2011年3月29日星期二

USC Aiken gets new disc golf course

USC Aiken gets new disc golf course


AIKEN, S.C.---University of South Carolina Aiken has a new disc golf course. The idea was a vision from a previous student government president at the university. It took nearly a year and a half for the idea to take shape golf lessons aberdeen. The school got some help from the Professional Disc Gold Association in Augusta when it came to the design.The course is nine holes long and located along the university's Pacer Path which is used for track and field events."Interest has been great. We've had some play before today. In fact, Josh our student president now came by and wanted to play 9 and came back and said hey I played 36 and really enjoyed it. So I think we're going to get a lot of play," said Michael Jara who is the Assistant Chancellor for Facilities Management at USC Aiken.Pete May, the Chairman of Collegiate Disc Golf Championship invited a team from USC Aiken to join the championship games taking place at the Hippodrome starting on Thursday Martin Laird Is First European to Win at Bay Hill Sets Sights on Augusta. There will be 54 teams from colleges all over the country.

2011年3月28日星期一

OSU alumnus sees green

OSU alumnus sees green


Planning a PGA tour and meeting celebrities at work might seem out of the ordinary for most Oklahoma State University graduates golf lessons aberdeen, but for one alumnus that dream is a reality.Kyle Callahan, class of 2006, is the assistant superintendent at Crooked Stick Golf Club in Indiana and has worked at some of the top courses in the nation."Back when the economy was really good, a lot of people jumped on it," Callahan said. "A lot of people thought it's just the easy way to play golf."Although Callahan is in charge of managing the greens for an exclusive golf club that Peyton Manning is a member of, it all started when he began working at Karsten Creek for Travis Levings."Because of Travis and the experience I got at Karsten Creek, I decided I wanted to be at the best of the best golf courses," Callahan said. "I've taken every bit of my degree, and I use it all."Best of the best is what Callahan got. After graduating he went on to complete an internship at a course in Tennessee, where he saw former celebrity couple Justin Timberlake and Cameron Diaz making their rounds on the course."When they were together in Tennessee, I had several conversations with them on the course," Callahan said.For four and a half years, Callahan, whose degree is in horticulture, worked at the Murfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio, which is home of the Jack Nicklaus course.The course is No. 18 in the top 100 courses, Callahan said. This is where he got the chance to meet OSU alumnus and PGA golfer Rickie Fowler What You Need to Consider When Choosing New Golf Shafts.

'Heroes' needs a savior

'Heroes' needs a savior

It's never a good thing for a retail release to feel like a tech demo. It's especially bad when it feels like a tech demo for a system that's been out for five years. "PlayStation Move Heroes" is admirable in its attempt to transfer combine motion-control standards like Frisbee and bowling out of the realm of sports and into the realm of combat, but the game never seems to do anything that the Move and the Move alone is capable of. The result is a middling diversion that golf lessons aberdeen, except for its graphics, feels like a Wii launch title.Shutting out Crash Bandicoot, the closest thing Sony's gaming division ever had to a mascot, "Heroes" stars everyone's favorite PlayStation-exclusive duos: Jak and Daxter, Ratchet and Clank, and, uh, Sly and Bentley. You know, Bentley. The pairs are sucked up by a special vortex that avoids Microsoft and Nintendo heroes, and placed in beautiful stages with the carnival atmosphere of a "Super Monkey Ball" game. In this new world, our heroes can't go about the platforming antics they're used to, and instead must complete challenges, lasting a couple minutes each, that involve bowling, disc golf, swordfighting, whipping or shooting.Most interesting among these are bowling and Frisbee, which differ from previous incarnations by letting you continue to control the Frisbee and ball after letting them go. With Frisbee, you can pilot the disc around by twisting the Move controller. This is fun but renders your throw worthless. The result isn't Frisbee at all, but a copy of "Wii Sports Resort's" flight mode Latest Golf News of Martin Laird.

2011年3月26日星期六

Dragons gear up for another golf title chase

Dragons gear up for another golf title chase


The Hutchinson Community College golf team has already won two Jayhawk Conference tournaments. Considering just three have been played so far, the Blue Dragons are in good shape to win their fourth straight conference title and fifth in six years.The one tournament the Blue Dragons didn't win, however, could be the difference between a conference title and second place. A third-place finish at the third conference tournament in Andover helped Dodge City move into a first-place tie at the midway point of the conference season lessons drills.Now the race essentially comes down to a best-of-three series with Hutchinson and Dodge City, although Johnson County trails the co-leaders by three points in the conference standings."I could very well come to that," HCC coach Chris Young said. "We go to Junction City on Monday, and that could go a long ways in deciding it. The team that finishes first will have an edge in confidence."We control our own destiny, but we've been in position before where we haven't and still won it."The final three tournaments will be played in the next four weeks. The final two tournaments are at courses the Blue Dragons generally play well at - Hesston Golf Park and Sand Creek Station in Newton.Dodge City and Hutchinson both have the individuals to ensure strong team scores. Dodge City's Alex Tiong leads the individual conference race with 24 .5 points. Reigning conference champ, Chien Hau Tan of Dodge City, is two points behind Is Your Golf Swing Training Aids True.

2011年3月24日星期四

Going for the green

Going for the green

Fees are going up at county golf courses. The city owns courses too. But are government-run services such as golf courses a thing of the past?County supervisors voted Tuesday to increase a number of fees, including greens fees at public golf courses lessons drills. Outrageous? No. Smart. And appropriate.Few but avid golfers — the enthusiasts of more typical means, not the rich ones who can join private country clubs — may be aware that Los Angeles County provides public courses for modest greens fees. It's one of those things that, for golfers, enhances the region's quality of life. Like tennis courts and other public sports facilities, the county Department of Parks and Recreation's 17 public golf courses provide recreation, not in more developed and more expensive urban areas but generally in smaller, less built-up cities and unincorporated areas.Public golf is nice to have. But given the amount of park space taken up by golf courses and the proportion of people who use them compared with those who would like to have more soccer fields, basketball courts, baseball diamonds or picnic grounds, it makes sense to ask whether golf is the best use of county resources — especially since the use of public space is by definition subsidized by all county taxpayers, even when fees rise to meet the immediate costs of operations Hit Your Golf Ball Long and High.

Cleveland County golf course closing down

Cleveland County golf course closing down


SHELBY — The clubhouse stands alone lessons drills. Nestled golf carts fill the space under a wooden canopy. Under the setting sun, two men tapped their golf balls while wearing tattered jeans. It could be their last time golfing. It will be the last time co-owner Cindy Hoyle will see the course she grew up with.Pine Grove Golf Club, Inc. will close to the public April 4. Hoyle said the course north of Shelby and south of Fallston was sold earlier this year to a Cleveland County manIt’s a bittersweet kind of thing,” Hoyle said.She said the land will be private with the new ownership. She doesn’t know what the new owner will do with the land Find Best Golf Swing Tips to Improve Golf.

2011年3月22日星期二

County residents to face higher fees

County residents to face higher fees


The Board of Supervisors voted Tuesday to increase charges for items ranging from golf course greens fees to the bill from the county coroner for handling a dead body. As the county struggles with cuts at the federal and state level and its own deficit, several department heads asked the board to approve fee increases to allow them to recoup more of their costs. Greens fees on county golf courses have been the same since 2009, but operating costs have gone up 10 percent, according to the Department of Parks and Recreation. Those fees are, on average, 25 percent less than the average at other public, municipal courses in Southern California, county staffers said. By unanimous vote, the board agreed to increase greens fees by $1 on weekdays and $2 on weekends lessons drills.
The county coroner's fee for body handling and transport will go up from $200 to $312.12, to cover some of the department's costs. Fees will be waived for the indigent, parents of a child 14 years old or younger, and those whose loved one was the innocent victim of a crime. The change gives the coroner authority to increase the fee up to $400, if necessary. Other fee increases will affect highway and sewer construction permits, and plan checks and inspections related to flood control. Most of the changes require further administrative action by the board and will not go into effect immediately Tiger Woods Will be Joined by Reigning U.S. Open Champ.