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Lexington reopens with larger Champion greens

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Lexington Golf Club reopened on July 19 with new Champion Bermuda greens after a renovation project that lasted only seven weeks.

The approximately $200,000 project also included the removal of hundreds of trees for maintenance and playability purposes.

Golf pro Dylan Dawson said the greens, which had gotten 20% smaller over the past two decades as Bermuda encroached on the bent grass, were restored to previous size with Zoysia planted on the borders as protection.

Work on the course, owned and operated by the City of Lexington, was performed by city employees. Karl Trost is the course superintendent.

Dawson said the project began by killing the bent grass. Sprigs from Texas were quickly brought in by climate-controlled trucks for the 105,000 square feet of greens. Providers helped the course staff with planting. Dawson said favorable weather conditions may have speeded up growing time by a few weeks.

Dawson said the Champion putting surfaces (pictured above before the project) reduce maintenance requirements. An employee no longer spends as many as 12 hours per day monitoring and hand-watering greens during summer months. Plus, the Bermuda dramatically reduces the amount of ball marks that must be repaired.

Top dressing has been applied since the reopening to make the greens more receptive to approaches – new Bermuda greens are often firmer than their predecessors, though they gradually become softer.

“With some top dressing and some other practices, we able to get the greens able to be more receptive to allow golfers to hold shots,” Dawson said.

The Champion greens can be cut shorter during the summer, allowing putts to roll faster.

“The speed will come some over time,” Dawson said. “They are faster now they would be with bent.”

Designed by former Carolinas PGA president Dugan Aycock, the layout opened in 1938. The project was the most extensive at the course since 2004.

The hilly, par-71 layout, which measures 6,116 yards from the back tees, is a popular destination, especially for players in Davidson, Randolph and Rowan counties.

The rack rate for greens fees and cart is only $30 during the morning and early afternoon on weekdays. Walking is just $16. The highest rates on weekends are $38 with cart. Pace of play is typically less than four hours.

Dawson said customers were eager to play after the layoff. On the Friday morning the course reopened, players were lined up early, waiting at the pro shop door.

The golf pro said 500 total rounds – much higher than typical — were played during the first three days of the reopening.

Lonnie Poole reigns as capital city’s premier public course

N.C. State’s Lonnie Poole Golf Course may be the toughest place to get a tee time in the Raleigh area. And there are at least three major reasons why.

First, there’s the layout, a signature product of the Arnold Palmer Design Co., which offers a broad-shouldered challenge, with pristine fairways winding over hills and through forest to large, undulating bent grass greens, often protected by huge bunkers and wild, native grasses.

Despite the course’s popularity, the tees, fairways, and greens are meticulously groomed, with the maintenance supervised by the university’s turfgrass management staff and students.

Second, there’s the overall facilities, which include a spacious, public practice areas, and a modern, multi-tier clubhouse with inside dining or outdoor seating with views of the downtown Raleigh skyline at The Terrace restaurant, a large pro shop and meeting rooms as well as a first-floor center for instruction and club fitting.

Third, there’s yes, location, location, location. The course is just a sand wedge off Interstate 40, only a few-minute drive from downtown Raleigh on N.C. State’s Centennial Campus.

In the capital city, Lonnie Poole is clearly the No. 1 public option. Interestingly, Lonnie Poole’s nearest rivals in the market’s elite public category are university courses at Duke and UNC.

“No doubt about it,” said Chip Watson, the PGA general manager. “There’s really not another golf course in that echelon.”

Watson said Lonnie Poole plays about 44,000 rounds per year, a figure it limits to prevent excess wear and tear. The course offers annual play packages, but no traditional memberships. Daily greens fees and cart for the public are $75 on Monday through Thursday and $100 on weekends. Walking is allowed, though a few long treks through woods connect some of the holes.

Stay-and-play packages are available through the university’s StateView Hotel, next to the Alumni Center, just across a street from the course.

The course is open seven days a week, though closed for maintenance on Tuesday until 11 a.m.

Most of the fairways are generously open — some deceptively wide — with manageable-length rough extending to the trees. Large white sand bunkers, sometimes framed by long native grasses, protect the fairways and greens, though bailout opportunities exist for most approaches.

Since the course’s opening in 2009, Watson said some original bunkering — including bunker islands with high grass— has been eliminated, and new forward tees were added to make the course more playable for beginners and high-handicappers.

“At first, the reputation was the course was way too hard,” Watson said. “The first 3-4 years, we worked really hard on that.”

Still the home of the Wolfpack golf teams has plenty of teeth, measuring 7,358 yards at par-72 from the back tees, with five other tee options ranging from 4,711 to 6,916 yards. A former host of NCAA Regionals, Lonnie Poole offers stout 74.6 rating and 142 slope from the tips that dips to 68.8 and 126 from the fourth set or Wolfpack tees that measure 6,127 yards.

If the five sets of tees aren’t enough, the scorecard supplies two tee combinations. Several holes require tee shots over ravines to uphill landing areas, reducing the roll of drives.

“We’d love to get some bigger events out here,” Watson said.

Lonnie Poole is the nation’s only university course designed by the Palmer’s company. The King visited a half-dozen times or so during design and construction. N.C. State graduates Erik Larsen and Brandon Johnson, working for Palmer, were the primary architects on site.

In addition to a new public practice area and putting green, scheduled to open in the fall, the course may continue to evolve. An I-40 exit, planned by NCDOT for the Centennial Campus when the course was built, has been scrapped. So, the 235-yard par-3 No. 2 hole, designed to fit with the exit, could be redesigned to improve the routing pattern sometime in the future, according to Watson.

From the plateau with the No. 10 green and 11th tee, players are greeted with a view of the downtown skyline, including the capital building.

The back nine, which covers on somewhat higher ground, plays from 100 to 200 yards longer than the front, and regulars believe it’s as much as three strokes more difficult. In fact, Watson said the toughest holes on the course during N.C. State and Carolinas Golf Association tournaments have been No. 11, a 665-yard par-5; No. 12, a 472-yard par-4; and No. 15, a 549-yard par-5.

But for mid-handicappers, the biggest challenge may come at 18, a 441-yard (from the third set of 6,498-yard tees) par-4 featuring a lake on the right off the tee, then a long approach over waste, fescue and sand to a green with a severe drop-off to the right and only a small bailout to the left that leaves a perilous downhill pitch.

Lonnie Poole is built on N.C. State land, but the course has a long-term lease. Carolinas Golf Group of Raleigh, which manages the facility, also manages six other facilities, including High Point Country Club, Starmount Forest Country Club and Pennrose Park Country Club in the Triad. Oak Valley, Salem Glen, Asheboro Country Club and Sapona were part of CGG’s past development and management portfolios.

Debby looms as potential for flood of headaches for Wyndham Championship

With the Olympics providing a week off for all but an elite segment of the PGA Tour, this week’s Wyndham Championship is shaping up to have its best list of names in years coming to Sedgefield Country Club.

But there’s one name the Tour and Wyndham organizers don’t want to attend — Tropical Storm Debby.

Yet Debby (soon expected to gain the Hurricane monicker) is forecasted to make its presence felt, perhaps dumping several inches of rain on the course and possibly, wreaking havoc on the tournament.

Debby is expected to have terrible timing for the Wyndham. Rain is forecast to arrive Tuesday and remain through Sunday’s scheduled final round. Weather.com forecasts one-quarter inch Wednesday, then a half-inch on both Thursday and Friday — the first two tournament rounds — with winds of 12-14 mph.

So if that forecast holds true, accumulated water shouldn’t be a problem. But what if the storm stalls over the area? Local meteorologists have pointed out that slow-moving tropical storms have been known to drop more than 10 inches of rain on the Triad.

Another potential issue is lightning, which would suspend play while in the area.

Though elite stars such as PGA Tour Olympians such as Scottie Scheffler, Xavier Schauffele, Ludvig Aberg and Rory McIlroy won’t be here, the field will include stars such as Jordan Spieth and Justin Rose; popular contenders Shane Lowry and Will Zalatoris; and  emerging players Akshay Bhatia and Robert MacIntrye.

Sungjae Im is the top player in the FedEx standings at No. 9, with 14 of the top 40 expected.

East Bend’s Fobes wins another CGA Women’s Match Play at Mill Creek

Mallory Fobes, who recently concluded her collegiate career at UNC Wilmington, won the CGA Women’s Match Play on Aug. 3 at Mill Creek Golf Club.

Fobes beat Grace Holcomb of Wilmington 4 and 3 in the championship match. Fobes, who also won the tournament in 2021, won all six of her matches at Mill Creek.

In the CGA Men’s Match Play at Mill Creek, Holt Allison of Conover beat Colin Dutton of Foxfire, 4 and 2.

Olympic provides star power to Wyndham Championship

Thanks to the Olympics, the upcoming Wyndham Championship is shaping up to have the strongest field in several years.

Several of the world’s best players, idle this week due to the limited-field Olympic competition in Paris, have committed to play at Sedgefield Country Club in the Aug. 8-11 Wyndham.

According to tournament officials, the list of Wyndham commitments — players still have until this Friday afternoon until the deadline — includes four of the top 20 players in the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup standings. Those include No. 9 Sungjae Im, No. 10 Shane Lowry, No. 15 Akshay Bhatia, and No. 17 Robert MacIntyre. Lowry and MacIntrye are coming off impressive showings at the British Open.

Other notable commits include 2023 British Open champion Brian Harman and Wake Forest product Cameron Young, who finished second in the 2022 PGA Championship and third in the 20923 British Open. Justin Rose, the 2013 U.S. Open champion, the third-round leader and eventual co-runner-up at the recent British Open. Former Wake standout Will Zalatoris, whose short pro career includes runner-up finishes at the U.S. Open, Masters, PGA Championship, has also committed.

Billy Horschel and Kevin Kisner are among other early commitments as are several past Wyndham winners, including defending champion Lucas Glover.

The PGA Tour and DP World Tour took this week off. The Olympics competition includes four U.S. players and no more than two each from other countries.

In recent years, nearly all of the game’s top players have skipped the Wyndham to rest and prepare for the lucrative FedEx Cup Playoffs, which begins this year on Aug. 15. The Wyndham’s purse of $7.9 million is one of the smallest on the PGA Tour. The FedEx Cup winner earns $25 million from a bonus pool of more than $100 million.

But skipping this year’s Wyndham would mean two weeks off prior to the playoffs.

As of Wednesday, U.S. Olympians Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele, Collin Morikawa and Wyndham Clark, as well as Ludvig Aberg, Rory McIlroy and other marquee players on the PGA Tour such as Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas and Patrick Cantlay had yet to commit to play at Sedgefield.

For much of the past two decades, the Wyndham was known as a last chance for players to finish in the top 125 on the FedEx Cup points list and secure full status on the next year’s tour. Last year, the tournament also became a last chance to finish in the top 70 and qualify for the FedEx playoffs.

Players between No. 30 and No. 50 also have incentive to play at Sedgefield because only the top 50 after the first playoff tournament, the St. Jude Championship advance to the BMW Championship, and only the top remaining 30 make it to final weekend at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta.

Lincoln Newton earns family bragging rights with Triad Amateur triumph

Lincoln Newton claimed bragging rights over three family members and the rest of the field while winning the Triad Amateur on Sunday afternoon at High Point Country Club’s Willow Creek Course.

Newton, a rising junior at Oak Grove High who turned 17 this summer, shot 5-under-par 67 in the final round to post a 7-under-par 137 total for 36 holes, three shots better than fellow HPCC member Sean Finan, who recently completed his sophomore season at Lenoir-Rhyne College. Tripp Shelton of Bermuda Run was third at 143.

By sinking an 8-foot putt on the final hole, Newton capped the round with three consecutive birdies — the first coming after sticking an approach within 2 feet of the cup at the par-3 16th. He had seven birdies and two bogeys while leading throughout most of the day. Trevor Mitchell of Oak Ridge, the co-leader with Newton after the first round, stumbled to 75 Sunday.

Newton won in his first attempt at the Triad Amateur, held the past 11 years at Willow Creek. His gallery on the final holes included his parents and other extended family members, including his aunt, former UNC golfer and Jamestown Park pro Marcy Newton. At the conclusion of the tournament, family members posed in several combinations with Lincoln and the trophy,

“It was pretty nice to win this,” said Newton. “My ball striking was on point the whole week, really.”

The Newton family put on an impressive showing. The winner’s father, Scott, and older brother, Grady, tied for fourth with Trevor Blevins of Kernersville at 144. Ernie Newton, the winner’s grandfather, tied for sixth in the Senior division at 151.

Lincoln Newton said he typically shoots around “even-par” at Willow Creek. Despite earning bragging rights, he refused to claim the top spot in his family. Who’s the top Newton golfer?

“It can be any of us,” he said.

Dale Fuller of Durham successfully defended his title in the Senior division, adding 68 to a 67 Saturday to finish at 135. Harrison Rutter of Winston-Salem was second at 139.

The tees were listed at more than 7,000 yards for the open division, but some were moved up due to wet conditions caused by heavy rains in the past week. The 64-player field included 17 Seniors. HPCC director of golf Jim Brotherton said he would like to see the tournament grow to 96 players.

With the victory, Lincoln Newton continued a winning streak. He won the TYGA High Point Junior on July 18 at Oak Hollow. The next day, he teamed with grandfather Ernie to win the Carolinas Golf Association Father-Son at Longleaf in Southern Pines.

“This is a little bit bigger than that,” he said comparing the Triad Amateur to the TYGA victory.

This week, Newton will play at the Dogwood State Junior Boys Championship at Cedar Rock Country Club in Lenoir.

Sunday’s highlights included an ace by Jake Rutter of Charlotte with a 7-iron on the 179-yard No. 3 hole. Rutter tied for 11th at 147.

Pate advances to quarterfinals at Western Amateur

Macy Pate (pictured) advanced to the quarterfinals of match play at the Women’s Western Amateur at Onwentsia Club in Lake Forest, Illinois, with Thursday victories over Sydney Roberts of Chesnee, South Carolina, and Kaitlyn Schroeder of Jacksonville, Florida.

Pate, who lives in Winston-Salem and plays for Wake Forest, beat Roberts, a Clemson golfer, 2 and 1 in the first round. Pate beat Kaitlyn Schroeder, who is set to begin her second season at Alabama, 5 and 3.

The No. 6 seed after a 36-hole, stroke play qualifier, Pate will play Alice Hodge of Larchmont, New York, in Friday morning’s quarterfinals. Hodge, who recently completed her career at Florida State, advanced with a 1-up victory over Clemson’s Annabelle Pancake in the second round.

The Western is the fourth of five tournaments in the Elite Amateur Series for college golfers. Pate was the runner-up in the last Elite event, the North and South Amateur at Pinehurst Resort.

In other matches Thursday, Catie Craig of Western Kentucky, who beat Pate at Pinehurst, lost in the first round. Medalist Farah O’Keefe of Texas won her first two matches. Clemson’s Isabella Rawl is among the quarterfinalists.

Macy Pate advances to match play at Western Amateur

Macy Pate (pictured) of Winston-Salem, a rising sophomore at Wake Forest, coasted into match play competition with a 1-over-par 73 Wednesday in the second round of stroke play at the Women’s Western Amateur at Onwentsia Club in Lake Forest, Illinois.

Pate, who shot 68 Tuesday, tied for fifth as the top 32 players advanced to match play. University of Texas freshman Farah O’Keefe, who Pate beat in the deciding match in the championship of the Stephens Cup, was the medalist at 8-under 136.

The No. 2 seed will be Catie Craig of Western Kentucky, who beat Pate in the championship match at last month’s North and South Amateur at Pinehurst No. 2.

Morgan Ketchum of Winston-Salem, who plays at Virginia Tech, and Kayla Smith of Burlington, a recent University of North Carolina graduate, missed the cut by one stroke with 147.

Lewisville golfer rallies to win North and South Girls’ title

Hallie Wilson of Lewisville birdied the 18th hole Wednesday to shoot 5-under-par 67 at Pinehurst No. 6 to win the North and South Junior Girls’ championship.

Wilson, who shot 7-under 209 for the 54-hole tournament, rallied from a six-shot deficit entering the final round to beat Zoe Cusack of Potomac, Maryland, by one stroke. Wilson opened with 76 at Pinehurst No. 2 then fired 66 and 67 at No. 6.

Cusack shot 74 Wednesday after starting with an impressive 68 at No. 2 and following with another 68. Macie Rasmussen of Chesapeake, Virginia, was third at 216 in the 80-player tournament.

Wilson trailed by one stroke on the 17th tee, but pulled even when Cusack bogeyed the hole. Cusack parred the final hole.

Wilson claimed the CGA North Carolina Junior Girls’ Championship and an exemption into the U.S. Junior Girls’ Championship (photo above) with three rounds of 73 the previous week at Brook Valley Country Club in Greenville. Ellen Yu of Greensboro tied for sixth at 220.

The girls played No. 2 at 5,988 yards and No. 6 at 6,123.

Trey Marrion of Chesapeake, Va., won the North and South Boys’ title with 9-under 205, five shots better Bryson Hughes of Saint Johns, Florida, in the 89-player bracket. Will Gordon of Hot Springs, Arkansas, was third at 213. T

The boys played No. 2 at 6,818 and No. 7 at 6,942 in the last two rounds.

The North and South amateur events conclude with men’s and women’s seniors tournaments on Aug. 12-14

Bradshaw wins exciting CPGA Junior duel at Colonial Country Club in playoff

Sage Bradshaw of Bluffton, South Carolina, birdied the final hole to force a playoff and went on to win The Carolinas PGA Junior Boys’ championship Tuesday at Colonial Country Club.

Bradshaw and John Santospago of Charlotte each shot 7-under-par 64 in the final round after opening with 67 to finish at 11-under 131 in the 36-hole event. Both earned spots in the PGA National Junior Championship later this summer at Congressional Country Club in Bethesda, Maryland.

Bradshaw and Santospago each made eagles in the final round. Bradshaw eagled the par-4 opening hole. Santospago eagled the par-5 ninth to pull within one stroke at the turn. Santospago made birdies at 12, 13 and 14, taking a one-shot lead.

Both qualifiers passed four players in advancing to the playoff. Will Cherry of Wilmington, who shot 65 Tuesday, and Preston Hate of Raleigh tied for third at 133. Griffin Huckabee of Winston-Salem shot 67 Tuesday and was the Triad’s top finisher in a tie for eighth at 140.