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Golf

  • BCPRD senior golf schedule

    Call Khrystye Haselden for more information at (910) 253-2670. The full schedule is at www.brunswickcountync.gov (55+ Programs).
    Oct. 16: Brierwood Golf Club, $30. 8 a.m. sign-in,
    9 a.m. shotgun start. Price includes cart fee, greens fee, cart attendants and prizes.
    Nov 14: Tiger’s Eye at Ocean Ridge, $45. 8 a.m. sign-in, 9 a.m. shotgun start.
    Price includes cart fee, greens fee, cart attendants and prizes.

  • Scores, highlights of area golf leagues

    Beachcombers
    The Beachcombers played a two-man team-net tournament Friday at Cypress Bay. Fourth went to Ed Hennessey and Dan O’Connell, 60. Tied for third were Tom Culverwell and Ed Redman with Fred Ortiz and Hal Riebesehl, 59. Second went to Larry Cecil and Dennis McCann, 56. In first were Sid Silver and Dick Cecil, 55. Low rounds: Sid Silver 76, Gary Gutheil 84 and Paul Michal 86. Low nets: Sid Silver 60, Dennis McCann and Fred Ortiz 65, Larry Cecil 68 and Ed Redman and Tom Culverwell 69. Sid Silver is golfer of the week.

  • Coastal Carolinas Golf Association: Moving right along

    I first met Jim McFadden when he owned and operated Mac’s Caddy Shack in the Old Southport Village Shops on Howe Street.
    Jim has been immersed in the game of golf since a boy. During the years, he caddied for golf legends like Arnold Palmer, Payne Stewart and Steve Stricker at the Kittansett and Myopia clubs in Massachusetts. He worked in private club management, ran tournaments, worked in retail golf sales and was a senior account executive at a regional golf magazine.

  • Ocean Ridge men play club championship

    The Ocean Ridge men’s club championship tournament was played
    Sept. 24-26 on Lion’s Paw, Tiger’s Eye and Panther’s Run. The championship flight competed on gross score and the first, second and third competed on net scores for a total par of 216.
    Tom Oxenfeld won the 2012 Ocean Ridge club championship, with a gross score of 235, followed by runner-up Jim Story at 240 and Rich O’Conner at 245.

  • Scores, highlights of area golf leagues

    Beachcombers

  • For a change of pace, plan a golf trip

    One of the best things about golf is the travel aspect of the game because all golf courses are different.
    Whether you play in the mountains, the desert or the Carolina low country, every golf course has its own identity. Each golf course architect creates his own spin as he routes the course through a particular terrain. The golfer experiences different views, grasses, yardages, lakes, rivers, creeks, ponds, salt marshes, elevations and challenges as he plays the round.
    Travel golf adds a fabulous dimension to the game, especially if you go with a group of friends.

  • Certified Eagle is a rite of passage

    By Walt Stachura
    Lead Eagle Coach

  • Scores, highlights of area golf leagues

    Beachcombers
    Beachcombers results Sept. 21 at Brunswick Plantation. Gross: Sid Silver, 85; Dan O’Connell, 89. Nets: O’Connell, 67; Silver and Tom Culverwell, 69. Team two nets: Bob Smith, Silver, Larry Cecil and Culverwell, 23-under par. Golfer of the week is O’Connell.

  • Sloup wins third golf tournament

    Staff Report

    South Brunswick junior Ashley Sloup shot a 2-over-par 38 on the front nine at Brierwood Golf Club in winning the third conference tourney of the season.
    Sloup had three 3s on the card in winning by six strokes and leading the Cougars to the team title. Freshman Jordan Saunders shot a 48 in finishing third and sophomore Janzen Jones shot a 51 in finishing fourth. Freshman Lilly Beecroft, who birdied the first hole, shot a 55.

  • BCC Turf School: A credit to the (golf) community

    If you think maintaining a golf course means cutting grass, laying sod and occasionally spraying for weeds, you are mistaken. Golf course maintenance is an art and a science. It requires not just hard work but knowledge  obtained through college-level courses, seminars, practical experience and networking with other superintendents.
    Many golf courses today require a superintendent has at least a two-year degree from a certified agronomy school. Some ask their head superintendent have a bachelor’s degree or better.