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Queensland Golf Industry Awards Finalists


The Queensland Golf Industry is pleased to announce the finalists for their upcoming Awards Night incorporating the PGA Trainee Graduation to be held at RACV Royal Pines Resort on Tuesday 31st March 2020.

Represented by the PGA of Australia, Golf Australia, Golf Course Superintendents Association of QLD and Golf Management Australia, the QLD Golf Industry Awards Night acknowledges the achievements the finalists have accomplished throughout 2019.

It was encouraging to see so many individuals recognised for their outstanding efforts in assisting the growth and development of golf within the state of Queensland.

Having all areas of the industry being represented by the governing bodies, the night is truly an evening that is dedicated to personalities that are involved in the game whether it be playing or teaching the game, managing facilities that allow it to be experienced or those that volunteer their time and instil so much of their passion toward assisting where needed.

To book your tickets or for further details about the QLD Golf Industry Awards Night, please go to www.qldgolfindustryawards.com.au or alternatively contact the PGA (QLD/NT) Office on 07 5657 6100 or via email [email protected].

The finalists for their respective awards (in alphabetical order) are:

Golf Club of the Year

  • Bargara Golf Club
  • Carbrook Golf Club
  • City Golf Club
  • Links Hope Island
  • Redcliffe Golf Club
  • Redland Bay Golf Club

Golf Club of the Year (Under 400 Members)

  • Atherton Golf Club
  • Dalby Golf Club
  • Goondiwindi Golf Club
  • North Stradbroke Island Golf Club

Golf Supplier of the Year

  • Acushnet
  • Club Car
  • Coca-Cola Amatil
  • Host Plus
  • Inside Golf
  • MiClub
  • Schweppes
  • Toro

Junior Program of the Year Finalists

  • Brisbane Golf Club
  • Brookwater Golf and Country Club
  • Cairns Golf Club
  • Carbrook Golf Club
  • City Golf Club
  • Emerald Lakes Golf Club
  • KDV Sport
  • Meadowbrook Golf Club
  • Palm Meadows Driving Range
  • Rockhampton Golf Club
  • Victoria Park Golf Complex
  • Windaroo Lakes Golf Club

Volunteer of the Year

  • Erick Duck – Mackay Golf Club
  • Simon Hewitt – South East Queensland Golf Association
  • Leo Scott – Keperra Country Golf Club 
  • Byron Smith – Pine Rivers Golf Club

Game Development Professional of the Year

  • Glenn Domigan – Victoria Park Golf Complex
  • Sean Dwyer – Victoria Park Golf Complex
  • Greg Lynch – Noosa Springs Golf & Spa Resort
  • Ryan Mouque – Wynnum Golf Club
  • Michael Murnane – Bundaberg Golf Club
  • Hamish Robertson – Noosa Springs Golf & Spa Resort
  • Jay Simpson – First Swing
  • Darren Weatherall – Victoria Park Golf Complex

Manager of the Year

  • Matt Bolton – Cairns Golf Club
  • Declan McCollam – Brookwater Golf and Country Club
  • Kerry Newsome – Redcliffe Golf Club
  • Mick Ryan – Surfers Paradise Golf Club
  • Ian Witt – Bargara Golf Club            
  • Joe Worley – Boonah Golf Club

Coach of the Year

  • Jim Barden – Victoria Park Golf Complex
  • Grant Field – Pelican Waters Golf Club
  • David Nable – Coolangatta Tweed heads Golf Club
  • Richard Woodhouse – KDV Sport

Club Professional of the Year

  • Brent Barlow – Gailes Golf Club
  • Chris Graham – Ocean Shores Country Club
  • Simon Houston – Coolangatta Tweed Heads Golf Club
  • Jared Love – Windaroo Lakes Golf Club
  • Paul Orchard – Surfers Paradise Golf Club
  • John Wright – Yamba Golf Club

Management Professional of the Year

  • Peter Clark – St Lucia Golf Links
  • Tim Porter – Victoria Park Golf Complex
  • Scott Wagstaff – Carbrook Golf Club

Golf Club Staff Member of the Year

  • Joe Cannavo – Carbrook Golf Club
  • Michael Dash – Keperra Country Golf Club
  • Billie Johnston – Links Hope Island
  • Keiron Judges – Links Hope Island
  • Tim Lynch – Victoria Park Golf Complex
  • Suzie Smith – Noosa Springs Golf Club
  • Andrew Webb – City Golf Club

Golf Club Board Member of the Year

  • Jim Horan – Mt Warren Park Golf Club 
  • Paul Rigby – Nudgee Golf Club
  • Rod Rhodes – Keperra Country Golf Club
  • Mark Schutters – Carbrook Golf Club

Tournament of the Year

  • Brookwater Pro-Am
  • GC Celebrity Pro-Am
  • Ocean Shores Pro-Am
  • Rockhampton Pro-Am
  • Tieri Pro-Am

Superintendents Achievement Award

  • Kirk Heald – Victoria Park Golf Complex
  • Dion Cope – Redland Bay Golf Club
  • Glen Gibson Smith – The Glades
  • Lincoln Coombes – RACV Royal Pines Resort

Metropolitan Tournament of the Year

  • Brookwater Pro-Am
  • City of Brisbane Pro-Am (Victoria Park Golf Complex)
  • GC Celebrity Pro-Am
  • Maroochy River Pro-Am
  • Wynnum Pro-Am

Regional Tournament of the Year

  • Bowen Pro-Am
  • Ocean Shores Pro-Am
  • Rockhampton Pro-Am
  • Tieri Pro-Am
  • Yamba Pro-Am

Legends Tournament of the Year

  • Brookwater Legends Pro-Am
  • Fraser Coast Legends Pro-Am
  • Gold Coast Senior PGA Championship (Lakelands Golf Club)
  • Legends Tour Championship (Byron Bay Golf Club)
  • QLD Senior PGA Championship (Wynnum Golf Club)
  • Royal QLD Cup

PGA Trainee of the Year

  • Cooper Eccleston – Victoria Park Golf Complex
  • Charles Wright – Burleigh Golf Club
  • Gavin Fairfax – Redland Bay Golf Club

Golf Course Turf Apprentice of the Year

  • Tom Bath – Palm Meadows Golf Club
  • Tahlia Bruce – Wynnum Golf Club
  • Luke Gramm – Riverlakes Golf Club
  • Eric Moore – Brisbane Golf Club

Superintendents Environment and Safety Excellence Award

  • Brendan Clark – Atherton Golf Club
  • Phil Soegaard – Lakelands Golf Club

PGA IGI Excellence in Golf Education Award

  • Robert Lane
  • Shannon Coad
  • Shu-Tzu Liang

The Lakes Golf Club hosted the 2019 NSW/ACT PGA Trainee Graduation and Awards Dinner on Thursday evening, celebrating the achievements of 15 PGA Trainees graduating to Full Vocational Membership.

The newly minted PGA Professionals were welcomed to the Association by Senior State Manager David Barker and CEO of the Jack Newton Junior Golf Foundation, Peter Van Wegen.

The night was attended by PGA of Australia Life Members Geoffrey Scott, Thomas Moore and Eddie Emmerson. Geoffrey Scott presented graduates with their PGA certificates and welcome them to the association as Full Vocational Members.

The 2019 NSW/ACT PGA Trainee of the Year Award was presented by FootJoy Account Manager Andrew Williams.

Mitchell Gannon from Kogarah Golf Club received top honours amongst some very strong candidates including Matthew Grenot, Dylan Thompson, Jason Perkin, Luke Humphries and Ashley Cramond.

The award follows an outstanding 2019 season during the second year of his traineeship, whereby Mitchell topped 2019 NSW/ACT Trainee Order of Merit, finished fourth on the 2019 Trainee National Ranking List, won eight trainee matches and secured nine top-five finishes respectively during the year.

“It is a tremendous privilege to be recognized for this award and something I am very proud to have achieved and will cherish for many years to come,” said Gannon.

Deputy Chairman of the PGA, David Stretton, capped off the evening by wishing the newest PGA Members the very best of luck in growing the game of golf and to develop a career of life-long learning within the industry. 

NSW/ACT PGA Trainee Graduates – Class of 2019

  • Jamie Bashforth
  • Evan Brawn
  • Andrew Brennan
  • James Cleary
  • Ashley Cramond
  • Blake Dowd
  • Tyrone Dowling
  • Adam Groom (Bridging)
  • Matthew Grenot
  • Brendan Higgins
  • Isaiah Melia
  • Jason Perkin
  • Darren Robel
  • Dylan Thompson
  • Apostolos Tsolakis
  • Bradley Ward

Online lessons with Aussie swing guru Bradley Hughes has restored Scott Arnold’s love of golf and reinstated the belief that he can win again at the highest level.

Arnold was at the centre of scorecard confusion that constituted part of a chaotic conclusion to the Coca-Cola Queensland PGA Championship at City Golf Club in Toowoomba on Sunday, ultimately losing at the fourth hole of a playoff against close friend Michael Sim in a frenetic finale.

When he handed in his scorecard it became apparent that Arnold had finished at 12-under par and not 13-under as everyone on course and PGA TV commentators Mark Allen and Ewan Porter believed.

The miscalculation stemmed from a bogey at the par-4 ninth for which Arnold had been credited with a par, tournament leader Brad Kennedy told halfway down the 72nd hole that a par would in fact be good enough to win.

But Kennedy’s double-bogey and Sim’s brilliant birdie resulted in a two-man playoff that was all the more remarkable given the pair were due to drive to the Gold Coast together at the end of the day’s play.

“I noticed on about 13 that they had my score wrong on a leaderboard,” Arnold said of the scoreboard error.

“I thought, That’s one out. Obviously Brad got told coming in that it was one shot wrong but I never honestly thought I would even be in a playoff.

“The way that the back nine was going, the last three days everyone had been making birdies and he was 16-under at one stage and I was only 12 or 13. I was still three or four behind and just trying to keep it in play and make birdies and if not stress-free pars and hopefully finish in the top three.

“When I saw that they’d told Brad and he laid up… I didn’t think he’d make six. I thought he’d definitely be in a playoff. And then I didn’t know Michael was there until I was walking out the door and heard Ewan say ‘Michael Sim’s not out of this’ and then I watched him hit it in close.

“I heard the groans when Brad missed and it was only going to be me and Michael in the playoff.

“I just wanted to give myself a chance to win. If I did I would have been super happy but I’m not disappointed one bit because I’ve worked so hard to be in this position.

“Now that I’m finally here all the hard work has paid off.”

Now 34 years of age, Arnold spent the majority of 2019 on the secondary Abema TV Tour in Japan but has been existing in golf’s wilderness for much of the past three years.

He played just 20 events attracting World Rankings points in 2017-18 but having recently linked with Hughes is starting to see a return to the type of golf that once made him the world’s leading amateur.

A former Australian Masters winner himself, Hughes has become one of golf’s most in-demand swing gurus due largely to the way he has resurrected the career of American Brendon Todd and he is having a similar effect on Arnold.

“I haven’t played well for quite a few years,” conceded Arnold, who was in the mix at the halfway mark of a star-studded Australian Open in December.

“I lost the love of the game for a little bit, got forced to keep playing and that wasn’t a great idea.

“I was going to tournaments and not really wanting to be there. I was never going to play to my potential not wanting to be there.

“The last couple of months I’ve had a few lessons with Brad Hughes in America online and things have turned around.

“I’m feeling a bit more comfortable and actually wanting to be out here playing which is a big difference.

“If I can be in that mindset in the next couple of weeks I can try and win one of the next two.

“I’m not really that disappointed to lose because I’ve been playing well of late but not putting everything together.

“This week was hopefully a turning point and I can kick-on the next couple of weeks.”

As for the car ride back to the Gold Coast, Arnold put to rest any notion that the pair would be sitting side by side silent for two hours.

“It’s so good to see Michael playing well again because he was in the same boat as me,” said Arnold.

“We didn’t really want to play but we were still playing but now we’re both playing well and enjoying it.

“It was so fun to play in those playoff holes. We’re best mates so I was much more relaxed playing those playoff holes with him than I would have been otherwise.”


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