What a great question.
Was going to write a long-winded, personal story, but figured brevity should win out: Lakeside Golf Club in Burbank for me, no question.
Just so many great memories there.
Go ahead and be long winded.
I shall, Tommy. Thank you....
Forgive the long, narcissistic response, but I'm really struggling to play decent golf now due to spinal stenosis, and it will feel good to write this. Skip if you don’t like reading about someone’s (not all that glorious) glory days.
For me, the course is most definitely Lakeside in Burbank, California. Just holds so many fond memories for me -- and I love the course, to boot.
I was not a golfer growing up, I was a baseball player. Fell in love with the game when a shoulder injury my sophomore year in college ended what would have certainly been a non-descript minor-league career had I been drafted out of college my junior year, which I was on-track to being.
Took up golf, fell in love with the game, got down to scratch quickly, but was certainly no good as a "new" scratch golfer -- especially in competition. The years went by and I played mostly club golf and inter-club "team play," but didn't play much serious amateur golf. I simply didn't understand the world of golf at that time. I was/am from Riverside. I knew nothing of the L.A. clubs or the NorCal clubs yet.
Started to dip my toes in local and regional stuff in the late 90's, and by the early 2000's, I got down to +3 or better for a stretch and was competing against local pros and top ams in skins games and money matches and holding my own -- albeit with a spastic mind and twitchy putter under pressure.
In 2004, at 37 years old, I entered my very first SCGA event and qualified for the SCGA Am at Hillcrest, playing against D1 college boys and top mid-ams and a few elite seniors. I made the cut, finishing 33rd. I also made the cut at the Mid-Am that year at Pauma Valley. I remember my friends being amazed, while all I could think about was how horribly I had played and how many stupid mistakes I had made!
2005, I qualified for the SCGA Mid-Am at North Ranch and finished 3rd, winning my first SCGA "plate" for a runner-up finish. I was on cloud nine. The best thing about it, though, was the friends I was making: guys from other clubs and guys who had won SCGA (and even USGA) championships. A whole new world was opening up to me.
And that's when I decided to write to Lakeside. I had heard about the Kelly Cup and a buddy said to go ahead and write to the head pro to try to get in the field, so I did. Explained that I had just finished 3rd in the SCGA Mid-am, finishing ahead of many of SoCal’s very best players (which I proudly trumpeted), and gave him a few other local finishes from previous years, and waited. A while later he wrote back that I was in. I was both excited and nervous and couldn’t wait for the tournament to come.
From the moment I arrived at the Lakeside for my practice round I was hooked -- the course just spoke to me, and the staff and members couldn’t have been nicer or more accommodating. They treated me like a member from day one and still do to this day.
With a par of 70 and only two par-5’s (one of which is virtually unreachable), the course sets up great for a relatively short-hitting player with a short-iron/wedge game like me. Its combination of short and medium-length par-4’s and quirky par-3’s (“short” 15 – all 78 yards of it -- is one of my favorite holes in golf, and then there’s the par 3.5, 240-yard 9th, a beast!), meant that I could compete with “The Bombers” if I played well. And at the Kelly Cup, it was even more possible for me to compete because the greens were so tiny and the rough was so long and thick, that missing a green could mean double-bogey for those with “problematic” short games, and that’s one problem I don’t have. Lack of length and a spastic mind, yes, but my short game is decent.
It wasn’t uncommon at The Kelly Cup, all the way through 2014 or so, for 4-index golfers to shoot in the 90’s – especially those with weak short games. I know that’s not the kind of course set-up that many here think is ideal, but the young me just loved it. And hell, I didn’t know any better! All I knew was that Lakeside was, by far, the most challenging course/conditions I had ever played in my life – and at only 6600 to 6700 yards! And it didn’t hurt that it was immaculately maintained and that I met Andy Garcia and Joe Pesci and used Kevin Costner’s locker my first time there.
I played well and made the 15-player cut (usually 40-50ish scratch or plus-index golfers in the field) in my first try and I was hooked. The best I’ve ever finished was 5th a few years back, but it’s just one of my all-time favorite places for all those reasons. I also love that the club has a great wagering culture. I love the trophies they give out. I love the history of the club. And I love the people I’ve met there over the years – both members and staff.
And now I love the course even more. With the Board and Robert Hertzing’s amazing leadership and direction, the course has become an absolute gem. Tree removal, green size reclamation, and run-up work (among many others things, I’m sure) has resulted in a much more “playable and fun” Lakeside, but it’s still a course that can challenge the very best when the greens are firm and the pins are tucked. I just can’t get enough of it. I’ll be out there this weekend for The Bob Hope Invitational this weekend, in fact.
Finally, a few years back, I played one of the best rounds of my life in a year when the course was perhaps playing its nastiest. In the opening round, I shot 69, and in so doing, joined a pretty cool group: mid-amateurs/seniors who have broken par in a Kelly Cup round. That score was the only round under par the entire tournament, and I will never forget it. Sadly, sitting at even par on the fourth hole in round two, my back spasms made an appearance. I couldn’t make a real swing at all from then on. I hobbled around on one leg for an 86 – and still made the cut, if you can believe it.
I was not going to WD, so I played day three, also on one leg. I was in the middle of 8 fairway on my way to grinding out another mid-80’s round, when the tournament chairman, Jim Grover, drove up to me and handed me a sterling silver bar for shooting low round of the tournament (the “regular” Kelly Cup is just two rounds). I’ll never forget that moment and how it made me feel. For a baseball player from Riverside who always felt like an outsider as a golfer, I can tell you it made me feel pretty damn good.