Year: 2019

Iowa Cup Matches move to fall dates

The 14th hole at Crow Valley Golf Club, site of the 2019 Iowa Cup Matches.

The 2019 Iowa Cup Matches are moving to the fall.

The Iowa Golf Association and Iowa PGA approved a plan over the offseason to move the date of the traditional matches between the state’s top amateurs and professionals to late in the season.  2019 will mark the 52nd playing of the matches and will be staged at Crow Valley Golf Club in Davenport on September 26 & 27.

The Iowa Cup began in 1967 and, for quite some time, the matches were always played in the fall.  It is unknown when they were moved to the spring.  The most notable driving forces for moving the event back to the fall were the weather and golf course availability.

“Three of the last six Iowa Cup Matches have had sessions wiped out due to weather while another one – Geneva G&CC in Muscatine – was very cold, windy and miserable.” stated IGA Executive Director Chad Pitts. “So moving to the fall dates should help with that. Not to mention that golf courses are looking for business much more in the early fall than in spring, which makes securing top venues a bit easier.”

The format of the event remains the same.  Four-Ball and Foursome (alternate shot) matches will take place in the morning and afternoon, respectively, of day one while Singles matches will be held on day two.

PICKING THE TEAM

In 2019, the IGA will use a point structure that mimics the Ryder Cup system.  50% of the points earned toward the 2018 IGA Player of the Year race will be added to 100% of the points earned in the 2019 race through July 28th (final day of the Iowa Amateur).  The top 14 players in the Open division and the top 4 players in the Senior division will be invited to play.  Reigning IGA Player of the Year J.D. Anderson will receive two captains picks to round out the 20 person squad.

You can view the standings for making the team here

Looking to play this week? Check here to see who’s open

In an effort to let golfers know what courses are open in 2019 (as always – weather dependent) this page will include and be updated with facilities that are open. Feel free to check back often!

Be sure to contact the course before heading out to play as the IGA doesn’t always know the conditions at every facility from day to day.

Amana Colonies Golf Club
Will open Thursday, March 28th. They will be Cart Path Only and the Practice Facility will be closed through this weekend.

Blue Top Ridge at Riverside Casino and Golf Resort
Weather permitting we will open April 5th with the below shoulder season rates till April 25th
-18 holes $55
-9 holes $35
-Replay rate $35
Juniors (17 & Under, excluding group events) $25

Bos Landen Golf Course
Hoping for Thursday, March 21st – Tentative as this point

Brown Deer Golf Club
Currently open and will remain as long as weather permits

Burlington Golf Club
Opening Saturday, March 23rd

Emerald Hills Golf Club
Opening with carts April 5th.

Harvest Point Golf Course
Will be open for walking play on Wednesday (3/20) and hopefully carts running on Thursday (3/31). The driving range is currently open.

Highland Park Golf Course
Hopefully opening April 6th – weather depending

Mason City Country Club
Will open at noon on Thursday, April 4th.

Pleasant Valley Golf Course
Fully open – Pre-Season rates will be in effect until around mid-April.

Rustic Ridge Golf Course
Currently Open

Sheaffer Memorial Golf Club
Currently Open (as of 3/22)

The Legacy Golf Club
Opening for play on Wednesday, March 20th. Shoulder Season rates are in effect through April 11th.
-18 holes with cart on Monday – Thursday = $40.00 + tax
-18 holes with cart on Friday – Sunday = $45.00 + tax
Carts will be restricted to the paths only for an extended period of time and the driving range is not yet open.

The Preserve on Rathbun Lake
Currently Open
$35 – 18 holes w/cart weekdays (M – Th) until March 31.
$42.50 – 18 Holes w/cart weekends (Fr – Su) until March 31
$20 18 hole replay rates

Veenker Memorial Golf Course
Driving Range opening Saturday, March 23, (Mats only and Max yardage of 200 yards due to wet conditions). Golf Course is currently now open. Carts available but will be restricted to path depending on weather conditions.

Warrior Run Golf Course
Hoping for Friday, March 22nd – Tentative as this point

Westwood Golf Course
Will open Friday, March 22nd, at 10 a.m. Carts will be ready to go (may have a hole or 2 that will be cart path only) but other than that the course should be ready for play.
Will be open all weekend probably not before 9:30 a.m., on both Saturday and Sunday.
Will take tee times and walk ins – 641-792-3087.

Whispering Creek Golf Club
Opening Thursday, March 21th

Waveland Golf Course
AH Blank Golf Course
Bright-Grandview Golf Course
Jester Park Golf Course
All opening Thursday, March 21st.

Waverly Municipal Golf Course
Is opening for the season Wednesday, March 27, at 10 a.m., for all play including carts. Weekday special is in effect now and all season long; 18 holes & cart only $26 M-F, before 2 p.m.

 

Registration Now Open For Drive, Chip And Putt Qualifiers

Parents Can Register Their Junior Golfers,
Get More Information at 
DriveChipandPutt.com

The USGA, PGA of America and the Masters Tournament announced that qualifying registration for Drive, Chip, and Putt is now officially open on DriveChipandPutt.com.

This fun, free and nationwide youth golf development initiative invites boys and girls, ages 7-15, to participate in local qualifying opportunities in all 50 states throughout the months of May, June, July and August. Entrants will play in girls’ and boys’ divisions in four age categories, with scoring centered around golf’s three fundamental skills – driving, chipping and putting. Top performers at the local level will advance through subregional and regional qualifiers in July/August and September/October, respectively, at several of the nation’s most acclaimed venues and championship sites. From these qualifiers, 80 finalists – 40 boys and 40 girls – will earn an invitation to compete in the National Finals at Augusta National Golf Club on Sunday, April 5, the eve of the 2020 Masters Tournament.

“We are proud to be a founding partner of Drive, Chip and Putt, and are excited to bring young golfers to several USGA championship sites through our active participation in this program,” said Mark Newell, president of the USGA. “One of our most important tasks in this partnership is to work with every family through the registration process – which provides an important pathway into the game for so many across our country.”

“We are delighted that Drive, Chip and Putt continues to achieve our goal of engaging junior golfers of all ages and skill levels,” said Fred Ridley, Chairman of Augusta National Golf Club and the Masters Tournament. “As a result of our shared partnership with the PGA of America and USGA, Drive, Chip and Putt gets better every year, helping new and returning young players across the country experience all the benefits our great game has to offer in a unique and fun way.”

“We’re proud that Drive, Chip and Putt serves as a welcoming environment for girls and boys to showcase their golf skills and passion for the game,” said PGA President Suzy Whaley. “The PGA of America is excited to host qualifying events across each of our 41 PGA Sections nationwide, as we inspire the next generation to pursue a lifetime of fun and enjoyment through the game of golf.” 

Local qualifying begins Saturday, May 4, 2019, at the World Golf Village in St. Augustine, Fla. The full breakdown and schedule of 2020 Drive, Chip and Putt qualifying is as follows:

Local (May/June/July/August):      
• 311 host sites throughout all 50 states
• 3 juniors advance in each age/gender category from every venue

Subregional (July/August): 
• 61 host sites in more than 20 states
• 2 juniors advance in each age/gender category from every venue

Regional (September/October):   
• 10 host sites in 10 regions
• 1 junior advances in each age/gender category from every venue

National Finals (April 5, 2020): 
• 80 total participants at Augusta National Golf Club

The regional qualifying events in September and October of this year are set to take place at 10 host sites on the following dates:

September 7 Oakland Hills Country Club
(Site of 6 U.S. Open Championships, 3 PGA Championships and the 2004 Ryder Cup)

September 8 | Oakmont Country Club
(Site of 16 USGA Championships and 3 PGA Championships)

September 8 | Chambers Bay
(Site of 3 USGA Championships)

September 8 | Colorado Golf Club
(Site of the 2010 Senior PGA Championship and the 2019 U.S. Mid-Amateur Championship)

September 8 Atlanta Athletic Club
(Site of the 3 PGA Championships and the 2014 U.S. Amateur Championship)

September 21 | Torrey Pines
(Site of 2 U.S. Open Championships)

September 28 | Interlachen Country Club
(Site of 5 USGA Championships and the 2016 Junior Ryder Cup)

September 28 | TPC Sawgrass
(Site of The Players)

September 29 | TPC River Highlands
(Site of the Travelers Championship)

October 5 | Alotian Club
(Site of the 2013 Western Amateur Championship and 2019 Arnold Palmer Cup)

The current sixth season of Drive, Chip and Putt will conclude on the eve of the upcoming Masters Tournament, with 80 junior golfers competing in the National Finals at Augusta National on Sunday, April 7. Golf Channel will broadcast the event live across North America and South America.

For more information about Drive, Chip and Putt, including official rules and a full listing of qualifying sites, please visit DriveChipandPutt.com.
                                                                                               

About Drive, Chip and Putt

A joint initiative founded in 2013 by the Masters Tournament, United States Golf Association and the PGA of America, Drive, Chip and Putt is a free, nationwide junior golf development competition aimed at growing the game by focusing on the three fundamental skills employed in golf. By tapping the creative and competitive spirit of girls and boys ages 7-15, Drive, Chip and Putt provides aspiring junior golfers an opportunity to play with their peers in qualifiers around the country. Participants who advance through local, subregional and regional qualifying in each age/gender category earn a place in the National Finals, which is conducted at Augusta National Golf Club the Sunday before the Masters Tournament and is broadcast live by Golf Channel. For more information, visit DriveChipandPutt.com.

View induction ceremony of Jill Blackwood

The Iowa Golf Hall of Fame induction ceremony of Jill Blackwood was held on Sunday, February 24th at The Club at Renaissance in Fort Myers, Florida.  Renaissance is Jill & Tom Blackwood’s “winter club”.  Chad Pitts of the IGA and Joe Butler of Burlington Golf Club – along with many other Burlington GC members – made the trip to Florida for the induction.

Click here to view video of the ceremony

Dan Naughton – 1948-2019

Daniel (Dan) Naughton, of Marion, passed away on February 26, 2019. Naughton, who was a reinstated amateur, was a fierce competitor on the IGA scene capturing the IGA Senior Player of the Year title in 2002 and 2003. Naughton’s victories included the Iowa Senior Amateur (2001 & 2003), Iowa Mid-Amateur Senior Division (2002 & 2003) and the IGA Four-Ball Senior Division in 2006 with partner Sam Aossey.

Naughton also won the Cedar Rapids City Amateur, prior to becoming a golf professional, served as an assistant pro at the Kankakee Elks Country Club as well as locally at St. Andrews Golf Club (Cedar Rapids).

A Celebration of Life for Naughton will take place 1-5 p.m. Sunday, May 5, 2019, at Hunter’s Ridge Golf Course, Marion. Arrangements by Stewart Baxter Funeral & Memorial Services, Marion.

Click here to read Naughton’s obituary

McCoy honored with USGA’s Ike Grainger Award

Norwalk’s Mike McCoy (right) was honored last week by the USGA with one of its highest honors – the Ike Grainger Award. McCoy is in his 25th year as a volunteer committee member of the USGA, which qualified him for the award.

“My first role with the USGA was when Rod Bliss, a long time USGA volunteer, asked me to become involved as a member of the U.S. Mid-Am Committee,” McCoy said. “ Robb  Pomerantz had been the Mid-Am representative for several years and decided to retire from the committee. I fulfilled that role for several years and when Rod retired from the then Sectional Affairs Committee , I expanded my role to what is now known as the Regional Affairs Committee.

McCoy commented that his volunteer work with the USGA for the betterment of amateur golf in Iowa has been quite satisfying.

“My most satisfying work on the committees was focused on helping Iowa amateurs form their own independent association and hire their own staff,” McCoy said. “It was unpleasant because I had many friends who felt the status quo of a joint office was satisfactory. I knew that Iowa’s amateurs would never enjoy the unique benefits and quality of governance I observed in other states until the split was made. While emotional at the time, it has proven to be beneficial to Iowa’s amateur golfers, both men and women.”

Established in 1995 as part of the USGA’s Centennial Celebration, the Isaac B. Grainger Award recognizes volunteers who have provided 25 years of service to the Association. Grainger served as USGA president from 1954-1955 and led the USGA effort to develop the first unified code of the Rules of Golf with The R&A in 1951.

“Satisfaction from the volunteer work has primarily come in the wonderful friendships that I have made with USGA staff and fellow volunteers,” McCoy said.

 

Jill Blackwood – 1947-2019

Iowa golf icon Jill Blackwood passed away on Sunday, February 3rd from complications due to cancer.  She was 71 years old. Blackwood was recently elected to the Iowa Golf Hall of Fame class of 2019.

Jill will be remembered for giving way more back to the game of golf than she ever took.  

She was a ‘champion’ for golf for over three decades.  She promoted the game to all golfers, but particularly to women and juniors.  She volunteered time and money to the Iowa Women’s Golf Association, Iowa Golf Association and junior programs in and around her hometown of Burlington, Iowa.  In 2014, the IGA honored Jill with the George Turner Distinguished Service Award, which is given to individuals who have contributed back to the game through volunteer efforts during their lifetimes.

She was instrumental in the revitalization of the Iowa Golf Hall of Fame in 2006, leading to the first class inducted in nine years at that time.  She spent time as President of the IWGA and served on it’s board of directors for 23 years.

In many ways, she was one of the foundational pillars the volunteer-led IWGA stood on for decades.

Blackwood was also a terrific player.  She won the Burlington Golf Club Women’s Club Championship 18 times.  She participated in four USGA Championships and partnered with her husband, Tom, to win two Iowa Wife-Husband Championships (1982 & 2006).  

Jill will be honored and welcomed into the Iowa Golf Hall of Fame in the coming weeks and months.  The planned induction ceremony at her home golf club in Fort Myers, Florida (The Club at Renaissance) on February 24 will still be held (if you wish to attend the ceremony in Florida, please contact the IGA at [email protected]).  She will also be honored during the traditional induction ceremony held in Iowa on April 4th. (Click here to see more info and sign up to attend the Iowa ceremony)

All golfers in Iowa mourn her passing.  There are very few that were as passionate about this great game as Jill.  She will be missed, but she will forever be remembered as an Iowa Golf Hall of Fame member and one of the most iconic and influential women to ever play the game in Iowa.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE INFO ABOUT JILL’S ELECTION INTO THE HALL OF FAME

CLICK HERE TO READ A FEATURE ON JILL BY MATT LEVINS, THE HAWKEYE NEWSPAPER (BURLINGTON)

Blackwood, McCarty, Tegtmeier, Willcox to join Iowa Golf Hall of Fame

INDUCTION CEREMONY SET – Click here for info

The Iowa Golf Hall of Fame will add four new members in 2019, bringing the total number in the Hall of Fame to 83.  Three living inductees – Jill Blackwood, Sean McCarty and Rick Tegtmeier – have been elected along with one historical (posthumous) honoree – Pat Willcox.  

Jill Blackwood

In typical Jill Blackwood fashion, she volunteered her time as a starter at the 2018 Iowa Women’s Amateur Championship

Jill Blackwood, 71, has been a champion for golf – specifically, women’s golf – at the local, state and national level for decades.

As a player, Blackwood dominated golf in and around her hometown of Burlington, IA for years.  She won the Burlington Golf Club Women’s Club Championship 18 times. She also won events at the state level and participated in four USGA Women’s championships.  

While she is a terrific player, it is her work giving back to the game that carries the most weight.

For over 30 years, Blackwood volunteered her time to the Iowa Women’s Golf Association and the Iowa Golf Association.  She began as district chair in 1985 and started serving on the IWGA Board of Directors in 1991. She served as the association’s President from 2002-2005.  She was the volunteer director of the annual Wife-Husband Tournament for 13 years, the Iowa Women’s Amateur for eight years and the Iowa Senior Women’s Amateur for four years.  She has served on the Ann Griffel Scholarship Selection Committee since 2008. In 2014, the IGA honored her with the George Turner Distinguished Service Award, which is given to individuals who have contributed back to the game through volunteer efforts during their lifetimes.

Blackwood has spent countless hours introducing golf to youth in and around Burlington.  She was involved for over 30 years with the junior golf program at Burlington Golf Club, spending several years as the chairperson.  She also coached the high school girls golf team from 1977 to 1982, winning the state championship in 1980.

Joe Butler, who is the PGA Professional at Burlington Golf Club and nominated Jill for induction, said in his letter of support that, “Jill has been active in every facet of golf.  Her organizational skills, passion for golf and determination to teach others while handling herself with class and without thought of herself makes her deserving of this award. Her contributions to golf in Iowa are impactful and she is a tremendous role model to all she comes in contact with.”

Jock Olson, PGA Master Professional and Iowa Golf Hall of Fame member, added, “I can honestly say that I have never seen a person more driven to advance and promote the game of golf than Jill.”

 

Sean McCarty

Sean McCarty after he won his fourth Herman Sani Tournament in 2016.

Sean McCarty has been a force on the Iowa golf scene since his freshman year of high school.  McCarty, 46, who grew up in West Branch, IA, was a runner-up at the state high school championship that freshman year, then went on to win the individual crown each of his final three years.  He also led West Branch to the team title each of those last three years.

He took his talents to the University of Iowa where he was a four-year letter winner, capturing Big Ten Freshman of the Year honors in the process.  He was a vital part of Iowa’s only Big Ten championship team (1992), would win four individual collegiate titles and help Iowa to eight team titles during his career.  In 2016 he became the first golfer inducted into the University of Iowa Athletics Hall of Fame.

In 1995 McCarty earned the Iowa Golf Association Player of the Year award.  He was named as an All-American by the NCAA that year and he won the IGA Match Play Championship and the Northwest Amateur.  

Following college, McCarty turned pro and continued to pile up the wins.  He has been dominant in Iowa Section PGA events, earning Iowa Section Player of the Year honors nine times and Assistant Player of the Year six times.  He has won four Iowa Opens (1997, 2005, ‘08, ‘13), four Herman Sani Tournaments (2007, ‘08, ‘10, ‘16), the 2012 Iowa Section Championship and the 1998 Waterloo Open.  

McCarty has qualified for two major championships in his career, the 2003 U.S. Open at Olympia Fields CC in Chicago and the 2018 PGA Championship at Bellerive CC in St. Louis.  Known around Iowa for his prodigious length off the tee, McCarty, at the age of 45, registered the fastest club-head speed on the PGA Tour while competing at Bellerive. He earned his spot at the PGA by finishing runner-up at the National PGA Professional Championship earlier that summer.  Overall McCarty has qualified for the National PNC six times. He has also played in over a dozen Web.com and PGA Tour events over the past two decades.

One of the things that sticks out about McCarty to his peers is how humble he is about his golf talents.  In a letter of support, fellow Brown Deer PGA pro Brian Wernimont said, “Sean’s talent on the course is only surpassed by his level of humbleness off it.  In eight years of working side by side he has never once boasted about his playing abilities and, in fact, downplays how good he truly is. He is a true champion that lets his play on the course speak for him”.

Prominent amateur golfer Jon Olson said in his letter of support that, “Since I have been competing, Sean is the best player I have played with in Iowa.  What impresses me the most is how he carries himself on and off the course. He is always calm and collected. He makes everything look easy, but there is no ego, no boasting or cocky attitude.  Instead, he is true to what matters most to him – simply working hard and loving the game”.

McCarty currently works as the Director of Golf at Brown Deer Golf Course in Coralville, Iowa.  He has been at Brown Deer since 2001. Prior to Brown Deer GC, McCarty spent a year teaching under Mark Egly at the Des Moines Driving Range.

 

Rick Tegtmeier

Rick poses with his wife Sherry and Zach Johnson following Zach’s induction into the Iowa Golf Hall of Fame in 2016.

Rick Tegtmeier, 59, has been grooming fairways in Iowa for over 45 years.  He is one of only 74 people worldwide to currently have the designation of Master Greenkeeper, which he obtained in 2015.

In 1973 – at only 14 years of age – Tegtmeier began on the grounds crew at Rockford Country Club in Rockford, Iowa.  At 17, he was named superintendent. At age 20, he took the head position at Urbandale Golf & Country Club where he remained for two years.  After spending a year at Hinsdale Golf Club in Illinois, he joined the staff at Des Moines Golf & Country Club in 1983, where he was the superintendent of the North course, working under Iowa Golf Hall of Fame member Bill Byers.  In 1989 he left Des Moines Golf & CC to take the head superintendent position at Elmcrest Country Club in Cedar Rapids, where he remained for 17 years. In 2006, following Byers’ retirement, Tegtmeier moved back to Des Moines Golf & Country Club as the Director of Grounds, where he remains today.

In 2017 Des Moines Golf & Country Club played host to the LPGA’s Solheim Cup matches.  What many didn’t see were the years of work that went into hosting that international championship.  Tegtmeier oversaw four years of renovations to the 36 holes at DMGCC, as the club did extensive work on nine holes each year.  Under Tegtmeier’s guidance, the work was completed on schedule and the club provided a pristine playing surface for the best female golfers from the U.S. and Europe.  

U.S. captain Julie Inkster commented about Rick, “My team could not stop raving about how the the course is.  You should be one proud papa on how this course played”.

Partly due to his terrific work in preparing DMGCC to host the Solheim Cup, Tegtmeier was honored by TurfNet as the national Superintendent of the Year in 2017.  In the announcement of Tegtmeier as the winner, John Reitman wrote, in part:

Tegtmeier was recognized not just for staging a virtually flawless venue for the 2017 Solheim Cup.  He also won acclaim for his four years of hard work and preparation leading up to the event and, most importantly, how he used the event to help others, including fellow superintendents throughout Iowa.  Tegtmeier wanted to prove to the world that Iowa superintendents were more than capable of producing a venue that rivaled anything in professional championship golf, so he opened the door to any Iowa greenkeeper who wanted to help prove his point.  In all, 87 volunteers showed up to work. The flawless conditions, large crowds and patriotism turned the Solheim Cup into an experience that was almost surreal.

When he wasn’t busy making his own golf courses better, Tegtmeier has volunteered time to many turfgrass related causes.  Since 2016 he has served on the Board of Trustees of the Iowa Turfgrass Institute. He was a member of the USGA’s Green Section committee from 2010-2015 and served on the Iowa Golf Course Superintendents Association board from 1992-1996, including as President in 1995.  From 1996 to 2004 he served on eight different Golf Course Superintendents Association of America committees or task forces.

In his letter of support for Tegtmeier’s nomination, Past President of the GCSAA Sean Hoolehan, CGCS wrote, “While I was President of the Golf Course Superintendents Association of America I often asked Rick to participate on important committees and task groups.  He was a pioneer in the use of technology and a leader in using that knowledge to increase quality and productivity of superintendents. Rick was one of the most respected superintendents in the country well before the Solheim Cup”.

 

Pat Willcox

Pat Willcox

Pat Willcox was one of the dominant figures in golf in Iowa in the late 1930’s, 40’s and early 50’s.  

The professional, who spent time in both Des Moines and Waterloo, won the Iowa Open three times and the Iowa Masters four times between 1940 and 1951.  His Iowa Open victories came consecutively in 1940, ‘41, and ‘42 while his wins at the Iowa Masters occurred in 1940, ‘45, ‘47 and ‘51. He also captured the Waterloo Open in 1938 and won the Cedar Rapids Open in 1944.

There are five major Iowa championships that have been contested since at least the 1950’s – the Iowa Amateur, Iowa Open, Iowa Masters, Northwest Amateur and the Herman Sani Tournament – and, using those as a foundation, 13 men have won those titles at least seven times.  Eleven of them were already in the Iowa Golf Hall of Fame. With the addition of McCarty and Willcox, now all 13 are in.

Willcox qualified for five major championships during his career, including four U.S. Opens.  He finished 23rd at the 1940 U.S. Open at Canterbury Golf Club in Ohio and 50th the next year at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth.  He also qualified for the national championship in 1937 (Oakland Hills CC in Michigan) and 1947 (St. Louis CC) but missed the cut. Willcox made it through a qualifier to play in the 1939 PGA Championship, but records indicate that he did not ultimately tee it up at the Pomonok Country Club in Flushing, New York.

Perhaps Willcox would have collected even more victories but for World War II putting a halt to many golf tournaments during his run.  He did, however, play a part in the war efforts. In 1943 he was spending most of his time helping make bombs for the war effort at the Chamberlain corporation in Waterloo.  It is documented that he would spend ten hours a day, seven days a week making bombs. Only when he knew they had met their quota for the week and month did he enter the 1943 Iowa Masters.

Willcox was 79 years old when he passed away in 1987.  

 

The Iowa Golf Hall of Fame is administered by the Iowa Golf Association on behalf of all golf organizations in and around the state, such as the Iowa Section PGA and the Iowa Golf Course Superintendents Association.

The nomination and induction process consists of two committees, the Nominating Committee and the Voting Committee.  The Nominating Committee determines the eligibility of nominees submitted by the general public as well as identifies individuals to nominate.  They finalize the ballot. The Voting Committee has the task of researching and studying those on the ballot and casting votes for induction. The Voting Committee consists entirely of individuals who are current members of the Iowa Golf Hall of Fame.  

These four individuals will be honored during an induction ceremony at a time and place to be determined.  Once ceremony details are finalized, they will be announced at iowagolf.org.

 

Whispering Creek GC in Sioux City for sale

The ownership group of Whispering Creek Golf Club in Sioux City has put the course up for sale.  The asking price is $2.7 million.

Whispering Creek GC opened in 2000 and includes 18 holes of championship golf.  The course has been host to multiple IGA championships in the past 18 years, including the 2006 & 2015 Iowa Amateur and the 2009 IGA Four-Ball.

Click here to view the course sale listing

Click here to view a flyer on the golf course sale

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