Valspar Championship Friday tee times, TV and streaming info

Valspar Championship Friday tee times, TV and streaming info

Valspar Championship Friday tee times, TV and streaming info https://ift.tt/3xuffq1

The PGA Tour is back in the Sunshine State this week.

Innisbrook Resort’s Copperhead course in Palm Harbor, Florida, plays host once again for the 2021 Valspar Championship after the 2020 tournament was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Three of the top-seven players in the Golfweek/Sagarin ranking are in the field, as well as two-time defending champion Paul Casey. A lot will be said for Copperhead’s Snake Pit, holes 16-18, but each of the holes on the 7,340-yard layout can be a killer.

Keegan Bradley leads by two after his first-round 64. Justin Thomas, who turned 28 on Thursday, is looking for his putter to heat up.

From tee times to TV and streaming info, here’s everything you need to know for the first round of the 2021 Valspar Championship.

Valspar Championship tee times

1st tee

Tee Time Players
6:55 a.m. Camilo Villegas, Alex Noren, Cameron Davis
7:06 a.m. Charl Schwartzel, Talor Gooch, Cameron Percy
7:17 a.m. Kyle Stanley, Adam Schenk, Chase Seiffert
7:28 a.m. Andrew Landry, Troy Merritt, Rhein Gibson
7:39 a.m. Justin Rose, Jimmy Walker, Danny Willett
7:50 a.m. Brian Gay, Ian Poulter, Ted Potter, Jr.
8:01 a.m. Ryan Palmer, D.A. Points, Zach Johnson
8:12 a.m. Michael Kim, Satoshi Kodaira, Patton Kizzire
8:23 a.m. Rafa Cabrera Bello, Denny McCarthy, Erik van Rooyen
8:34 a.m. J.J. Spaun, Wyndham Clark, Scott Harrington
8:45 a.m. Danny Lee, Rory Sabbatini, Luke List
8:56 a.m. Joseph Bramlett, Sebastian Cappelen, Rod Perry
9:07 a.m. Roger Sloan, Nelson Ledesma, Rasmus Hojgaard
12:05 p.m. Jhonattan Vegas, K.J. Choi, Kelly Kraft
12:16 p.m. David Hearn, Xinjun Zhang, Matthew NeSmith
12:27 p.m. Aaron Baddeley, Hunter Mahan, Patrick Rodgers
12:38 p.m. Tyler Duncan, Grayson Murray, Kevin Stadler
12:49 p.m. Corey Conners, J.B. Holmes, Bubba Watson
1 p.m. Jason Kokrak, Gary Woodland, Paul Casey
1:11 p.m. Patrick Reed, Kiradech Aphibarnrat, Phil Mickelson
1:22 p.m. Hudson Swafford, Chez Reavie, Kevin Kisner
1:33 p.m. Kevin Na, Sung Kang, Scott Piercy
1:44 p.m. Brian Stuard, Tim Wilkinson, Sam Burns
1:55 p.m. Russell Henley, Nick Watney, Beau Hossler
2:06 p.m. Rob Oppenheim, Vincent Whaley, John Augenstein
2:17 p.m. Brandon Hagy, Kris Ventura, Sam Horsfield

10th tee

Tee Time Players
6:55 a.m. Vaughn Taylor, Cameron Tringale, Bronson Burgoon
7:06 a.m. Chesson Hadley, Lucas Glover, D.J. Trahan
7:17 a.m. Scott Stallings, Scott Brown, Louis Oosthuizen
7:28 a.m. Branden Grace, Graeme McDowell, Charles Howell III
7:39 a.m. J.T. Poston, Brandt Snedeker, Russell Knox
7:50 a.m. Max Homa, Viktor Hovland, Sungjae Im
8:01 a.m. Justin Thomas, Dustin Johnson, Joaquin Niemann
8:12 a.m. Richy Werenski, Adam Long, Luke Donald
8:23 a.m. Scottie Scheffler, Mark Hubbard, Bo Hoag
8:34 a.m. Tom Hoge, Doc Redman, Tom Lewis
8:45 a.m. Peter Malnati, Peter Uihlein, Henrik Norlander
8:56 a.m. Rafael Campos, Michael Gligic, Chase Koepka
9:07 a.m. Kramer Hickok, Ryan Brehm, Jordan Hahn
12:05 p.m. Byeong Hun An, Abraham Ancer, Jamie Lovemark
12:16 p.m. James Hahn, Emiliano Grillo, John Huh
12:27 p.m. Ryan Moore, Chris Kirk, Bo Van Pelt
12:38 p.m. Jim Herman, Andrew Putnam, Kevin Streelman
12:49 p.m. Martin Laird, Kevin Tway, Ryan Armour
1 p.m. Keith Mitchell, Keegan Bradley, Wesley Bryan
1:11 p.m. Martin Trainer, Henrik Stenson, William McGirt
1:22 p.m. Nick Taylor, Pat Perez, Mackenzie Hughes
1:33 p.m. Lanto Griffin, Austin Cook, Jason Dufner
1:44 p.m. Sean O’Hair, Kyoung-Hoon Lee, Robby Shelton
1:55 p.m. Jonas Blixt, Charley Hoffman, Daniel Chopra
2:06 p.m. Adam Hadwin, Sam Ryder, Doug Ghim
2:17 p.m. Hank Lebioda, Brad Adamonis, Michael Visacki
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The best part of Keegan Bradley's day came after carding 64 in opening round at Valspar Championship

The best part of Keegan Bradley's day came after carding 64 in opening round at Valspar Championship

The best part of Keegan Bradley's day came after carding 64 in opening round at Valspar Championship https://ift.tt/3xuffq1

PALM HARBOR, Fla. — Keegan Bradley just equaled his finest round of golf in 18 months during what he called “an all-around great day” that was “basically zero stress.”

And the best part of his Thursday had yet to come.

After a 7-under 64 that gave the Jupiter resident a two-shot lead after one round at the Valspar Championship, Bradley was back to the real life … being a husband and a dad.

Keegan and his wife, Jillian, crossed the state along with sons, Logan, 3, and Cooper, 3 months, to enjoy what has started out to be a nice relaxing week on the Gulf Coast. Now, if the rest of the week goes the way it started and the only stress Keegan faces is making sure Logan eats his vegetables and Cooper gets his naps, this definitely will be a memorable family vacation.

“I’ll go back today and, doesn’t matter what I shoot, I got to go be a dad and play baseball and play golf in the backyard, which I look forward to,” said Bradley, who called his family his “good luck charm.”

ValsparCheck the yardage book | Leaderboard | Photos

Shooting a bogey free round has to make Dad Time a bit sweeter. Especially on a Copperhead Course that the two-time defending champion, Paul Casey, said is “as good and as tough as it’s ever been.”

Bradley, the nephew of LPGA Hall of Famer Pat Bradley, burst on the PGA Tour scene early, winning twice as a rookie in 2011, including the PGA Championship. That was a thrill only equaled by the Vermont native receiving a text that day from one of his sports heroes, Tom Brady, who, Keegan says, would be part of his dream foursome along with his dad and Ben Hogan. That Wannamaker Trophy then sat on the floor in his Jupiter home topped by a Red Sox cap.

Although Bradley, 34, admits that major title “changed my life forever,” it also ratcheted up the spotlight and expectations. After being named PGA Tour rookie of the year, Keegan won again in 2012 (WGC-Bridgestone Invitational) and cracked the top 10 of the World Golf Ranking (No. 10) in 2013.

That victory at the WCG event was 229 starts ago. Since then, Bradley has one win (2018 BMW Championship, with his family on site) and his world ranking has dropped to 135.

Few have had their careers altered over a rule change as much as Bradley. In 2016, the practice of anchoring a putter was banned. Bradley, who used a belly putter, was the first golfer to win a major using an anchored putter. The putter was part of a package that also earned Bradley spots in the Ryder Cup and President’s Cup teams.

Bradley was outspoken about not being able to use something he had adopted, not as a crutch, but as part of his game.

And as Bradley’s putting suffered, so too did his game. In 26 events in 2016, he had two top 10s (the fewest of his career) and missed a career-high 11 cuts. Bradley’s game has ebbed and flowed in the last five years, but something has clicked the last three months, and Bradley knows exactly what it is.

“When you putt poorly, golf isn’t that much fun,” Bradley said. “But I’ve been putting very well since Phoenix.”

Since missing back-to-back cuts in January, Bradley has played in seven tournaments, starting with the Phoenix Open in early February, and finished in the top 30 six times. He’s coming off a T-4 at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans and had a T-10 at the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

The key to Bradley’s quick start Thursday was simple. Of his seven birdies, three were accomplished by sinking putts of more than 17 feet. He dropped consecutive putts of at least 30 feet on the 14th and 15th holes.

Bradley shot a 30 on the back nine.

“The putter’s been a lot better,” he said. “After I won, putting went into a pretty big dip and I had to kind of work my way out of it again. I feel like I’m on the other side of that right now.”

Bradley credits a lot of work with his coach, Darren May, and caddie, Scotty Vail, for rediscovering his putting stroke.

“I got a lot of good things going my way right now,” he said. “A really fun day.”

On and off the course.

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Justin Thomas wishing his putter warms up on his 28th birthday at Valspar Championship

Justin Thomas wishing his putter warms up on his 28th birthday at Valspar Championship

Justin Thomas wishing his putter warms up on his 28th birthday at Valspar Championship https://ift.tt/3xuffq1

PALM HARBOR, Fla. – On his 28th birthday, Justin Thomas couldn’t wish the ball in the hole in the first round of the Valspar Championship.

Thomas ranked No. 146 in the 156-man field in Strokes Gained: Putting, losing more than 2 ½  strokes to the field with the short stick. And that’s after holing a 13-foot birdie putt at the last hole. That’s the bad news.

The good news? That birdie putt completed a round of 2-under 69 for Thomas at Innisbrook Resort’s Copperhead Course and five strokes behind leader Keegan Bradley after the opening round, and two better than his fellow playing competitor, World No. 1 Dustin Johnson, who headed straight to the range after an indifferent round.

Best of all for Thomas? The World No. 2 wasn’t overly concerned with his struggles on the greens.

ValsparCheck the yardage book | Leaderboard | Photos

“Hit a lot of quality putts that just didn’t go in. The only really truly bad putt I hit today was 14. I just hit it too hard. I was playing break for softer speed and I rammed it. But I hit a lot of good putts I feel like that could and should have gone in and hit a lot of quality golf shots,” he said. “I know I easily could have shot 4-, 5-, 6-, 7-shots better, 2-under is fine after the first day.”

Thomas got off to a flying start with a 12-foot eagle at the first hole and stuffed his approach from 186 yards to inside 2 feet at the second. He made his first bogey of the day at the sixth, but got it back by drilling a 5-iron inside a foot at the par-3 eighth hole.

“Just tried to get a good flight on it and hold it up against the right-to-left wind and that was probably the best shot I hit today,” Thomas said.

But on the back nine, the putter let him down with bogeys at the two par 3s, Nos. 13 and 15, and he missed from inside 3 feet for birdie at 14. Despite the birdie at the last, Thomas headed straight to the putting green to work on his stroke with his father, caddie, and putting coach John Graham.

The birthday dinner celebration wouldn’t be put on hold for long, he said.

“I just want to go see a couple go in and see if there’s anything that maybe fundamentally or anything that might be wrong to why I was missing them, but, no, I mean, I hit plenty of good putts out there,” he said.

When he blows out the candle on his birthday cake, Thomas should wish for a better putting day on Friday when he’ll have the advantage of putting on fresh greens in the morning.

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Photos: Valspar Championship, Copperhead Course at Innisbrook Golf Resort

Photos: Valspar Championship, Copperhead Course at Innisbrook Golf Resort

Photos: Valspar Championship, Copperhead Course at Innisbrook Golf Resort https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

The Valspar Championship has returned to the PGA Tour.

After being canceled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Tour is back at the Copperhead Course at Innisbrook Golf Resort in Palm Harbor, Florida.

The Larry Packard design plays as a par 71 and measures 7,340 this week.

Paul Casey is the defending champion. The 2021 champ will take home $1.242 million of the $6.9 million purse.

Valspar: Check the yardage book | Leaderboard

Check out some photos from this year’s event.

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Hey Jordan Spieth, think you won't play on the PGA Tour Champions? 'Yeah, you will. Everybody does.'

Hey Jordan Spieth, think you won't play on the PGA Tour Champions? 'Yeah, you will. Everybody does.'

Hey Jordan Spieth, think you won't play on the PGA Tour Champions? 'Yeah, you will. Everybody does.' https://ift.tt/3eAd9Mo

The joke, as Jim Furyk likes to tell it, is that everyone is thrilled to be on the PGA Tour Champions. Just thrilled. I mean, who wouldn’t want to know their prime is behind them, right?

“We all just get really excited about getting older and turning 50,” Furyk joked earlier this week. “It’s awesome.”

Snark aside, Furyk and a strong field will be lacing up their spikes on Friday to take part in the Insperity Invitational, a lucrative stop on the PGA Tour Champions at The Woodlands, just north of Houston.

Forget the whole field, just Furyk’s pairing has quite the pedigree. In fact, Furyk, Ernie Els and Colin Montgomerie — who open their first round on Friday at 11:40 a.m. ET — have amassed a combined 96 titles on the PGA and European Tours.

So the competition should be fierce at Insperity, the first of three straight weeks of PGA Tour Champions action. And while Furyk, Els and most recently, Phil Mickelson, might not be thrilled about moving to the senior circuit, they’re also realistic about their chances.

Scott McCarron poses with the trophy after winning the Insperity Invitational at The Woodlands Country Club on May 05, 2019, in The Woodlands, Texas. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

As reigning champion Scott McCarron said on Wednesday, what once might have been thought of as a step down becomes a wonderfully viable option as players get longer in the tooth, but shorter off the tee.

“You’ve got to remember, almost everyone that played the PGA Tour and was successful played out here. There’s only a couple guys that didn’t and those guys were guys that had a lot of other extracurricular stuff going on. They had businesses and they put their competitive juices into that. But the guys that still want to compete, they all come out here,” said McCarron, who won three times on the PGA Tour but has 11 move victories to his credit since moving to the Champions loop.

“So when I look at the Jordan Spieths and Rickie Fowlers and all these guys that have a long time before they get out here and they all say, ‘Well, I’m not going to play out there.’

“Yeah, you will. Everybody does.”

A total of 11 World Golf Hall of Famers will be on hand this week, with Els and Montgomerie being joined by Retief Goosen, Tom Kite, Bernhard Langer, Davis Love III, Sandy Lyle, Mark O’Meara, Jose Maria Olazabal, Vijay Singh, and Ian Woosnam.

And while Furyk might joke about not being ecstatic about meeting the age threshold, he’s certainly thankful for the comforts the tour brings. And the purse — at over $2.2 million, or nearly $700K more than last week’s at the Chubb Classic in Naples, Florida — doesn’t hurt to bring up the group’s spirits.

“I enjoy being out here. I enjoy the carts, I enjoy as far as the practice rounds, carts in the pro-ams, only three-round events. It’s more much a track meet. It’s not a marathon out here, it’s a track meet. You’ve got to get out there and make some birdies and shoot some low scores,” Furyk said. “I get to see some friends that I wasn’t seeing for, say, the last five to 10 years. There’s this misconception, and I talked to some of the younger players on Tour, that everyone’s out having a beer and a glass of wine, no one’s practicing. It’s not really quite that way. Guys are shooting 15, 16 under every week.

“The range is usually packed and full of guys working on their games and working hard, and you’re seeing that even though we’re 50 and over, there’s a lot of guys that are really competitive and playing some great golf.”

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The journey of 'Big Mike' Visacki comes full circle this week at Valspar Championship

The journey of 'Big Mike' Visacki comes full circle this week at Valspar Championship

The journey of 'Big Mike' Visacki comes full circle this week at Valspar Championship https://ift.tt/3r4dqwJ

PALM HARBOR, Fla. – Michael Visacki teed off at the 12th hole of the Copperhead Course at Innisbrook Golf Resort, not far from a banner with the image of Vijay Singh, the 2004 Valspar Championship winner, hanging from a street sign.

Seventeen years ago, Visacki’s father, Mike Sr., brought him to his first tournament and they followed Singh and Ernie Els. That day, a dream was born. “Just being a little kid thinking about one day I’ll be here,” Visacki said of his fondest memory of that day.

But there was another moment later that day away from the course that would be every bit as memorable. Before driving home, his father stopped to fill the tank at a gas station and, in a happy coincidence, Singh happened to be across the aisle pumping gas. Visacki Sr. still has the picture he snapped of his son standing beside Singh.

Before they parted ways, Singh, who came from nothing in Fiji to become a Masters champion and a World Golf Hall of Famer, offered young Mike three words of advice if he wanted to play on the PGA Tour like him someday. Visacki leaned in and listened as if Singh was about to tell him the secret to life.

“Practice, practice, practice,” Singh said.

Visacki, now 27, made his PGA Tour debut Thursday only 90 minutes north of his hometown after making a 20-foot birdie putt in a playoff of a Monday qualifier to earn a spot in the field at the Valspar Championship. In one of this week’s most heartwarming moments, “Big Mike,” as everyone calls him, broke down in tears as he phoned his father with the news.

“I don’t know who was worse – me or my wife,” Visacki Sr. said. “Happy tears. I waited for this moment all of my life.”

Video of a blubbering Visacki, his voice rising as he told his dad, “I made it,” went viral on social media and was replayed on ESPN’s “SportsCenter,” NBC’s “The Today Show” and even Fox Business News.

Visacki is more than just the hometown kid making good. His story resonated because he never quit on his dream. He has been plying his trade in the obscurity of golf’s bush leagues, notching 37 wins on the West Florida Pro Tour while piling on more than 170,000 miles on his Honda Accord and living at home with his parents. Daniel Robinson, a fellow mini-tour player said, “We all think of him as No. 1 in the world without a world ranking.”

Mike Visacki, father of PGA golfer Mike Visacki, watches as his son plays his first round of the Valspar Championship golf tournament. Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports

On Thursday, his fellow mini-tour competitors such as Dominic Formato were part of a boisterous crew that witnessed Visacki stripe his opening drive down the middle at the first hole and nearly hole a bunker shot for eagle at the par 5. He tapped in for a birdie at his first hole on the PGA Tour and his pals roared with approval.

“He makes us all believe in our own dreams a little more,” Formato said, “and just reminds you that sometimes the light at the end of the tunnel is closer than it seems.”

Visacki couldn’t maintain his fairytale start, bogeying the next three holes in a row en route to shooting 3-over 74, leaving him 10 strokes behind leader Keegan Bradley and with work to do to make the 36-hole cut.

But nothing could spoil Visacki’s day. He waved his hat in appreciation as he received an ovation at the 12th green from fans at the Hooters Owl’s Nest, and as one volunteer pointed out, Visacki had the largest gallery outside of Phil Mickelson.

“It is sweet whether he makes the cut or not,” Visacki’s father said. “He made his place in the world. I knew he could do it. It was just a matter of time.”

Kaylor Steger, caddie for Mike Visacki, wears the name Big Mike on the back of his bib during the first round of the Valspar Championship golf tournament. Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports

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Keegan Bradley shoots 64 at Valspar Championship, calls it 'his best round of the year'

Keegan Bradley shoots 64 at Valspar Championship, calls it 'his best round of the year'

Keegan Bradley shoots 64 at Valspar Championship, calls it 'his best round of the year' https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

PALM HARBOR, Florida – Keegan Bradley has his good luck charm with him this week at the Valspar Championship and it sparked him to a bogey-free opening-round 7-under 64 and the early lead on Thursday.

“Best round of the year,” Bradley said. “Today was an all-around just great day. Basically zero stress the whole day. I didn’t really come close to making a bogey, so that was a really fun day to be out there and pl

Bradley made a birdie at the first hole, tacked on another at the fourth hole and then heated up on the back nine. Bradley added a birdie at No. 12 and closed with birdies on four of his final five holes.

“It feels good to go around a course like this and shoot that score,” Bradley said. “This is a tough track, demands a lot, ball striking-wise and I did that today.”

Bradley, who is nearing the 10th anniversary of his first victory at the 2011 PGA Championship, is coming off a tie for fourth last week in New Orleans, his second top-5 finish in 17 starts this season. He credited his continued fine form to a hot putter, which has been behaving now for the better part of two months.

Valspar Championship: Leaderboard | TV times |

“After I won (the 2018 BMW Championship) putting went into a pretty big dip and I had to kind of work my way out of it again. So I feel like I’m on the other side of that right now,” Bradley said. “As long as I putt strokes gained around zero, I’m going to be up there. So when I have a day where I’m positive or a week that I’m positive I got a good chance.”

Bradley gained nearly 2 strokes on the field with his putter on Thursday. He drained putts of 34 feet at No. 14, made a 29-footer from off the green at No. 15 and finished in style with a 21-foot birdie at the last.

“My son Logan said he yelled when I made it, which made me feel really good,” Bradley said.

Bradley, 34, called his family his “good luck charm,” and noted that wife Jill and Logan were in attendance the last time he won in 2018, but that COVID-19 concerns (and the birth of a second son three months ago) have limited their ability to join him on the road.

“Any tournament we drive to, they will come, but it’s just, it’s so great to have them out here and be around them,” said Bradley, who calls Florida home. “I’ll go back today and, doesn’t matter what I shoot, I got to go be a dad and play baseball and play golf in the backyard, which I look forward to.”

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LPGA's Maria Fassi says she 'discovered a tear' in her knee, now home after surgery

LPGA's Maria Fassi says she 'discovered a tear' in her knee, now home after surgery

LPGA's Maria Fassi says she 'discovered a tear' in her knee, now home after surgery https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Maria Fassi is back home in Mexico recovering from surgery to repair a tear in her left knee. The former NCAA champ and Arkansas star shared the news on her Instagram account Wednesday evening.

“Gutted to share with you guys that after a few weeks of playing with pain on my left knee we discovered a tear,” Fassi wrote. “My team and I decided it was best to go ahead with a minor surgery and step away for a minute to make sure I give it the proper time to rehab and recover. I am out of surgery and the knee is doing great. I look forward to getting back out there with all of the girls soon!”

Fassi made her first cut of the season last week at the Hugel-Air Premia LA Open. After opening the tournament with her best round of the season, a 3-under 68, Fassi admitted that the pain in her knee was so bad that she probably shouldn’t be playing. She called it a “free week.”

“For me, it was just to try and go out there and have fun and do the best I could,” said Fassi, who ultimately tied for 50th. “That might be a new approach for the rest of the year.”

 

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Te Arai Links, a new course by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw in New Zealand, to offer stunning landscape

Te Arai Links, a new course by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw in New Zealand, to offer stunning landscape

Te Arai Links, a new course by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw in New Zealand, to offer stunning landscape https://ift.tt/3xz9oja

Good news for golfers who can’t get enough of Coore and Crenshaw designs: They’ve been keeping plenty busy of late. Since the calendar flipped to 2021, the pair has made a site visit to Mike Keiser and Ben Cowan-Dewar’s big Caribbean play, Cabot St. Lucia, and Coore is back on the road checking on another project under construction: Brambles, the brainchild of longtime C&C associate James Duncan in Lake County, California. Meanwhile, yet another new course, on Lake Martin in Alabama, was announced a couple weeks ago.

I recently caught up with Bill Coore for an interview while he was at home in Scottsdale. The conversation focused on the project where the architect spent much of this past winter: New Zealand’s Te Arai Links, for which he endured rigorous and extended hotel quarantine in order to access the relatively COVID-free nation.

Imagine a true links – all-fescue, sandy soils, wispy native surroundings – that you can play in nearly subtropical warmth in shorts and a polo. Now imagine your group has the course almost to itself – because it’s extremely private – and the conditions are basically perfect, for the same reason. That’s Tara Iti Golf Club, Tom Doak’s design for Los Angeles hedge-funder Ric Kayne, which since its 2015 debut has carved out a reputation for many players as one of the 20 or so best golf courses on the planet.

Given that precedent, as Adam Schupak documented in Golfweek in the fall, the expectations for its neighbor, Te Arai, are off the charts. This new 36-hole, public-access facility (which is also a Kayne development) is a bit like trying to add a couple of Pebble Beaches to a portfolio that already includes a Cypress Point.

Of course, this isn’t the first time Coore and Crenshaw have stepped to the plate following a Tom Doak home run. According to Coore, they are certainly up for the challenge.

Te Arai Links is scheduled to open in October 2022.

(This interview has been edited for length.)

Te Arai

Te Arai Links, a new course being constructed by the team of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw in New Zealand (Courtesy of Robinson Studios NZ)

Dunne: For Golfweek readers who have never been to New Zealand, can you give your impressions of that part of the world in general and the Tara Iti/Te Arai property in particular?

Coore: The whole country, from what I can see, is one national park. It’s just stunning. And there’s such a great variety between the South Island and the North Island, where we are. It’s possibly the most fantastic place I’ve been in the world. I’m not saying other people will agree with that, but it’s easy to see why so many people who are able to do so gravitate to New Zealand.

Regarding Tara Iti, I’m a huge admirer of Tom and his guys to start with, but I would put Tara Iti in the category with Pacific Dunes and Barnbougle Dunes, which are my three personal favorite Renaissance Golf Design courses.

I think golf courses should be complements to the landscape they’re put upon, and Tara Iti is absolutely that. It’s a very interesting landscape with dunes and vegetation and landforms that were so gifted for golf in their natural state. They managed to put the golf course there without taking away from the landscape, and that’s hard to do when you have a site that is that spectacular visually. It kind of reminds me of a mosaic, the way the turf areas intermingle with the native sand areas and the dunes.

It’s interesting – Tara Iti’s site is removed from the ocean a bit, but you still experience it, you feel it. I suspect you can see it from almost every hole. But it was also just far enough away that it afforded Tom and the guys the chance to route holes in different directions, which you actually don’t see so frequently on seaside courses. Generally, if it’s a dunes property, it’s usually a fairly linear configuration of dunes along the sea, and that lends itself to more of an out-and-back, Old Course-type of routing.

Te Arai

A hole design for Te Arai Links, a new course by the team of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw in New Zealand (Courtesy of Bill Coore)

Dunne: Does the Te Arai property have some of those traits, as well?

Coore: No, it’s quite different. It is closer to the water and is defined by a big dune ridge that runs parallel to the water, similar to Pacific Dunes. So it creates a landform that when you start to study how you’d lay out the holes, it’s more of a linear situation than at Tara Iti. There’s still a 120-meter setback – a governmental setback for a nature reserve – so you’ll never hit a ball into the ocean, but at Te Arai, you’re going to feel like you’re much closer to the water.

Over both nines, on the first and 10th holes, you see the ocean, but you then hit your tee shot and go inland of the big dune ridge, which has trees on it. On the third hole, you play back up the ridge and from there on, it’s just … I happen to really like the first three holes, but I’m sure some people will probably say they’re the introduction. Just like at Barnbougle, at Te Arai Links there’s a beautiful river that comes out of the hills and enters the ocean. It’s right there where our fourth hole cascades down the ridge to the green, and it’s in the background on the little pitch-shot par-3 fifth. So from there on, once you go over the hill at the fourth cascading down the ridge, numbers 5 through 9 are all right on the ocean.

Te Arai

A hole design for Te Arai Links, a new course by the team of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw in New Zealand (Courtesy of Bill Coore)

Dunne: I know how hard you work on your routings. Was it a similarly laborious process at Te Arai or did the land offer suggestions a bit more easily?

Coore: You probably wouldn’t go out there and say, “Gee, where to start? Which way do you go?” It was pretty obvious you would gravitate toward the ground between the large dune ridge and the ocean. So the key was how to get the holes.

The strip between the dune ridge and the reserve setback line along the ocean, particularly on the front nine, was not wide or deep enough to have two holes – parallel holes – coming and going. So that’s why the front nine is basically a bit of the old butterfly routing. It loops itself out, kind of like a propeller on a plane, going counterclockwise. On the back nine, the dune ridge moves farther away from the ocean and there was enough room to place holes side by side, running clockwise.

Ric Kayne and Jim Rohrstaff (Te Arai’s managing director) didn’t demand that the course come back to its starting point after nine holes, but they did like that aspect of Tara Iti. They said, “Find the best golf and we’ll deal with the rest.” As it turned out, the more I studied and walked out there, I saw an area where we could loop the nines together.

Te Arai

A hole design for Te Arai Links, a new course by the team of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw in New Zealand (Courtesy of Bill Coore)

Dunne: What has it been like for your team building a golf course in the midst of the pandemic?

Coore: Well, I’ve been going down there for four years now. The holes were staked, we decided on the routing and we talked about the hole concepts in general. CJ Kreuscher was someone we got to know when he was working for (superintendent) Ken Nice at Bandon Trails. He was an assistant professional who decided he wanted to be on the maintenance side, and he was hired be involved with Tara Iti and to be its superintendent. Anyway, CJ and I walked through what was to become Te Arai countless times, and there was an absolute game plan.

When the pandemic arrived, Ric and Jim said, “We’d like to get this thing started.” Everything was beautifully in place, given the circumstances. CJ knew everything we needed to do, and he had the complete freedom to start cleaning the dunes, clearing the pine trees and building the irrigation and holding pond, which is way back in the trees – you don’t see it. Start the main line, get the pump station going – everything.

I went back at the end of September last year and was there for a little over four weeks. By the time I got there, they’d already finished the practice facility and the major earthworks on holes 1, 2, 3 and part of number 10.

It’s just an unbelievable crew in place there. John Hawker is an Australian guy who’s worked with us on numerous projects, from Shanqin Bay and Trinity Forest to Branson and the Sheep Ranch. He went from Sheep Ranch to do Bougle Run at Lost Farm (in Tasmania), the par-3 course. After the lockdown he came over to New Zealand with his wife and daughter. And Riley Johns, who worked with us at Cabot and has done some beautiful stuff with Keith Rhebb, moved his family, too.

So when I got there, everybody knew what the hole concepts were and were starting to rough them in. I’d given them sketches, but as those guys all know, sketches are just something to start the process.

Te Arai

Te Arai Links, a new course being constructed by the team of Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw in New Zealand (Courtesy of Robinson Studios NZ)

Dunne: Would you say that your team of shapers has had a greater degree of latitude here than on other projects?

Coore: Our guys … they’re so talented. We try to give them extreme amounts of creative freedom. The difference here would be that in most of our jobs throughout the years, Ben or I have been able to visit the sites much more frequently and see what’s happening. Were we going to slow this process down and just do it in little pieces whenever I could get in? With trying to get grass planted at certain times of year, we needed to proceed … not necessarily quickly, but in an efficient and organized fashion. And remember, it wasn’t based on my schedule – just getting a spot in quarantine in New Zealand is extremely difficult. Tara Iti had to get permission from the government for me to even go.

So if I’d been trying to do this with people I hadn’t worked with before, well, I’d just be a nervous wreck. Because this site is so good. Am I going to say it’s the best site we’ve ever had? No. But it’s among them. And I’ll leave it for other people to make that determination. But it is a site that’s very much like the Sand Hills (in Nebraska, which is Golfweek’s Best No. 1 Modern Course): If you don’t produce something special, you’ve failed mightily.

Dunne: It seems like this project was really the culmination of team building that you and Ben have been doing for quite some time.

Coore: That’s absolutely true. I observe what’s happening there and I marvel at it. Yes, it’s John Hawker and Riley Johns, along with CJ and his crew, who are making it happen, but if you connect the dots they’ve had input from so many of the guys who’ve worked with us for a long time.

Obviously, the goal is to create as many interesting and wonderful golf courses as you can, but you also want to see other people with whom you’ve worked take your standard and elevate it. If you talk to Jeff Bradley and Jimbo Wright and, of course, Dave Axland and Jim Craig, they’ll say that whoever the next new guy is that comes along, teach him what you know. They’re all good at that. There’s not that jealousy factor, there’s not that “Wait a minute, I don’t want him to know everything I know, because then he might be better.”

Dunne: Does it feel good knowing that lots of people will be able to see your work, given that Mr. Kayne has adopted a public model for Te Arai?

Coore: One hundred percent. I mean, I grew up playing the cheapest little public courses in North Carolina. I was never a member of a club and hardly knew anyone who was. So public golf is the foundation of my understanding of the game. As magnificent as Tara Iti is, it’ll be seen by very few people, no matter their love of the game. Ric knows that, and he wanted Te Arai to be public access. It’s more in keeping with New Zealand’s culture, and my hope is that it becomes a part of golf that New Zealanders appreciate.

Dunne: You’ve already built what’s widely considered to be one of the best courses in the southern hemisphere at Lost Farm. How do you think of Te Arai in the context of your career? Do you think you’ll build again down there, or do you see this as a capstone moment?

Coore: I don’t know that I’ve given it much thought, but I doubt that we would work in the southern hemisphere again. Not that we wouldn’t want to, it’s just that right now we have design commitments that will take us the next three to four years, and I don’t know after that.

I remember when Ben and I first formed this partnership, we knew we weren’t going to do a lot of courses. In those days, we thought about working in places in the U.S., like Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago, Long Island, that have been so influential in golf architecture. Ben and I were talking about it not that long ago. Looking back, we couldn’t have imagined in our wildest dreams that we’d be able to work the places we’ve worked.

And so when I go back to your question about the southern hemisphere … would we ever try to work with something really special there again? Perhaps. I certainly wouldn’t rule it out. But it’s also great to be able to say that we were there. I’ve had the opportunity to experience and work in Australia, and in New Zealand. Even if it was just one time – we were there. So if there’s never another Coore and Crenshaw course in the southern hemisphere, that’ll be okay.

from Golfweek https://ift.tt/3sYyAvP