Monday, January 7, 2008

Golf and Hospitality



Meeting planners and suppliers gather annually for golf, hospitality and a good time.

Event: M&C Annual Golf Invitational
The 2006 event was held at The Wigwam Golf Resort & Spa in Litchfield Park, Ariz. This year’s event will be held Sept. 16-19 at Hershey Resorts, Hershey, Pa.

Meetings and Conventions magazine’s annual golf invitational began in 1992 as a relationship marketing event bringing advertisers (travel industry suppliers) and readers (meeting planning professionals) together to network, golf and have fun. Magazine staff from the special events, sales and marketing departments work each event.

The M&C Annual Invitational is the company’s largest and longest-running event. In addition, two niche market outings are also produced—the Pharmaceutical Meetings Invitational and the Financial Insurance Invitational.

Player recruitment:
Advertisers qualify for a team invitation through advertising participation in the magazine’s golf supplement. Each advertiser completes their foursome by inviting their three best clients. “We qualify all attendees to make sure they have meeting planning job responsibility,” Bernard W. Schraer, group publisher, Meetings and Conventions, says. “We also recruit and qualify additional meeting planner attendees through the magazine. Total attendance is about 125. Attendance has grown since its inception and we now maintain this group size to ensure a quality event.”

Recruitment challenges:
Some advertisers have difficulty completing a foursome, Schraer says, so qualified players are recruited from the magazine readership to help round-out foursomes.

Making it stand out:
The location, always at a top golf resort, changes each year, alternating between East and West venues.

Offer your players the opportunity to leave their golf clubs at home. International Golf Rental & Sales, Inc delivers premium golf club rental sets nationwide. They specialize in supplying large corporate and not-for-ptofit outings with rental golf equipment.

Course selection:
RFPs are sent to golf resorts that the magazine staff becomes aware of throughout the course of business. “Once proposals are submitted to us, the magazine selects the final location based on the resort reputation, number of golf courses, quality of golf courses, ease of transportation (air and ground) and other criteria to ensure a quality experience for our attendees,” Schraer adds.

Advice on working with course staff:
Schraer suggests planners always conduct a site inspection of the course and facilities, preferably during the same time of year as you plan to hold the event. “Ask for a food tasting to sample your menu. Make sure to position your objectives to the course so they can help you meet them,” he says.

Weather delays:
The annual event has experienced few interruptions from Mother Nature and it has never been cancelled. “We had one rain delay of about two hours during the first day of a tournament in South Carolina,” Schraer says. “Golfers were instructed to go to the clubhouse or halfway house where beverages and snacks were served until play resumed. We allow enough time in the schedule so that the delay did not affect other activities.”

Food and beverage:
“We always ask the representative of the host resort to attend the tournament the year prior to their event. This is an exceptional way to maintain a high-quality event and superior food and beverage,” notes Schraer. “Many resorts try to ‘top’ the food and beverage from the prior year. About three months before the event, the resort submits suggested banquet event orders (BEO) with menu selections. Our staff reviews and makes changes and a final BEO is selected.”

Format:
A modified scramble format has been used for the last several years. Players all hit from the tee and select the best drive, then play their own ball from there. The two best net scores for each hole determines the team score. “This seems to be a good compromise for both novice and competitive golfers,” adds Schraer. “We mix foursomes over the two-day tournament. Teams play together the first day, then are mixed randomly the second day. The players continue to compete for their original team but the mixed format promotes better business networking.”

Awards/gifts:
Team prizes are given for first, second and third place teams with a humorous prize for the team coming in last. Individual skill prizes are also given. Golf trips and golf equipment are typically awarded.

Incorporating technology:
If the venue has GPS-enabled golf carts, then that technology is utilized. The organization also uses a “very high-tech video/camera company that takes stills and video throughout the tournament and creates a video that we play at the beginning of the final awards banquet,” Schraer says. Team and individual photos of winners from the awards presentation are also incorporated into the video.

Cost-savers:
“Always use a travel professional to ensure airfare costs are the least expensive as possible. Shop around for equipment and premium vendors to make sure you are getting the best price on these items,” says Schraer. “Negotiate all contracts to save money.”

Post-event:
Attendees are asked to complete a post-event survey evaluating each aspect of the event; and are asked to make suggestions. Staff meets about one month after the outing to incorporate any productive suggestions into the following year’s event.


Reference:
Golf Event Magazine

Friday, January 4, 2008

ATT Pebble Beach National Pro-Am




The ATT Pebble Beach National Pro-Am is a 72-hole PGA TOUR golf championship dating back to the 1930’s when Bing Crosby gathered a ‘few friends’ to raise money for charity... and have a little fun.

Top TOUR professionals team with Hollywood celebrities, world renowned musicians and the captains of industry as they compete for a $5.6 million purse. Foursomes rotate to Poppy Hills, Spyglass Hill and Pebble Beach Golf Links Thursday through Saturday. The infamous ‘cut’ is made on Saturday night and the leading 60 professionals and 25 pro-am teams play Pebble Beach on Sunday for the championship.

If you want to play this golf clourse yourself at some point, perhaps within a large group. Refer to this California golf club rental company to supply your group with rentals.

Phil Mickelson won the 2007 AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am and will be back to defend the week of February 4 – 10, 2008.

2007
Phil Mickelson wins the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am – First place check is $990,000.

2005
Phil Mickelson wins the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am – First place check is $954,000.

1991
Poppy Hills replaces Cypress Point

1986
AT&T becomes title sponsor. Fuzzy Zoeller wins the pro portion as well as the pro-am with partner Mike Evans

1977
Bing Crosby dies on a golf course in Spain

1967
Spyglass Hill replaces MPCC

1947
First Bing Crosby National Pro-Amateur Golf Championship on Pebble Beach, Cypress Point and Monterey Peninsula Country Club. Ed Furgol ties with George Fazio. Sam Snead and Roger Kelly win the pro-am portion.

1946
Ted Durein and Dan Searle approach Crosby re reviving the tournament in Pebble Beach

1942
Tournament suspended during WWII

1937
Bing Crosby hosts the first National Pro-Amateur Golf Championship in Rancho Sante Fe, California. Sam Snead wins first tournament – First place check is $500

Pebble Beach Golf




The Pebble Beach Golf Links
Since 1919, the exquisite beauty and unique challenge of Pebble Beach Golf Links has thrilled golfers and spectators alike. Pebble Beach has been the site of golf's most prestigious tournaments, including the annual AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, the 1972, '82, '92 and 2000 U.S. Open Championships.

Pebble Beach Golf Links is ranked the No. 1 Public Course in America by Golf Digest in
2007.

Designed by Jack Neville and Douglas Grant, the course hugs the rugged coastline, providing wide-open vistas, cliffside fairways and sloping greens. It is a delightful challenge for all players.


Pebble Beach Golf Links also includes chipping and putting greens and the Peter Hay Par-Three Golf Course and practice range. The Golf Shop and first tee are located directly across from The Lodge at Pebble Beach.


18 Holes
Par: 72

Black Rating (US Open Championship): 74.3/Slope 144; Yardage - 6,828

Blue Rating: 73.8/Slope 142; Yardage - 6,737

Gold Rating: 72.3/Slope 137; Yardage - 6,348

White Rating: 71.2/Slope 134; Yardage - 6,116

Red Rating: 71.9/Slope 130; Yardage - 5,198

Remember each of these golf courses do not always have sufficient golf club rentals available for large outings. If you find your group in need, refer to this Pebble Beach golf club rental company to help you out.



Spanish Bay Golf Links
Spanish Bay recalls the original Scottish concept of the game golf, established over five hundred years ago. This was the intention of the design team, Robert Trent Jones Jr., Tom Watson and Sandy Tatum, in their creation of a true links golf course. Links is an old Scottish word for sandy wasteland, usually near the sea, with bristly grasses and ever prevailing wind. The Links at Spanish Bay are so authentic that even the Monterey coastline mirrors the rugged, natural beauty of Scotland.

Here, the golf course provides you with the choice of using your regular shot or a low, running shot to play the firm turf while keeping the ball under the steady ocean breezes.

The Links at Spanish Bay was also built with a deep respect for environmental preservation. To further continue this mission, we have designated "environmentally sensitive" areas. Drops are allowed outside of these areas, so we ask for your understanding and cooperation to help us preserve the native plants, birds and animals that make this course so special.



Also available are chipping and putting greens. The Links at Spanish Bay is located at The Inn at Spanish Bay, off 17-Mile Drive near the Pacific Grove Gate.


18 Holes
Par:72

Blue Rating: 74.1/Slope 146; Yardage - 6,821
Gold Rating: 72.0/Slope 137; Yardage - 6,422
White Rating: 70.3/Slope 129; Yardage - 6,043
Red Rating: 72.1/Slope 129; Yardage - 5,332


SpyGlass Hill Golf Course
Ranked number five on "America's 100 Greatest Public Courses" list by Golf Digest for 2003 - 2004.

Spyglass Hill Golf Course takes its name from Robert Louis Stevenson's classic novel, Treasure Island, published in 1863. Local legend maintains that Stevenson once wandered the Spyglass area gathering ideas for his novels. A unique aspect of this course is that the holes are named after characters in Treasure Island. Hole names such as "Black Dog" and "Billy Bones" are hints for the unwary. As players attempt to master this difficult course, they may hear the laughter of pirates in the distance.

Spyglass Hill was designed by Robert Trent Jones, Sr., as a part of the master plan for the Pebble Beach ocean front. S.F.B. Morse, founder of Pebble Beach Company, and chairman of the board of Del Monte Properties, envisioned a string of golf courses around Del Monte Forest's shoreline. Morse commissioned Jones to design a course between Cypress point and Pebble Beach.

After six years of planning, Spyglass Hill opened on March 11, 1966. The design features two distinctly different kinds of terrain that influence the way the holes look and play. The first five holes roll through sandy seaside dunes challenging the golfer to carefully pick the safest path. The following 13 holes are cut through majestic pines with elevated greens and strategically placed bunkers and lakes to grab the errant shot.

Spyglass Hill is rated one of the toughest courses in the world from the Championship tees, boasting a course rating of 75.5 and a slope rating of 147. The PGA Tour consistently lists Spyglass Hill's holes 6, 8 and 16 among the toughest on the tour, and during the 1999 United States Amateur, the stroke average of the field during medal play was in excess of 79.

Spyglass Hill is an annual co-host to the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, formerly known as the Crosby. Spyglass Hill co-hosted the 1999 United States Amateur during medal play rounds, and hosts many other world-class professional and amateur events each year as well.

Located one mile west of The Lodge at Pebble Beach, Spyglass Hill Golf Course also offers putting greens and practice range.


18 Holes
Par: 72

Blue Rating: 75.5/Slope 147; Yardage - 6,953
Gold Rating: 73.2/Slope 144; Yardage - 6,534
White Rating: 71.4/Slope 137; Yardage - 6,123
Red Rating: 72.9/Slope 133; Yardage - 5,379


Del Monte Golf Course
Opened in 1897, Del Monte Golf Course is the oldest course in continuous operation west of the Mississippi. Designed by golf and polo enthusiast Charles Maud, this inland course boasts a meandering layout that has challenged golfers for more than a century.

It was the original host of the California State Amateur, still played on Del Monte's narrow, tree-lined fairways and small, well-protected greens, and continues to serve as one of three courses on which the Callaway Golf Pebble Beach Invitational is played.

Adjacent to Del Monte Golf Course, the Del Monte Pavilion offers an inviting outdoor setting for any special event. Whether you are hosting a corporate outing or a tournament awards ceremony, all events meet the impeccable standards of Pebble Beach Resorts.

18 Holes
Par: 72

Blue Rating: 71.5/Slope 127; Yardage - 6,365
White Rating: 70.1/Slope 124; Yardage - 6,052
Ladies' Red Rating: Rating 70.8/Slope 115; Yardage - 5,429
Men's Red Rating: 67.3/Slope 117; Yardage - 5,429

Thursday, January 3, 2008

FBR Open - Phoenix, Arizona




Annually sporting the largest crowds on the PGA TOUR, the FBR Open has gained legendary status on TOUR for being unlike any other golf tournament. Yes, the Phoenix TOUR stop is different from all the rest, but what makes it so? It starts with the unbelievable golf played by the likes of Aaron Baddeley, Phil Mickelson and Vijay Singh on the beautiful TPC Scottsdale and ends with the biggest galleries on TOUR. In between the golf and the galleries are The Thunderbirds. Hosts of the Open since 1939, this fine group of Valley business men has turned an ordinary "golf tournament" into a community event/happening -- commonly referred to as "The Greatest Show on Grass" -- and along the way have raised close to $46 million for Arizona charities.

The 2008 edition will mark the 73rd playing of the Open, and the fifth as the FBR Open, making it one of the five oldest events on the PGA TOUR.
If you are thinking about attending the 2008 FBR Open, there are a few things you should know. First, parking is never a problem. A number of large lots are located in proximity to all the action and patrons have the choice of walking to the event or being shuttled practically to the front door. Second, ticket access is simple. Due to the design of the FBR Open course and grounds, an unlimited number of people can witness great golf action. Thus, tickets are never sold out. Finally, there’s the TPC Scottsdale itself, one of the finest venues on the PGA TOUR for players and fans alike. If you want to play this golf clourse yourself at some point, perhaps within a large group. Refer to this Arizona golf club rental company to supply your group with rentals. Remember, they don’t call it the “Stadium Course” for nothing. There’s room aplenty to watch the key shots on all of the critical holes. Crucial are the final four holes, which offer classic risk/reward options for the game’s top pros.