Thursday, February 28, 2008

More Americans Are Giving Up Golf

HAUPPAUGE, N.Y. — The men gathered in a new golf clubhouse here a couple of weeks ago circled the problem from every angle, like caddies lining up a shot out of the rough.

“We have to change our mentality,” said Richard Rocchio, a public relations consultant.

“The problem is time,” offered Walter Hurney, a real estate developer. “There just isn’t enough time. Men won’t spend a whole day away from their family anymore.”

William A. Gatz, owner of the Long Island National Golf Club in Riverhead, said the problem was fundamental economics: too much supply, not enough demand.

The problem was not a game of golf. It was the game of golf itself.

Over the past decade, the leisure activity most closely associated with corporate success in America has been in a kind of recession.

The total number of people who play has declined or remained flat each year since 2000, dropping to about 26 million from 30 million, according to the National Golf Foundation and the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association.

More troubling to golf boosters, the number of people who play 25 times a year or more fell to 4.6 million in 2005 from 6.9 million in 2000, a loss of about a third.

The industry now counts its core players as those who golf eight or more times a year. That number, too, has fallen, but more slowly: to 15 million in 2006 from 17.7 million in 2000, according to the National Golf Foundation.

The five men who met here at the Wind Watch Golf Club a couple of weeks ago, golf aficionados all, wondered out loud about the reasons. Was it the economy? Changing family dynamics? A glut of golf courses? A surfeit of etiquette rules — like not letting people use their cellphones for the four hours it typically takes to play a round of 18 holes?

Or was it just the four hours?

Here on Long Island, where there are more than 100 private courses, golf course owners have tried various strategies: coupons and trial memberships, aggressive marketing for corporate and charity tournaments, and even some forays into the wedding business.

Over coffee with a representative of the National Golf Course Owners Association, the owners of four golf courses discussed forming an owners’ cooperative to market golf on Long Island and, perhaps, to purchase staples like golf carts and fertilizer more cheaply.

They strategized about marketing to women, who make up about 25 percent of golfers nationally; recruiting young players with a high school tournament; attracting families with special rates; realigning courses to 6-hole rounds, instead of 9 or 18; and seeking tax breaks, on the premise that golf courses, even private ones, provide publicly beneficial open space.

“When the ship is sinking, it’s time to get creative,” said Mr. Hurney, a principal owner of the Great Rock Golf Club in Wading River, which last summer erected a 4,000-square-foot tent for social events, including weddings, christenings and communions.

The disappearance of golfers over the past several years is part of a broader decline in outdoor activities — including tennis, swimming, hiking, biking and downhill skiing — according to a number of academic and recreation industry studies.

A 2006 study by the United States Tennis Association, which has battled the trend somewhat successfully with a forceful campaign to recruit young players, found that punishing hurricane seasons factored into the decline of play in the South, while the soaring popularity of electronic games and newer sports like skateboarding was diminishing the number of new tennis players everywhere.

Rodney B. Warnick, a professor of recreation studies and tourism at the University of Massachusetts, said that the aging population of the United States was probably a part of the problem, too, and that “there is a younger generation that is just not as active.”

But golf, a sport of long-term investors — both those who buy the expensive equipment and those who build the princely estates on which it is played — has always seemed to exist in a world above the fray of shifting demographics. Not anymore.

Jim Kass, the research director of the National Golf Foundation, an industry group, said the gradual but prolonged slump in golf has defied the adage, “Once a golfer, always a golfer.” About three million golfers quit playing each year, and slightly fewer than that have been picking it up. A two-year campaign by the foundation to bring new players into the game, he said, “hasn’t shown much in the way of results.”

“The man in the street will tell you that golf is booming because he sees Tiger Woods on TV,” Mr. Kass said. “But we track the reality. The reality is, while we haven’t exactly tanked, the numbers have been disappointing for some time.”

Surveys sponsored by the foundation have asked players what keeps them away. “The answer is usually economic,” Mr. Kass said. “No time. Two jobs. Real wages not going up. Pensions going away. Corporate cutbacks in country club memberships — all that doom and gloom stuff.”

In many parts of the country, high expectations for a golf bonanza paralleling baby boomer retirements led to what is now considered a vast overbuilding of golf courses.

Between 1990 and 2003, developers built more than 3,000 new golf courses in the United States, bringing the total to about 16,000. Several hundred have closed in the last few years, most of them in Arizona, Florida, Michigan and South Carolina, according to the foundation.

(Scores more courses are listed for sale on the Web site of the National Golf Course Owners Association, which lists, for example, a North Carolina property described as “two 18-hole championship courses, great mountain locations, profitable, $1.5 million revenues, Bermuda fairways, bent grass, nice clubhouses, one at $5.5 million, other at $2.5 million — possible some owner financing.”)

At the meeting here, there was a consensus that changing family dynamics have had a profound effect on the sport.

“Years ago, men thought nothing of spending the whole day playing golf — maybe Saturday and Sunday both,” said Mr. Rocchio, the public relations consultant, who is also the New York regional director of the National Golf Course Owners Association. “Today, he is driving his kids to their soccer games. Maybe he’s playing a round early in the morning. But he has to get back home in time for lunch.”

Mr. Hurney, the real estate developer, chimed in, “Which is why if we don’t repackage our facilities to a more family orientation, we’re dead.”

To help keep the Great Rock Golf Club afloat, owners erected their large climate-controlled tent near the 18th green last summer. It sat next to the restaurant, Blackwell’s, already operating there. By most accounts, it has been a boon to the club — though perhaps not a hole in one.

Residents of the surrounding neighborhood have complained about party noise, and last year more than 40 signed a petition asking the town of Riverhead to intervene. Town officials are reviewing whether the tent meets local zoning regulations, but have not issued any noise summonses. Mr. Hurney told them he had purchased a decibel meter and would try to hire quieter entertainment.

One neighbor, Dominique Mendez, whose home is about 600 feet from the 18th hole, said, “We bought our house here because we wanted to live in a quiet place, and we thought a golf course would be nice to see from the window. Instead, people have to turn up their air conditioners or wear earplugs at night because of the music thumping.”

During weddings, she said: “you can hear the D.J., ‘We’re gonna do the garter!’ It’s a little much.”

HSBC Women's Champions is first Winner Event of LPGA Playoffs 2008; Winner automatically qualifies for ADT Championship and chance to win $1 million

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – This week's inaugural HSBC Women's Champions in Singapore boasts a $2 million purse, which designates it as the first Winner Event of LPGA Playoffs 2008. The winner this week will automatically qualify for the season-ending ADT Championship Nov. 20-23, 2008, at Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Fla. and their chance at the coveted $1 million winner's check.

LPGA Tour members have already started earning ADT Points via LPGA Playoffs 2008. Seventy-time LPGA Tour winner Annika Sorenstam leads the way with 232,112 ADT Points, followed closely by Fields Open in Hawaii champion Paula Creamer with 212,384 ADT Points.

LPGA Playoffs 2008 is a yearlong competition that splits the season into two halves and features 13 Winner Events, defined as official LPGA Tour events with a purse of at least $2 million. Eight spots are open to the champions of Winner Events during the first half of the season—which started at the SBS Open at Turtle Bay. At the conclusion of the McDonald's LPGA Championship Presented by Coca-Cola in June, the top-seven players on the ADT Points list will round out the 15 first half positions. The second half of the season begins at the Wegmans LPGA and will feature five players qualifying via Winner Events and 10 through the ADT Points designation. Following the end of the second half of the season at the Lorena Ochoa Invitational Presented by Banamex and Corona, two wildcards will be selected to complete the 32-player ADT Championship field.

The ADT Championship will feature three days of “playoffs,” with a final-round shootout. During the weekend, the scorecards will be wiped clean for both the third and final rounds. After 36 holes, the first cut will be made to the low-16 players, with a sudden-death playoff used in case of a tie. The third round will be played in eight groups of two, with all players starting with a fresh scorecard. After 54 holes, another cut will be made to the low eight players, again using a sudden-death playoff to break any ties for eighth place. For the second consecutive year, a live draw will take place with the final eight players immediately following the third round, where players will draft their own tee time based on their third-round finish.

The final round will be played in four groups of two, with all players starting with yet another fresh scorecard. The player who records the lowest score in the final round will win the ADT Championship and $1 million.

For more information about the 2008 ADT Championship, log on to www.adtchampionship.com.

Northern Texas PGA's Crall is selected to head the PGA Foundation

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. -- Darrell Crall, who has served since 1995 as executive director of the Northern Texas PGA Section while developing and guiding a wide range of members programs, junior golf and fundraising initiatives, has been named the executive director of the PGA Foundation.

Crall, who will continue his Section duties while living in Dallas, Texas, will assume the responsibility of building the PGA Foundation enterprise-wide through transferring best practices and leveraging current assets. Additionally, he will guide the promotion of the economic impact of The PGA of America, its membership, facilities and Sections in the charitable arena, and establish benchmark goals for major gifts and fundraising events.

"I am humbled by the opportunity to build upon past success of the PGA Foundation," said Crall. "I look forward to working alongside the Association's more than 28,000 men and women PGA Professionals and through its Sections as we grow the game of golf, making it accessible to all segments of every community, enhancing the lives of youth, the disabled and building diversity."

A native of Ashland, Ohio, Crall is a 1989 graduate of Duke University, where he captained the men's golf team. He joined the Carolinas PGA Section headquarters in 1990 as junior golf/tournament manager, and served from 1992-93 as director of education and employment. Crall was named director of tournament operations in 1993, where he was responsible for the largest golf professional tournament operations at the Section level.

He was named Northern Texas PGA executive director in 1995, and made an immediate impact by elevating the Section's annual budget, directing the marketing, promotion and management of the Section and Junior Golf Foundation, which includes an active membership of more than 5,000 PGA Professionals, junior golf and association members.

Crall organized and branded the nationally-recognized Help-A-Kid Play Golf and Golf In Schools Program, which introduces golf to more than 25,000 inner-city youngsters at city recreation centers and elementary, middle and high schools. From 1996 through 2007, Crall established and conducted the Ewing Charity Classic fundraiser to generate $2.6 million for children's charities; and since 1998, created and annually managed the Deloitte Justin Leonard Scholarship Program, raising $1.2 million for the academic and financial need-based college assistance for junior golfers.

Crall and his wife, Lane, live in Dallas, and are the parents of daughter Sarah Caroline, 5, and a son, Davis, 3.

The PGA Foundation, a 501(c)(3) non-profit charity, is dedicated to enhancing lives through the game of golf. The Foundation provides people of every ability, race, gender, and social and economic background an opportunity to experience the game and learn vital life lessons.

The PGA Foundation achieves its mission through programs which provide instruction and access to playing the game of golf along with enriching those lives by providing educational and employment opportunities.

Square Necessities

One of the most talked about innovations of 2007 has spawned offspring. Aaaaaw, aren't they cute?

Like the iPod mini, square-headed fairway woods were just a matter of time, with both Nike and Callaway delivering the goods a year or so after the successful launches of their respective squareheaded drivers.

Nike's Sumo2 fairway wood ($276) hit stores in February; Callaway's FT-i Squarewaywood ($375) follows suit this month.

The physics? Same story as the drivers: weight pushed toward the four corners of the clubhead helps square the face at impact, promoting a straighter ball flight.

Makes you wonder what they'll square next. Golf balls?

Arnold Palmer vs. Phil Mickelson

Who is the better No. 2?

By Jonathan Abrahams

If history is fair, it will say the 2006 U.S. Open was not Phil Mickelson’s career nadir, but his moment of realization, that the “maturing” that produced two Masters and a PGA Championship in three years was a red herring, and the double bogey that cost him the Open was actually the final piece of the who-is-Phil Mickelson puzzle: A terminal swashbuckler, beloved by a large, fiercely loyal but ultimately doomed legion of fans who know that their man, despite all his gallantry, will never be the best in the world—a description that sounds a whole lot like Arnold Palmer.

If Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods blitzed the record books with lethal, impersonal precision, Arnold and Phil have been the alternative—genial, charismatic winners capable of smiles and eye contact, ultimately reminding galleries of what makes professional golf unique: the possibility of connection between a player and his fans so strong that they share in his success, or in some cases, his heartbreak.

Palmer commanded an Army; Mickelson leads a couple of divisions at the very least. Both players’ biggest wins have come with exciting, birdie-filled, go-for-broke play. Palmer began his final-round 65 at the 1960 U.S. Open by driving Cherry Hills’ 346-yard 1st hole. Mickelson made five birdies in the last seven holes to win his first major, the 2004 Masters.

Both were 36 at the time of their most spectacular collapses. Mickelson had just celebrated a birthday two days before his double-bogey finish at Winged Foot; Palmer stood on the 10th tee of the Olympic Club with a seven-stroke lead after 63 holes of the 1966 U.S. Open. He shot 39, lost the playoff to Billy Casper, and an Army mourned.

But the reckless play that has afflicted both players is somehow more forgivable with Palmer, who never had Mickelson’s talent. Palmer played golf like a boxer fighting his way off the ropes, attacking the course with a swing that looked as if it were assembled in a home-machine shop: bowed left wrist at the top, violent downswing, lunging helicopter finish. Even in victory, Palmer made the game look just as difficult as it actually is.

Palmer, Mickelson has the game to pick his spots and still lap the field. Already having won the 1991 Northern Telecom Open as an amateur, the only question when he turned pro in 1992 was just how much history he would make. And that’s why, 15 years later, his risk-taking plays more like immaturity than heroism.

In light of this, Mickelson’s appeal is a bit mysterious. Despite his extraordinary talent (and wealth), Lefty is the people’s choice. Is it empathy for his failures? Unlikely. Palmer’s chain smoking and blue-collar pants-hitching were points of validation for the average Joe, and perhaps the same can be said for Mickelson’s flabby midsection.

But while Palmer reached the game’s pinnacle—if only briefly before being toppled by Nicklaus—Mickelson never took advantage of the four years between his turning pro and Woods’ arrival in the fall of 1996. Still, Mickelson is at the peak of his career. He might win five more majors, putting him ahead of Palmer. But Mickelson will never come close to matching The King’s legacy—on or off the course.

It says a lot that while Palmer received such a regal nickname, the best sobriquets anyone has been able to do for Mickelson are the obvious “Lefty” and the pedestrian, unimaginative “Philly Mick.”

Folks point to Mickelson’s 2004 Masters victory as one of the tournament’s most exciting, but for impact, don’t forget Palmer’s victory in 1958. Witnessed by a throng of soldiers from a nearby base who dubbed themselves “Arnie’s Army,” that Masters literally put televised golf on the map and established it as a sport that could be enjoyed outside the country-club set.

For 40 years, his was the face of the game, with a list of endorsements so long that he entered the 1990s as one of the world’s most recognizable athletes. Palmer will always be remembered as the greatest ambassador the game has ever had; Mickelson, the great talent who played second fiddle to Woods. The irony is it’s all because neither of them wanted to play safe.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Mickelson adds Riviera to collection of West Coast wins

LOS ANGELES (Map, News) - Phil Mickelson had played 10 tournaments at Riviera dating to his first appearance 20 years ago as a teenager. Never before had he arrived with such good vibes, mostly because of a minor change that he didn't reveal until he won.

It wasn't his close call last year, when he bogeyed the final hole and lost in a playoff.

Nor was it the playoff loss two weeks ago in Phoenix, a sign that his game was on the right track.

Rather, it was a noise only Lefty could hear.

He switched golf balls this year to a softer cover for more spin, and figured he had made all the adjustments until he struggled with his speed on the greens at Pebble Beach last week, which held him back. That's when he decided to change the insert in his putter.

"When I had putted with the insert I had, it was a quieter sound when the ball was coming off and I couldn't hear it, and I was giving it a little too much," Mickelson said. "Consequently, my speed was going well by the hole. By putting in the firmer insert, I was able to hear it, and my speed and touch came back.

"Now I hear it and it feels great."

The putter was key for Mickelson, who closed with a 1-under 70 for a two-shot victory over Jeff Quinney that gave him yet another PGA Tour title on the Left Coast.

He now has 33 career victories, with 16 of them in California and Arizona.

But as much as the putter helped Mickelson, it went from a magic wand to a ball-and-chain for Quinney.

He made four straight putts, three of them for birdie, from outside 10 feet that took him from a two-shot deficit to a brief lead and ultimately to a duel alone the final seven holes. But Quinney again had trouble down the stretch.

He bogeyed three straight holes, starting with back-to-back par putts that he missed from 7 feet, that gave Mickelson a two-shot lead and some comfort as he played the final holes. Quinney lost all hope with a three-putt from 20 feet on the par-5 17th, and his 25-foot birdie on the final hole only made it look close.

He shot a 71 for his first runner-up finish in his two years on tour.

"I had two (putts) that I'd like to have back," Quinney said. "I just put a little too much pressure on the putter on the back nine."

Mickelson, meanwhile, was solid throughout the week.

His putting kept momentum in his round of 64 on Friday to seize control, and in his 70 on Saturday to stay in the lead. And after a two-shot swing that gave Quinney the lead on the ninth hole Sunday - Quinney made a 12-foot birdie, Mickelson missed the green well to the right and made bogey - Lefty responded with clutch putts.

The first came at the 310-yard 10th hole, where Mickelson hit driver over the green and a flop shot to the skinny part of the green, the ball stopping 6 feet away. Quinney saved par with a 10-foot putt, and Mickelson made his on top of him to tie for the lead.

Mickelson pulled away when Quinney made the first of three straight bogeys, and the tournament turned on the par-3 14th.

Quinney went over the green and chipped 7 feet by the hole. Mickelson hit into a bunker and blasted out to the same distance, a few inches farther away. That meant he went first, and Mickelson poured it in for par.

Quinney missed his, the lead was two shots, the tournament effectively over.

Mickelson didn't make it a clean sweep of the West Coast Swing. He has never won in Hawaii, and only goes to Hawaii on vacation. He has never won the Accenture Match Play Championship, although he gets another shot starting Wednesday.

But he has won at every stop on the West Coast, from the ocean courses of Torrey Pines and Pebble Beach to soggy La Costa Resort to the desert tracks in Phoenix, Palm Springs and Tucson.

"I do enjoy the West Coast," Mickelson said. "I'm excited to play golf and I practice very hard on the West Coast when the season is coming around and I haven't played for awhile, I've got a lot of energy and I'm excited to get back out. I think all of these things, plus the fact that I grew up here and used to walk these fairways on the outside, I just have a great love for the West Coast.

"I've been fortunate to play well here."

It should be no surprise that Riviera took so long.

Until last year, Mickelson had missed the cut four out of eight times, including the 1995 PGA Championship. He loved the look of Riviera, but was confounded by the sticky kikuya grass that could grab the ball as it was approaching the green.

There's an art to his course off Sunset Boulevard, and he was a slow learner.

"I didn't understand the nuances of this golf course, where you can and can't hit it," he said. "And learning those nuances and how to hit the shots into some of these greens has helped me over the years. Last year was when I started to put it together, and I'm fortunate to break through this year."

Sweeter still is having his name on the roll call of a champions, a list that includes Ben Hogan, Byron Nelson and Sam Snead. And it's a list that doesn't include Tiger Woods, or even Jack Nicklaus.

And now that another victory is in the bag, he's hungry for more.

"It's not quite to where I believe I can get it, but I feel like it's been much better than in the past, so I feel like I'm getting better," Mickelson said of his game. "I can taste where I want to get to. But I'm not quite there yet."

Golf on the Moon?

Efforts are underway by some private firms to develop the moon. Among the corporations that have launched studies are two large Japanese companies, Shimizu Construction and Nishimatsu Construction. Shimizu has been studying plans for lunar tennis courts and golf courses, while Nishimatsu has proposed building a 10-story-high resort.

Two other non-profit entities are also advocating lunar development. The Moon Society, an organization of astronomers, computer programmers and scientists, is pushing for “larger-scale industrialization and private enterprise” on the moon, according to the Wall Street Journal. The Universal Lunarian Society wants to build the city of Lunaria on the moon. The society has been recording claim deeds on the lunar surface since 1989. Five years ago, it began offering sites in the lunar crater of Copernicus for $50 an acre.

Among those opposing development on the moon is Rick Steiner, a fisheries professor at the University of Alaska. Steiner has proposed that the United Nations designate the moon as one of its World Heritage Sites, thus preserving Earth’s only satellite for peaceful and scientific purposes. Steiner presented his proposal at the International Space Development Conference, in Denver, in late-May 2002. Before the conference, Steiner told the Wall Street Journal, “The bottom line here is: Let’s go and explore our universe, but let’s not go as Genghis Khan. Let’s go as Mother Teresa.”

Not so surprisingly, given the diminishing land availability on Earth, many conference attendees favor developing the moon. The pro-development “moonies” also question how Steiner can invoke United Nations’ protection measures of the moon, when the 1973 World Heritage Convention signed by the U.S. and other countries specifically calls for protecting sites on Earth. Others are less disdainful of Steiner’s purist approach, saying that such worthy projects as a solar-power plant could help fuel earthly activities while helping the environment on the home planet.

Corporate takeover of the moon may be feasible, yet is still quite futuristic. But who knows? With the moon’s near-zero gravity, golfers would love to test their power against Tiger Woods’, whose drives would be paltry compared to shots hit on a lunar golf course.
Alan Shephard was the first to play golf on the moon. On February 6, 1971, Shepard, a crew member on Apollo 14, grabbed a custom-made 6-iron and launched one of the most famous shots in history. Actually it was two shots – Shepard’s first misfired and traveled only 100 feet. The second connected solidly and stayed up in the air for 30 seconds, traveling 200 yards – not bad for a 6-iron.

Of his famous shot, which proved that man could perform regular tasks in an otherworldly environment, Shepard said, “I was searching for a way to indicate to schoolchildren the reduced gravity field and the total lack of atmosphere," he told USA Today during a 1994 book tour. "The classic example of dropping a feather and a lead ball had already been done. Then I thought, with the same clubhead speed, the ball's going to go at least six times as far. There's absolutely no drag, so if you do happen to spin it, it won't slice or hook 'cause there's no atmosphere to make it turn."

Sounds like those lunar studies should continue.

Hock Takes Playoff; Wins Back-To-Back On Champions Tour

Naples, FL (AHN) - Scott Hoch made an eight-foot birdie putt on No.18 to force a four-hole playoff, then rolled in another eight-footer on the first playoff hole to win The ACE Group Classic for his second straight Champions Tour victory on Sunday.

The 52-year-old Hoch picked up the top prize of $240,000 a week after winning the Allianze Championship in Boca Raton. He now has three Senior titles. He won 11 times over a 25-year PGA career.

Hoch, Tom Jenkins, Tom Kite and Brad Bryant all finished regulation at 14-under par 202. Jenkins, Kite and Bryant had all made pars on No. 18 before Hoch made his birdie.

On the playoff hole, Jenkins and Kite both missed chip shots after going over the green. Bryant lipped out a birdie putt.

Said Hoch, "I just said, 'Let's end it here. I don't want to play anymore. Anything else could happen."

Muskeg Meadows Golf Course

Wrangell's Golf Course is carved from a rain forest and its natural beauty defies description. Its ocean views, snow-capped mountains, and wildlife are remarkable. It is truly a memorable experience to play golf surrounded by all this beauty.

The regulation course is a 9-hole course, with a 250 yard driving range. The annual opening tournament of Muskeg Meadows is in April each year, coinciding with the Wrangell Garnet Festival, our local celebration of Spring and the migration of Bald Eagles congregating at the mouth of the Stikine River. There are four major tournaments during the season, with smaller tournaments and contests almost every weekend during the summer. The Course is USGA rated and sloped as follows:
  • Blue 70.2/119
  • White 67.8/110
  • Red 68.4/112
Anyone who plays the course will find it very challenging, with a few unique hazards for the golfer to deal with. One of these hazards brought about the Raven Rule: It states that a ball stolen by a raven may be replaced, with no penalty, provided there is a witness!
The Green at Hole #2

Wrangell enthusiastically invites you to visit and play at Muskeg Meadows. Local stores rent clubs and provide transportation.

To learn more about Muskeg Meadows Golf Course and membership opportunities call 907-874-4654 (GOLF), P.O. Box 2199, Wrangell, AK 99929. www.wrangellalaskagolf.com.

Best Alaska Golf Courses

RankGolf CourseLocation
1Moose Run Golf Course - Creek Course Fort Richardson, AK
2Eagleglen Golf Course - Eagleglen Course Elmendorf Afb, AK
3Anchorage Golf Course - Anchorage Course Anchorage, AK
4Tanglewood Lakes Golf Club - Tanglewood Lakes Course Anchorage, AK
5Russian Jack Golf Course - Russian Jack Springs Course Anchorage, AK
6Chena Bend Golf Course - Chena Bend Course Fort Wainwright, AK
7Moose Run Golf Course - Hill Course Fort Richardson, AK
8Settlers Bay Golf Course - Settlers Bay Course Wasilla, AK
9North Star Golf Course - North Star Course Fairbanks, AK
10Mendenhall Golf Course - Mendenhall Course Juneau, AK
11Palmer Golf Course - Palmer Course Palmer, AK
12Fairbanks Golf Course - Fairbanks 1 Course Fairbanks, AK
13Fireweed Meadows Golf Course - Fireweed Course Anchor Point, AK
14Kenai Golf Course - Kenai Course Kenai, AK
15Birch Ridge Golf Course, Inc. - Birch Ridge Course Soldotna, AK
16Cottonwood Country Club - Cottonwood Course Nikiski, AK
17Black Diamond Golf Course - Black Diamond Course Healy, AK
18Bear Valley Golf Course - Bear Valley Course Kodiak, AK
19Valley of the Eagles Golf Links and Driving Range - Valley Course Haines, AK
20Sleepy Hollow Golf Course - Sleepy Hollow Course Wasilla, AK
21Mount Fairweather Golf Course - Mount Fairweather Course Gustavus, AK
22Bird Homestead Golf Course - Bird 1 Course Soldotna, AK
23Kachemak Bay Lynx Par 3 Golf - Kachemak Bay Links Par 3 Course Homer, AK
24Muskeg Meadows Golf Course - Musking Meadows Course Wrangell, AK