Wednesday, May 6, 2026
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Where I played this week: Bryan Park Champions

(This is the first of a new weekly feature on TriadGolf.com. Each weekend, editor/publisher John Brasier will share his experience that week playing at a Triad course open to the public.)

If you play golf and live in the Triad, you’ve almost certainly played the Champions Course at Bryan Park. The Rees Jones design, host of the 2010 U.S. Public Links Championship is one of the elite public courses in the region, and quite possibly, the best value I’ve found in the entire state.

But last summer when I last played Champions, there was some maintenance underway. So, this past week was a good opportunity to check out the progress.

The timing wasn’t perfect. The Bermuda greens had not totally recovered from aeration and the fairways were in transition, most areas offering tight lies and a mixture of dormant grass with new Bermuda only starting to grow in.

Still, it was a good experience. The back nine, which stretches along Lake Townsend is beautiful and challenging. 

Some good news at No. 11, one of memorable holes along the lake, there’s new healthy grass on the small hillside where many players aim off the tee to cut distance on the sharp dogleg right peninsula.

You’ll also notice a few dozen stumps where trees have been taken out left of the 11th tee. Renovated bunkers with bright white sand also added beauty and playability to the hole. I do hate the curbed cart path that forces players to walk 70 yards with multiple clubs to get to their ball.

Several trees were recently cleared near the 11th tee at Bryan Park Champions.

I don’t know why, but I normally play the back nine well. This week, my highlights were solid approaches into the wind to make easy two-putt pars at Nos. 12 and 14, which measured 175 yards and 190 yards, into a two-club breeze.

As much as I love most of the back nine, I hate the tricky, par-5 15th, which requires a tight drive into the wind over a sliver of the lake with no easy second shot options and limited good looks at a hilltop green hidden by trees for the first two shots.

After pitching out from the left woods, I hit a 3-wood over more water that rolled through the green, leading to an eventual 7.

For those that haven’t played Champions, it’s a great test of golf if maybe a little too difficult for beginners. My early weekday afternoon round took 3 hours, 30 minutes. I wouldn’t depend on that pace in the mornings or weekends.

As a senior, my cost was $45 for greens fee and cart. Greensboro residents also get a few dollars off. The highest price on weekdays is $63 Monday through Friday and $74 on weekends.

The superior practice facilities, including 20 new covered bays with Toptracer technology, are the best among area public courses.

In a few weeks, the greens should be smooth and fairways lush with green Bermuda. For good public players, Champions merits a spot in your regular rotation. If it’s booked up, the sister Players Course, is a solid alternative.

Davis Love III touchup at Harbour Town on display at RBC Heritage

With its landmark, red-and-white striped lighthouse standing only yards behind its 18th green along the Calibogue Sound, Harbour Town Golf Links has long been a beacon of golf in the Carolinas.

Now, approaching 60 years old, the Pete Dye/Jack Nicklaus design reopened in November on Hilton Head Island after a subtle, but effective facelift from a fitting course doctor, Davis Love III, five-time champion of the RBC Heritage Classic, an annual upper-tier event on the PGA Tour.

TriadGolf.com visited Harbour Town in December hoping to see much the same classic layout, with minimal tweaks. I’d been fortunate to play the course perhaps a dozen times previously in media outings to promote the Heritage.

We weren’t disappointed. Harbour Town remains the classic, seaside shotmakers’ course that debuted in 1969. But with new infrastructure.

The routing and strategy for the holes remained much the same. This renovation didn’t include large-scale tree removal. Hitting fairways still isn’t enough — approaches often requiring hitting the target area in the short grass.

Bulkheads for greens set above hazards and bridges were rebuilt. New irrigation was installed. Railroad ties for the bulkhead was replaced. Some shrunken greens and bunkers were rebuilt to original size and shape, restoring lost pin positions at modern maintenance standards. Stack-sodded bunker faces, replaced over the years, were restored.

Though slightly larger, the course’s trademark small greens remain TifEagle Bermuda with winter overseeding with Poa Trivialis and the fairways are still Celebration and 419 Bermuda replaced with Perennial Rye in the winter. For maintenance reasons, the stacked sod on bunker faces were synthetic turf, a change we didn’t notice on the course.Though known for requiring accuracy over power, par-71 Harbour Town plays to almost 7,100 yards with a 75.6 rating and 148 slope from the tips, with distance from other men’s tees measuring around 6,600 and 6,300 yards.

The 17th hole at Harbour Town requires a shot over marsh and sand that offer plays into a strong ocean breeze. Photo by Bill Hornstein/The Sea Pines Resort

So what changes come into play?

Well, a big live oak was uprooted and moved 20 feet or so left to tighten the approach on the right to the par-5 fifth hole. At No. 7, another tree was moved to provide a tunnel feeling on the tee.

The trio of windy closing holes remains truly special, a place to make longtime memories. After satisfying pars at the dogleg left, par-4 16th and the dangerous par-3 17th, I bailed out right away from the beach on my approach at the signature 18th and failed to get up and down.

Harbour Town isn’t a course many of us will play very often. The rack rate in December was around $500, tip not included, for forecaddies, who provide yardages that mitigate the inconvenience of the course’s cart path-only policy. Sea Pines Resort lodging packages can make the golf fees seem more palatable.

Sea Pines’ other two courses, Heron Point and Atlantic Dunes, have been transformed over the years from typical resort-style courses to more challenging, upper-tier layouts.

Elon reopens landmark building as new home for golf programs

Elon University has reopened its Holland House as the home of its men’s and women’s golf programs.

Donors provided $3 million fir the expansion of the university’s golf complex, which includes the W. Cecil Worsley III Golf Training Center.

Holland House has new practice and team spaces, and state-of-the-art technology. The complex expansion project also encompassed renovations to the driving range, including the creation of a 17,000-square-foot tee box, and renovation of the short-game area with reconstruction of the bunkers.

Holland House includes locker rooms, coaches’ offices, quiet spaces for academic study, team engagement spaces and player meeting rooms, strengthening team culture and promoting student growth off the course.

The final phase of the project includes upgrades to the existing W. Cecil Worsley III Golf Training Center, a dedicated indoor practice facility that allows players to train in adverse weather conditions. The center opened in 2009 and includes multiple indoor heated hitting bays, a computerized swing analysis center, indoor putting facility and an outdoor lighted driving range.

Built in 1963, Holland House was the official residence for President Earl Danieley and his family along Haggard Avenue.

Wake grad gives up early Sunday lead at Masters

After a great start Sunday, Cameron Young fell short in the final round of the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club.

The former Wake Forest golfer took an early two-stroke lead, but tied for third, two shots behind Rory McIlroy, who successfully defended the title with 12-under-par 276. Young, who began the final round tied with McIlroy for the lead, made all pars on the back nine.

Young made a 10-footer for par on the final hole for 73 Sunday to join Tyrrell Hatton, Russell Henley and Justin Rose at 278. Arnold Palmer, a four-time champion, remains the only Wake golfer to win the Masters.

Though he never threatened the lead, Scottie Scheffler finished second at 277.

With win at Augusta, Young would join Palmer in elite Wake Forest club

In August, Cameron Young won his first PGA Tour title in the Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield.

In March, he won the Players Championship, the most-prestigious non-major tournament.

And on Sunday, the former Wake Forest golfer will go head-to-head with defending champion Rory McIlroy in the final round of the Masters on the hallowed grounds of Augusta National. If he wins, Young would become only the second Wake Forest golfer to win at Augusta, joining four-time champion Arnold Palmer.

With several contenders, including McIlroy dunking shots into water on Augusta’s famed back nine, Young shot 7-under-par 65 to pull into a tie with McIlroy at 11-under 205.

Young will be with McIlroy in Sunday’s final 2:25 p.m. tee time. They’ll have to hold off some of the world’s best players, including Sam Burns, Shane Lowry, Jason Day, Justin Rose and Scottie Scheffler, who are each within four strokes of the leaders.

Considered almost a lock to win after grabbing a six-stroke lead after the second round at 12-under, McIlroy began paying the price for the errant driving and inconsistent iron play he’s displayed throughout the tournament.

Beginning with nine pars, McIlroy double-bogeyed 11 and bogeyed 12 to bring several players back into contention. He finished the round with 73.

Eight shots behind McIlroy entering the third round, Young birdied Nos. 3, 4, 7 and 8. He took a brief solo lead with a birdie at 14 while McIlroy failed to save par after a pulled tee shot at 12.

Young’s key shot was a holed pitch from 24 yards behind the third green after his tee shot rolled through the back of the green.

Playing much earlier in the day without much network TV coverage, Scheffler also shot 65 Saturday to pull within four strokes.

Burns and Lowry will play together in Sunday’s second-to-last group, before Rose and Day.

McIlroy was the only player Saturday to shoot an over-par score.

Cameron Young has Rory beat on Augusta’s most famous stretch of holes

Rory McIlroy may be dominating the Masters, but a player with Triad connections has been the early Masters of Augusta National’s most famous stretch of holes.

Wake Forest alumnus Cameron Young has played holes 12 through 15 at 7 under par through the first two rounds.

Young, who won the 2025 Wyndham Championship at Sedgefield Country Club and the 2026 Players Championship, is an impressive 4-under through 36 holes. Still, that’s not good enough to challenge defending Masters champion McIlroy, who holds a six-stroke lead at 12-under 132.

Young’s amazing run through the second two holes in Amen Corner as well as the tough par-4 14th and tricky par-5 15, has been unmatched, though McIlroy is 6-under on the four holes.

On Thursday, Young made a tricky, long downhill putt for birdie at the par-3 12th and added birdies on the par-5 13th and 15th.

On Friday, Young made four straight birdies beginning at 12. He rolled in a 12-foot putt at 12, got up and down from just above Rae’s Creek at 13, dropped a 5-footer at 14 and made a 24-footer at 15 after his approach rolled far over the green.

Young’s 67 Friday could easily have been better. He missed a 10-foot birdie putt at 16 and a 7-footer at 18. Young shot 73 Thursday with a bogey on the opening hole and consecutive bogeys at 5, 6 and 7.

Unique new golf facility in Triad approaches opening

A new six-hole Triad course is expected to open in the next few days.

Old Field, the par-3 course built adjacent to Collin Creek Golf Club outside Mocksville, is tentatively planned to open April 10 to private play, an employee at the pro shop serving both courses told TriadGolf.com. The course will later open to the public.

An email message to developer Stephen Edwards was not returned Monday or Tuesday.

Originally hoped to open last fall, Old Field was designed by Colton Craig and Smyers, Craig and Coyne, and constructed by Landscapes Unlimited. The facility includes a large putting course and practice area.

HPU women take fourth at Maryland

Anna Howerton of Winston-Salem rebounded from a tough weekend to shoot 68 Monday and spark High Point to a fourth-place finish in a 16-team field at the Terps Invitational at the University of Maryland Golf Course.

Howerton, who shot 80 in the second round, made five birdies in the final round to finish at 7-over 223 after making only one — plus one eagle — in the first two rounds. Makayla Grubb tied led the Wildcats at 217 to tie for third in the individual race.

Virginia won the team title at 4-under for 54 holes with Kentucky two behind. HPU shot 23-over, two behind third-place Maryland.

HPU finished ahead of Wisconsin, Michigan, Penn State and Notre Dame.

Column: Have we seen the last of Tiger Woods in the Masters?

Tiger Woods won’t be at Augusta this week. As is the case whenever Tiger gets in trouble, he has gone away to some secret place where he can recover and try to let the trouble blow over.

He’ll be back, though few outside his close circle know what’s really behind his impaired driving troubles that endanger not only him but others.

The biggest question should be: Will Tiger be back in future Masters fields?

While Tiger’s future at Augusta isn’t the current media narrative, maybe it should be. Is Tiger’s playing career over? It could be.

Tiger is 50 years old. He’s had seven back surgeries. He has a bum knee. He’s had two DUIs and been found another time asleep at the wheel.

His fourth auto incident requiring police may have been due to a wedge to the teeth after his ex-wife found out about his serial infidelity. No substance abuse involved, but another secret getaway.

On the course, Tiger hasn’t been Tiger since he won the Zozo Championship in 2019, the same year he won the Masters for his 15th and final major championships.

Though Tiger hasn’t been a factor on the course in years, it’s amazing how important his competitive presence seems to be to the golf world, not just to non-golfers and non-golfing media members.

But I don’t think Tiger is coming back this time. Not to regular PGA Tour events, much less major championships. Why would he?

He doesn’t need to return. Does he really want to spend his 50s limping around golf courses, worrying more about making cuts than winning more titles?

Yeah, he could take a cart and play on the Champions Tour. But like Jack Nicklaus before him, Tiger doesn’t need the money and it’s hard to fathom him yukking it up with old-timers in pro-ams and media interviews. Imagine him losing to a career club pro.

Frankly, the Champions Tour is beneath the best golfer of all time. Tiger might make a few appearances to help the circuit or satisfy a sponsor, but he won’t be a regular participant.

For much of two decades, Tiger was the best. Nobody was close. Not even Nicklaus, whose 18 career majors will continue to be the standard.

Tiger was dominant like no one else. He not only made amazing shots, he intimidated opponents into submission.

Nicklaus won 73 PGA Tour events and finished second in 58. In fewer events, Tiger won 82 — 15 majors — and placed second in 31.

Lee Trevino and Gary Player challenged Nicklaus early in his career. Johnny Miller and Tom Watson were foils in the 1970s and early 1980s.

Tiger was rarely second-best. From 1997 through 2008 (with few injury problems), he won 14 of 56 majors. Once he took a lead, it was over. Only once did he give up a final-round lead in a major.

Fortunately for golf, Tiger knows his place in history and his impact on the game. He won’t disappear.

He’ll continue to design courses and pitch equipment and businesses. He’ll be involved in golf-related philanthropy. He’ll probably visit the TV booth during major golf events. He may take Nicklaus’ place as golf’s authority on the state of the game.

We will see him as a Ryder Cup captain, maybe as a longtime member of the PGA Policy Board.

But his days playing in the Masters may be over, though it would be interesting to see if the Masters Committee would dare nudge him not to play.

I can’t see him making the trip to shoot 75 and miss the cut. Considering Tiger’s injuries, his age and his substance problems, his next tee time at Augusta could be hitting a ceremonial opening tee shot with Nicklaus.


Smalley ties for 14th in Texas

The final-day charge Alex Smalley needed to win and earn a spot in the Masters never materialized Sunday at the Valero Texas Open.

The Jamestown golfer, who played at Duke, finished with two rounds of 71 for 10-under-par 278 to finish in a tie for 14th place seven shots behind winner J.J. Spaun.

Smalley entered the day at 8-under with 29 holes to play in the storm-interrupted tournament.