at Gardner-Webb, which opens the season Sept. 15 in a tournament hosted by Elon.

Local teams wins CGA Mixed Team

Reece Hart of Winston-Salem and Joseph Cansler of Clemmons won the CGA Carolinas Mixed Team Championship on Aug. 17, in a three-hole playoff over Davis and Tina Morrison of Raleigh after both teams finished regulation play with a total score of 11-under 133 at Kiawah Island’s Oak Point course.


Spence projects include popular Triangle facility, Lake Norman property

Kris Spence’s work at Starmount Forest Country Club is nearing completion, and the Greensboro-based architect is gearing up on a few new in-state projects.

Though heavy summer rain – 15 inches in July – caused delays, Spence now expects the Greensboro course to be ready to open by sometime in October.

Rain, including several “pop-up” storms, washed away many of the sprigs planted in the past few months, making sod necessary to get many of the tees and fairways ready this fall.

“We got the first 10 sprigged and the hard rains hit within a few days,” Spence told TriadGolf.com.

Spence has made significant renovations, especially to the green complexes, planned to bring a more classic style to the layout. 

The multi-million-dollar project also included a new irrigation system, some new tees and the instillation of fast-draining concrete capillary bunkers.

The course now has hydrid ultradwarf TifEagle Bermuda greens, Tahoma 31 Bermuda collars, Tif-Tuf Bermuda fairways and Zeon zoysia tee boxes.

Originally designed by Wayne Stiles and John Van Kleek, Starmount was given a major facelift in 1999 by Virginia-based architect Lester George, whose new projects include Contentment Golf Club in Wilkes County.

As TriadGolf.com reported recently, Spence did a rapid restoration while making ongoing improvements at Hound Ears Club, flooded during Hurricane Helene.

Starmount and Hound Ears are two of several significant current Spence projects, which include:

RALEIGH GOLF ASSOCIATION

Raleigh Golf Association, which owns 27 holes on both sides of Tryon Road only a few miles south of the N.C. State campus, is making some major changes.

Spence was hired to merge and create a new 18-hole course south of Tryon. Construction began in April. RGA’s public course is often noted as perhaps Raleigh’s most-played course.

A unique organization that had 18 holes open to the public and a separate nine holes reserved for “stockholders,” RGA has sold at least 44 acres north of Tryon that were home to five holes on the former public course. An apartment community was planned for the sold property.

RGA is managed by McConnell Golf, which owns Sedgefield Country Club, The Cardinal by Pete Dye and Old North State Club in the Triad.

Spence said John McConnell instructed him to add as much length as possible and add a little flair to the layout. Much of the work — what was the Stockholder course is under construction — involves greens and bunkers.

Spence’s design will measure about 6,200 yards – more than 100 yards longer than the previous 18-hole layout. The Stockholder course measures less than 2,800 yards. The project includes the building of a large, lighted practice facility. 

LAKE NORMAN GOLF CLUB

Spence another major project at Lake Norman Golf Club, formerly known as Mallard Head Golf Course, on Lake Norman in Mooresville.

Purchased in June, the new owners are bringing in Spence to make major renovations to the high-potential property, which includes a racquet club with indoor courts pickleball. A marina has also been considered.

Spence said the project has similarities to his renovation and restoration of Woodlake Golf Club near Pinehurst, where he took a flood-ravaged property and created a high acclaimed course.

“This place has really been let go,” Spence said. “We’ve reimagined a design for it. I think they’ll end up being private club. It’s a lot like Woodlake in potential.”

PINE VALLEY AND OTHERS

Spence will begin a remodel at Pine Valley Country Club in Wilmington next year. Projects at Hope Valley Country Club in Durham, Country Club of Lexington (South Carolina) and Fiddlesticks Golf Club in Ft. Myers, Florida are on the future calendar.