Sean Foley named 2008 Ontario PGA Teacher of the Year

Oct 31, 2008 @ 02:42 pm by Nigel Da Costa

ORLANDO, Florida (October 30, 2008)-Sean Foley, Director of Instruction at the Core Golf Junior Academy in Orlando, Florida has been named 2008 Ontario PGA Teacher of the Year.
 
Foley of Burlington, Ont. was honoured Wednesday during the annual awards dinner at the Ontario PGA Merchandise Show in Mississauga, Ont.
 
“Foley has made a name for himself in 2008, adding a number of high profile PGA Tour players to his growing roster of students,” the Ontario PGA said in a release. “This is the first nomination and first win for Sean who has become a world renowned
teacher over the last several years.”
 
In accepting the award, Foley said: “To be recognized by your peers is a level of respect that is quite admirable and appreciated.”
 
Foley paid tribute to a number of people who had helped him with his career, including his parents Gerry and Donna, late professional Ben Kern, his wife and manager Kate Foley, and PGA Tour player Stephen Ames.
 
“I`d also like to thank Stephen Ames for giving a kid from Burlington a shot at living his dream,” Foley said.
 
In addition to Ames, Foley also coaches PGA Tour players Sean O’Hair, Hunter Mahan, Parker McLachlin, the Nationwide Tour’s Greg Owen, and LPGA Tour player Jessica Shepley.
 
A number of Foley’s students had banner 2008 seasons: Jennifer Kirby won the Ontario Junior Girls, Jennifer Vandermade won the Ontario Women’s Amateur, Danny King won his third Ontario PGA Championship, and Shepley earned her 2009 LPGA Tour card on the Duramed Futures Tour.
 
Other 2008 Ontario PGA award winners included: Bill Wogden, Barrie Country Club, Club Professional of the Year; Mike Kelly, Golf Association of Ontario; Teacher of the Year for Juniors; Tim Moore, Thornhill Golf & Country Club, Merchandiser of the Year; and Dan Poort, Hamilton Golf & Country Club, Assistant Professional of the Year. 
 
The Core Golf Junior Academy offers education and comprehensive golf development in every facet of the game to high-school-age and post-graduate players dedicated to becoming elite players and responsible world citizens. Students of the Core Golf Junior Academy attend Windermere Preparatory School.
 
The junior academy is part of the Core Golf Academy which provides high-quality instruction to all levels of players at three Greater Toronto Area facilities: Core Golf Downtown Academy in Toronto, The Academy at Piper’s Heath Golf Club in Oakville  and the Core Golf Academy at Physiomed-Premier Fitness Oakville.
 
Nike Golf Canada is the official sponsor of the Core Golf Academy and supplies apparel, equipment, balls and footwear to Core Golf Academy instructors and to Core Golf Junior Academy students.



Core Golf’s Sean Foley coaches PGA Tour winners Hunter Mahan and Parker McLachlin

Oct 28, 2008 @ 02:29 pm by Nigel Da Costa

ORLANDO, Florida (October 28, 2008)-Sean Foley, Director of Instruction at the Core Golf Junior Academy in Orlando, Florida has reached agreements to coach PGA Tour players Hunter Mahan and Parker McLachlin.
 
“I am delighted to enter into coaching relationships with Hunter and Parker, both of whom are great young players with plenty of talent, smarts and heart, and they are terrific people too,” said Foley, who also coaches PGA Tour players Stephen Ames and Sean O’Hair, the Nationwide Tour’s Greg Owen, and LPGA Tour player Jessica Shepley.
 
Mahan, 26, is one of the tour’s strong young players, having won the 2007 Travelers Championship for his first PGA Tour victory. One of the stars on the American team in the recent Ryder Cup, Mahan played brilliantly and with passion in going undefeated with a 2-0-3 record as a captain’s pick in his first Ryder Cup.
 
In his 5th year on the PGA Tour, Mahan has notched five top-10 finishes so far this season and sits 29th on the money list with US$2.208 million in earnings. Mahan, winner of the 1999 U.S. Junior Amateur, was also one of Jack Nicklaus’s captain’s picks for the victorious American squad in the 2007 Presidents Cup. He lives in Plano, Texas.
 
In just his second year on the PGA Tour, McLachlin, 29, broke through this season for his first victory at the Legends Reno-Tahoe Open. The win is one of the three top-10 finishes to date this season among 17 cuts made by the resident of Scottsdale, Arizona. He sits at 78th on the money list with US$1.31 million. McLachlin played the Nationwide Tour for two years before earning his 2007 PGA Tour card at Q school.
 
A number of Foley’s students have won championships this summer: in July, Danny King won his third Ontario PGA Championship, Jennifer Kirby and Nicole Vandermade finished 1-2 in the Ontario Junior Girls, and Vandermade won the Ontario Women’s Amateur.
 
Foley is one of three PGA Tour coaches on the Core Golf Junior Academy team that includes Neale Smith, Performance Enhancement Consultant, and Dr. Craig Davies, Director of Fitness and Nutrition. Mahan works with both Smith and Davies.
 
The Core Golf Junior Academy offers education and comprehensive golf development in every facet of the game to high-school-age and post-graduate players dedicated to becoming elite players and responsible world citizens. Students of the Core Golf Junior Academy attend Windermere Preparatory School. 
 
The junior academy is part of the Core Golf Academy which provides high-quality instruction to all levels of players at three Greater Toronto Area facilities: Core Golf Downtown Academy in Toronto, The Academy at Piper’s Heath Golf Club in Oakville  and the Core Golf Academy at Physiomed-Premier Fitness Oakville.
 
Nike Golf Canada is the official sponsor of the Core Golf Academy and supplies apparel, equipment, balls and footwear to Core Golf Academy instructors and to Core Golf Junior Academy students.
 
For more information, please visit coregolfacademy.com.



Mike Francis named US General Manager of Nike Golf

Oct 14, 2008 @ 12:37 pm by Nigel Da Costa

Nike Golf today announced the appointment of Mike Francis to U.S. General Manager and Stan Grissinger to General Manager for Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) effective by December 1, 2008, according to company President Cindy Davis.  Francis will be succeeding Davis, who was recently promoted from U.S. General Manager to the position of President, and Grissinger will assume Francis’ role.
 
Mike Francis is currently Nike Golf’s General Manager for Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA), a position he has held for three years.  Prior to his role in Europe, Francis was General Manager for Nike Golf Canada, where he was responsible for the initial establishment of Nike Golf business in that region.  As Nike Golf’s U.S. General Manager, Francis will oversee the U.S. business for Nike Golf, including sales, operations, marketing and sports marketing.
 
“Mike Francis has been an effective leader within Nike Golf and has the ideal skill set and experience to manage Nike Golf’s U.S. business,” said Davis, Nike Golf President.  “He has a proven track record in generating incremental revenues in both Europe and Canada, and we look forward to Mike’s continued leadership to drive growth for our U.S. business.”
 
A native of Halifax, the graduate of Dalhousie University began his 21-year career in the golf industry at Ram Golf and moved to Wilson Golf, where he had ascended through various roles from territory sales to merchandising management, marketing, and ultimately sales leadership.  Francis joined Nike Golf in June 2003.
  more…



Healing American Golf

Oct 08, 2008 @ 08:18 pm by Nigel Da Costa

Bill Bales, the CEO for aboutGolf is a strong proponent of correcting some of the problems that have affected the game of golf in recent years. Bill wrote a short article below that offers some of his
thoughts on what the problems with golf are today. Bill offers some of the possible solutions that could help restore the greatness to a game that so many of us enjoy. Please take a few minutes to read and enjoy Bill’s article. Mary Beth. — For more info. on aboutGolf: www.aboutgolf.com or contact me. Thanks.

Healing American Golf - Bill Bales, aboutGolf CEO

When my grandmother was succumbing to cancer, my uncle made a series of calls to my father to come pay a final visit. Over time the requests for my father’s visit became more urgent. I accompanied him on the ultimate visit. We were both shocked at the degree of my grandmother’s physical decline. Yet her mind and soul had sustained the same amazing luster and positive energy she had had in her prime.

The business of golf in America is ill. A casual observer might not notice, as would have been the case with my grandmother before her body began to fail. But the symptoms are present. Golf can be healed, but not without change. It’s been said that golf has lost its relevance in American culture. I am willing to stipulate that this is the effect. But the causes are many.

If you could give golf a stress test, a colonoscopy, and a full body MRI, you’d understand what the doctors already know.

Signs of Illness

The annual number of rounds played and the total number of golf course facilities in the U.S. has remained stagnant for more than a decade. Both have slipped in numbers over the last three years. Courses are being plowed under. In spite of the fact that millions of players take up the game each year, an equal or greater number give it up. The business of golf is doing a poor job at keeping its customers.

In many areas of the U.S. the traditional country club is falling from grace. In my market the signs are widespread. One private club was sold to creditors who changed it to a low-priced public access course, and are now contemplating subdividing it for housing. One club that has had a waiting list for 50 years is now struggling with a member shortage. One club, the site of more than half a dozen majors, recently admitted everyone on a waiting list of more than 80 would-be applicants after a mass exodus by existing members–under loss-leader terms reminiscent of the used car business. For a club that a generation ago wouldn’t even let you put your name on a waiting list unless you were a relative blue-blood, this was golf’s equivalent of the Mariel Boatlift.

It is getting increasingly difficult to find major sponsors for professional events. Companies that embraced golf just a few years ago have started to turn their back on golf. The auto industry, for years the backbone of golf sponsorship, has fallen on hard times and is making a rapid retreat. Cadillac, once a major Champions Tour sponsor, has withdrawn from golf completely. Chrysler and Buick, two of the PGA TOUR’s largest sponsors, have cut back significantly on golf spending.

The OEMs are running out of ways to advance club technology, and therefore ways to compel golfers to purchase new equipment. For many, their stock is at or near a long term low. And they struggle to earn
meaningful profits. Barney Adams, in his book The WOW Factor, listed over 100 golf OEMs present in 1990 which are now either defunct or of greatly diminished significance.

While the youth of America don’t think golf is lame, as was the case a generation ago, they nonetheless are not embracing it. If golf can’t get the attention of today’s youth, there will be negative consequences a
generation from now. Today’s youth require instant feedback and fast action. They get trophies for participation. They play video games with interactive action that moves faster than Retief Goosen in a
thunderstorm. But the typical round of golf takes longer than ever. Golf broadcasts are slow and boring, with little or no interaction. Golf represents, in many ways, the antithesis of American youth culture.

The Howling Beasts

A while back I tried to write a clever article about slaying the BEASTS. “BEASTS” is my acronym for the things in golf that affect its overall relevance. We can heal golf if we focus on improving these fundamental elements.

B = Barriers: The game today places barriers for many participants. We must strive to welcome with open arms all players, regardless of ability, age, sex, race, or style. We must think of golf as the business
it is and golfers as the customers they are. Instead of bombarding our customers with rules and negativity when they come to the course, we should strive to make every moment they spend an extremely positive
experience.

E = Equipment: Most golfers have equipment that is ill-fitting to their swing and physical capabilities. We must strive to deliver to golfers clubs that fit their games. We also need to make this equipment
affordable, or to welcome new players without equipment by supplying it at the course–with a selection and reasonable cost comparable to how bowling centers accommodate casual participants.

A = Access: Many golfers perceive impediments to regular play. We must strive to overcome factors that mitigate access including price, availability, pace of play, weather, and location. One partial solution
involves the growth of indoor golf. While hard to comprehend for golf traditionalists, indoor golf has the ability to overcome virtually all of the access problems golf faces. It also is consistent with a cultural
trend to move outdoor sports and activities inside. Consider that over 80 new indoor water parks are expected to open in the U.S. in the next year. One indoor golf simulator purveyor claims that 2 million rounds per year are played on its simulators alone. GolfTec, an indoor golf instruction business, claims to give 10% of all the golf lessons in the U.S.

S = Social: The vast majority of golfers play to relax and have fun in a social environment. Women especially are oriented to the social aspects of play. We must strive to get compatible golfers together in a way that creates an enjoyable social experience. There are many ways for golf facilities to create a more social environment for players to meet and play together. But the biggest impact can be made, very easily, by simply getting club pros out from behind their desks and pro shop counters out onto the course to get folks together, play holes with the patrons, and act as the course social director.

T = Time: The most diabolical disease in golf today is slow play. We absolutely must take measures immediately to enforce a reasonable pace of play, and to educate golfers on how to speed up play and why it is essential to the health of golf. It dawned on me while playing the other day, waiting on every shot the entire round, that most players really have no idea how to get around the course efficiently. Instead of having marshals patrolling the course pretending to keep things moving, send out friendly instructors to help players learn good habits in efficient play.

S = Satisfaction: In golf, as it is with anything in life, if one doesn’t find their performance satisfying they’ll be less encouraged to do it more. We must strive to improve our methods and systems for teaching the game, we must help golfers realize and find pleasure in meeting realistic expectations, and we must provide courses and play from tees that fit our games. We must strive with all our power to guarantee that our customers have a very predictable, positive experience every time they come to the course.

If we place serious focus on these fundamental elements, we can not only heal the business of golf, but we can help the game of golf sustain its amazing luster and positive energy.



Nikegolf.ca Launches New Digital Content

Oct 04, 2008 @ 08:13 pm by Nigel Da Costa

TORONTO (September 26, 2008)-Nike Golf Canada is taking interactive technology an exciting step further for Canadian golf fans with the launch of Inside The Ropes.

 

Through nikegolf.ca, golf fans now have an opportunity to ask Nike Golf athletes questions during featured tournaments, watch exclusive video interviews from select events, or browse through still images of the athletes.

 

This week, fans have an opportunity to “Go Inside The Ropes at The Tour Championship.”

 

In addition to other great content on nikegolf.ca such as Stephen Ames’s blog, Clubhouse Members can now interact with Nike Golf athletes the week of a tournament, and watch video interviews about their rounds, the tournament, new Nike Golf product, and much more. The “Interview the Pros“ section allows fans to send questions to Nike Golf athletes throughout the season and to check back to see if their questions were selected and answered via a video interview.

Currently, fans can view an entertaining array of archived Inside The Ropes segments on nikegolf.ca, including the RBC Canadian Open, the Deutsche Bank Championship, the BMW Championship, and the Barclays Championship.

“This is really just the beginning for ‘Inside The Ropes,’” said Tyler Keenan, Brand Communications Manager of Nike Golf Canada. “Our goal is to make nikegolf.ca a destination for golf fans searching for unique and exclusive tour content from some of the best athletes in the game, at some of the biggest events on the schedule.  Our members not only have the chance to view timely event interviews and still images, but also the chance to interact with our players by submitting their own questions; something that is truly unique in the industry.

 

“The Inside the Ropes content will continue to be updated after the Tour Championship and into next season where the focus will be on new product stories and exclusive interviews at events such as The Masters, The Players Championship, and the U.S. Open,” Keenan said.

 

This latest development for nikegolf.ca-which has just past its first anniversary-follows the July launch of WeatherEye Golf, a customized widget that provides current and local weather for up to 17,000 of your favorite golf courses right on your desktop.  A partnership between the Weather Network and Nike Golf Canada, WeatherEye Golf also recommends Nike Golf products based on weather conditions.

 

In the Clubhouse section of nikegolf.ca, Canadian golfers are also enjoying instructional videos by Stephen Ames and his coach Sean Foley, sharing Ames’s thoughts in his blog, and winning Nike product in the If Nike Wins, You Win contest.



Vijay wins the FedEx Cup using Element 21 Shafts

Oct 02, 2008 @ 08:09 pm by Nigel Da Costa

Element 21 Golf Company (OTC BB:ETGF.OB - News) (Frankfurt:BJQ.F - News), the manufacturer of advanced Scandium Alloy golf and fishing equipment, announced today that the player using Element 21 Scandium shafts has clenched the FedEx Cup after winning the Bridgestone, Barclays and Deutsche Bank.

This player switched to the Scandium shafts in the summer of 2007 and has been using scandium shafts on an UNENDORSED basis since then.

In a recent interview, the player attributed his wins to the accuracy of his irons, that have been shafted with Scandium shafts for over a year. This player has a reputation of being the hardest working professional golfer, hitting thousands of golf balls on the practice range daily and playing in numerous events worldwide each year. Following his switch to the Scandium shafts, he was quoted as saying that he experienced less vibration — and, therefore, less strain — in his elbows when he hits the Scandium shafts. He has suffered from an ongoing elbow injury, so the Scandium shafts, with vibration dampening ‘ShockBlokTM’ technology, help keep that from flaring up.

“FedEx Cup win is a real milestone for Scandium technology. The fact that top players are using this technology on unendorsed basis is a true endorsement for Scandium performance,” stated Dr. Nataliya Hearn, Element 21’s CEO.



Nike Canada updates web site

Oct 01, 2008 @ 08:07 pm by Nigel Da Costa

Web site for golf retailers enables placing and tracking orders… and more!

TORONTO (October 1, 2008)-Conducting business and communicating with Nike Golf Canada is now easier than ever with enhancements to our retailers’ web site, www.nike.net.
 
With easy-to-use features, Nike.net makes it quicker and more efficient for retailers to do business with Nike Golf Canada whenever and wherever they can connect with the internet.
 
“Nike.net is an enhanced self-service solution to make ordering and communicating with Nike Golf Canada as simple and routine as possible,” said John Sibley, General Manager of Nike Golf Canada.
 
“Retailers tell us it’s the best business-to-business site in golf. And it’s open 24/7, so you can conduct your business based on your schedule-whether that’s during weekends, nights, anytime,” said Sibley.
 
Nike.net is comprehensive and loaded with features, but as easy to use as a consumer site. Once retailers log in, it’s simple to book orders, check order status and history, track shipments, monitor credits, enter returns, and much more.
 
The site is linked in real time to inventory so that retailers can check availability up to the minute and make orders accurately. Retailers can customize their orders so that shipments go out on prescribed dates and special notes are included in the shipment (for example, “Custom driver for John Smith”).
 
It’s also easy to verify information and check on order status with a search function that shows detailed information on amount ordered, specifications, shipment status, terms, pricing, courier tracking number, and more.
 
Nike.net is also an important and entertaining source of news: All news releases and editions of Nike Golf Canada’s comprehensive e-news are posted.
 
“We’re very proud of our enhanced business site because it achieves one of main objectives: It makes doing business with Nike Golf Canada easy and routine, just like you were ordering a book online,” Sibley said.