Dan Lenzmeier

I played some as a kid in my home town of Wahpeton ND, where the Bois de Sioux golf course straddles the ND/MN border, but only to the extent that I would lug my brother's bag down to the course on my bike and whack balls all over the place as I struggled to get from tee to green. 

Later, while living in Fargo and working at a video store, I took home the 2-VHS set of "Jack Nicklaus Golf My Way". I kept it for a couple weeks and did my best to pick up the basics of the game. It was still just a part-time interest, not a passion. I did play in a league of BCBS employees though, where we'd play 9 holes once a week.

Fast-forward to 2019, when one of my brothers handed down to me a much better set of clubs than I was using. That, and the fact that both brothers were retired and playing a lot, got me interested again. Each year since then, I've spent more time playing and it's now one of my main pastimes. In 2022, wanting to play more and meet other players, I joined the GMC. At first, I was reluctant to participate, thinking that with my high handicap I wouldn't fit in. Scott encouraged me to come out and give it a shot. I did, and I couldn't be happier with my decision to join. 

When I was young I was a tennis player, and there was nothing quite like the sound and feel of a ball hitting the sweet spot. The same is true with golf. There's just nothing like hitting a great golf shot. That keeps me coming back, despite the game's frustrations. I'm almost always eager to get out on the course.

 
 

Dennis Van Norman

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Random Shots from a Grassy Knoll 

by Dennis Van Norman

Hi, my name is Dennis, and I am an addict.

Every addict has a back story. Here is some of what I can remember…

He was a nice man. He was our neighbor, Mr. Van Tassel. Even though I was underage, about 12 years old, he invited me to join him and his friends at his club. He bought me my first round, and we started taking shots.

We stayed for hours, and what little I can recall, he and his friends took a few shots, and I had way too many.

Van Tassel and Van Norman. This was the Dutch Connection. The fact that we were a newly formed Netherlands partnership is not insignificant. Consider the meeting as a young innocent’s first exposure to his Dutch people’s never-ending negotiation with the boundaries between land and sea. It’s not the sea now; today it’s called a penalty area; and I learned that it’s not just one hole we are trying to plug, there’s 18 holes, and they are spread all over the countryside.

The countryside was called Phalen, the olde Phalen. That was over 60 years ago, and I have two memories. As a kid I recall being introduced to a new phrase that morning, and how funny it was at the time, “frog-hair.” And I still remember the early morning dew covering the green velvet landscape. Beautiful. 

Turn the clock ahead a few years and what had started as a nice walk in the park was taking a seductive turn to the dark side.

In the early 1960’s, my lifelong friend, Dennis Smith, and I got reintroduced to the wonderful game as teenagers. In keeping with the golf era then, Dennis Smith grabbed Julius Boros (JB) for his moniker and I took Gary Player (GP) as my namesake. We kept the JB and GP names in play for over 45 years. 

While Jack Daniels, Joe Camel and Mr. Coffee might take a while to set their hooks in the unsuspecting; the Golf Jones grabbed us both right from the first tee. We golfed addictively for a lifetime until JB’s tee-times got canceled by a pretty bad case of terminal cancer ten years ago.  

My name is Dennis, and I am a golf drunk. 

This Anonymous Program has twelve steps, but I can’t recall them all. Like in golf with its 18 holes, I want to remember only a few.

Step One says, “I admit I am powerless, and that my life has become unmanageable.” True!

Step Two: “I came to believe that a Power greater than myself could restore me to sanity.” Over the years this step has proven to be helpful for me. I call it my Power of Weakness. Here’s how it works. If a buzz-bomber like Steve Date powers his drive 285 yards, but pushes it just a bit to the right on Gross’ sixth hole, he finds himself up against the fence or even OB. If I weakly push my drive, I see my ball slowly rolling just past that lone tree in the right rough and I have an open shot to the green. …the Power of Weakness

Step Eight: “Make a list of all persons I had harmed and become willing to make amends to them all.” I will offer just two examples. I have harmed my four-ball partner of 30+ years, Jim Steinmueller (Steinie). It was in a match against our vaunted opponents, Dennis Dale and KJ Milhone. In our third overtime hole I chipped to 18 inches. Making the tap-in would win the match and end a years-long drought.

It was now my partner’s turn, but in my hubris, my hunger for the spotlight, fame, and fortune I jumped in and proclaimed, “I’ll keep going and finish this off.”

I don’t have to tell you how that ended. 

The second example of others I have harmed due to my addiction occurred in Texas. I was on a business trip to Dallas in the 1980’s for a conference about the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (a personality preference inventory that has enjoyed some popularity in the human resources arena). While in Texas I discovered the Arnold Palmer-designed Golf Club at Fossil Creek in Fort Worth. It is my favorite of all the hundreds of courses I have ever played. The conference would start at 1:00 in the afternoon so I could sneak in a morning round. 

After the morning round at Fossil Creek, and not being familiar with the area, it was taking me longer to drive to the conference than I had planned. The only reason I flew to Dallas was for the conference, and now I was stuck in traffic. I finally did make it to the conference, but I was 30 minutes late. The sad part is I was the scheduled presenter. I apologize to the fifty people who had to wait while I enjoyed another round. Addiction is not pretty.

I have struggled with this addiction for a lifetime. “She is a cruel mistress.” Sums it up in five tidy words.

As my fingers grind out my golf sentiments on this keyboard I realize these are the same fingers that have held thousands of stubby little pencils, trying to squeeze tiny numbers, too may 6’s, 7’s, and 8’s, into tiny little boxes. These are the same Vardon-gripping fingers that have wrapped themselves around hundreds of golf sticks, from my dad’s wooden-shafted, leather-gripped driver, to my own Patty Bergs and Tommy Aarons, to today’s over-engineered, most-forgiving hybrids. It has been a journey, from laughing at the first time I heard “frog-hair” to trying to figure out the new WHS’s latest ESC conversion. “Oh, I can take an eight on hole number 12.”

Is it a good thing that I can give a two-word answer to the question, “What did you do last week?” …or last summer, …or with your life? Father forgive me for I have sinned. “I golfed.”

I will close with the most important of the 12 steps, Step Three: “I made a decision to turn my will and my life over to the care of God as I understood Him.” You have seen this step popularized and reduced to bumper-sticker format “Let Go, Let God.

As I try and type this phrase the golf gods are channeling their collective will and have invoked their auto-correcting powers. As I strive for “Let Go, Let God,” the phrase morphs magically into “Let’s Go. Let’s Golf!!!

(A note: Just in case you are wondering, I missed the tap-in putt on our third sudden-death hole against Dennis Dale and KJ Milhone. It never even touched the rim. We lost the match on the next hole, and we never did beat them in countless attempts. Sorry, Steinie! Mea culpa.)

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John Charnes

John Charnes GMC Member Profile

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I was introduced to golf as a caddie at Northland Country Club (NCC) in Duluth in the 1960s. Caddies were allowed to play early on Monday mornings, so my West End buddies and I would schlep our clubs down to the bus stop and make the half-hour trip to the east end of town where NCC is located. I still like to play golf in the early morning, and one of my favorite recent rounds began just before sunrise at the Streamsong Black course in Florida a couple of years ago.

However, I also recall being chastised at Gross by a grumpy old man who no longer works there for showing up late for a 6:30am tee time I had made on a September day many years ago. Sunrise wasn’t until after 7am, so I thought there was no way we would be allowed to tee off at 6:30. Much to my surprise, there were two groups already out on the course when I arrived in the darkness of the morning. Grumpy told me that those guys would use lighted golf balls for the first few holes, and what the heck was wrong with my group for not doing the same!

While caddying at NCC, I learned the rules of the game and many other important  life lessons such as how to play poker with the other loopers in the caddy shack to pass the time before we were assigned to a player. Golf was a fun diversion at the time, but I didn’t consider it a real sport like football. So I played golf sporadically during high school, college, and graduate school. Once I got married and had a kid, I stopped playing completely.

About 15 years later, I took up the game again in Lawrence, Kansas, where I had moved to join the business school faculty at the University of Kansas (KU). One of my colleagues and I began playing on Saturdays. We set out to play every course within 20 miles of Lawrence, and experienced many different tracks. After a couple of years and some improvement to our games, the two of us were recruited by some colleagues to join Lawrence Country Club, which was about a mile from our KU offices. I played there from about 1998 until 2007, when I took a job at Bank of America in Charlotte, North Carolina.

Charlotte has many great courses in and around town, and I played most weekends there with some BofA buddies regularly at about four of them. It was at a course in Monroe, NC where I had what was then my closest completion of a hole in one. I had hit a nice little fade with my 4-hybrid on the 180-yard par three ninth hole.The ball hit the flagstick, then took a funny little bounce and I could see it from the tee right next to the hole. When my group got to the green, two players who were waiting to tee off on the first tee excitedly told me that they had heard the ball hit the stick, then looked over to see it drop into the hole before bouncing off the bottom of the cup and coming to rest an inch from the hole. 

For a few years I thought that might be my closest ever to making a hole in one but in January 2017 I hit a nice little push draw with my 5-hybrid 170 yards toward the 4th hole on Raptor Bay GC in Bonita Springs, FL. The ball flew towards the hole, then disappeared. I thought it might be over the green but found it at the bottom of the cup. 

I’ve been fortunate over the last thirty years  to have had jobs that allowed me to spend many summer months in Minnesota, while living in warmer climes the rest of the year.. I’ve been a member of the University of MN Golf Club for the last six years, and decided this year to join GMC as well. My wife and I have now retired to Miromar Lakes, near Fort Myers, Florida. She was born and raised in Minneapolis, and we intend to spend summers here for many more years. 

I plan to remain a member of GMC for a long time. I like the course, and the fact that the scheduled events mesh well with the events at U of M GC.

Keith Nelson

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Keith Nelson

Downtown Minneapolis

After six years of visiting Minneapolis, three or four times per year, my wife and I downsized from suburbs to city, house to condominium and east coast to midwest in the fall of 2018.  We wanted to be close to our daughter, son-in law and three grandchildren.  I played Gross National for the first time in 2018 and joined the Gross Men's Club at about this time last year.  I like the exercise golf, the company and the challenges golf provides.  For me walking the course is like walking a labyrinth, but not as confining and surprisingly different each time.  I prefer to walk the course, but will ride the second time around, if playing 18 or more holes two consecutive days.

Handicap Index: 22.9

I grew up in Aliquippa, a steel town in western Pennsylvania.  I started playing golf in my early teens on local, inexpensive public courses, like Pettibones, Broad-Vue and Ohio View.  These are all gone now, converted to shopping centers, housing developments or business parks. Steel town golf was different in the 1950's and 60's:  no power carts, seldom a starter, pay $1.50 - $3.50 for nine holes, drop a ball in the slanted metal pipe near the first tee and wait your turn. 

Early highlights for me were:

1) a birdie, chip-in on the ninth hole at Pettibone's stimulating a large cheer from the crowd waiting to tee off on the nearby first tee.

2) hitting a 3-iron from the tee on a 180 yard up hill par 3, watching the ball wrap itself in the flag and drop  straight down.  I soon learned it was 14 inches from the hole.

3) caddying at Oakmont Country Club for a good friend who was the #1 golfer on our high school golf team.  The high school golf coach, Bill Batchelor, got us out of school that day, drove us to the golf course, gave us each a sleeve of new Titleists, lunch money and let us enjoy the day.

Hole-in-One: Tuesday , July 18, 2017 at Phalen Park Golf Course, Hole #16, 154 yards from the white tees, drew a 6-iron into a front center pin.  As the ball raced across the green, right to left, it disappeared.  No cheers.  All three of us looked at each other,  dismayed, and said, " What happened?  Where did it go?" I smiled and said, "That may be a hole-in one, gentlemen." Sure enough.  After 48 years of playing golf, it was anti-climactic, but I remember the event vividly and the story gets better every year.

Favorite Courses: Surf Golf and Beach Club, North Myrtle Beach, SC

                              Pine Valley Golf Club, Pine Valley, NJ

                              LuLu Country Club, Glenside PA

                              Spring Mill Country Club, Ivyland, PA

                              Eagle's Landing Golf Course, Berlin, MD

Golf Heroes:  I grew up watching, Palmer, Player and Nicklaus compete.

Favorite Golf Book:  Golf Is Not a Game of Perfect by Bob Rotella

Favorite Golf Course Designer: Donald Ross

Dave Johnson

 
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I’ve been reading through the website and the comment about the Gross Invitational in the "Old Scorecard, Old Clubhouse" article triggered a memory for me.

The Gross Invitational was the first tournament I ever played. It was so long ago that I don't recall the exact year, but I was still playing some of my old "Patty Bergs". I was probably in 8th or 9th grade in about 1962. I think I read about the tournament on the sports page of the paper and there was nothing about age requirements or anything that would make me ineligible to play. We lived out in Minnetonka but my dad let me sign up and dropped me off on his way to work in St Paul. 

The only thing I had going at that age was my love of the game but zero experience playing in a golf event. I was the youngest, smallest person there. When I signed in I got a few quizzical looks and I'm sure a number of “I hope he's not paired with me” glances from the guys nearby. 

I held my own for the first part of the day averaging bogies and doubles but on about the 8th hole it started raining. Remember the old leather grips? By the 13th hole we were all soaked. The bag, filling with water, the rain jacket, no longer waterproof, the grips slippery, made getting from tee to green a nightmare. No one quit. We finished. I shot somewhere in the 120's and actually got quite a few “attaboys" and we settled into the clubhouse trying to warm up.

There was an awards presentation. I may have — no probably did — win the highest score award. There were door prizes. As the pile of donated prizes shrunk, my name came up — a quart of Bourbon. I guess the Tournament committee did not want to get in trouble and gave the booze to the next guy. I don't remember what I got instead. I was still so cold and wet I could have used a sip or two.

I remember, if not the names and faces, the guys in my foursome. They were encouraging, friendly, patient, funny and never made me feel like I wasn't part of the group and didn't belong. I really was too young for the tournament but the way golfers typically encourage other golfers made my day.

And now after all these years I'm joining the Gross Men's Club for the first time.

A bunch of my golf buddies are already at Gross: Steve D., Roger B, Steve L, Bill O — probably some others — and my U of M 4-Ball partner Bill Decker is joining. 

 

Scott Helgerson

 

Scott E. Helgerson 

Current WHS Handicap:  13.0

2nd year in the Francis A. Gross Men’s Club

  • At Large Member of the Board of Directors

Reside in Champlin (since 1997)

Work in Downtown Minneapolis (TCF Building)

Grew up in Lake City, MN

  • Learned to play golf at the Lake City Golf Club

Favorite Golf Courses

  • Francis A. Gross Golf Club

  • Theodore Wirth Golf Club

  • Lake City Golf Club

  • Lake Pepin Golf Course

  • The Refuge Golf Club

  • North Oaks Golf Club

Favorite Players

  • Arnold Palmer

  • Tom Watson

  • Johnny Miller

  • Ben Crenshaw

  • Tom Weiskopf

Favorite Golf Books

  • Go For Broke: My Philosophy of Winning Golf by Arnold Palmer

  • Harvey Penick’s Little Red Book of Golf

  • I Call The Shots by Johnny Miller

Why did I join the Francis A. Gross Men’s Club?

  • Great Guys

  • Awesome Course

What’s new in the bag?

  • Cobra F-Max #5 Hybrid (25°/Stiff)

  • Volvik Vivid Golf Balls/Yellow and Red (matte finish)

First Set of Golf Clubs:  A used set of Patty Berg Wilson Clubs

Second set of Golf Clubs:  Brand new Bob Rosburg Star Flite Ram Clubs 

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Bill Oas

 

Bill Oas Profile

Current WHS Handicap = 14.6

Member of Gross Men’s Club since the mid 1990’s

Member of the Board of Directors for more than 20 years.

Currently the Club Treasurer

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I was born in 1941 in Minneapolis and grew up in Hopkins, MN. I started playing golf at Meadowbrook and Lakeview with my parents and brothers as a teenager. I enjoyed playing golf, but it soon took a backseat to playing and coaching hockey, owning and driving late model stock cars, and to owning a local auto race track. My wife Lois and I are retired, live in New Brighton, and have two children and four grandchildren. 

I returned to golf in the 1980’s and started playing at the Francis A. Gross course.  I took a job at a company just off the 12th fairway on County Road C. The company I joined is an importer and allowed me to travel to many foreign countries, and play golf in many Asian countries including Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Macau, and mainland China.

I joined the Gross Men’s Club in 1996, and soon joined the Board of Directors. 

I helped Bill Turner, our then Gross Men’s Club President, by assisting him with Gross Metro Seniors team, and I took over being captain of our Metro Seniors team in about 2006. I continued to be captain of our team through 2019. John Wicks will be the new captain in 2020 of the Gross Men’s Club team, and I will assist him. In addition to my duties with the Gross Metro Seniors team, I create and maintain the season league schedule for the 15 teams in The Metro Seniors Golf League.

I volunteered to become the Club Treasurer in 2011 taking over from Bob Schuette who retired that year, and continue to hold that position. As regards other Club duties, I have maintained our annual registration and membership files, assisted with golfing event registrations, and other Club activities. As a result of my long-term supporting the Gross Men’s Club and the Twin Cities Metro Seniors League, I was the recipient of the Minnesota Public Golf Associations annual Ron Self Memorial Award in 2016.

I have had 3 holes in one to date in my golfing career.  The first one was at the Bridges Golf Course in Moundsview in a Sunday evening couples golf league with a pitching wedge on a 90-yard hole.  The second was in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico on a 165 Yard hole with a 4 iron. The third was the most memorable when I had a hole in one on the 17th hole at Gross with a 21-degree rescue club during the final round of 2017 Gross Club Championship.

I have really enjoyed being a member of Gross Golf Men’s Club for the past 25 years, and look forward to a great 2020 season.

The famous Ace on #17 in the GMC Championship 2017

The famous Ace on #17 in the GMC Championship 2017

 
There’s nothing like a hole-in-one in the Club Championship!

There’s nothing like a hole-in-one in the Club Championship!

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Scott Jax

Scott Jax

Gross Men’s Club Role: 

2020 Master of Events (with the expertise of Mr. Mark Bryden)

Joined Club in 2016

Current Handicap Index: 18.0 (I reached my goal of a bogey golfer in 2019)

What prompted me to start?  I was inspired by my grandfather who picked up the game in his late 70s/early 80s while wintering in Arizona, after farming for many years on the border of Iowa/Minnesota—where I also grew up.  I later got his beginner set of clubs in 8th grade and quickly got acclimated playing the game well on the HS team.  Here’s a picture of me back in 1987---I looked a bit different back then.

Golf Highlights (or low lights):

  • Never had an ace or eagle to this point

  • Finally broke into the 80s a few times this past year for the first time!

  • In HS, the local TV Station’s Sports Director established a weekly Sports Challenge series which earned him some national awards. The SD invited viewers to submit challenges from the silly to serious and our HS golf coach challenged him to a 18-hole put-off against one of his players.  I won the competition comfortably among our team for the right to challenge the sports director on TV, only to putt miserably when the cameras were on.  That’s my 15 minutes of fame.

  • A volunteer (Marshal on Hole 6) for the inaugural 3M Open Championship in Blaine.

Golf Heroes – a couple of my earliest memories of watching golf was when Jack Nicklaus won his last green jacket at the Masters, and Tom Watson was dominating at The British Open.  I’ve also been a big fan of Phil Mickelson’s career.  So far, I’ve attended a couple PGA Championships in MN and the US Open when it was in Wisconsin in 2017.  I need to work on getting to the Masters and The Open someday.

Why did I join the Men’s Club?  For many years I just played casually and didn’t really care about my score.  Yet, I always felt if I could find a friendly but competitive environment where I could feel the pressure, I would be motivated to find ways I could improve.  I found it with the Men’s Club.

  

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Scott in 1987

Scott in 1987

Steve Larson

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(Web manager note: Steve Larson is the reigning Gross Men’s Club Senior Champion. He carded a 73 in the first round last year and demoralized the field of senior players. Mr. Larson is a humble and unpretentious man and did not feel comfortable including that major achievement in his profile. It is not my policy nor desire to edit these member profile submissions, but you have to admit, that was a glaring omission that I couldn’t ignore.)

A few highlights of my golfing career:

Steve’s friend, Betty Lema, and her husband, “Champagne Tony”.

Steve’s friend, Betty Lema, and her husband, “Champagne Tony”.

  • I shot an 82 in my first competitive round of golf as a 9th grader . . . and that was for 9 holes. My opponent won by 27 shots.


  • As a 15-year-old, I followed my favorite professional golfer of all time — Champagne Tony Lema at the old St. Paul Open. Following a rain-drenched round in which Tony played quite badly and in which his gallery consisted of two — me and a quite attractive red-haired woman. When said woman asked if I was a fan and I answered in the affirmative, she said she was Tony’s wife and that if I wanted to wait around, he would be coming out of the clubhouse shortly and I could talk to him and get his autograph. I had a short but gracious conversation with him and got the autograph. Unfortunately, it was not long after that I read in the newspaper that Tony Lema and his wife Betty had died in a plane crash.


  • On a more positive note, I once finished 10th in the State Caddy Tournament at the old Gall’s Golf Course (now Manitou Ridge).


  • I have had two holes-in-one in my life, but readily admit that they pale in comparison with one I witnessed last year (see description below).


  • I enjoyed my first year in the Gross Men’s Club and look forward to my second.


(Web manager note #2: Mr. Larson is also known to employ sarcasm and attempts at humor as defense mechanisms to combat his innate shyness and self-esteem issues. Case in point — here’s the final part of the profile he submitted.)

  • I joined the Men’s club last year (2019) EVEN knowing that it could lead to playing rounds of golf with the NGMCW (Notorious Gross Men’s Club Webmaster). As it turned out, those rounds were not entirely unpleasant. In fact, I got the thrill of a lifetime when said NGMCW holed out an Ace in heated competition with the University of Minnesota Men’s Club. While I may have counted the birth of any of my three children ahead of that “thrill”, I was corrected — again by said NGMCW — and now realize the correctness of his correction.


(Web manager note #2A: Since Mr. Larson has made such an overly big deal about this particular Hole-In-One, it’s probably a good time to show the “nearie” sign. You might notice that this was posted on Twitter by OUR OPPONENTS in the “Ryder Cup” tou…

(Web manager note #2A: Since Mr. Larson has made such an overly big deal about this particular Hole-In-One, it’s probably a good time to show the “nearie” sign. You might notice that this was posted on Twitter by OUR OPPONENTS in the “Ryder Cup” tournament, NOT the Gross Men’s Club. The Web Manager has since gotten over this snub and has moved on.

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(Web manager note #3: There’s one more accomplishment that Mr. Larson was too modest to mention in his profile. The next time you play the University of Minnesota Golf Course, stop at the rest room near the 3rd and 16th greens. After you’ve finished doing whatever you needed to do, look closely at the small commemorative plaque above the water fountain. The metal is now badly tarnished and hard to read, but the memory of what he did lives on in the hearts and minds of those who played with Steve that day so many years ago. Look closely and you might be able to make out these words, “Generously Refurbished by Steve ‘Crash’ Larson”. The plaque honors Steve and memorializes one of those events that Steve doesn’t like to talk about, but that’s just the kind of guy Steve is, you know? When you visit the memorial, pause for a moment, sip the cool, refreshing, gurgling water and linger to savor it. And next time you see Steve, thank him for the shiny, non-smashed water fountain.)

Ken Troia

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Gross Men’s Club Duties:  Membership/Publicity Co-Chairman

Ken is the happy guy on the far right.

Ken is the happy guy on the far right.

Current Handicap Index:  19.9 (and rising fast!)

Got Started in Golf: Carrying ½ set (odd numbers) of my father’s forged irons and persimmon woods (my little brother had the even numbered other half) at various public courses in Madison, Wisconsin in the early 1970’s.

Golf Highlights/Lowlights:

  • No aces, EVER, in over 1500 rounds of golf!

  • Played six of the Golf Digest World’s Greatest 100 courses

    • #3 Muirfield – Scotland

    • #39 North Berwick G.C. – Scotland

    • #40 Portmarnock G.C. (Championship) – Ireland

    • #70 Mid Ocean Club – Bermuda

    • #95 The European Club – Ireland

  • Played 11 of the Golf Digest 100 Greatest  Courses in America

    • #7 Pebble Beach G. Links

    • #21 Whistling Straits (Straits)

    • #24 The Ocean Course at Kiawah Island

    • #37 Bethpage State Park (Black)

    • #41 Baltrusol G.C. (Lower)

    • #42 Erin Hills G. Cse.

    • #49 TPC Sawgrass (Stadium)

    • #61 Baltusrol G.C. (Upper)

    • #81 Hudson National G.C.

    • #85 Aronomink G.C.

    • #97 Blackwolf Run (River)

  • Played 23 of the Golf Digest 100 Greatest Public Courses

    • The aforementioned Pebble Beach (#1), Whistling Straits-Straits (#3), The Ocean Course (#4), Bethpage-Black (#8), Erin Hills (#9), TPC Sawgrass-Stadium (#11), Blackwolf Run-River (#15)

    • #23 Harbor Town G. Links

    • #36 Torrey Pines G. Cse. (South)

    • #39 The Broadmoor G.C. (East)

    • #43 Whistling Straits (Irish)

    • #44 SentryWorld G. Cse

    • #51 Cog Hill G. & C.C. (#4)

    • #53 Wolf Creek G. C.

    • #56 The Dunes G. & Beach C.

    • #57 Blackwolf Run (Meadow Valleys)

    • #58 The G. Courses of Lawsonia Links (Links)

    • #69 Troy Burne G.C.

    • #75 Trump National Doral (Blue Monster)

    • #77 Caledonia G. & Fish C.

    • #82 World of Woods G.C. (Pine Barrens)

    • #93 Torrey Pines G. Cse. (North)

    • #100 Innisbrook Golf Resort (Copperhead)

  • Over 250 rounds played overseas, primarily Ireland, Scotland and Germany

Golf Hero: My Irish best friend, Kevin Nugent

Most Memorable Golf Vacation(s): There were many trips to Ireland to the hometown of my buddy (~2/year for 15 years), for the 4-G’s (Golf, Gambling, Guinness and God), playing many famous courses in the Kildare & Dublin area (including Portmarnock, The European Club and The K Club.  But the best was in 2010 when we tried to go in late April in conjunction with the major horse race event in Kildare (The Irish National Hunt). As you might recall, this was during the eruption of the Iceland volcano Eyjafjallajökull, and flights were disrupted around the world! There was a small window that opened on our departure date and we were allowed to take off for Ireland. I was sitting a few rows ahead of my buddy. After dinner, he came up to me and said “I think we’re going to make it”. I told him to sit down and shut up…that we needed to be over half way before we were committed. About an hour later as I was dozing off listening to the cockpit, I groggily heard the Dublin ATC radio to the cockpit “Continental 22 Heavy, Turn Right Heading 270”. As I slowly awoke, I realized this was not right and the plane starting turning back to Newark. 2.5 hours later we landed back in Newark to complete our 5+ hour trip to nowhere after being volcano-ed. The next day the air routes to Europe were shut down again for an undetermined length of time and we decided to have Continental rebook us to Miami, where we proceeded to play all the courses at Doral as well as Jacaranda and Diplomat. As a backup plan, it was the best possible trip!

Why do I belong to the Gross Men’s Club: I was looking for a convenient, affordable place where I could be involved in Events and Competitions. When I moved to the Twin Cities in 2012, I joined Dellwood CC and really enjoyed the weekly and season-long events. Having to resign due to finances, I was looking for an affordable public place where I could continue the organized events.

Tom Varno

 

I grew up "playing" golf, only I was one of those that played 2-3 times a year and didn't really enjoy it because I played so badly. Then in 2001 that all changed when I got invited to go on a bachelor party golf trip. All the guys made fun of me for losing so many balls and it was then that I committed to getting better and soon found my love for the game. Gross was real close by and I started my improvement there and it has continued as I play more.

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