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Ruffels shows major qualities


Australian amateur Gabriela Ruffels has produced another stunning performance in a major championship.

The 20-year-old Ruffels, a senior at the University of Southern California, finished tied-13th in the US Women’s Open after closing with a one under par 70 at Champions Golf Club in Houston, Texas.

With six birdies, the Melbourne-schooled Ruffels vaulted up almost 20 places to be the leading Australian of the six in the field.

It improves upon her previous best finish in a major – tied-15th at the ANA Inspiration this year – and consolidates her status as one of the most promising Australian players of recent times.

She shot scores of 71-72-76-70 to finish five over par, eight from the winning score of three under by South Korea’s A Lim Kim.

“It’s been awesome,” said Ruffels, who last year won the US Amateur. “I feel like any time I can kind of mix it with the pros and know that I can compete against them it’s a great week. I feel like I did that this week and just gained a lot of confidence.”

Ruffels has bounced between the USA and Australia through her short life. Born in Florida, she came to Melbourne with her parents for her high school years, latched on to golf and then picked up the USC scholarship and moved to California.

Her father Ray is an Australian Davis Cup tennis player; her mother Anna Maria Fernandez played on the WTA Tour.

She switched from tennis – where she was in Tennis Australia’s junior programs — to golf at 14 in the footsteps of her elder brother Ryan, who is now a travelling professional, too. It has all happened with remarkable speed.

It is expected she will turn professional later in 2021 after completing her college degree. She certainly knows that she is good enough to compete.

Today she began on the sixth hole after Sunday’s weather delay, and having made three birdies in the first five holes of the back nine on Sunday, she made another three on the front nine including two to finish, at the eighth and ninth holes.

“I played pretty well today, I was really, really happy with the round,” she said. “It was definitely one of the tougher days, conditions-wise, especially this morning it was pretty cold, warmed up a little bit. it was definitely you had to be mentally strong coming back from yesterday, but I had a pretty good start yesterday, I think I was two under through five holes, made three birdies when I started.”

Hannah Green (40th), Minjee Lee (46th) and Su Oh (66th) were all farther back in the field.

The performance of the week, though, came from Korean LPGA Tour star Kim, who made three consecutive birdies to finish in overrunning American Amy Olson to win.

It was her first appearance in a US Women’s Open at 25, although she has won three times on the Korean Tour.

She picked up $US1 million in prizemoney.


The Tweed Coast Open has been abandoned after torrential rain and gale-force winds over the last 48 hours rendered the course unplayable.

Officials inspected the course this morning, and with bunkers out of play, tree limbs down, and several holes at risk of inundation during high tides today and tomorrow, officials were faced with no option but to call the event off.

With the Bureau of Meteorology issuing a severe weather warning for damaging winds, heavy rainfall and abnormally high tides in the northern rivers district, for the remainder of the day and into the evening, and a flood watch on the Tweed River, conditions aren’t likely to improve.

A decision on rescheduled dates for the event will be made in the near future.


Amateur phenom Gabi Ruffels enters this week’s US Women’s Open with the advice and support of three Australian Major champions fresh in her thoughts as she endeavours to join their elite company.

Ruffels is one of six Aussies in the field at the Champions Club in Houston, Texas, the home club of 1995 US PGA Championship winner Steve Elkington.

Elkington joined Ruffels and her University of Southern California teammates Amelia Garvey from New Zealand and Hawaiian native Allisen Corpuz to provide a guided tour, Elkington registered to assist as a volunteer on the course maintenance team for the week.

In addition to a Twitter message of support from 2015 US PGA champion Jason Day – complete with the #GoGabiGo hashtag – Ruffels spent last week picking the brain of seven-time Major champion Karrie Webb.

Continuing the Karrie Webb Scholarship that has benefited the likes of Minjee Lee and Hannah Green in the past, Webb invited Ruffels and Virgina Tech representative Emily Mahar into her home to share her insights and advice.

“I’m about to tee up in a Major as an amateur and I get to ask a seven-time major champion anything I want. That’s unbelievably cool,” Ruffels told Golf Australia, Webb winning the first of her successive US Women’s Open titles 20 years ago at Merit Club in Illinois.

“I was able to get so much priceless information about practice, especially short game – and we all know how much of a wizard Karrie is around the greens.

“I’m glad I got to witness this up close and ask her everything about it.

“This is going to help me so much for the US Open and beyond.”

The 2019 US Women’s Amateur champion, Ruffels missed the cut in her first appearance in a Major last year but after qualifying for the final of the US Women’s Amateur again in August went on to finish tied for 15th at the ANA Inspiration.

A winner in Dubai last month, Minjee Lee comes into the week ranked No.8 in the world and seeking her first Major championship, her third-place finish at the AIG Women’s Open another step towards her ultimate goal.

Last year’s KPMG Women’s PGA champion Hannah Green is currently ranked No.23 in the world and was 24th in last week’s Volunteers of America Classic while Katherine Kirk will be out to improve on her best showing in the US Women’s Open, a tie for 25th in 2007.

Round 1 tee times (AEDT)

US Women’s Open
Champions Club, Houston, Texas
Cypress Creek Course
2.53am Katherine Kirk, Azahara Munoz, Minami Katsu
2.53am*              Sarah Jane Smith, Jeongeun Lee, Linn Grant (a)
3.04am*              Amelia Garvey (a), Kana Mikashima, Kim Kaufman
3.15am Su Oh, Ashleigh Buhai, Xiyu Lin
3.37am Gabriela Ruffels (a), Jeongeun Lee6, Hinako Shibuno
3.48am Hannah Green, Stacy Lewis, Seon Woo Bae

Jack Rabbit Course
3.37am Minjee Lee, Charley Hull, Hae Ran Ryu
3.48am*              Lydia Ko, Sei Young Kim, Brittany Altomare

Defending champion: Lee Jeong-eun
Past Aussie winners: Jan Stephenson (1983), Karrie Webb (2000, 2001)
Top Aussie prediction: Hannah Green
TV schedule: Live 2.30am-10am Friday; Live 5am-10am Saturday, Sunday; Live 3am-9am Monday on Fox Sports 503


Cameron Smith knows what happened at the 1996 Masters. It stands alone as the cruellest finish to a Major championship that any Aussie golf fan has had to endure but given Smith wasn’t yet three years of age it’s not his most enduring Greg Norman memory.

Smith will make his tournament debut at this week’s QBE Shootout – aka the Shark Shootout – at the Tiburon Golf Course in Naples, Florida, the Norman-designed Gold Course the host layout.

Smith and teammate Marc Leishman were both heavily influenced by Norman’s career as young players but Smith’s Major heartbreak came watching a 53-year-old Great White Shark come within nine holes of an unlikely third Open Championship triumph at Royal Birkdale in 2008.

“I can’t remember ’96 but my old man tells a story of how he took a day off work to watch Greggy win The Masters,” Smith recalled.

“My best memory of Greggy was when he was tied for the lead with Padraig Harrington in the British Open.

“I remember staying up through the night to watch that. That’s probably my best memory.”

Runner-up at Augusta National in his last start, Smith was flooded with messages of congratulations and support from some of the biggest names in Australian sport.

He receives semi-regular messages from Norman through Instagram but they are less connected to how he’s playing and more to do with the state of his lawn.

“He tags me in some videos every now and then when he’s mowing his lawn. He knows I love my lawn and all that stuff,” said Smith, Norman commenting on Smith’s lawn update post in April.

“I’ve only met Greg a couple of times in person and haven’t really seen him a whole lot.

“We’ve never really had anything other than that. We’ve never had time to.”

Whether it’s over a Leishman Lager or the latest release from Greg Norman Estates, Smith and Leishman will surely find time this week to spend quality time with the person who inspired so many young Aussies to take up the game.

Winner of the 2017 Greg Norman Medal, Leishman was given a ball by Norman’s then caddie Steve Williams at the 1991 Australian Masters at Huntingdale and his boyhood bedroom also featured a life-size cardboard cut-out of his idol.

Given that history and the crazy nature of 2020, Smith said the pair thought teaming up this week was a fitting way to end the year.

“I talked to ‘Leish’ at the Tour Championship from memory and said we were going to play it,” Smith said.

“It’s just a good week to have fun with Leish but also get some golf in in the middle of a pretty big break.

“It will be nice to be competitive for a week and keep me going and I know Leish probably feels exactly the same way.”

Smith and Leishman are vying to become the first all-Aussie winners of the QBE Shootout since Norman and Steve Elkington teamed up to win in 1998.

The 54-hole tournament sees two-man teams competing in ambrose, modified foursomes and best ball formats across the three rounds.

The QBE Shootout is not the only professional tournament in Florida this week with Aussie pair Harrison Endycott and Daniel List to contest the PGA TOUR Latinoamerica’s Shell Open.

Round 1 tee times (AEDT)

PGA TOUR
QBE Shootout
Tiburon Golf Course (Gold Cse), Naples, Florida
1.45am Cameron Smith/Marc Leishman, Harris English/Matt Kuchar

Defending champions: Rory Sabbatini/Kevin Tway
Past Aussie winners: Steve Elkington and Raymond Floyd (1993), Steve Elkington and Mark Calcavecchia (1995), Greg Norman and Steve Elkington (1998), Rod Pampling and Jerry Kelly (2006), Jason Day and Cameron Tringale (2014)
TV schedule: Live 3am-7am Saturday; Live 5am-9am Sunday; 4am-8am Monday on Fox Sports 505

PGA TOUR Latinoamerica
Shell Open
Trump National Doral Golden Palm, Doral, Florida
Aussies in the field: Harrison Endycott, Danny List


The 2020 South Australian PGA State Vocational Awards have been presented in an event at Grange Golf Club where PGA Professionals from across the state have gathered to celebrate the year that was.

The awards serve not only as recognition for the hard work and dedication of each PGA Professional but the way in which they have so brilliantly adapted to the adversities of 2020.  

“Congratulations to all of the nominees and winners. We are extremely pleased to be able to get together and present these awards at the tail end of what has been a challenging year,” said SA Senior State Manager, David Barker.

“The submission of numerous nominees reflects the calibre of PGA Professionals we have here in South Australia and their fantastic contributions to our sport.”

Jamie Clutterham has been named the South Australian PGA Management Professional of the Year for his work at North Adelaide Golf Course.

Jamie’s work in the introduction of new technologies at North Adelaide Golf Club to improve venue efficiencies and the golfer experience, as well as fast tracking projects including the integration of handicaps into memberships have led to a significant increase in traffic and club membership.

Kooyonga Golf Club PGA Professional Daniel Blackwell has been awarded the South Australian Coach of the Year award for his work with both South Australia’s established and emerging golfing talents.

Blackwell’s innovative approach to coaching during COVID-19 including an increased presence online and on social media as well as continued learning and development have seen him recognised once again for his contributions to coaching in the state.

Simon MacWhirter’s successful adult group coaching programs at North Adelaide Golf Course, a fresh approach to course management through on-course training as well as growing junior MyGolf programs have seen him named the SA PGA Game Development Professional of the Year for 2020.

For his work in providing a welcoming and uplifting pro shop environment at Thaxted Park Golf Club and a focus on MyGolf, ladies and SAAGA golf clinics, PGA Professional Cody Sherratt has been named the SA PGA Club Professional of the Year.

2020 has been a particularly interesting year for Sherratt. The South Australian travelled to Nepal earlier this year to complete the Everest Base Camp trek, an experience he hopes will aid his work as a PGA Professional. Find out more about Sherratt’s journey to Everest Base Camp earlier this year here.

Ahead of the award celebrations PGA Tour of Australasia regular Ben Stowe won the SA PGA Professionals Championship, played on Grange Golf Club’s east course, with a round total of 4-over 76 in gusting SA conditions.

View the final SA PGA Professionals Championship leaderboard here.

Rain and increasing winds also challenged the field at the SA Trainee Championships where Nick Thompson fired winning rounds of 70 and 79 for a 5-over total to finish eight strokes clear of Joshua Groom in second place.

View the final SA Trainee Championships leaderboard here.


Finding new ways to do things has been thrust upon society in 2020 and this year’s winners of the Victorian PGA Vocational Awards have each advanced the game’s cause by challenging convention.

In an exceptional field of nominees recognised, Haydn Thompson (Deep Creek Golf Club-Pakenham), Sandy Jamieson (Oakleigh Golf Course), Tim Wood (Rosanna Golf Club) and Alan Patterson (Patterson River Golf Club) stood out for the innovative ways they have each approached their area of expertise.

Thompson was named the Management Professional of the Year for the community connection he has helped to foster as CEO at Deep Creek Reserve, Jamieson’s 1Club Golf concept saw him awarded the Game Development Professional of the Year, Wood’s biomechanics-inspired philosophy to the golf swing earned him Coach of the Year honours while Alan Patterson was named Club Professional of the Year for the way he has engaged the membership at Patterson River Golf Club.

“Obviously COVID-19 has forced us as an industry to look at the way we do things but these PGA Professionals were already examining new ways to deliver golf programs and engage with the broader community,” said PGA Senior State Manager, Victoria, David Barker.

“It’s innovative thinking such as this that not only energises existing golfers but shows those thinking about playing that they are welcome and that there are programs tailored specifically to meet their needs.

“This is also why PGA Professionals represent such an important asset in advancing our golf facilities not only in Victoria but throughout the country.”

Management Professional of the Year

Haydn Thompson (Deep Creek Reserve-Pakenham)

It was as simple as a $6.90 Parma Night but that too-good-to-refuse offer three years ago represented a dramatic shift in how the then Pakenham Golf Club east of Melbourne was perceived by its community.

Joining the club originally seven years ago as its PGA Professional, Haydn Thompson progressed quickly to the role of General Manager. The timing was critical as he championed a club that wanted connection with its community over any exclusionary perception that may have existed.

“We actually approached the local council about becoming a more community-minded facility which to be honest caught them a bit by surprise,” Thompson explains.

The result is a $14 million refurbishment that has seen the clubhouse relocated, two new holes built to accommodate the reconfiguration and construction of a new driving range.

But perhaps the most significant asset in the club’s repositioning is the all-abilities playground that is proving to be a magnet to local families.

“The whole idea of the parma night was to offer an affordable family meal where people would come to the golf club for no other reason than to have a night out,” Thompson adds.

“We were conscious of never talking golf and our social media to this day reflects that, to get people to understand that we are here for so much more.

“By starting with that we could take people on the journey of what the new complex was going to look like, what the playground was going to look like and how awesome that was going to be.

“It was that conscious decision of really trying to talk up those things that were going to be of interest to the majority of people who live in the area, not necessarily the golf.”

It was a shift intended to secure the club’s future for the next 50 years and beyond and has already begun to provide the club with some financial stability.

In lockdown for four months, those who had been enticed initially by a $6.90 parma eagerly took up the club’s offer of takeaway meals.

“There was a point where we were putting through 500-600 takeaway meals a week,” Thompson says.

“Without that income it would have been extremely difficult for the club to keep staff employed and helping to them to just get by.

“We came out of that period a lot better than we thought and in many respects it was business as usual.”

And further establishing the club as a treasured community asset in the process.

Coach of the Year

Tim Wood (Rosanna Golf Club)

As a talented young player in the Victorian Institute of Sport, Tim Wood spent nearly five years trying to create a position in the backswing that his body wasn’t willing to accommodate.

A former PGA Trainee whose first interest was coaching, when Wood brought an end to his playing days he turned his attention to developing a methodology that would allow him to fit a swing to a player’s physical capabilities, and not the other way around.

Wood’s star pupil of the past 12 months is long-time friend Josh Younger, the 2019 NSW Open champion who in the space of three weeks late last year rose from 966th in the world to 272nd.

Given the events of 2020, Younger’s ability to secure his playing future on the Asian Tour more than likely saved his career… and validated to Wood that what he was teaching could withstand the greatest pressure professional golf can exert.

“I was so nervous watching that playoff,” Wood says of Younger’s showdown with Travis Smyth.

“We’d worked on correcting this shot he hits left under pressure all winter and then on the 72nd hole he hits his driver left, it hits a tree and goes into a pond.

“So then in the playoff he’s got to face up to those demons again and I’m watching it thinking my job was on the line.

“He hits a good drive, stiff his approach to three feet and makes birdie to win the tournament.

“That was very cool.”

A chance meeting with Hall of Fame coach Mike Adams at a conference in Melbourne five years ago and a trip to Las Vegas to celebrate his wife’s 30th birthday paved the way for Wood to tap into the minds of the game’s foremost thinkers on the golf swing.

Armed with that insight Wood achieved a perfect score in the Biomechanics in Golf online course offered by Pennsylvania State University and continued to develop his own style centred around a person’s physical limitations.

“I spent three days with Butch Harmon and I lived with Mike Adams for a week and it just showed me a whole new world of coaching, a whole new way of doing it,” Wood says.

“I started to understand human movement better and I was sucked in straight away.

“Because of my chest size, I’d spent five years trying to fix something in my swing that essentially couldn’t be fixed in the traditional way. Imagine if I’d spent five years on my short game and hitting better shots rather than chasing positions that I now know weren’t actually achieveable.

“Before I work with anyone I have a page with 10 questions and a sheet of measurements. The first thing I do before they hit a shot is to measure six things on their body: Wingspan, length of forearm, which leg is stronger, how their shoulder wants to move – which affects their grip – and how their lower body creates power.

“I then understand what their swing will look like before they’ve even picked up a club.

“So many pros are coming to me because when they have a lesson I make only minute adjustments. I don’t try to rebuild them because we understand what their swing should look like.”

Game Development Professional of the Year

Sandy Jamieson (Oakleigh Golf Course)

If the simple things in life are truly the best, it’s little wonder the 1Club Golf concept pioneered by Sandy Jamieson has struck such a chord with new golfers.

The former PGA Professional at Commonwealth Golf Club for nine years and a 25-year PGA Professional, Jamieson looked at the downward trend in golfers and identified the perception that it was difficult, serious and expensive.

He wanted it to be easy, fun and affordable, just as it was when he fell in love with the game as a kid.

“I went back to the public courses where I played as a kid and they were empty,” Jamieson says.

“Given there was space available I wanted to coach new golfers on the golf course and to do that I needed to make it as simple as possible.”

Jamieson developed a golf club that was easier to hit and designed a program where after a 15-minute introduction new golfers were on-course and playing the game.

Prior to the onset of COVID-19 Oakleigh had witnessed a 50 per cent increase in both player numbers and turnover in just six months, females outnumbering men among the social players on a daily basis.

“I believe everybody already possesses the skills needed to play golf; I just need to help them to apply those skills on the golf course so they can play straight away,” he adds.

“For $100 a group of four can come and get a lesson and play nine holes and be a good golfer inside an hour. My definition of a good golfer is someone who can play safely, move at the right speed, understands their ability and looks after the course.

“I don’t teach grip, stance, posture or alignment; I teach them how to play golf and then refer them on for lessons elsewhere if they choose.

“I’m in the business of creating new golfers. PGA Professionals, golf clubs and equipment companies will all benefit on the back of new golfers coming in.”

Club Professional of the Year

Alan Patterson (Patterson River Golf Club)

Alan Patterson could have kept doing things the way they’d always been done.

It is the default setting for the majority of the population but it is not a sustainable way to do business.

Concerned by a flatlining of the golf industry within Australia, Patterson could see where the path was taking him and decided to redirect his focus.

The result is a thriving membership culture within the Patterson River Golf Club just south of the Melbourne Sandbelt and an atmosphere that makes going to work a pleasure.

“We place a big emphasis on customer service and giving members and guests a really good time when they come to the club,” Patterson explains.

“When they come to the club it’s their leisure time so we like to make it a happy place.

“When they walk into the pro shop they have a laugh and they’re smiling and they’re happy when they walk out the door.”

In addition to developing more flexible membership categories, Patterson River staff engage with new members to ascertain exactly what they want out of their golf club.

The Wednesday Twilight Comp is so popular that it has to begin at 2.30pm to accommodate all the players and the Golf Extravaganza on December 17 will include a nearest-the-pin competition from the back terrace to the chipping green, long drive comp in the PGA blow-up tent using FlightScope and a putting competition that anyone can participate in.

“If something isn’t working then we’ve got to try something different,” says Patterson, who is nearing 12 years at Patterson River.

“In my opinion the industry has been stagnant for a long time so we just wanted to do something different that gets as many people to the facility as possible.

“It’s just about getting as many people as possible into the club, especially our new members.

“Our whole retention plan is around giving them the opportunity to come to the facility more often and bring their partners and friends.

“That’s how it becomes their club as opposed to a place they come to play golf.”


In a professional golf career spanning more than four decades, new golf courses can be hard to find.

But Aussie legend Peter Fowler will break new ground on Friday when he tees it up at North Stradbroke Island Golf Course for the Sealink Stradbroke Ferries Legends Pro-Am.

Originally intending to play the North Coast Open at Coffs Harbour Golf Club next week – the course whose car park his father helped design and build – the opening of the Queensland border has convinced Fowler to support the PGA Legends Tour events that will be played across south-east Queensland over the next 10 days.

There will be return trips to Noosa, Twin Waters and Maroochy River golf courses but the ferry ride to ‘Straddie’ offers a new experience for someone who has been traipsing the countryside chasing golf tournaments since 1977.

“I’ve never been there. And I only just found they’ve only got nine holes but they’ve got two tees for each hole for a front nine and a back nine,” said the 1983 Australian Open champion.

New discoveries were a big part of the journey for a teenage Fowler in the late 1970s.

He would average 200 kilometres a day for months at a time, driving from town to town in pursuit of a professional golf pay day.

A career on the European Tour was the stuff of fantasy when you were racing the sun through the winter months playing the infamous Queensland ‘Troppo Tour’.

“They had events, so we played them,” Fowler reasons all these years later, the mantra not too dissimilar to the one he continues to live by.

“On the Troppo Tour in Queensland we went to a lot of mining towns out west.

“A real rough one I remember was Cherrabah Mountain Resort which was out the back of Brisbane somewhere.

“I remember standing on one tee and we couldn’t work out whether the hole went one way or the other. There was no fairway or anything like that, nothing distinguishing where to go.

“That was an interesting course.

“I reckon we averaged 200 kilometres a day driving for about three or four months. The last one we went from Townsville to Mount Isa and played and then drove from Mount Isa to Brisbane in one go, which is something like 1,800km.

“There were a lot of dirt roads on that trip so we got a bit of dust in the car but apart from that it was all right.

“But that’s what we did. Peter McWhinney and Peter Senior travelled together, Mike Harwood and another guy travelled together. I travelled with a mate from Sydney, Vaughn and Perry Somers travelled together.

“We were all teenagers around that time so we had a lot of fun and learning on the road.”

Now 61 years of age, Fowler believes with the advancements in technology he hits the ball longer these days than he did 20 years ago.

In that time he has played in 309 events sanctioned by the ISPS HANDA PGA Tour of Australasia, winning 43 PGA Legends Tour events alone since 2013.

He has played 716 tournaments attracting Official World Golf Ranking points since 1986 and his European Tour record stretching back to 1983 includes 524 main tour events, 23 Challenge Tour appearances and 156 starts on the Seniors Tour.

Yet the infuriating possibility of improvement continues to drive him forward.

“I still think I can get better,” Fowler says.

“I never felt like I played that good when I was playing at my best. My short game was pretty good and I managed to get it around but I never thought I did as well as I thought I could.

“There’s a bit of technology around now and it depends how you use it.

“You can only swing as hard as you can but maximise the way your club’s set up to maximise the distance you can get because distance is a real key.

“Getting older I do club testing every year with PING so I can keep my game good enough to compete.”

And as the distance debate rages and players at the top of the world rankings push golf courses to breaking point, Fowler believes the answer lies within a near-century old design that is the jewel of the Melbourne Sandbelt.

“The more golf I play, the more I realise Royal Melbourne is a fantastic design,” offers Fowler of the No.1 ranked golf course in the country.

“If you’re in the wrong place – if you’re on the slightest downslope hitting to those greens in tournament condition, you can’t stop it on the green. But if you can place the ball and shape the ball into the right part of the fairway and play off a flat lie or an upslope with one club shorter then you can stop it on the green.

“The modern tournament courses are built for the guys who tee it high and hit it as hard as they can. And that’s why they’re dominating.

“Royal Melbourne isn’t that long compared to the long courses but in tournament condition, it’s about placing it and shaping the ball in the right places where all the modern courses don’t seem to be like that at all.

“Royal Melbourne – and a lot of the courses around Melbourne with the firmer greens – they can stand the test of time.”

Which is a topic few are more qualified to speak on than the man they call ‘Chook’.


The PGA of Australia has launched a national advertising campaign celebrating the invaluable role of PGA Professionals in the industry.

The campaign – featuring three television commercials and outdoor media – aims to bring to prominence the vast skillset of PGA Professionals and enhance the recognition of the coveted PGA Professional accreditation badge.

“On the back of golf’s pandemic-inspired boom, we have seen thousands of new and returning golfers flood our fairways and facilities. Our multi-channel campaign is targeted to assist first-time golfers to understand who they can turn to for coaching or fitting advice and reinforce to existing golfers the important role and function of PGA Professionals,” said Gavin Kirkman, PGA of Australia’s chief executive.

“The fun, fresh and creative way in which we have promoted our PGA Professionals helps illustrate strongly that our Members are more than just good golfers. They are the heartbeat of the golf industry and are the leading experts in coaching, equipment and club fitting, retail, game development and golf club management.

“To earn the right to wear the prestigious PGA Professional badge, aspiring Professionals must undertake a three-year PGA Membership Pathway Program. Their education and training makes them golf’s most skilled person, so when you see the PGA Professional badge, you know you are getting the very best in golfing advice from a fully qualified professional in their field.”

This campaign sees the creation of a fictional character, Dale the Driving Ranger, who hilariously attempts to give advice to golfers using a series of bizarre coaching techniques. Dale adorns a child-like Sherriff’s badge with the words ‘Driving Ranger’ scrawled over it on masking tape. The ad concludes by illustrating that the only badge that should be trusted is that of a PGA Professional, and acknowledges that they are golf’s only accredited professional coaches.

The outdoor advertising encourages audiences to get a lesson and fitting by a PGA Professional and will be showcased in high traffic locations across Australia.

Some of the golf industry’s leading equipment manufacturers – Titleist, Callaway, TaylorMade, Cobra Puma Golf and Mizuno – have all assisted in widening the reach of this campaign by providing their support.

“These golf brands have been pivotal to bringing this campaign to life,” Kirkman said.

“They – like us – believe that a healthy golf industry is reliant on the success of PGA Professionals. We are proud to unite with these quality brands and thank them wholeheartedly for embracing this campaign.”


The PGA of Australia and the ALPG are proud to unveil their new respective brands as part of a new era that strengthens the alignment between Australia’s two professional golf bodies.

And in a world-first for golf, the ALPG Tour will become known as the WPGA Tour of Australasia, creating a powerful and unique identity for women’s professional golf.

Created in collaboration with design agency SE Creative, the brand refresh will see the modernisation of the PGA and the ALPG’s history-rich identities.

“This is a historic moment for Australian golf. Our new brand is truly inclusive and is representative of the whole PGA and allows for all male and female professional golfers and golf professionals to be recognised under a unified PGA brand,” said Gavin Kirkman, chief executive of the PGA of Australia.
 
“We have undergone a meticulous modernisation and are proud to include the WPGA moniker into the PGA brand family. We are also excited to future-proof the PGA of Australia with a contemporary and timeless design that better projects our personality, values and ambitions.”
 
ALPG chief executive Karen Lunn said the launch of the WPGA Tour of Australasia is a significant milestone in world golf.
 
“We are extremely excited to leverage the strength of the world-renowned PGA brand and create a strong, bold and aspirational platform to elevate women’s professional golf,” Lunn said.

“As the ALPG we celebrate a proud history dating back to 1972 when our founding members started the women’s tour here in Australia, and this next step will ensure the future of our game is structured in a way that provides women golfers with even greater opportunities moving forward.
 
“We are proud to adopt the ‘W’ mark, which has become a powerful symbol in women’s sport the world-over. WPGA Tour of Australasia will sit proudly alongside the PGA Tour of Australasia representing the tournament playing arms of the professional game in our territory.”
 
The PGA’s comprehensive brand redesign includes the creation of a new, future-focused corporate logo and a newly created tournament professional badge, which is an adaptation of the revamped PGA Professional badge.
 
The look of the WPGA Tour of Australasia aligns with the updated PGA Tour of Australasia brand, which will be launched at the conclusion of the 2020-21 tournament schedule, alongside assets representing other tournaments, events and the various industry-leading functions of the PGA.
 
The PGA’s new brand boasts:

  • A strong, bold and unified typography that conveys the PGA’s personality and values.
  • A brand that is clearly identifiable and flexible across a broad range of executions and activations.
  • A simplistic design appearance that makes clever use of negative space, as illustrated in the ‘A’, where a forward-leaning pin flag exists, which represents the PGA’s forward-thinking approach to Australian golf. The retrospective-style flag is also a nod to the PGA’s history (established in 1911).
  • A revamped colour palette where the PGA’s primary green, synonymous with golf, has been retained but slightly modified for a more friendly and contemporary feel.


The unforgettable rookie season of Steph Kyriacou continued, though a pair of Australians made their own runs at #AussieOfTheWeek honours.

There were four events on the world’s four biggest tours this week as the men’s calendar year winds down and the game’s top women eye off next month’s US Women’s Open.

Jason Day rebounded strongly from the first missed cut of his Masters career by finding 46 of 54 greens in regulation over the final three days at Sea Island.

Our LPGA stars were back on course three weeks out from golf’s final major in Texas and unsurprisingly, Minjee Lee led the way.

A Sunday fade out ruined the World No.8’s hopes of winning back-to-back tournaments after her recent triumph in Dubai but Lee hung on to record an eighth top 20 in 13 starts this season.

And just when we thought it couldn’t get any better, rising superstar Steph Kyriacou capped off an unforgettable rookie year – and birthday week – on the Ladies European Tour.

Playing in Saudi Arabia for the second straight week, Kyriacou chipped in for eagle on her final hole to sign for a new course record 63 which would be enough to secure a runner-up result prior to her birthday on Sunday.

That stretched the now 20-year-old’s run of top 5 finishes to five in her past seven events, nabbing her Rookie of the Year honours and lifting her to third spot on the Race To Costa Del Sol standings.

So for finishing off a debut season we’ll never forget in the most stylish way possible, we name Steph Kyriacou as #AussieOfTheWeek once again!

LADIES EUROPEAN TOUR
The Saudi Ladies Team International
Royal Greens G&CC, Saudi Arabia
T2 – Steph Kyriacou, -12, 71-70-63
T81 – Whitney Hillier, +11, 77-78-72
Team – Won by Team Pedersen at -40 by one shot
1st – Team Pedersen, -40, 129-132-131
2nd – Team Kyriacou, -39, 136-133-124

PGA TOUR
The RSM Classic
Sea Island Resort, Georgia
Won by Robert Streb (USA) at -19 in a playoff over Kevin Kisner
T12 – Jason Day, -14, 69-67-67-65
T44 – Matt Jones, -8, 67-71-70-66
T57 – Aaron Baddeley, -4, 68-69-69-72
MC – Cameron Percy, -2, 75-65
MC – Cameron Davis, -2, 70-70
MC – Rhein Gibson, -1, 68-73

LPGA TOUR
Pelican Women’s Championship
Pelican Golf Club, Florida
Won by Sei Young Kim (KOR) at -14 by three shots
T4 – Lydia Ko, -8, 70-67-66-69
T15 – Minjee Lee, -1, 68-69-67-75
T46 – Hannah Green, +6, 73-72-71-70
T46 – Su Oh, +6, 71-72-72-71
T53 – Sarah Jane Smith, +7, 69-72-73-73
MC – Katherine Kirk, +6, 74-72
MC – Gabi Ruffels (am), +8, 73-75
MC – Karrie Webb, +15, 77-78

EUROPEAN TOUR
Joburg Open
Randpark GC, South Africa
Won by Joachim B Hansen (DEN) at -19 by two shots
MC – Scott Hend, +2, 73-71

Image: Ladies European Tour


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