Director — Chapter Outreach
Steve Randall serves as GCSAA's director of chapter outreach. Randall resides in Lawrence, Kan.
Tel. 800-472-7878, ext. 5146
Read the latest issue of Chapter Connection.
Get Out and Play!
Apr 5, 2022, 16:14
by
Randy Robinson
The greatest tool in your tool box might just be the experience you had on your own course. So, get out there and play and enjoy what you've worked so hard for.
For those of you that don't know me, I love golf! I love everything about the game. I love the finely manicured surfaces, the attention to detail, the honor bestowed upon the players, and the history of the game. More than anything, I love to play golf. Before I was blessed with four children, I was a pretty good stick, but family has taken much of my time and I no longer play as much as I want. In fact, I played more golf when I was a superintendent than I do now.
Crazy idea, right?! A superintendent that plays his course at least once a week? Not crazy, in fact, it made me better at my job. My outlook was to make the course play the best that I could make it play for the golfers/members and to do it as cost-effectively and environmentally friendly as possible. Every morning, I would take my putter and putt at pin placements that were borderline too tough, checking every angle and distance I could. That gave me a feel for what the golfers were going to experience. When I did get out and play after work, I would concentrate on how the greens were responding to certain shots, certain chips, and also feeling the flow of pace of play.
The next day, I would consider what we had done in previous days that might affect what I was experiencing on the course as a golfer. Why guess how a ball will respond on the green from 150 yards? Why guess that what you are doing isn't going to speed up or slow down play? Why take the word of members that the greens were slow or bumpy?
It's not worth taking a chance on.
There are many superintendents that I know that don't like to play where they work. I've been there and I understand that. Whether you do or don't play your course doesn't make you a good or bad superintendent.
But, in my opinion, the greatest tool in your tool box might just be the experience you had on your own course. So, get out there and play and enjoy what you've worked so hard for.