Christmas Sale – December 7th



Greetings Golfers,

Maybe it’s the format of the emails….but, whatever the reason may be, I’m getting a lot of questions about the Holiday Passes and our Annual Christmas Sale.

So, this should clear-up things:  The Sale is Saturday, December 7th at the Clubhouse.  The hours are 9am – 2pm.  Everything is 50% off.  Everything.  Even balls, clubs, and shoes which have very little mark-up in the first place.

Of course we want some winter revenue.  But we also want to sell everything and start totally fresh next year.  And, believe it or not, we enjoy giving you a great deal.  What makes the Sale fun is that we have really good stuff left over.  Cool clothes, hats, gloves, bags, etc.  A smart way to Christmas shop…and a reason to buy stuff for yourself.

We also will be selling the Holiday Passes at the Christmas Sale.  We originally intended the passes to be purchased as Christmas presents.  But people got wise and figured out it’s a great opportunity to set themselves up golf-wise for next year.  The passes can be shared and used at anytime.  They also have no expiration date.

As always, we will be serving Christmas cookies, hot chocolate, coffee, Baileys, Kaluha, Irish whiskey.  It’s more than a Sale…it’s a Christmas party.

See you then, 
 
Tom Abts
GM/Head PGA Professional
tabts@deerrungolf.com

Deer Run Golf Club
8661 Deer Run Drive
Victoria, MN 55386
(952) 443-2351
www.deerrungolf.com
www.facebook.com/DeerRunGolf
www.twitter.com/DeerRunGolfClub



The Impossible Dream



Greetings Golfers,

Last weekend was fun to be a Minnesota sports fan. Of course, Saturday’s Gopher game was the biggie. But, the Viking’s win on Sunday night was also a big deal.

As usual, I was expecting the worse on the final drives of both games. That both opposing drives failed right in front of our respective end-zone was a miracle. One game? … maybe…both games?…impossible!

All sporting events have a period where a team or players is not sharp. I think the secret to success is to survive that period. Obviously the start is critical. You basically want to find some rhythm and not screw-up.

I always tell my playing partners that the first 3 holes at DRGC are the warm-up holes…that the round really starts on #4. All you need to do is survive and hopefully find some feel and tempo by the 4th hole.

Too often I see someone top their tee-shot on #1, and then try to make up for it with a perfect 3 wood for their second shot (which they then yank out -of-bounds). After the topped drive, I suggest that they just hit a seven iron back in play and relax and just play the hole.

You can be 3 over after 3 holes and still have a very good round. It’s tough to be 10 over after 3 and have a decent round.

Obviously you don’t want to wreck your round at the start. But, you don’t want to wreck it at ANYTIME during the round.

Usually teams and golfers have a mid-second-half slump. Maybe it’s lack of concentration…but whatever, it seems to happen…just basically sloppy play. If they can just not get too sloppy…(compounding penalties or errors or 3 putting after a chip)…things will come back.

Then, I think all players in all sports have to play aggressive at the end. Playing safe at the end of the game or at the end of the round usually turns into failure – and an ugly failure at that.

Here’s what I recommend: conservative at first while finding your rhythm; avoid getting sloppy in the mid-second-half; and then finishing aggressively.

The worst of all worlds is the opposite: reckless at the start; sloppy in the middle; playing safe at the end.

I’ve told my sons that I hope to see the Vikings win the Super Bowl before I die. I never even dreamed that the Gophers would play for the National Championship. Maybe the impossible is the new reality. We deserve it.

Cheers,

Tom Abts
GM/Head PGA Professional
tabts@deerrungolf.com

Deer Run Golf Club
8661 Deer Run Drive
Victoria, MN 55386
(952) 443-2351
www.deerrungolf.com
www.facebook.com/DeerRunGolf
www.twitter.com/DeerRunGolfClub



Old School Golf – with new tools

Greetings Golfers,

Since the beginning of the year, I’ve been the Administrator for a site called Old School Golf. I used to read it pretty frequently and post on it fairly regularly. So, when the former Admin left, he chose me to take over. Also, he knew that I didn’t want to monetize it or have that sort of an agenda. But, I did have an agenda – I wanted to spur interesting discussions about golf. And all aspects of golf: playing, teaching, managing, history, the Tour, etc.

It’s a pretty good site. However, I haven’t exactly taken it to a new level. Some of my “conversation starters” have been successful, but most seem to fall pretty flat. Actually, I get much more interesting responses to my blog … but that’s not an online discussion. Maybe people don’t want to risk saying what they really think in a public forum. When you say something online … it just sits there … you can’t take it back. And sometimes if it gets heated, people get nasty.

G.K. Chesterton said: “It is generally the man that is not ready to argue, who is ready to sneer”. Sneering shuts down interesting arguments … and the threat of sneering probably stops a lot people from even posting. Being the Admin, I can boot out hostile people, but it’s been harder to create the culture I want than I thought it would be.

The name isn’t just Old School Golf … it’s actually: Old School Golf – with new tools. Fine with me either way. I get it. It’s not just a site for golf reactionaries … but for people who respect golf’s past and are still interested in the modern game. And the culture that I’m trying to create is based on the human side of golf. I have no problem with the “new tools” side of golf … I just don’t want it to be the focus. Personally, I’m not using wooden shafts and feathery golf balls … in fact I’m using a ridiculously modern goofy driver from Japan. But what really interests me is the human aspect of golf and I want to drive those discussions.

As I said, I’ve only been the Admin since early this year. It takes time to build a culture – just ask PJ Fleck. But even if I get everyone to “row the boat” on OSG … I probably won’t get PJ’s salary.

Cheers,

Tom Abts
GM/Head PGA Professional
tabts@deerrungolf.com

Deer Run Golf Club
8661 Deer Run Drive
Victoria, MN 55386
(952) 443-2351
www.deerrungolf.com
www.facebook.com/DeerRunGolf
www.twitter.com/DeerRunGolfClub

Why You Should Be A Sweeper

Greetings Golfers,

I played twice last weekend – Saturday and Sunday. Not exactly great weather … especially on Sunday … but, it was maybe the last golf weather until Spring.

Played a really old course on Saturday with my sons. Hadn’t played there in 40 years.  It was a good layout for my old-man game. Pretty narrow and pretty short. Most holes favored a right-to-left drive and usually a nice wide, long entrance into the green. Meaning that I could hit my sleazy running draw off the tee … then run some sort of low, skanky iron-shot onto the green. My game is the opposite of the modern hit-it-far and hit-it-high style of golf.

Before Jack Nicklaus, most good players drew their shots and played angles. Courses were pretty firm and dry … and the layouts rewarded controlled low, running shots. Jack came around the time of improved course conditions – especially watering. So … Jack developed a swing based on power … a high fade that flew over the trouble and landed softly. Then he’d hit a moon shot iron into the middle of the green and putt well. Because of Jack’s length with the driver … the par 5s were really par 4s for him. So par for Jack was 68 – not 72. He was already -4 before the round started.

But … but … but … Jack’s style of golf was not good for most golfers. Most people naturally slice … calling it a “fade” would be kind. And most people naturally scoop their iron shots trying to hit it up in the air. When looking for someone’s lost ball … I always go short and right of where they think it went. They don’t hit Jack’s “power fade”.

Now, especially as we get older … Jack’s “power fade” is really the wrong swing. You need to be young and strong and flexible for the power fade. And, willing to destroy your body. Those old-time drawers of the ball could play into old-age and not have all the problems you see in modern Tour players.

I recommend a loose swing that is more of a sweep than a hit. The driver should be the easiest club to use  … and easiest to use well. It has a huge head and you can hit it off of a tee. A sweeping swing can do that all day. Iron shots with a sweep work pretty well too. However, I struggled with iron shots at both courses because they had really tight fairways. The only good high iron shots I hit over the weekend were on par 3s where I could tee-it-up. My fairway iron shots on Saturday worked because I could hit low runners onto the green. The course on Sunday was more modern and demanded higher iron shots into the greens. I needed to tee-it-up in the fairway! But seriously, I would prefer lush fairways with some cushion. 

What I’m trying to say is that most of us should play with an old-school sweeping swing. And most golf courses should be designed for that swing. For most of us, golf is recreation … few are needing to play well to feed their families. A sweeping swing is easier on the body and easier to do. It feels a little unnatural at first – the desire to “hit” is natural, but not a good feel to build a swing on. Even a putting stroke is a sweep. And a sweeping draw goes farther than most people’s hit-type-slice … and is much more controllable.

Now we just need to adjust these modern courses to a sweeping swing.

Cheers,

Tom Abts
GM/Head PGA Professional
tabts@deerrungolf.com

Deer Run Golf Club
8661 Deer Run Drive
Victoria, MN 55386
(952) 443-2351
www.deerrungolf.com
www.facebook.com/DeerRunGolf
www.twitter.com/DeerRunGolfClub



Thanksgiving in October



Greetings Golfers,

Many years ago on Monday Night Football, “Dandy” Don Meredith would sing “The Party’s Over”. He wasn’t much of a singer, but he was pretty entertaining and Monday Night Football was a big deal. 

Now there’s even Sunday Night Football. Well, I’ll be watching the World Series instead … after I come home from closing the golf course – for the season. 

Yes … “The Party’s Over” for golf at DRGC in 2019.

It was an odd year. The weather was “unusual”. I don’t expect great weather every year. In fact, I hope for C- weather. 

We didn’t get hit by a tornado or a hurricane or even lightening. So I don’t really have anything to complain about. In fact, we had a pretty good year and I’d to thank a bunch of people.

Our staff was outstanding and dealt with whatever came their way with grace and persistence. A-I robots can never take their place. 

Many thanks to:

Dan Abts, Peyton Ayers, Justin Bach, Doug Backstrom, Kelly Benson, Paul Bickel, Emma Braaten, Kai Braaten, Sam Brammer, Grace Bratrud, Heidi Breen, Jerry Brown, Jacob Bryant, Veronica Cemenski, Dean Clark, Nelson Cole, Hayley Cruikshank, Gordy Davis, Mason Day, Ryan DeBenedetto, Kelly Donovan, Darrell Eggertson, Bob Elfering, Anthony Elkins, Leah Elleraas, Don Ellwood, Bill Farnham, Bob Finn, Elle Forslund, Carolyn Gaskill, Jim Gibson, Sydney Gilbertson, Adam Hamburg, John Hermann, Madi Hicks, Ketti Histon, Paul Hook, David Hunter, Olivia Jackson, Jordan Johnson, Sonny Jurgens, Charlie Kelly, Clare Kelly, Taylor Kiffin, Todd Knutson, Madison Koebnick, Austin Kosier, Ray Kutz, Allyson Kuzara, Jack Lahl, Carson Liebeg, Chip Lien, Stephanie Loney, Kevin Loney, Amanda Malo, Cassidy McGillick, Fred McGraw, Dan McQuillen, Mike Melander, Claire Melander, Emma Melander, Beth Melander, Lee Metzer, Dennis Miller, Lori Money, Carter Nelson, Don Nelson, Andrew Neuman, Kristi Notvedt, Conner Olson, Gary Peterson, Gary Plummer, Barry Provo, Steve Ranz, Danny Renner, Emily Renner, John Rochford, Todd Schindler, Paul Schullo, Mary Schulz, Ryan Scrivner, Tita Skeesick, Ron Smith, Ron Solheim, Roger Swanson, Michelle Tentis, Morgan Tentis, Taylor Tentis, John Thompson, Kasey Walker, Fred Whitney, Jon Williams, Blain Wilsey, Jacob Wolf, Ethan Wolf, Jaclyn Zirbes and Ian Zorn.

We won some nice awards in the October Tee Times magazine’s READERS CHOICE AWARDS. The people just listed are the reason why. 

Next week is Halloween. I hope you enjoy it. However, I’m more in the mood for Thanksgiving. Thanks to all of you.

Cheers,

Tom Abts
GM/Head PGA Professional
tabts@deerrungolf.com

Deer Run Golf Club
8661 Deer Run Drive
Victoria, MN 55386
(952) 443-2351
www.deerrungolf.com
www.facebook.com/DeerRunGolf
www.twitter.com/DeerRunGolfClub



My Dad

Greetings Golfers,

I wasn’t sure if I should do this. Too much of what should be private has become public. However, my dad was the kind of guy that we don’t hear enough about.

James Francis Abts was born and raised in Yankton, South Dakota. Though he and my mom moved to Minneapolis over 60 years ago, he still read the Yankton paper.

I wish you knew him. He was fun and funny and charming … but what drew you to him was his kindness. Some people are nice but not kind. He was both … but especially kind.

Yet, that kindness also made life difficult for my dad. He really couldn’t believe that people could be cruel. Not that he grew-up in la-la land. Like too many people, he grew-up in a dysfunctional family. But, it didn’t harden his heart.

So to make a new life, he and my mom moved up to the big city. And he decided to sell life insurance. Wow. A young man with a wife and two kids … in a new city … trying to make a living in a business based on relationships. That could make a kind man cold.

But it didn’t. He had to become a grinder – which wasn’t his nature – but he did it. And he became a successful insurance agent. People trusted him. He actually cared about the people he sold insurance – and they knew it.

I learned so much by just watching him. He always treated people with respect – everyone he met. He saw beauty in life, in nature, in people. No wonder he was kind. He saw the best in this life. Now he’s in an even better place.

R.I.P.

Tom Abts
GM/Head PGA Professional
tabts@deerrungolf.com

Deer Run Golf Club
8661 Deer Run Drive
Victoria, MN 55386
(952) 443-2351
www.deerrungolf.com
www.facebook.com/DeerRunGolf
www.twitter.com/DeerRunGolfClub

Nervous Energy is a Good Thing

Greetings Golfers,

Well, the Twins are toast. All the other division series went to 5 games. It seemed to me that the Twins were just happy to be there … and that they tried really hard to be “loose”. Think how goofy that sounds “Tried hard to be loose”.

Remember early this year when Rory McIlroy was “trying to be loose” … saying that the Majors were “just another tournament”? Worked really well for both Rory and the Twins.

Loose has to be natural – not forced. Shouldn’t you use that energy? Nervous should be used – not fought. The Twins looked flat. Rory looked flat in the first rounds of this year’s Majors.

Obviously for a long season like baseball … it’s good to keep loose and not get too ramped up for every game – you’ll burn out. However, for the playoffs or golf Majors … put the pedal to the metal!

NFL football games are only once a week … and only 16 games. They could ramp it up. The Vikings have looked flat. I think Zimmer is a good coach – especially defense. But a ball-control offense only works with a great offensive line. That’s what Zimmer wants to do … have a low-risk offense and rely on the defense. I get it. But you need to have the horses. Game plans have to be based in reality. Just like your golf game plan. As I’ve gotten older I have to play a different style of golf. My game has lost its horsepower. I can’t play power golf. The Vikings can’t play power, ball control football.

Both these confused concepts are rooted in la-la land. When la-la land meets reality … la-la land is in trouble.

Nervous energy is a good thing. It should be used. And a game plan is good if rooted in reality. The worst of all worlds is “trying to be loose” while sticking to a faulty game plan. Whether it’s your golf game, your business, etc. Somehow apathy became a virtue. And fantasy became better than reality.

Whatever team wins the World Series will be facing reality head-on with nervous energy. I look forward to the battles.

Cheers,

Tom Abts
GM/Head PGA Professional
tabts@deerrungolf.com

Deer Run Golf Club
8661 Deer Run Drive
Victoria, MN 55386
(952) 443-2351
www.deerrungolf.com
www.facebook.com/DeerRunGolf
www.twitter.com/DeerRunGolfClub

The Nuances Make Things Interesting

Greetings Golfers,

Later today, the Minnesota Twins play the NY Yankees in the first game of the ALDS. I’m actually fairly optimistic that the Twins can win this series. They aren’t afraid of the Yankees. They set the league record for home-runs in a season – 307. The Yankees hit 306.

Obviously these two teams are bombers. Normally, I’m not a fan of home-run baseball. I like the nuances of baseball: Is the pitcher consistently ahead in the count? Can this batter hit to the opposite field? Can they steal on this catcher – or pitcher? Etc.

Too often, home-run baseball just overpowers the nuances … almost makes them irrelevant.

This year, MLB, decided to “juice” the ball. It worked – record home-runs.

They think this is what the fans want. Maybe. I relate it to movies. What makes a good story is that the nuances are important – that’s what is really interesting. The plot can be basic. Most of our lives have basic plots. But, it’s the nuances that make it interesting. Same with a movie. If the writer doesn’t really have insight into how things and people work … the writer focuses more on a tricky plot and then uses cliche characters and cliche situations. That type of story doesn’t really get your full attention.

Same with baseball. The nuances are what really get your full attention. Power-baseball is about half watching the game, but getting excited when someone knocks it over the fence. Sort of like a car chase.

Obviously, I can continue this analogy to golf. I much prefer links-style golf to wide-open parkland courses that allow bombers to fly everything that was intended to make the holes interesting. Driver-wedge all day except for driver-6 iron on par 5s is not exactly fascinating.

So, maybe this Twins-Yankees series will be basically a home-run derby. That’s fine with me as long as the Twins win. I’ve loved the Twins since they moved here in 1961. However, I hated the Yankees even before 1961.

Cheers,

Tom Abts
GM/Head PGA Professional
tabts@deerrungolf.com

Deer Run Golf Club
8661 Deer Run Drive
Victoria, MN 55386
(952) 443-2351
www.deerrungolf.com
www.facebook.com/DeerRunGolf
www.twitter.com/DeerRunGolfClub

Your True Golf Score

Greetings Golfers,

There’s an old Greek proverb that says, “A society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they will never sit in.”

Well, I’m getting to be an old man, so I take these sayings seriously. We all get it … “Leave the world a better place than you found it.”

I’m sure you notice this behavior with the people you play golf with. Do they “Leave the golf course better than they found it?” Do they repair their own ball marks and even a few extra? Do they replace divots? Do they rake bunkers? Do they drive their cart where they shouldn’t?

Of course beginning golfers get a pass on a lot of this stuff. Sort of like how kids should get a pass on comparable stuff in daily living.

However, experienced golfers know better. They can’t claim innocence. Not really.

Golf really is a test of character. Not just in the obvious ways of how people keep score. But, in the more subtle ways of how they treat their playing partners and the golf course.

Golf isn’t all about score.

Cheers,

Tom Abts
GM/Head PGA Professional
tabts@deerrungolf.com

Deer Run Golf Club
8661 Deer Run Drive
Victoria, MN 55386
(952) 443-2351
www.deerrungolf.com
www.facebook.com/DeerRunGolf
www.twitter.com/DeerRunGolfClub

Less is More

Greetings Golfers,

What do people mean by the saying “Less is More”?

According to PHRASE FINDER, it means: “The notion that simplicity and clarity leads to good design”.

Obviously it’s referring to architecture, but I think it relates to everything. Simplicity and clarity sure beats complication and confusion.

We host a lot of golf events. My mantra to the organizers is always “Less is More”. That usually isn’t what people want to hear. They get sucked into other people telling them they should do “this really fun thing”. Usually, it’s not really fun … and if they listen to a lot of people and keep adding “fun things” … it becomes annoying instead of fun.

We need to prioritize. We have limited time on this planet. We innately know how much time things should take. Life shouldn’t be rushed through … but time shouldn’t be wasted either. Time is precious. We all know that instinctively.

I advise golf events to focus on 4 things:

  • simple format
  • nice pace of play
  • friendly atmosphere
  • good food

Too often, adding “More” … leads to:

  • complicated format
  • slow pace of play
  • uptight atmosphere
  • no one sticks around for the dinner

As usual, Abraham Lincoln said it well: “If I’d had more time, I would have written a shorter letter”.

Simple doesn’t mean simple minded. It usually means clarity. That takes work.

Adding too much to things … is usually lazy and not focused. Lazy because of not doing the work of clarity which leads to simplicity.

Henry David Thoreau: “Our life is frittered away by detail. Simplify. Simplify.”

Cheers,

Tom Abts
GM/Head PGA Professional
tabts@deerrungolf.com

LessDeer Run Golf Club
8661 Deer Run Drive
Victoria, MN 55386
(952) 443-2351
www.deerrungolf.com
www.facebook.com/DeerRunGolf
www.twitter.com/DeerRunGolfClub