SKIPPING HOLES...



Paige Graham: "1st time under 100!"
--- Elk City Girls team qualifies for state tournament! Kelsie Wilson overcame a terrible front nine of 51 with a 40 on the back nine; Paige Graham broke 100 for the first time ever (99), Katie Hutson made her first birdie ever, and the team broke 400 for the first time ever! Congratulations!

Erin Hutchinson... always smiling!
"Golf is a Game!" Tristen Butler
--- Keegan Hall and Brock Walker continue to lead  Elk's Boys team. Keegan shot 69, Brock 72 in their last tournament in Hefner Lake in Oklahoma City. With Joby Gray's 75 and Logan Gore's 77, the team placed 3rd. As well, all four of the golfers mentioned have been "low man" on the team one time or another which tells us that each one individually has potential. The Regional Tournament is next at Clinton, OK next Monday. This year the competition will be stiff, but coach Garrette Mantle with this year's team, has as good chance as any other school. Let's see if the putts start dropping! (for all results, click on the link on the right)
Katie Hutson: My first birdie!


Rusty & Kelsie Wilson
Don Andrews celebrates 80th birthday with friends Bob Griffith and Harry Payne, and proud brother Ray, then, he gets the cup cakes and the candles, then last hole of their match! (#9), where fittingly as it was, he was the only one in regulation with an approach to 12 feet. Mr. Andrews went on to better his age by one in his round with a 79, and joins an elite group of octogenarians in Elk City who play golf in great style!


New Team Mascot... Brandie!
--- Ann Cowan, Ricky Marr and James Ainsworth take a trip to one of the two courses everyone wants to play... PEBBLE BEACH! Hope they take lots of pictures!!!!!!! The other one, of course, is Augusta National, a course you can't pay enough to play in.
Paige's Gallery!


--- Joe Wynn, Brad Gilbert, Richard Harvey and Brian Carnes will have a "bucket list" item taken care of in about 10 days: SAIL SEVERAL THOUSAND MILES!


Give me a mike!
--- Men's Tuesday Scramble and Thursday Couples have resumed. Both are at 6:00 p.m. in the evening. Results are posted in the grill where you can relax and have a beer afterwards.


--- Thanks to K.E.C.O. for their help during the 2012 "Demo Day". It was very well attended with over 150 golfers taking part in "demoing" clubs from six manufacturers: Ping, Tour Edge ("Exotics"), Callaway, Adams, Cleveland and Titleist. Member Shawn Wilson did interviews and did what he does best, TALK A LOT ON THE RADIO!... and in doing so, he did as enthusiastically as anyone can do. "Demo Day" prices expire April 30....
Don Andrews, our newest octogenarian!


--- Useful fact: to get rid of a slice, you must aim your body farther right, not father left (for left handed golfers, then the opposite holds true). Useless fact:  There were 18 playoffs in the PGA Tour in 2011, a record. Useful fact: to get rid of a slice, your right elbow must always be in a plane below your left elbow. Useless fact: There were 5 holes in one during the 2011 NCAA Women's Championship in Texas, and only 11 in the LPGA Tour season in 23 events! Useful fact: You must always "keep the ball DIRECTLY in front of your body" (in other words, don't move sideways when you swing, stay centered in front of the ball). Useless fact: Andy North, won three tournaments in his career, including two U.S. Opens (1978 & 1985) making him the ONLY player in history with multiple wins who had more majors than regular tour events. 


And that folks, is all for this post!

BOY SCOUTS BENEFIT SCRAMBLE RESULTS...

Winning Team: Joby Gray, Tyler Windsor,
Paul Gunkel & Dustin Gunkel
I wish I was playing!!
The Boy Scouts is all about kids, boys in particular. Period. Teaching boys how to be productive and eventually good adults. Hosting a tournament for these kinds of organizations is always good for everyone, and an honor; and we hope this tournament grows into one of the elite fundraisers and fun events at Elk City Golf & Country Club who was proud to be part of this first Benefit Scramble for the region's Boy Scouts Club.

Kudos to Brad Harguess for his efforts in organizing the first ever Boy Scouts benefit tournament. The day turned into a very difficult golfing day with winds up to 40mph and while the field was small, the camaraderie was great.

All about fun! "Indianapolis Style Shot"
In the end, 44 players in 11 teams went out to battle the windy and chilly day, but  once on the course, the golf took priority and the competition was pretty stiff with a putt here or there making the final difference.


In first place was the team of Joby Gray, Dustin Gunkel, Paul Gunkel and Tyler Windsor with a score of 53, 18 under par!! Next, at 56 came Rusty Wilson, Kelsi Wilson, Brad O'Hara and Ricky Nagle.


In a tie for 3rd place, at 59, you had three teams: (Lacy Property Inc.) Craig Pucket, Marlin Nippert, Hunter Laughlin & Rusty Rickerd; (Cowan Land Services) Ann Cowan, Charlie Kauk, Aaron Kauk & Carter Muncrief and (Rocky Andresen Insurance) Rocky Andresen, Sean Cowan, Jill Cowan & Ryder Cowan. After the tie breaker, the teams ended up in the above order.


The winning teams were paid in gift certificates and the Boy Scouts club made a little extra when the winning team donated their winnings back to the hosts... Thank you!

ELK BOYS WIN OWN TOURNAMENT...

With a score of 296 (12 over par), the Elk City Boys team won their Invitational on April 11. That Berek Dyson was low score on the team, speaks volumes about the depth of this team: Joby Gray, Keegan Hall, Logan Gore and now Berek Dyson, have been the top score in the team in the last few tournaments.

Elk City was followed by Weatherford (304) and Clinton (307) within the bigger schools in the tournament. In the smaller schools group, Hinton won with a score of 325 and was followed by Burns Flat with a score of 335.

The individual scores were as follows: Berek Dyson 72; Joby Gray 73, Logan Gore 75, Keegan Hall 76, Cameron Marcum 77 (he played in the J.V. team) and Brock Walker 79.

Berek's determination and refusal to give up under pressure when things got tough in front of a local crowd, kept his focus and patience, came back with some late birdies to earn a solid score that netted him the top spot on the team, and 4th overall. Congratulations!
Long hitting Keegan Hall had a shaky start with a double bogey (out of bounds on #2), bogey on his first two holes, and although he steadied his game, his game never really "caught fire"; and neither did Joby Gray's, who fought a shaky driver all day.

On the other hand, Logan Gore, had the best start of all, and at one point reached 2 under par, but somehow, the freshman's concentration waned and he finished with a solid, but a likely personally disappointing, 75.

As I write this, I realize that there must be an obvious personal disappointment among some of the team members about their personal performance at home, where they really wanted to come up not only with a win for the team, but a better personal score in front of a local crowd. My advice? Don't worry, golf is just a game, and if you sit down and think that even on a bad day, the team came with a win, things should not look so bad for the rest of the season.

In closing: with Cameron Marcum's solid performance, which follows other good finishes, it looks like coach Mantle will be having a "problem" other coaches would really like to have: "I only have five spots, and 6 worthy players, who will be my top five?" Your choice coach!

This is the fourth win from Elk City in 5 starts....




BUBBA!!!!!

Bubba always cries when he wins. Here with his mom on Sunday
For years, it has been said that "The Masters starts on the Back Nine on Sunday", and by all accounts, the 2012 Masters was just like that.

Starting the back nine, you had Oosthuizen at -8, Bubba Watson and Peter Hanson at -7, Phil Mickelson at -6 and 3 players at -5, including Matt Kuchar, who by #15 reached -9, shortly before Oosthuizen reached -10 on #15 as well. Minutes later, Bubba also reached -10 at #16 with a short putt.

The last 3 holes of Mickelson, Oosthuize, Watson and Kuchar were about as exciting as a tournament can get. Mickelson and Kuchar could not reach -10, while Watson and Oosthuizen parred in and went into a playoff that was eventually won by the American.

Oosthuizen, who made a double eagle early in the round did not have the best shot of the day after all. It was too early in the round to really count it as a deciding shot, like Gene Sarazen's double eagle on #15 that eventually allowed him to win in 1934. The best shot was by Watson, who curved a short iron from 155 yards to about 10 feet at the difficult #10 and second playoff hole.After Oosthuizen missed the same green and chipped well past, Watson only had to make two putts from 10 feet to claim the green jacket...

You could see how nervous Bubba was since his birdie attempts on the 18, first in regulation and then in the first playoff hole. Both were really tentative putts. Perhaps thinking the one that slipped away to Martin Kaymer a couple of years back in the PGA Championship. However, it was Oosthuizen  who opened the door and thank God for Bubba, he had two putts to win from a very short distance.

CONGRATULATIONS!!!!

IF YOU DID NOT SEE THE 2012 MASTERS, YOU MISSED A GREAT TOURNAMENT!

ELK CITY H.S. GIRLS INVITATIONAL

Due to a mix-up in communication, the score sheets were pulled out before we could copy the results. We will publish the results of the Elk City Girls Invitational as soon as we get a printout from the coaches. Here are some pictures of the girls that represented us along with their coach and their friend who was also taking pictures for the school...














THE MASTERS...

You always know that the golf season starts when The Masters, the first major of the year, is played. Not that it is the first tournament of the year, but you seem to think that you know who is hot and who isn’t, not to mention that this time, you are really pulling for your favorites…. If they are lucky enough to be in the field.

Now, though there are rules on how you qualify to play, the Masters has been and will always be an invitational tournament, and remains –and will remain-, unique among all championships.

When Bobby Jones retired in 1930 after winning the “Grand Slam” of his era (U.S. and British Opens and U.S. and British Amateur Championships), he and millionaire Clifford Roberts sought to buy some property where to build a golf course and start an exclusive club where the members would love golf. After all, Jones had won 13 major championships and was very famous. Some would argue that he was more famous than Tiger Woods is because it was a time where communications were not as good as now.

They bought the land, and Jones suggested Alllister McKenzie as architect. Jones had met McKenzie in 1929 after losing an early match in the 1929 U.S. Amateur in Pebble Beach, after which he was invited to play Cypress Point G.C., which he loved and wanted to meet the architect… McKenzie readily accepted and with Jones, designed Augusta National Golf Club. The course was finished in 1931, opened in 1932 and Roberts and Jones, in order to promote the club in a small city not so close to a metropolitan area, decided to have a golf tournament that they called “Augusta National Invitational”. 

The Masters was first played in 1934, and all of the invited players were masters of the game of their time, either amateurs or professionals that had competed against Bobby Jones for 15 years. There was a purse for the professionals, and accommodations for the amateurs. After Horton Smith (32 professional wins, 2 majors) won the first Augusta National Invitational, Roberts wanted a better known name for the event so they could sell tickets and not cost the club a penny. Considering that the field included many of the best golfers of the day, he wanted to name it The Masters Championship, but Jones would have none of it. But fate has its way sometimes.

In 1935, Craig Wood (25 professional wins, 2 majors) was in the clubhouse with a seemingly insurmountable lead of three shots at six under par, 282. Only one player was on the course that could catch him, but the last few holes were playing very tough. However, fate struck and Gene Sarazen (42 professional wins, 7 majors including all four majors at least once), in front of only a few players and a few people in the gallery, holed out a 4 wood second shot in the par 5, #15 hole for a double eagle (it is called “the shot heard around the world”), made pars coming in, tied Craig Wood and bested him in the 18 hole playoff the next day.

Between the “shot heard around the world” and Clifford Roberts, the press “renamed” the tournament, Jones accepted the turn of fate, and as of 1936, it was known as The Masters. Here are some other facts unique to The Masters:
  • Has the smallest field of all majors (96 this year) opposed to at least 152 in the other three.
  • DOES NOT HAVE an “alternates list”.
  • Is the only major by “invitation only”(*).
  • Only major who hosts its amateurs at the club’s cabins where they stay and dine at the expense of the hosts.
  • Only tournament and major that has official honorary starters; this year, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player will hit the opening tee shots to start the tournament.
  • As a policy, The Masters doesn't start anyone on #10 but has done it in bad weather.
  • The Masters is the only one of the majors who has a “champions dinner” hosted by the defending champion (Tuesday before the tournament).
  • The Masters is the only major that invites all living champions to enter the tournament (though now discourages, but doesn't prohibit, those older ones not to play because of the length of the course).
  • It is played in the same course every year.
  • The Club has a “Champions Locker Room”.
  • It is the only major with a “mini tournament” as part of the week, “The Par-3 Tournament” (played on Wednesday)
  • It never announces the purse in advance.
  • You can buy a Pimento Cheese sandwich for only $2.00, and a Cokes for $1.00.
  • It is not organized by a golf organization (PGA Championship is organized by the PGA of America, U.S. Open is hosted by the United States Golf Association and The Open (British Open) is hosted by the Royal and Ancient Golf Club (Association) of Scotland).
  • If you ever want to play Augusta National, you better have lots of cash, prove that you know the rules of golf and its traditions, and be invited to become a member… or BE VERY, VERY GOOD AT PLAYING GOLF SO YOU CAN QUALIFY FOR AN INVITATION. 

NEWS MAKERS LIST OF 2012 HAS IT'S FIRST INDUCTEES... ALL FROM ELK CITY'S HIGH SCHOOL!

Keegan Hall. Shot 67 and tied for
medalist honors on 3/30/2012
Last year we started a tradition of recognizing those who "make our local golf news" during the year, whether it be just a special shot, like a hole in one, or a tournament win or news of national importance to our local importance. This year will not be different.

Two weeks ago, Joby Gray started the school's golf season and his, by scoring 69-69 in the school's first tournament. He won by five shots in a 6A school tournament. That was newsworthy. The team placed second in that event.

Coach Garrette Mantle talking
strategy with one of his players
The second individual to be recognized as "Newsmaker" of 2012 is Keegan Hall, who shot a 67 (-4) in the Weatheford High School Invitational. The talented and long hitting Keegan started slow by three-putting his first two holes, then he literally "lit the course up" with an eagle and five more birdies AND NEVER LOOKED BACK. Keegan tied for medalist honors and beat fellow teammate Joby Gray (67) by one shot...

But the story gets better yet... by adding Brock Walker's score of 72 and Logan Gore's score of 73, Elk City High School ended up with a total score of 280, 4 under par, which won the tournament by 13 shots.! Our other two players did not play bad either: Cameron Marcum, who played as an individual, shot 76; while Berek Dyson, who is still trying hard to regain his sharp game, shot a 78 (we have no doubt that Berek will start contending again!)
On the girls team, no one works
harder than Kelsie Wilson. 

The total of 280 (-4) is one of the lowest in a long while, at least in the last 15-20 years since a previous generation of great Elk City high school players represented our city in the same year, a generation that included Dustin Gunkel, Cory Smith and brother Russ Smith, all of whom played golf in college, with the Smith brothers having earned "All American" status... now, since all of them still live in Elk City, should we organize a "Match of Generations"? I bet it would be interesting in a low ball format!

And what about the girls team? They are all practicing hard, however, no one has taken the game as seriously, nor practices as much as the quiet, soft spoken Kelsi Wilson, who is seen practicing as much as anyone else. A testament to her hard work is simply her improvement, as her scores have come down at least 10 strokes from this time last year. Kelsi who is now scoring consistently in the 80's is the schools best female golfer, and no doubt she will soon break the barrier every golfer dreams of: score in the 70's. Keep up the hard work!