High-Tech Turf

by Casey Griffith

 Dec 19, 2017 at 4:23 PM

To the casual observer, the greens and fairways of Raleigh Country Club appear to be a utopian landscape expertly sculpted by knowing hands. One imagines every corner of the course is generously and thoroughly fussed over for hours on end, and that it no doubt guzzles unspeakable resources and costs a fortune to maintain.

Often overlooked, however, is the whirr of spinning discs atop the birdhouse on the No. 18 fairway and the tiny sets of holes on each green. It’s easy to glance past a nearby sprinkler head that covers an exact radius for exactly five and a half minutes — one that will administer no water at all tomorrow. The reality is that taming this demanding 200-acre course requires a sophisticated approach, precise applications, and next-level data analysis that McConnell Golf is helping to pioneer.

TECHNICALLY SPEAKING

During RCC Superintendent Billy Cole’s 30 years in the industry, he’s watched technology touch nearly every aspect of his work. “From equipment to communication, technology has made every job a little bit easier,” he says.

Until recently however, these technologies have lived in separate systems. Soil contents and moisture levels are recorded with a device called a Pogo stick — it probes the green and transmits data to a mobile app. Another device drops a golf-ball size sphere onto the green to record firmness, while green speeds are measured by hand with a stimpmeter. Hidden in plain sight, a solar-powered weather station on No. 18 transmits info to the office, where all data points are manually recorded alongside records for equipment repair, maintenance, and labor costs. Through these tools, Cole can track, assess, and manage a healthy course. 

“The challenge is to balance what’s good for the golfers and what’s good for the course,” he says. “They both rely on each other and they both want very different things. The turf needs to rest and recover while our members want to play as often as possible.”

Enter OnLink. This cloud-based platform collects data from Cole’s instruments to provide analytics across all sources. Beyond time savings, OnLink measures different variables against each other and predicts outcomes with more accuracy.

“I’ve been doing this long enough that I could tell you how the weather will impact the course pretty well,” Cole explains. “But this gives me the ability to precisely understand why we’re seeing certain things. We’ve had more consistent green speeds, for example, since using OnLink because we can monitor if a particular green needs to be rolled twice in order to play consistently with others.”

The predictive nature of the platform doesn’t only prompt reactive efforts – it’s also a means for conservation. As Cole reports, “Now I can see where we’ve over-corrected in the past. Identifying thresholds for ideal outcomes and eliminating excess has been just as valuable to us as the ability to understand trends.” 

SUSTAINABLE PRACTICES

The platform has environmental implications as well. “OnLink provides the tools to incorporate metrics that evaluate sustainability across our courses ... fewer chemicals, less water, less intensive maintenance, and lower costs,” explains McConnell Golf COO Christian Anastasiadis. “The ability to efficiently measure and monitor benchmarks has been missing in the golf industry for a long time.”

RCC has been piloting the OnLink platform for six months, and it will be rolled out to all properties by the end of the year. These practices will be just as valuable at sister properties, especially when it comes to accommodating the unique ecological thumbprint and microclimate of each course.

“Our purpose for this program is consistency of course conditions and management of materials and labor across McConnell properties,” says VP of Agronomy Michael Shoun. “OnLink helps us be better managers of our resources.”

Earlier this year, John McConnell posed a question in his often playful manner: “Who has the most important job at McConnell Golf?” The audience made some guesses but couldn’t quite nail it down. “The mechanic,” he finally explained. “Without mowers and rollers, you can’t provide a superior golf course. And that’s where it all starts.”

While operational efficiency may not be glamorous, it offers members a thriving world of private golf. A world where the phrase “It’s a McConnell course” carries the same meaning from Knoxville to Myrtle Beach.

 

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Growing the Game

by Brad King

 Aug 22, 2017 at 3:30 PM

Junior Golf thrives at Raleigh Country Club

Jim Barnes has been around the junior golf program at Raleigh Country Club since 1973, when he was four-years-old and playing golf with his father. Today his own sons, Avery and Camden, are active in the RCC junior golf program, and Barnes says things have changed quite a bit since he was a kid.

“When I was growing up, there were only about three junior golfers,” he recalls. “I played golf with more retired members during the weekdays than young people. Nowadays at the parent-child tournaments, you’ll have 60 teams.”

Involvement in RCC’s junior golf program, led by Assistant Golf Pro Thomas Walker, has skyrocketed. Walker and his staff host a variety of events during the year, including fall and spring after-school clinics and summer camps, and they’ve fielded numerous successful PGA Junior League teams in the past few years.

LAYING THE GROUNDWORK

Growing the junior golf program was a top priority for McConnell Golf after taking ownership of RCC in 2003. McConnell wanted to emulate the vibrant programs at nearby clubs in Raleigh. A key hire at RCC was Josh Points, who came from Florida, where he was teaching with famed instructor Jim McLean.

“We wanted to follow a pyramid model — growing a big base with beginners, then moving them to intermediate and advanced, then on to high school and college,” says Brian Kittler, RCC’s director of golf operations. “We knew we had the facilities and the instruction to do so.”

Mission accomplished: RCC’s junior golf program is now regularly churning out college golfers, starting a few years back with Cyrus Stewart, who went on to play at Wake Forest and is now pursuing professional golf. Stephen Franken is at NC State now, earning All-ACC honors this past season. Preston Ball (Loyola), Gray Matthews (Sewanee), and Sam Stephenson (UNC Pembroke) have all played collegiate golf, while Parker Gillam is headed to Wake Forest this fall.

“That progress has been really cool to see,” says Kittler. “We’ve grown quite a pipeline. Every graduating class now sends kids to Division I golfing programs. I think we’ve created a culture. Plus, they’re all really great kids.”

FUNDAMENTALS AND MORE

Eleven-year-old Kinsley Smith, a fifth grader at Lacy Elementary, has participated in just about everything offered at RCC at every level during the past few years.

“I remember Kinsley not being able to get the ball airborne two years ago,” says Walker. “Now, she’s one of the best on our Junior League team. She whooped all the boys a few nights ago.”

“She’s really improved. It’s been exciting to see,” says Marcus Smith, Kinsley’s father. “More than anything, it’s the opportunities. They’ve really expanded the program. They’ve added a Saturday series, the summer camps, which have been really good, and they’ve added fall events like they’ve done in the spring. The more you’re out there playing and practicing, the better you’re going to get. It’s fun for her. Golf is an individual game, but the team-based atmosphere, the camaraderie at the camps, and the spring and fall drills ... it makes it fun for the kids.”

Kinsley has now started playing tournaments, including U.S. Kids Golf and she recently started playing in Peggy Kirk Bell Girls Tour events around North Carolina. She’s tried other sports too — dance, gymnastics, and tennis, plus other activities — but according to her father: “She keeps coming back to golf. Now it’s just part of our after-school routine.”

Smith says the RCC staff, along with its world-class facilities, has been key to Kinsley’s rapid improvement.

“Raleigh Country Club has got to have one of the best practice facilities anywhere,” he says. “If you can learn to chip and putt at Raleigh, that game will travel. When you see 30 kids on the putting green, to me that’s awesome. It’s a game of a lifetime. It’s a good gift to give a kid.”

Barnes adds that the lessons taught by Walker and the rest of the RCC team impact young people in ways far more important than just golf.

“They’re focusing on the fundamentals, but they’re also focusing on what we want all young people to learn — to be good teammates, to pull for each other, to be good stewards of the game,” he says. “Winning is secondary. They’re good golfers, but they’re good young people first and foremost. Not all of them are going to be professional golfers, but they’re all going to be adults one day.”

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A Worthy Cause

by Lynn Hart

 Jan 01, 2017 at 6:21 PM

When McConnell Golf and Raleigh Country Club pastry chef Lynn Hart was diagnosed with breast cancer last December, she turned to her club family for support. They rallied to the cause by joining her Cardinal Solutions Group Team in the 20th annual Komen Triangle Race for the Cure in June. Altogether, members donated $2,500 to Hart’s team, and much of the Raleigh Country Club staff participated in the race. McConnell Golf matched the member donations to raise a total of $5,000 on Hart’s behalf for breast cancer research. 

A Note From Lynn...

Going in for a routine appointment and learning that you have a very aggressive form of breast cancer was one of the worst moments of my life. I would have five months of chemo, surgery and then six weeks of radiation. Dennis Freeland was the first person I told at work; we would see how things went and take it one day at a time.

My first chemo was once a week for twelve weeks. I woke up every morning with a splitting headache but found that if I ate a light breakfast and had some coffee that it would go away in about twenty minutes. Though it did not change the recommended treatment plan, the chemo drugs worked and the tumor was gone.

My second chemo would last for eight weeks and my nausea was as wicked as they said it would be. For two and a half months, I would become deathly ill for three hours each morning before the pills would kick in. I pressed on believing that God would give me the strength to get through it and he did. This eight and a half weeks was my hardest stretch in which Dennis took an active role.

When my blood sugar dropped, I would get very light headed and experience chest pains. Even if we were quite busy, if Dennis noticed that I was looking puny, he would park a salad or sandwich in front of me. He is not only a good boss but also a good friend. Without his support, I would not have been able to make it through.

A week after I completed chemo, I did a 5k walk/run to benefit the Komen Foundation. My husband’s company, Cardinal Solutions, custom designed a shirt logo with my name on it for the race. JP, the executive chef from Greensboro drove all the way to Raleigh with his daughter Harriet to support me and John McConnell generously matched funds contributed from our company. Between our employers, friends and family $5,000 was raised in my name.

The moral support I received from McConnell Golf does not end there. A talented pastry chef named Jennifer from Country Club of Asheville was brought in to help me during the Wyndham Championship so my shifts would be shorter than last year. I was able to keep my recommended radiation schedule and still have a quality event for the VIP guests. I was very touched to receive the special Wyndham chef coat and be photographed with all the McConnell Golf chefs overlooking the 18th green.

To everyone reading this who knows me personally, thanks for your prayers. I had a great outcome for the most difficult season of my life and I am grateful to work for such a caring company.

Lynn Hart

 

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Making Business a Pleasure

by Jessie Ammons

 Dec 21, 2016 at 5:13 PM

Winter's lull is the perfect time to plan your next corporate outing

Country club involvement need not to be off-the-clock time only. “I’m proud of my membership in the McConnell group and wanted to showcase the club and its people,” says Kerry Doughty, a nine-year Raleigh Country Club member. Over the years, the president and CEO of Butterball, the nation’s largest producer of turkey products, has used RCC as the setting of annual company national sales meetings and quarterly management update meetings.

For Doughty, using the country club as a corporate event space is a way to share his love of the facility and add a sophisticated, leisurely ambiance to business gatherings. “I know the quality of the people and the operation at Raleigh Country Club, from both a golf and hospitality vantage,” he says. The clubhouse’s conference room spaces are perfect for “meetings that require space and entertainment opportunities.”

This year, another showcasing opportunity arose. Doughty was the chairman of the 2016 Triangle American Heart Association Heartwalk, and when it came time to organize a unique fundraiser, he turned to that place he knew as perfect for both space and entertainment. “We decided to have the Butterball Has Heart charity golf tournament, and host it at RCC.” The inaugural event on August 29 was a smashing success: 148 golfers and 40 volunteers turned out for a day of golf and socializing. “It’s not easy to have a club make its facility available for a charity event with this many golfers,” Doughty says, and “the team at RCC was very supportive. They provided full food and beverage service as well as golf essentials.”

First-time visitors were impressed with the caliber of play and with their overall experience. “The course is fantastic, and it was a cool opportunity to provide non-members a chance to play this historic course,” Doughty says. “The staff was attentive and passionate about the cause, and the food was awesome. It was a good time that everyone enjoyed. And we exceeded our fundraising expectations!”

“Hosting member-sponsored events is a great way for all of our properties to help give back to the local communities and assist charities in raising money for their great causes,” says Brian Kittler, McConnell Golf vice president of golf operations. “We do our best to balance the number of outside events at each facility to allow the golf course maintenance teams an opportunity to keep courses in championship-caliber conditions all year.”

While Doughty didn’t need convincing, the summer charity tournament’s success encouraged him to continue considering his home McConnell club as more than a place to play a round with friends. “RCC is an excellent venue for business or charity outings. Of course I plan to do more at RCC in the future.”

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Where Are They Now?

by Shayla Martin

 Dec 18, 2016 at 9:45 PM

At McConnell Golf the sport of golf is more than just a leisure activity. Members across all 12 clubs train competitively in the hope of one day playing among their idols. Two McConnell Golf members have progressed to amateur and professional levels, and we’re proud to share the recent success of Raleigh Country Club's Grayson Murray and Carter Jenkins.

After receiving a McConnell Golf Junior Scholarship in 2008, Grayson Murray has wasted no time ascending the ranks to the PGA Tour. After the 22-year-old started the year with conditional status on the Web.com Tour and missed the cut in his first event, he tied for 10th place at TPC Wakefield Plantation and then tied for eighth at the BMW Charity Pro-Am. He earned his full-time PGA Tour card for the upcoming season in mid-October by finishing among this year’s top 25 money winners on the Web.com Tour.

“I received the McConnell Golf Junior Scholarship in the eighth grade, and it was perfect timing. It elevated my game so much just getting to go out to Raleigh Country Club every afternoon after school,” said Murray. “I don’t think I would have been the player I am without that scholarship.” The MCG Junior Scholarship is a program designed to offer instruction, practice, and playing opportunities to young golfers who may not have the financial ability to work on their games at first-class facilities. Murray was selected based on his level of talent, need, and commitment to the sport - as well as his proven dedication and value to the future of golf.

A fellow McConnell Golf Scholar is Raleigh native Carter Jenkins, a 2010 recipient who also played in the Rex Hospital Open as an amateur. Like Murray, Jenkins excelled in the amateur and collegiate ranks and is currently playing as a professional on the PGA Canada Tour. A fun fact about Jenkins: He and Grayson Murray were high school golf teammates at Leesville Road High School in Raleigh.

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Experience of a Lifetime

by jessie Ammons

 Jul 06, 2016 at 3:48 PM

Members share their most cherished memories of the Wyndham Championship in Greensboro

"For me the great moment at Wyndham each year is standing with our grandsons at the 18th green and watching them get golf balls, gloves, and hats from the players. Then they run to the scorer’s trailer, waiting for these players to come out and sign the gloves, hats, and other items. I remember that [Arnold Palmer’s grandson] Sam Saunders gave my grandson his hat, then autographed it. Ernie Els signed a golf glove. And many more players have been so very accommodating to the children. Our grandson came on Saturday and could not wait to get back on Sunday. It’s a great weekend and great time for families.”

- Jim Barnes, Raleigh Country Club

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Celebrating America’s Military

by Brad King

 Dec 03, 2015 at 2:54 PM

On a beautiful November morning leading into the Veterans Day holiday, McConnell Golf honored all branches of the military and helped bring awareness to our veterans with the first annual Army vs. Navy Golf Challenge at Raleigh Country Club.

Under the leadership of General Tony Tata — a Raleigh CC member currently serving as Secretary of the NC Department of Transportation — the Army Black Knights managed to squeeze out an exciting 486-497 win over the Navy Midshipmen, who were led by Admiral Donald Gintzig, CEO of WakeMed and also a Raleigh CC member. The format was a four-person, Texas scramble using two best ball nets of a foursome.

The benefiting charity for the event was the US Military Veterans Foundation® (USMV), which ensures connections and growth through fundraising, supporting, educating, and connecting veterans with communities and nonprofits. Both captains, along with Mc- Connell Golf CEO John McConnell and Wounded Warriors and veterans, delivered special words about their service and commitment to giving back and importance of helping those who served.

The Wake & District Public Safety Pipe and Drums provided the event’s ceremonial opening music, while Beverly Marler, Club Manager at Sedgefield Country Club, sang the national anthem. The event’s master of ceremony was Connie Inggs, USMV Foundation President. USMC SFC Stanley Roberts, a Wounded Warrior & Purple Heart recipient, struck the ceremonial opening putt. In addition, nearly every foursome included an active military member, a wounded warrior or a veteran.

The USMV’s mission is to bring restoration to the lives of this country’s veterans and their families through engaging and educating communities on how to give back to those that have sacrificed for the United States.

The foundation financially supports vetted nonprofits that are providing programs and services needed for these families’ lives to be restored. These include Operation Coming Home, which builds homes for wounded veterans; Military Missions in Action, which provides home modifications for disabled veterans, as well as disabled children of military families. Vets to Vets provides service dogs and training to disabled veterans, and Chambers for Hope, which provides medical treatment for military veterans suffering from TBI and PTSD.

“We believe the nonprofits that are out there making a difference need support from a passionate team that understands the needs of our military veterans and their families,” said Inggs. “ We look at ourselves as a relationship builder, which takes hard work and time, but is essential in establishing needs, motivating individuals and companies through educating them of the needs, including time, treasure and talent.”

McConnell Golf left no stone unturned during the Veterans Day event including personalized McConnell Golf challenge coins and a small, silent auction. Another beneficiary of the event was the Wounded Warrior Project.

The Army vs. Navy Golf Challenge also benefited McConnell Golf ’s “Footprints on the Green” program, through which members and staff give back by volunteering time, effort or resources to enrich the lives and environment around them. The Footprints on the Green program was established to engage all of the McConnell Golf properties around the Carolinas to support broader-based charitable causes.

McConnell Golf announced that the Army vs. Navy Golf Challenge was able to raise several thousand dollars for the US Military Veterans Foundation, and it also honored one specific veteran military family, for whom McConnell Golf was able to raise and donate $5,730 specifically to that local family in need.

With an older brother, Bob, who played football for the United States Naval Academy, Gen. Tata is no stranger to Army-Navy duels. As a young West Point cadet Gen. Tata said he would never forget how proud he was of his brother’s heralded Navy team, which captured the 1979 Holiday Bowl.

 “That pride in no way overshadows my annual desire for Army to beat Navy on the gridiron or any field of competition,” said Gen. Tata. “As a West Point wrestler and baseball player, I did my best to support the Army cause. And while Army has been unsuccessful of late in beating Navy in football, John McConnell has given us a proxy, a different battlefield, upon which to cross sabres and determine bragging rights. More importantly, John’s support of veterans and Veterans Day is noble and much appreciated.”

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