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A Bucket List Day of Golf in Boston

August 18, 2021 by Sean Melia in Golf in Mass, Golf

The idea to play both George Wright and Franklin Park in a day came about last October when Kevin Van Cleef said it was one his golf bucket list. The idea, like all great ideas, stuck with us. We stayed in touch and every now and then we’d remind each other of our plan for a day of local golf decadence in Dorchester and Jamaica Plain.

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August 18, 2021 /Sean Melia
Boston, Golf, Public Golf
Golf in Mass, Golf
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Michael Thorbjornsen and Matt Parziale Put on a Show at Brae Burn

July 19, 2021 by Sean Melia in Golf in Mass, Golf

Michael Thorbjornsen beat Matt Parziale to win the 113th Massachusetts State Amateur in style. A historic match between two national champions at their peak.

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July 19, 2021 /Sean Melia
Mass Amateur, Amateur Golf, Massachusetts, Matt Parziale
Golf in Mass, Golf
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Putting with The Flagstick in has Made Me a Better Putter... I Think.

July 07, 2021 by Sean Melia in Golf, Golf in Mass

The clang of a golfball striking the flagstick will never replace a golf ball rattling around the bottom of the cup. It’s an age old sound that rings through every golfers soul when a ball tumbles over the edge of the earth and into the cup. It’s the sound of success and satisfaction, but I am here to tell you that I’ve decided to eschew that wonderful sound for the satisfaction of making more putts.

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July 07, 2021 /Sean Melia
Golf, Golf in Mass
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Cape Cod Country Club is on the Brink of Becoming a Solar Field.

March 22, 2021 by Sean Melia in Golf in Mass, Golf

Cape Cod Country Club is owned by Friel Golf Management who is planning to sell the land so it can be turned into a solar field. This isn’t the only public golf course that the Friel’s are selling off. In Hudson, NH, their father’s 60 year old course is slated to become a logistics center.

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March 22, 2021 /Sean Melia
Cape Cod, Cape Cod Country Club, Cape Cod Golf, Golf, Friel
Golf in Mass, Golf
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The Afterlife of a Golf Ball

October 29, 2020 by Sean Melia in Golf in Mass, Golf

Some golf balls spend their eternity clanging around in a drawer or a compartment in the trunk of a car. Others sit on a wall plaque commemorating a hole-in-one or a favorite round. Others rest deep in the woods, after rattling through the trees. It hears the occasional group crunching through the forest but can’t call out for help. It watches time go by, leaves turning and growing, rain falling, sun blazing. The cycles of the year slowly helping the ground swallow the ball up until it’s completely buried, never to be found by another golfer again.

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October 29, 2020 /Sean Melia
Golf, Golf Balls
Golf in Mass, Golf
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Taconic’s 15th hole.

Taconic’s 15th hole.

Seeking the Patron Saint of Pace Of Play

October 21, 2020 by Sean Melia in Golf in Mass, Golf

The parishioners rush through their prayers; their voices echo off the stain glass as each faithful servant finishes the “Our Father” at a different time. The priest’s sermon doesn’t drone on and on to the point of death inducing boredom, he seems more interested in setting the world record for transforming wine and bread into the body and blood of Christ. It would make Usain Bolt blush.

This is church in Ireland, held at breakneck speed. In and out in 35 minutes. The experience was a joy for a young boy used to hour long church services in America. My family would often joke about the mismatched church experiences. Ireland, a slow paced, “no bother” kind of place shouldn’t be rushing through Mass. It’s the home of St. Patrick, it’s a Catholic stronghold, a beacon of spirituality for the rest of the world. The religious spoken word sprint belongs in America, home of the micro-machine man. American’s are always in a rush, until they get to church, then everything slows to a screeching halt.

This same conundrum exists on the golf courses of both countries. The Irish play fast golf. Hit it, find it, hit it again. No frills and no bother. Maybe it’s the constant threat of rain that puts fire in the heels of Irish golfers. 18 holes and church on a Sunday morning in Ireland might take you 3.5 hours total. You’re lucky if you’re making the turn in that amount of time in the United States.

Golf is growing.

It’s growing slower. Most course rangers drive their carts around too nervous to ruffle any feathers and tell people to hurry up. The combination of hard seltzers and an “I paid to be here” attitude is quite combustable. Starters stand on first tees, shoulders slumped in defeat, telling a 1:30pm tee time that finishing before a 6:30 sundown might be a challenge because “it’s all backed up.” Many golfers are spending more time watching golf on the golf course than actually playing the game.

The challenge with pace of play in golf, especially weekend public golf, is tricky. On the one hand, people should be learning to golf. It’s an outdoor, active, lifelong sport. It’s a social sport, allowing for connection, and this CoVID summer has proven that golf is the perfect combination of being social, active, and outdoors. Otherwise, we’d be reading about crowded hiking trails and streams of people taking selfies on mountain summits. On the other hand, it should be played far more efficiently than it is. A day of golf is turning into a day of golf. A 30 minute drive to the course, a 4.5-5 hour and a 30 minute drive home is basically the entire day. Tear yourself out of bed early to beat the crowd? Sure, that’s sometimes a thing, but the early bird doesn’t always catch the fast-round worm. A Thursday morning round at 7:41 last week, as a twosome, took four hours.

The solutions are all available to us, there’s just no conviction to make it work. Rangers need to “Range” if you will. Push groups ahead if they fall behind, give groups a 9-hole check-in. If you’re behind after 9-holes, you don’t get to play the 10th hole (or the 11th if you’re way behind). Obviously, the fear of this mentality is that it might turn people off to the game. It’s too intimidating, too stuffy, unwelcoming to the newbie. All valid arguments. Not everyone has a friend in their lives that can usher them around a course and give them the tricks of faster play. Some people just suck and it takes them a really long time to play. If you really suck, you shouldn’t be keeping a sharp tally of your score and you shouldn’t be too worried about the tee shot you blew into the woods. Let it go, drop a ball, and continue on.

The biggest issue is just a simple awareness that we are all sharing this massive field with pins stuck in random spots. We all chose to chase a ball around and whack it with a stick. No one is more or less worthy to be there and play golf. However, this is where golf courses could really help themselves out in the long run if they did hold everyone accountable to some pace of play expectations.

Irish golfers don’t worry about their handicap and rarely play stroke play. On No Laying Up’s excellent Tourist Sauce episode about Bandon Dunes, David Mclay Kidd says that most golfers in the British Isles play stroke play once a one to keep their handicaps up to date, aside from that, they don’t care. They’re playing match play, and all they care about is winning that day’s match. When the hole is won, the hole is done. Americans are obsessed with the optics of the golf experience and their handicaps are a big part of that (I can be part of that epidemic myself) . Church, in some ways, is the same. The Irish don’t feel the need to spend longer than they need in church or on the golf course. They have no desire to prove anything to anyone about their religion or their other religion.

There are plenty of other possible explanations for the different golf and church experiences in these two countries.

Maybe the pace of play, and the pace of church, in Ireland is fast because they have other things they’d like to be doing, too. They value their time and want to spend it in different ways. Maybe they’re more aware of the people they are sharing the course with. Maybe they choose the proper tees to play from. Maybe they’re treating 18 holes more like a hike, not worrying about score all the time, and getting on with it. Maybe the rhythm of their prayers in church has found its way into their golf. Maybe, church and golf are so spiritually aligned that they’re the same thing to the Irish. Play fast and pray fast, I wonder if there’s a Saint for that.

October 21, 2020 /Sean Melia
Golf
Golf in Mass, Golf
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Golf is a Goldfish

October 08, 2020 by Sean Melia in Golf in Mass

Goldfish typically grow to fit their environment. Buy one at the pet shop, bring it home, stick it in a bowl, it’ll stay pretty small. However, toss it in a tank, it’s grow larger. The growth also depends on the quality of water and nutrients, which shouldn’t really surprise anyone. Feed a goldfish well, put it in a large tank, you’ll get something that looks like Bryson DeChambeau.

Golf is indeed a goldfish.

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October 08, 2020 /Sean Melia
Golf in Mass
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The Biggest Golf Questions: Drink Cart or Snack Shack?

September 29, 2020 by Sean Melia in Golf in Mass

As rounds of golf slowly but surely grow longer and longer, snacks (and drinks) become more and more vital to a golfer’s survival. Hunger can be wreak havoc on those last few holes (so can one too many adult beverages). However, part of the experience a round these days is not just the quality of food and drink options, but the frequency of opportunities to crack open the wallet and buy a round.

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September 29, 2020 /Sean Melia
Golf in Mass
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The Greatest Challenge in Golf is managing the Space Between. It Will Be On Display This Weekend at Winged Foot.

September 17, 2020 by Sean Melia in Golf in Mass

Sports anticipation is like nothing else. Those small moments within the game that leave us on the edge of our seat or standing in our living room. The point guard dribbling the ball down the court is just a spring loaded moment ready for that inevitable snap of a jump shot or drive to the hoop. Then the waiting begins: Will it go in? What happens when it doesn’t? Will I be able to sleep? Will my remote be lodged in the wall? Will they grab the rebound?

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September 17, 2020 /Sean Melia
Golf in Mass
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The Purpose of Par Threes on a Golf Course

September 15, 2020 by Sean Melia in Golf in Mass

Over the course of the summer and playing all sorts of new courses, I have found myself most intrigued by par threes. The shortest holes on a golf course can range from 75 yards to 250 yards, and I believe I have probably hit each club in my bag into a par 3 this summer, including a driver at the 245 yard third hole at Cedar Falls in Saugus and a sand wedge into the miniaturized 9th hole at Concord CC, which shortened for the day and usually plays around 140 yards.

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September 15, 2020 /Sean Melia
Golf in Mass
2 Comments

Putting Green or Driving Range? A Pre-Round Conundrum.

September 10, 2020 by Sean Melia in Golf, Golf in Mass

Last month I was playing in a 2-day best ball tournament with my friend Eliot. As we warmed up on the range among some very talented players, I overheard one of them remark that before most rounds they “hit three balls on the range” and then go play. Obviously, a tournament round requires a bit more preparation, so the range was lined with players finding their swing for the day. Ultimately though, we all want to play well when we tee it up on the first hole, and there’s nothing worse than standing on the fourth tee and cracking the “Well, the first three holes was the warm-up” joke.

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September 10, 2020 /Sean Melia
Golf, Golf in Mass
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The Golf Shots That Bring Me Back Have Changed With Time (and Age)

August 27, 2020 by Sean Melia in Golf in Mass, Golf

I’m not going to diagnose my chipping issues here, mainly because the diagnosis involves words that golfers don’t want in their mind. However, my shaky short game has also become the part of the game that excites me most about any upcoming round. It’s strange because as a kid I loved hitting driver far. Playing Maynard CC over and over and over again when I was young was a practice in how measuring how far I could hit the ball.

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August 27, 2020 /Sean Melia
Golf in Mass, Golf
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What Makes a Great First Hole

August 24, 2020 by Sean Melia in Golf in Mass, Golf

The first hole of any golf course is an important one. I prefer the gentle handshake approach taken by the likes of Donald Ross, however, some courses don't want to let you ease into your round, like Bethpage Black and Bethpage Red.

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August 24, 2020 /Sean Melia
Bethpage, Concord Country Club, Golf, Golf Courses
Golf in Mass, Golf
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To Fall In Love With a Golf Course

August 19, 2020 by Sean Melia in Golf in Mass

I fell in love with Taconic Golf Course during a twilight round. The setting, the vibe, the course, and freedom I felt were amazing and left me feeling like I had to get back as soon as possible.

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August 19, 2020 /Sean Melia
Golf in Mass
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