Update: On Monday, July 6, organizers of the Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club announced the event will be held without fans on-site, a change from previous plans.
Muirfield Village Golf Club assistant superintendent James Bryson (right) looks on as crew members topdress on June 1, the original day Memorial Tournament week had been set to kick off at the club, located just outside Columbus, Ohio. Photo courtesy of Chad Mark
Normally, the thought of preparing one golf course to host two consecutive PGA Tour events in consecutive weeks would have given Chad Mark pause.
âAny other year,â says Mark, GCSAA Class A superintendent and director of grounds at Muirfield Village Golf Club, âIâm not sure we could do it.â
Of course, 2020 isnât just any year, and until now, there wasnât any reason to even entertain such a notion. But cancellations and concessions coalesced just so, and over two weeks in July, Muirfield Village will be the site of a PGA Tour doubleheader â the Workday Charity Open, July 9-12, and the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide, July 16-19 â an unprecedented occurrence in the modern era of the PGA Tour.
Those same weeks, TPC San Antonio will host its own unprecedented tour twin bill, albeit on a slightly smaller scale and different stage â or stages. The Korn Ferry Tour will be hosting consecutive events at TPC San Antonio: the TPC San Antonio Challenge at the Canyons Course, July 6-12, and the TPC San Antonio Championship at the Oaks Course, July 13-18. As the names suggest, although the events will be played at the same complex, theyâll be contested on different courses, which brings about its own set of challenges.
âWeâre excited to see how it goes,â says Roby Robertson, CGCS, TPC San Antonioâs director of golf course maintenance operations. âThereâs no road map for something like this. There will be hiccups and hurdles, but every hiccup and hurdle is an opportunity to learn. And when weâre done, then weâll have a road map at that point.â
Memorial and more at Muirfield
Muirfield Village, just outside Columbus, Ohio, has hosted the Memorial since 1976. Never before, though, has the staff there experienced the event being postponed from its usual late May/early June slot â this yearâs event was originally scheduled June 4-7 â into the heat of summer, plus the added bonus of putting on another PGA Tour event the week prior.
âItâs been a wild ride,â says Mark, a 23-year GCSAA member. âItâs been craziness inside of this crazy world we live in now with COVID. In some ways, itâs not really sunk in yet.â
(There were 11 instances of PGA Tour twin bills from 1948-1957. In all but one, the All American Open was followed by the World Championship of Golf in August at Tam OâShanter Golf Course in Niles, Ill.)
The challenge Mark and his staff at Muirfield have faced is twofold. First, they had to shift agronomic gears to prepare for a tournament peak that will occur weeks later than initially anticipated. Then thereâs the whole two-tournaments-in-two-weeks thing.
âIn Columbus, Ohio, the weeks of those tournaments are the toughest of the year,â Mark says. âMid-July is the peak of summer heat and humidity. The end of May is both a blessing and curse. Itâs a blessing because of the cooler nighttime temperatures, and you donât have the heat stress or as much mechanical damage, but you only have a few weeks to prepare the golf course. Weâll have more time to lead into this July date, but we will have some heat stress heading into the tournament.â
Typically, Mark says, the plan is to have Muirfield Village â the âcourse that Jack built,â as itâs called, a nod to its architect/visionary/hometown hero Jack Nicklaus â in top form for the earlier-season Memorial, aerate the following week, and then baby it back to health. âWe open it back up for member play,â Mark says, âand itâs usually good by July 4. We havenât seen this golf course go through that peak aeration in early July. Weâre feeling some things out. We had to shift some agronomic programs. But we saw it coming and were able to change some things.â
Muirfield Village staffers were among the essential workers who toiled through March, though the club remained closed through April. When it appeared that the Memorial would be bumped or even canceled, the club started some minor work on a planned renovation. When the event was officially postponed, the renovation worked picked up, primarily in the form of some new fairway bunkers.
âIn the midst of that, we were approached about, âWhat about doing back-to-back weeks?ââ Mark recalls. âMy initial thought was, it (the additional event) would be held after the Memorial, and that would delay the renovation. I thought, âHoly cow. Weâve got a lot to do.ââ
As it turns out, that renovation is one of the things that could make this twofer doable. Immediately after the Memorial (which is the week after the Workday Charity Open), the course will close for the renovation to get underway in earnest.
âEarly on, they came to me and wanted to know if the golf course could take it,â Mark says, âbefore we went to Jack with it. Any other year, Iâm not sure we could do it. But weâre closing the course the week after the Memorial ends. Given that circumstance, the golf course ... if we do it right the first week and not peak too early, yes, we can do it.â
Mark says his biggest concern is his people.
âIâm just as worried about my staff as the golf course,â he says. âAsking people to get up at 3 in the morning for two weeks ... thatâs the hard part. Youâve got to make sure everybody gets some breaks. Weâre grinding, but morale is still good so far.â
Mark says heâs working 20 âturf guysâ on a rotation, with 10 days on and two off. âThe rest of the staff gets off every other weekend,â he says. âWeâre still sticking to that. If you donât, the guys will start dragging pretty good. And we start a renovation the day after the tournament ends, so it doesnât get any easier after that. Itâs important to keep âem fresh. If we catch a rain day here or there, we get the guys out of here.â
Seamus Foley, a second assistant at Muirfield Village Golf Club, hand-waters the seventh green on June 18. Photo courtesy of Chad Mark
Mark lauded the work and crew management done by assistants James Bryson and Adam Daroczy, both of whom are four-year GCSAA members. Theyâve all had to adapt to the notion of making do with fewer volunteers than in years past. Mark says he usually taps a volunteer workforce that numbers in the 40s; he anticipates between 20 and 22 for this yearâs Memorial, and maybe only a handful for the Workday Charity Open, those declines attributable to coronavirus.
âThatâs definitely changed a lot of what weâre doing,â he says. âWeâve had to adapt, but the staff has done a great job with that.â
The Workday event was created to fill a void left by the cancellation of the John Deere Classic amid coronavirus worries, and it plays into the Tourâs âbubbleâ approach of keeping players and workers as insulated as possible. One particular hurdle the Muirfield staff faces is having to prepare a course that provides a different challenge in consecutive weeks. To that end, Mark, who has been at Muirfield since 2017, is glad the Memorial â which is known for its tricky long roughs and speedy greens â is the second of the two events.
âIf you have to do this, itâs a lot easier to have a steady climb to a peak than it is to be at the peak and then have to deal with the next tournament,â he says. âWhether itâs a different set of expectations or not, itâs easier to rise to a peak than to turn it up and then dial back.â
The Workday Charity Open will boast a full field of 156 golfers â and no fans. The Memorial, a special invitational on the PGA Tour, will have a field of 120 and is slated to be the first event of the restarted season that will allow fans on course. The gallery is expected to be limited to about 8,000 fans, or 20% of Muirfieldâs capacity, to adhere to state social-distancing guidelines.
Editorâs note: Read about how the team at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, prepped to pull off the 2020 Charles Schwab Challenge, the event that marked the return of pro golf in the age of coronavirus.
Mark isnât sure how apparent the courseâs setup differences will be to casual viewers. âWhen youâre here, it will be obvious,â Mark says, âbut I donât know how much the average fan will notice. There are a lot of people who are shocked to learn you change holes every day. I hope people donât think thereâs a night-and-day difference. We want it to be a great test both weeks.â
Thatâs where Markâs mantra about Muirfield comes in handy. âWe do try to have championship conditions on a daily basis here at Muirfield,â he says, âso the guys are already in tune to that pressure. We feel we can take this on.
âMany of them are super excited. Thereâs this element of confidence, just the test of no one has done this â two PGA Tour events back to back. Theyâre all excited about it. Weâve got a lot of guys we bring in to intern. When I told the staff, their eyes lit up. The guys who worked the past three Memorials with me, they got the look on their faces, âWow. That will be a lot of work.â They know getting there is the hard part. When you get to tournament week and you get a few volunteers to help out, thatâs the easier part.â
Deep in the heart(ache) of Texas
Some 1,300 miles southwest, Robertson and the crew at TPC San Antonio are facing a similar but markedly different challenge. While he doesnât have to worry about the increased scrutiny that comes with appearing on live television, or the wear and tear of a tournament twofer on the same 18 holes, Robertson is still keeping plenty busy juggling a staff tasked with prepping not one but two courses for professional golf.
âYou canât just concentrate all your staff on one side, like when youâre getting ready for a tournament on one golf course,â says Robertson, a 33-year GCSAA member. âYou have to prepare both at the same time while still being open for member play. You focus most of your manpower on the one golf course having the tournament that week, and itâs advance week on the other golf course. Our guys will get plenty of overtime, thatâs for sure.â
Like the Muirfield double feature, the Korn Ferry Tour twin bill at TPC San Antonio was made possible by a PGA Tour cancellation. Sort of. TPC San Antonioâs Oaks Course was scheduled to host the PGA Tourâs Valero Texas Open April 2-5, but that event was canceled because of the pandemic.
âWe were two weeks out from the Valero,â Robertson says. âAll the stands were up. We were ready to go. Then â canceled.â
TPC San Antonio crew members at work ahead of last yearâs Valero Texas Open, contested April 4-7 on the Oaks Course. Photos courtesy of TPC San Antonio
The team adjusted. With the facility closed for golf because of the pandemic, Robertson and his staff moved up the coursesâ agronomic plans.
âWe had started preparing the golf courses for summertime play,â he says. âWhen we heard we were being considered for a twofer, back to back, we said, âAll right. Letâs go.â Both courses are in really great shape. The best part of this is, weâre doing it without a lot of volunteers. This year, with the travel situation, weâre a little short of normal from what weâd normally have for such an event, but the thing about being a TPC facility is, there arenât too many of us who could not put the place together for something like this.â
Robertson says the Korn Ferry doubleheader takes some of the sting out of having the Valero Texas Open called off.
âThere was a little heartache when it was canceled so close to the event,â he says. âThe guys get so excited. With the big show on television, theyâre ready to see the course shine. So they were a little let down. But once we saw we were open for this opportunity, âHey, guys, weâre back on the schedule.â Even though it wonât be a televised event, theyâre excited to do it.â
Robertson says his biggest concern is keeping his staff safe. Motivation, he maintains, wonât be an issue. Among the perks: swollen paychecks, tournament shirts, twice-a-day feedings from a rotation of food trucks, and the opportunity to pull off a Korn Ferry Tour â and TPC network â first.
âOver three weeks, you get into a rhythm,â Robertson says. âI wouldnât say thereâs burnout. But itâs July â itâs hot and muggy. I wouldnât say burnout, but itâs exhaustion. Mother Nature is usually the biggest unknown. My biggest concern is probably the weather. If it gets really hot and humid, itâs not just the workers and the team. Those two golf courses there can be a pretty good walk, so keeping everybody hydrated is a big concern. Weâll make sure everybody is hydrated and the course is too. Thereâll be a lot of hand watering those days.â
Echoes of Pinehurst
Though big-time professional golf tours do not, in normal years, hold consecutive events at the same venue over consecutive weeks, there is a precedent for a top-tier twofer. Back in 2014, Pinehurst played host to consecutive U.S. Opens â first the men, then the women â on its storied No. 2 course in consecutive weeks. That was the first time two golf majors had been played at the same site in back-to-back weeks.
âI was listening to PGA Tour Radio, and they were talking about Muirfield,â says Bob Farren, CGCS, Pinehurstâs director of golf course maintenance and a 39-year GCSAA member. âIt did trigger some thoughts, some memories of what we did, though it is kind of flipped for them from what we did, since we had the men first and then the women.â
Farren recalls there were external concerns going in that the golf course would be a bit battered by the time the women teed off.
âThere were some criticisms that there would be too many divots for the women to contend with,â he says, âbut that was not the case at all. They played from some different areas than the men, so that wasnât a problem.â
Like Robertson at TPC San Antonio, Farren was most concerned about weather complications.
âWe only had one storm,â he says. âSeldom can we go two weeks in the sandhills and not have pop-up storms in the evening, but (in 2014) we only had one. It came in really fast, and there was some damage, but we dealt with it. Now, if they get storms at Muirfield, thatâs where you really need to have some contingencies.â
Among the factors over which he had control, Farren says he paid particular attention to morale and the need to manage the many volunteers necessary to put on an event as labor-intensive as a major.
âFrom a management prospective,â he says, âthose were the key pieces, as far as I was concerned. How do you maintain that level of energy for two weeks, instead of just one? How do you not burn yourself out the first week and not be a zombie the second week? Youâre almost a zombie by round four of a normal championship, and you have to turn around and do it again the next week. We consciously made ourselves understand that â the whole leadership team.â
The Canyons Course at TPC San Antonio, which will welcome the TPC San Antonio Challenge July 6-12. The spotlight will shift to the facilityâs Oaks Course just one day later for the TPC San Antonio Championship, July 13-18. Photo courtesy of TPC San Antonio
The volunteer piece was mostly a matter of logistics â and one that was aided by the fact that Pinehurst is a nine-course complex with lots of bodies available. Farren and his staff made sure all of those bodies understood the novelty of the moment and, importantly, took time to savor it.
âWe approached it with the sense of, it will be the best one ever, because itâs the only one, and it had never been done before,â Farren says with a laugh. âBut in hindsight, thereâs not any one single thing we would have done differently or any one thing we would have prepared for differently. It all went very smoothly.
âPsychologically, you have to prepare for it to be a marathon. Itâs not a sprint. You have to find ways every day to enjoy it, to enjoy the fact youâre doing it. You have to be intentional about that every single day. I told a number of our guys over that time, at some point, to stop and intentionally soak it in â to hear the sounds and smell the smells and enjoy all the things that go with it, because those are the things you remember.
âRegardless,â Farren continues, âyou get pretty exhausted. Itâs a big footprint of labor. But I wish them the best of luck.â
Andrew Hartsock is GCMâs managing editor.