Thursday, October 3, 2013
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
The Pete Dye Course at French Lick
The Pete Dye Course at French Lick
Follow this link for a great review and photographs of the Dye Course at The French Lick Resort.
Follow this link for a great review and photographs of the Dye Course at The French Lick Resort.
Saturday, July 13, 2013
The Fort Golf Course, Golf Now and The Golf Channel - Total Agreement
In the heart of the Midwest, among the farm fields and near the home of the Indy 500 sit some of the more underrated and fantastic golf courses in the U.S.
Indiana – and Indianapolis in particular – is not only a playground for some of America’s most-devout basketball fans, but also an exciting locale for enthusiastic golfers.
Enjoy golf in the Hoosier State no matter what your price range with these three great Indianapolis-based GolfNow courses.
- See more at: http://blog.golfnow.com/golf-indianapolis-on-3-budgets/#sthash.4T2r78tW.dpufFriday, July 5, 2013
French Lick Resort featured on Cybergolf Website.
Dual Courses Make the Trip to French Lick Seem Easy
I am used to "remote." Born, raised and a resident of Texas, I've traveled all over the back roads and through the tiny towns of the largest state in the Contiguous 48. I know all about getting away and have been to my fair share of crossroads in burgs with single blinking lights as the only traffic control.
Vistas are Amazing at the Dye Course
But I've never felt as isolated as when I drove from Indianapolis to French Lick in the far southern part of the Hoosier State. A map will show that French Lick is just a two-and-a-half-hour drive from Indy and an hour less than that from Louisville, Ky., to the east. But the journey - though a series of increasingly smaller roads and through rolling fields and dales - is almost a step back in time as well as a trek to remoteness.
It's at the fabulous French Lick Resort where the well-heeled have come in droves since the mid-1850s to escape the city, to enjoy the healing waters of the area's mineral springs, to revel in the opulence of the West Baden Springs Hotel and to play golf at, initially anyway, a course designed by the legendary Donald Ross that opened in 1917.
In 2009, with the approval of casino gambling in French Lick attracting visitors and their money not seen since before the Great Depression, a second course was built - this one by Indiana's own Pete Dye, arguably the most important golf architect of the 20th century's last 25 years.
The two courses, both notable in their own right for their individual challenge and beauty, have combined to make a trip to French Lick a must for golfers. The fact that the other amenities in the tiny town are also top-drawer just adds to the appeal.Read more at..... http://www.cybergolf.com/golf_news/dual_courses_make_the_trip_to_french_lick_seem_easy
It's at the fabulous French Lick Resort where the well-heeled have come in droves since the mid-1850s to escape the city, to enjoy the healing waters of the area's mineral springs, to revel in the opulence of the West Baden Springs Hotel and to play golf at, initially anyway, a course designed by the legendary Donald Ross that opened in 1917.
In 2009, with the approval of casino gambling in French Lick attracting visitors and their money not seen since before the Great Depression, a second course was built - this one by Indiana's own Pete Dye, arguably the most important golf architect of the 20th century's last 25 years.
The two courses, both notable in their own right for their individual challenge and beauty, have combined to make a trip to French Lick a must for golfers. The fact that the other amenities in the tiny town are also top-drawer just adds to the appeal.Read more at..... http://www.cybergolf.com/golf_news/dual_courses_make_the_trip_to_french_lick_seem_easy
Saturday, June 29, 2013
News from our Friends at the French Lick Resort.
The Legends Tour Championship
French Lick Resort
September 23-29, 2013
http://www.frenchlick.com/golf/events/legends2013/about |
In 2013, women’s professional golf returns to French Lick Resort for the first time since 1960. The Legends Championship will be held on the highly acclaimed Pete Dye Course at French Lick Resort and features Nancy Lopez, Jan Stephenson, Pat Bradley, Beth Daniel, Betsy King, Patty Sheehan, Joann Carner, Rosie Jones, Meg Mallon and all of the greats of women’s golf. These storied players represent more than 650 career tournament wins.
In honor of the Legends Championship, French Lick Resort has planned a week-long tribute to women’s golf, beginning Monday, September 23 with the fourth annual Alice Dye Invitational. This is a popular two-day women’s amateur event filled with great golf, food, and fun. An all-day golf clinic for women will be conducted by the Legends on Wednesday and on Thursday the Pro-Am Sponsor match will be played at the Pete Dye Course. The Legends Championship will be played Friday, Saturday, and Sunday on the Pete Dye Course.
Along with golf there will be plenty of opportunities to network and socialize during the week. The opening of the Legends Hall of Fame to be housed in the West Baden Springs Hotel will be celebrated with a reception on Thursday evening and the induction of its first three members. There will be exclusive hospitality tents for top sponsors at the Pete Dye Course as well as hospitality areas at each hotel during the tournament. The title sponsor will receive a reception at West Baden Springs Hotel for up to 100 associates, employees and guests. Other levels of sponsorship will host a reception and have access to hospitality areas.
French Lick Resort is honored to invite your company to participate in this fabulous week-long celebration of women and their contributions to the game of golf. There are a variety of sponsorship levels available that will afford valuable marketing, networking and entertainment opportunities for your employees, clients and guests. Contact French Lick Resort today to declare your sponsorship intentions 888-936-9360.
TOUR TIDBITS
- The Legends Tour has over 100 members, including 10 World Golf and LPGA Hall of Fame members.
- Legends Tour players have compiled over 650 LPGA victories, including 65 major championships.
- The Legends Tour is in its 12th season and has played for over $9,000,000 in prize money.
- Over $11,000,000 has been awarded to charity through Legends Tour events.
- The Legends Tour has played events all over the world and across the nation. Tournaments have been held in Arizona, Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii, Indiana, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Wisconsin, Japan and Australia.
- The Legends Tour was founded in 2000 by 25 LPGA Tour veterans who wanted to provide opportunities for professionals 45 and over to continue competing. • For more information about The Legends Tour, log onto the official website, www.thelegendstour.com.
Sunday, June 16, 2013
LPGA at The Fort? an article by Phil Richards of the Indy Star.
There is much to be done if the City of Lawrence is to realize
its ambition of bringing an LPGA Tour event to
The Fort Golf Course, a reality acknowledged last week by mayor Dean Jessup’s chief of staff.
“We’ve
put our toe in the water,” Tim
Joyce said.
There
has been contact with the LPGA Tour but the effort is in its earliest stages. A
working group is being assembled, issues are being identified and strategy is
being formulated.
The
tour has been receptive. Read More!
Tuesday, June 4, 2013
Larry Bush-Jupiter Courier: Pete & Alice: 'Wanted to build golf courses'
Life for golf course architects Pete and Alice Dye has become like a quote from the Bible, and I’m paraphrasing here: “Whither thou goest, I will follow.”
They have been married for 63 years, they have lived in Gulf Stream since 1970, and they spend 300 days a year on the road.
Unlike many equally well-known architects who number their new and renovated projects in the hundreds, the Dyes have only 90 to 95 identifiable courses. There’s the famed Casa de Campo in the Dominican Republic, a couple of projects in Switzerland, and the rest carry the label of Made in America.
Included are The Dye Preserve west of Jupiter and the Dye course at the PGA Golf Club in Port St. Lucie.
Not bad for a World War II greenskeeper who decided he didn’t like the insurance business despite achieving Million Dollar Roundtable membership status back in Indianapolis.
“I wanted to build golf courses,” he said recently during a PGA Speaker Series appearance in Port St. Lucie. “I’ve always been interested in golf course maintenance. The only way I could get done what I wanted was to build it myself.
Saturday, May 25, 2013
Brickyard Crossing Has Unique Setting & Much to Like
From our friend Steve Habel
This weekend, as upwards of 290 million households around the world watch the television coverage of the Indianapolis 500 - the biggest sporting event on the planet - most of the focus will be on the race cars whipping around the 2.5-mile track at speeds exceeding 230 miles per hour.
Expect golfers to pay a little more attention to the overhead shots of the action, especially those who have played the unique and ultra-challenging Brickyard Crossing Golf Course that borders- and even enters - the Indianapolis Motor Speedway along the massive edifice's backstretch.
Because four of Brickyard Crossing's 18 holes are set within the infield of the huge oval, the course is surely distinctive for its setting. But, thanks to the handiwork of native Indianan and famed designer Pete Dye, there's a whole lot more to like about Brickyard Crossing than its location. This is one of the testiest golf courses in America, one that demands your best, especially on its home stretch. Read More.
This weekend, as upwards of 290 million households around the world watch the television coverage of the Indianapolis 500 - the biggest sporting event on the planet - most of the focus will be on the race cars whipping around the 2.5-mile track at speeds exceeding 230 miles per hour.
Brickyard Crossing GC on Indy 500 Race Day
Because four of Brickyard Crossing's 18 holes are set within the infield of the huge oval, the course is surely distinctive for its setting. But, thanks to the handiwork of native Indianan and famed designer Pete Dye, there's a whole lot more to like about Brickyard Crossing than its location. This is one of the testiest golf courses in America, one that demands your best, especially on its home stretch. Read More.
Friday, May 3, 2013
The Golf Channel features Mr. and Mrs. Dye.
The Golf Channel will air a segment on Pete and Alice Dye at approximately 3 p.m. ET on May 9 and 10 as part of its coverage of the Players Championship.
The 2013 Players Championship will be contested from May 9-12 at TPC Sawgrass, designed by the Dye duo and recognized as one of the most difficult courses in the world. The course is known for its signature hole, the par-three, 132-yard 17th, simply known as the "Island Green."
Pete Dye received the 2003 Old Tom Morris Award from the Golf COurse Superintendents Associate of America, their highest honor. In 2005, he became the sixth recipient of the PGA Tour Lifetime Achievement Award, and he was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2008. He has been awarded a Doctor of Landscape Architecture degree from Purdue.
An accomplished amateur golfer in addition to her prowess as a designer, Alice Dye is known as the "First Lady of Golf Architecture" in the United States. The Indianapolis native was a 1970 U.S. Curtis Cup Team member and won the U.S. Senior Women's Amateur in both 1978 and 1979. She has been a member of the USGA Women's Committee, the LPGA Advisory Council and a member of the Board of Directors of the Women's Western Amateur, which has honored her with its Woman of Distinction Award. In 2004, she was honored with the PGA's First Lady of Golf Award.
The state of Indiana proudly lays claim to having more Pete Dye-designed courses than any other place in the world. The Kampen Course at the Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex is part of the Pete Dye Golf Trail, a collection of his courses in the state of Indiana intended as both a showcase for the golf traveler and a tribute to the golf visionary.
The 2013 Players Championship will be contested from May 9-12 at TPC Sawgrass, designed by the Dye duo and recognized as one of the most difficult courses in the world. The course is known for its signature hole, the par-three, 132-yard 17th, simply known as the "Island Green."
Pete Dye received the 2003 Old Tom Morris Award from the Golf COurse Superintendents Associate of America, their highest honor. In 2005, he became the sixth recipient of the PGA Tour Lifetime Achievement Award, and he was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2008. He has been awarded a Doctor of Landscape Architecture degree from Purdue.
An accomplished amateur golfer in addition to her prowess as a designer, Alice Dye is known as the "First Lady of Golf Architecture" in the United States. The Indianapolis native was a 1970 U.S. Curtis Cup Team member and won the U.S. Senior Women's Amateur in both 1978 and 1979. She has been a member of the USGA Women's Committee, the LPGA Advisory Council and a member of the Board of Directors of the Women's Western Amateur, which has honored her with its Woman of Distinction Award. In 2004, she was honored with the PGA's First Lady of Golf Award.
The state of Indiana proudly lays claim to having more Pete Dye-designed courses than any other place in the world. The Kampen Course at the Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex is part of the Pete Dye Golf Trail, a collection of his courses in the state of Indiana intended as both a showcase for the golf traveler and a tribute to the golf visionary.
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Bury Me In a Pot Bunker
For
Immediate Release:
April
17, 2013
New Special Edition of Pete
Dye’s Bury
Me In A Pot Bunker Released
as 60 Minutes
Sports on Showtime Appearances Near
Delray Beach, Florida –
Coinciding with his appearance on 60
Minutes Sports on Showtime (April
21st, Noon. EST), a new special edition of World Golf Hall of Famer Pete Dye’s
autobiography Bury Me In A Pot Bunker has been released. Written with
co-author Mark Shaw, this book not only chronicles the evolution of 25 magical
Dye courses including The Ocean Course at Kiawah, The Players Stadium Course
featuring the infamous island green 17th created by Pete’s wife Alice,
Whistling Straits, Teeth of the Dog, Crooked Stick and Harbour Town Golf Links,
but includes new creative insights, design philosophies and humorous “Dye-isms”
from the world’s most challenging golf course architect.
“By understanding the architect’s mindset
while creating the holes, golfers can improve their game playing our courses or
any courses using sound strategies instead of just winging it,” Dye said. “If
players pay attention, they can out-think me or any designer who’s trying to
hoodwink them into attempting the difficult, gambling shot.”
Packed
with dramatic photos from Ken May’s Rolling Greens Photography, Bury
Me In A Pot Bunker features quotes from Tiger Woods, Rory Mcllroy, and
many other PGA Tour headliners chronicling Dye’s remarkable career, one that
has seen his courses host 28 Major Championships. No wonder Golf Digest’s Ron Whitten says of Dye:
“No other [golf course] designer continues to re-invent his architecture the
way Pete Dye does.”
Intended
for golfers of all skill levels, Bury Me In A Pot Bunker will, as
Greg Norman says, “Change forever the way players look at the game of golf.”
******************
Published
independently to immediately launch the book to coincide with Pete and Alice
Dye’s media appearances, Bury Me In A Pot Bunker is available
at Amazon.com in both paperback and on Kindle and at bookstores through Baker
and Taylor and Ingram. More information about the book including interview
requests and review copies may be obtained by contacting co-author Mark Shaw
via email at mshawin@yahoo.com or telephone at 970.618.2027.
Monday, April 1, 2013
Watch for this television special on the Dye's
Mr. and Mrs. Dye will be featured on a 60 Minutes segment on Premium Channel Showtime CBS Sports:
April 3 9:00pm 11:00pm 12:00pm
April 7 12:00pm (night)
April 11 12:00pm
April 13 3:30pm
April 20 12:30am
April 21 12:00pm
April 27 2:00am
We hope you will get a chance to watch.
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Have you booked your Pete Dye Golf Trail visit?
The office phone has been ringing at a steady pace as spring approaches. We truly enjoy speaking to fellow golfers looking for a unique golf experience.
Where are you traveling to play golf this summer? I highly suggest a trip that includes the Pete Dye Golf Trail for this summer.
On the right hand side of the blog you will see a list of links for the member golf courses. In addition the following websites have packages and promotions that include our member courses.
Visit Hamilton County
Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex
Marriott - Indianapolis Downtown
French Lick
The Fort
and as always you can reach us directly at petedyegolftrail@gmail.com
and at 574-933-1610
DON'T MISS THE CHANCE FOR A GREAT EXPERIENCE.
Where are you traveling to play golf this summer? I highly suggest a trip that includes the Pete Dye Golf Trail for this summer.
On the right hand side of the blog you will see a list of links for the member golf courses. In addition the following websites have packages and promotions that include our member courses.
Visit Hamilton County
Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex
Marriott - Indianapolis Downtown
French Lick
The Fort
and as always you can reach us directly at petedyegolftrail@gmail.com
and at 574-933-1610
DON'T MISS THE CHANCE FOR A GREAT EXPERIENCE.
Friday, February 1, 2013
An Opportunity for the Friends of the Pete Dye Golf Trail
For those of you who have been influenced by this recent
blast of Midwest winter and are thinking about warmer climates and new places
to play golf, I have a suggestion. I just recently returned from a short
business trip to the PGA Show in Orlando. After a couple days at the show, a
friend and I drove to Brooksville, Florida to play a course Mr. Dye completed
in 2006, Southern Hills Plantation Club.
As a private club it is not that well known to the public,
however it is well enough known to have hosted the second stage of the PGA tour
qualifier last fall. It is a great golf facility, challenging, but not
punishing. A straight forward layout
that requires just about every club in your bag. It has an extensive practice
area that includes a walking only, short game course off the back of the range.
You can spend a whole afternoon there just working on your wedge game and putting. Finally, there is a
clubhouse worthy of the name Southern Hills Plantation. Left click the following picture to see the first hole and the clubhouse.
Brooksville is located in Hernando County bordered on the
west by the Gulf of Mexico. While modernized in many ways, it still retains
much of the charm of what is referred to as Old Florida. The town was
incorporated in 1880 and many of the original historic buildings still stand.
The rolling topography and sand based soil of this area has lent itself to some
of the most beautiful golf courses in Florida. The best of which might be Southern Hills.
From the back tees, the course measures 7557 and at the time of its opening it
was the second longest golf course in Florida. Of course like all of Mr. Dye's
golf courses, you don't need to go all the way back to have a great golf
experience. My friend and I played from the Blue Tees, plenty of golf at 6995
yards and I will say without reservation, it was a great golf experience. The following video describes it better than I ever could.
Now for the best part! The club is currently offering member for
the day opportunities. Arrangements can be made through me by contacting the
Pete Dye Golf Trail Office at 574-933-1610 or you can call the Pro Shop at
Southern Hills and let them know you are a friend of the Pete Dye Golf Trail. In
addition, home and real estate tours are available by contacting the Pro Shop
as well. The number there is 352-277-5000.
Either way, I hope you will take advantage of this generous offer and after you
play let me know what you think. I think you will agree that this one is a gem.
Monday, January 21, 2013
Golf Advice - A Different Perspective
This past summer I have become a fan of The Dan Dakich Show
on the ESPN radio affiliate in Indianapolis, 1070 The Fan WFNI. One of the
reasons I enjoy his show is Dan's ability to use the sports issues and developments
of the day as teachable moments to help his audience in their day to day lives.
Once a coach always a coach. One of the things I hear Dan stress on a regular
basis is that the key to success in sports, business or really any aspect of
your life is to make a consistent effort in whatever you do, every day.
As I have thought about this over the course of the summer,
I have found that not only is it great advice in how you determine to live your
life, but that it has major applications in the fun, but probably less important
aspect of playing a round of golf. I
have been fortunate in my life to be able to make a living by promoting a game.
Currently by promoting the Pete Dye Golf Trail, but throughout the majority of my
career to promote golf as an instructor. I learned early on that the game is more fun
for my students when they play better. In an effort to play better golf I have
found we are tempted to try all manner of things. Often trying something new on
almost every shot. So much so, that when we do hit a good shot we have no idea
what we did to produce the improved results.
My suggestion is to use the Coach's advice and make a
consistent effort. Do the same things every time you hit a golf shot. Even down
to making the same swing in the same sequence of motion, regardless of results.
Will you miss some shots? Of course, we all miss shots regardless of skill
level. But by recognizing the effort and trying to repeat it in every swing, we
can learn something about our swing and making educated changes as opposed to
random moves.
One thing you can do in the off season to help is to try and
verbalize your swing. Tell yourself how you swing the club. An example would be
as a right handed player , my left arm starts the club back as my hips clear
out of the way. When the club gets past my back foot I start to use my shoulders
to finish the backswing. To start back to the ball, I start my downswing with
my knees, clearing the way for my arms and hands to swing the club to the ball.
There are countless number of combinations so the best way to start is to
describe simply what you do. Don't worry about right or wrong just identify
what you do. Two good things will happen. It will be easier to identify the
need to make a change for improvement and when you indentify that need, you
will have a guideline to base your decision. More important you will have the
basis of making the consistent effort that is a key to successful golf game.
Monday, January 14, 2013
Visual Advice - Influence of the Dominant Eye
The problem is we trust what our eyes tell us, even if the “picture” they create is not accurate. This inaccuracy occurs much more often than we realize. Since visual and perceptual inaccuracies have an influence on the basic fundamentals of our golf shots, it has to be difficult to set ourselves correctly if we don’t see the direction accurately.
While we all see things in the same manner, our perception of what we see is different for everyone. Much of this is caused by the concept of a dominant eye and its position relative to the image. Since there isn't any agreement about how a dominant eye influences us as golfers, we are left to our own devices to find the “best way” for an accurate view of the target. Do you know your dominant eye? The classic method to evaluate the idea of a dominant eye is to make a circle with your index finger and your thumb. With both eyes open hold the circle at arms length put an image in the circle. Now close one eye. Does the image stay in the circle or move? If the image stays in the circle, the open eye is your dominant eye. If when you close one eye it moves, the closed eye is the dominant eye. Now do the test again closing the opposite eye first and see if the results are the same.
For any golf shot it helps to create an imaginary line at the ball, but many of my students have trouble with this concept. What I have found is that it is easier to create reference points either from behind the ball ending at the ball or in front of the ball going toward the target. In an interview with my online clients I found there seems to be a correlation between the dominant eye and which side of the ball they look to create this imaginary target line. The following is a test I have had some success with. Get a 12 inch ruler and a golf ball. Set the ruler on the ground pointed to a target across the room and put the ball at one end of the ruler. Now with a golf club set the club behind the ball and set up to the ball using the ruler as a reference to the target. How does the ruler look in relation to the target? Now put the ball at the opposite end of the ruler and do the test, again setting up to the golf ball. Was there a position that looked like the ruler was aimed more accurately? If there was we suggest that you focus on that side of the ball when try to create an imaginary reference for your set up.
While it might seem that for right handed golfers the line behind the ball would be most accurate for right eye dominant players and the one left of the ball for left. After more than a year of testing I can tell you there is no pattern or rule. Each player has been different. Head position tilt of the head, How we approach the ball, visual patterns on the putter all seem to have an influence. Yet all agree that how the information pertains to them has been helpful. At the end of the day for me how to help the individual means more than finding a rule that pertains to everyone.
We have found one pattern as it pertains to the actual stroke. The following are generic and average images of the path we see on PuttLab, relative to the target line. One for players who see a line to the ball and for those who focus on the line past the ball. These are average arc shapes, in the real world some are smaller and some are bigger. I don't have enough data to make any claims. What I don't know yet is whether stroke mechanics influence a visual preference or if vision forced the mechanics. But we do have enough to know that those that match one of these patterns in general are less conflicted and more consistent than those who don't.
Monday, January 7, 2013
Play Golf or Play Swing?
A couple of years ago I was lucky enough to attend the
opening of the Harbor Shores Golf Club in Berrien Springs, Michigan. Designer
Jack Nicklaus was joined by Arnold Palmer, Tom Watson and Johnny Miller for a
clinic and a round of golf. The clinic began with Tom Watson explaining his
beginnings in golf. He described how his first lesson came from his Dad. Mr. Watson
showed young Tom how to hold the club, how to make the ball curve left and how to curve the ball curve to the right. He taught him how to hook and slice it on the very first day
and then how to use that knowledge. Not one way to stand, or the proper
positions during the swing, but how to control the clubface and make the ball
curve.
As a former employee of Arnold Palmer I was well aware of
the story of Mr. Palmer’s first lesson from his father that was in essence the
same story. What I didn’t realize was that the first lessons for
Johnny Miller and Jack Nicklaus were the same as well. They were taught to hit
shots, not how to swing a club. Experiment, not with the thought of good or
bad, but with the intention of gaining information by experience. All of these
Hall of Famers started the game with the concept that to play successful golf
requires a variety of shots.
#7 The Fort Golf Course and Resort |
Over the course of the offseason we will continue this
conversation of strategic play and how it will benefit your scores as you
challenge the Trail next season.
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