7/17/19 U.S.Open volunteer notification
Always great to get the official notification from USGA, getting selected from thousands of applicants to volunteer at the 2020 Open. My son Brian has also been selected, can't wait for him the share the experience!
Dear Wyn,
Congratulations! You have been assigned to volunteer on the 19th Hole Marshals committee
for the 2020 U.S. Open Championship at Winged Foot Golf Club in Mamaroneck, NY.
Sunday
Saturday
The Travelers Championship June 23, 2019 Sunday
I knew Brian had been fully bitten by the marshaling bug when he and Chris met at our 7am mobile marshals meeting and discussed all the specifics of the previous day's events, including the varying number of marshals hole-by hole and the challenges of the course layout from a gallery movement perspective. I had requested as early an assignment as possible for today so that we could finish in a reasonable time to then make the three hour drive home. As a result, we were assigned to Bubba Watson and Sam Burns for a 9:15am tee off, perfect. I was designated as lead marshal for a 3-man crew, with Brian of course, and a third fellow, Ray. Thank you David for advocating for me to get this assignment. Our morning marshals meeting was extended a bit for Maureen to verbally acknowledge the selection of one to the hole marshal captains as Volunteer of the Year, evidently the first time a marshal had been so selected. We eventually joined Mary and Lauren at the first tee grandstand to watch Koepka and the early pairings tee off until it was our time to go. I noticed a familiar face down at the starter's tent, Marty Hackel (Mr. Style of Golf Digest) so I went down there to renew an old acquaintance. He's a well known character at TPC Boston, and I learned he's a native New Englander, living in New Canaan, having attended Tabor Academy, and playing various courses near me on Cape Cod. As our teetime neared, our third marshal arrived, Ray, who was a pretty unique fellow, a very loquacious chap, who we eventually pegged as a doppelgänger for Joe Pesci in hyperactive mannerisms, speaking style, and even accent. A real nice guy but talked way too much! Thank goodness he was an experienced MM and didn't need any coaching from me. He did a great job marshaling, especially staying ahead of the players as a fore-marshal for any wayward shots.
Neither Bubba Watson or Sam Burns was in contention but both didn't give up in their efforts today, especially Bubba who at times is known for checking out under similar circumstances. He is such a crowd favorite here at the Travelers as a previous three-time winner and received applause at nearly every green as he walked up. His wife Angie and her guests were walking along with him so I fetched some water bottles for them at the fourth hole. They were very appreciative, always good to take care of anyone associated with the PGA TOUR. I also got some waters for Mary and Lauren, walking along with us again today. We all had a thoroughly enjoyable midday round on this sunny summer day, a bit hotter and humid than yesterday. Now that we knew the course a bit better, our marshaling duties seemed easier in that we knew where the crowds would tend to gather so that we could position ourselves accordingly. As usual, we had to be mindful of limiting gallery movement when there was a name player alongside a lesser known player. The fans were very respectful and responded well to our directions to limit moving about, especially on the cart paths. There was a rather sizable gallery all along the way, with lots of shoutouts of "We love you, Bubba". I had a typical marshal event happen when Burns hit outside of the ropes with his drive. When we arrived on the scene, a woman was standing there holding the gallery rope, which had been repositioned by the hole marshal to make room for Burns to get back into play. She looked nervous having been given this responsibility, especially when Burns was standing nearby making his shot. Afterwards I thanked her and gave her one of my marker tees, which I identified as the "PGA TOUR Golden Tee Award" for her contribution for being such a big help. She was thrilled!
As we finished up at the 18th hole, the crowd was in full voice supporting Bubba, their favorite. The stadium was rocking as he acknowledged the crowd, including posing for a few pictures with some fans as he exited the green. Brian, Ray, and I followed him up to the scoring area adjacent to the clubhouse and our job was completed. We met up with Mary and Lauren, who'd been watching the action there at 18. It was a good ending to our two day adventure at the Travelers. Lauren's pedometer registered 10 miles for the weekend, which she characterized as a billygoat walk due the hilly terrain. We wound things up with a quick lunch at the concession stand, seated in the shade for a well deserved rest, then we were on our way home. Definitely a different experience than previous tournaments, glad we made the trip.
I knew Brian had been fully bitten by the marshaling bug when he and Chris met at our 7am mobile marshals meeting and discussed all the specifics of the previous day's events, including the varying number of marshals hole-by hole and the challenges of the course layout from a gallery movement perspective. I had requested as early an assignment as possible for today so that we could finish in a reasonable time to then make the three hour drive home. As a result, we were assigned to Bubba Watson and Sam Burns for a 9:15am tee off, perfect. I was designated as lead marshal for a 3-man crew, with Brian of course, and a third fellow, Ray. Thank you David for advocating for me to get this assignment. Our morning marshals meeting was extended a bit for Maureen to verbally acknowledge the selection of one to the hole marshal captains as Volunteer of the Year, evidently the first time a marshal had been so selected. We eventually joined Mary and Lauren at the first tee grandstand to watch Koepka and the early pairings tee off until it was our time to go. I noticed a familiar face down at the starter's tent, Marty Hackel (Mr. Style of Golf Digest) so I went down there to renew an old acquaintance. He's a well known character at TPC Boston, and I learned he's a native New Englander, living in New Canaan, having attended Tabor Academy, and playing various courses near me on Cape Cod. As our teetime neared, our third marshal arrived, Ray, who was a pretty unique fellow, a very loquacious chap, who we eventually pegged as a doppelgänger for Joe Pesci in hyperactive mannerisms, speaking style, and even accent. A real nice guy but talked way too much! Thank goodness he was an experienced MM and didn't need any coaching from me. He did a great job marshaling, especially staying ahead of the players as a fore-marshal for any wayward shots.
Neither Bubba Watson or Sam Burns was in contention but both didn't give up in their efforts today, especially Bubba who at times is known for checking out under similar circumstances. He is such a crowd favorite here at the Travelers as a previous three-time winner and received applause at nearly every green as he walked up. His wife Angie and her guests were walking along with him so I fetched some water bottles for them at the fourth hole. They were very appreciative, always good to take care of anyone associated with the PGA TOUR. I also got some waters for Mary and Lauren, walking along with us again today. We all had a thoroughly enjoyable midday round on this sunny summer day, a bit hotter and humid than yesterday. Now that we knew the course a bit better, our marshaling duties seemed easier in that we knew where the crowds would tend to gather so that we could position ourselves accordingly. As usual, we had to be mindful of limiting gallery movement when there was a name player alongside a lesser known player. The fans were very respectful and responded well to our directions to limit moving about, especially on the cart paths. There was a rather sizable gallery all along the way, with lots of shoutouts of "We love you, Bubba". I had a typical marshal event happen when Burns hit outside of the ropes with his drive. When we arrived on the scene, a woman was standing there holding the gallery rope, which had been repositioned by the hole marshal to make room for Burns to get back into play. She looked nervous having been given this responsibility, especially when Burns was standing nearby making his shot. Afterwards I thanked her and gave her one of my marker tees, which I identified as the "PGA TOUR Golden Tee Award" for her contribution for being such a big help. She was thrilled!
As we finished up at the 18th hole, the crowd was in full voice supporting Bubba, their favorite. The stadium was rocking as he acknowledged the crowd, including posing for a few pictures with some fans as he exited the green. Brian, Ray, and I followed him up to the scoring area adjacent to the clubhouse and our job was completed. We met up with Mary and Lauren, who'd been watching the action there at 18. It was a good ending to our two day adventure at the Travelers. Lauren's pedometer registered 10 miles for the weekend, which she characterized as a billygoat walk due the hilly terrain. We wound things up with a quick lunch at the concession stand, seated in the shade for a well deserved rest, then we were on our way home. Definitely a different experience than previous tournaments, glad we made the trip.
Thursday
The Travelers Championship June 22, 2019 Saturday
It was a long time in the planning, but it finally arrived. I was going to marshal at the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, CT. My friends at the Dell/Deutsche Bank Championship had been inviting me for years to come down to marshal and since there would be no FedEx Cup event at TPC Boston this year, now was the time. I had enticed my son Brian to accompany me as well, after he'd gotten exposed to the inside-the-rope experience at last year's Dell. In addition, my wife Mary and Brian's wife Lauren would be accompanying us so there was an added dimension to the experience. It would almost be like having our own personal gallery walking along with us. Our Dell mobile marshal co-chair David had been in communication with me over the winter, stating the need for experienced mobile marshals at the Travelers, which implied our level of experience over so many FedEx Cup Championships was highly valued. Brian and I committed to the mobile marshal committee, but on a limited schedule, working the two weekend days only, not the entire 4 day + Pro-Am tournament.
I won't delve into the details, but the pre-tournament communication with the Travelers was a bit disorganized at best. The usual drill is to get periodic emails from the volunteer coordinator as well as the mobile marshals chair, informing you of important details such as the uniform pick-up procedure, volunteer credential, parking details, guest passes, shift schedule, etc. Suffice to say that each of these details changed repeatedly as the date got closer, requiring phone calls to the Travelers office to clarify specifics. It's partially due our being long-distance out-of-state volunteers, and partially due to Travelers policy of not sending anything by mail. It ultimately necessitated us to show up in street clothes, then change into the Travelers official shirt and hat in the parking lot. At this stage in my marshaling career, you'd like to have things run as tightly as you've come to expect at TPC Boston, but not so much here evidently. Oh well, it all worked out in the end, and the essensce of being a marshal is responding to the situation right then and there, and dealing with it in a way that supports the overall objective of contributing to a first class event for one and all.
We arrived at TPC River Highlands on a glorious sunny day, the second day of summer, perfect conditions especially since the course had been drenched in rain recently and was basically a quagmire. A nice feature was having parking immediately adjacent to the course, a short walk to the volunteer villa and mobile marshal morning assembly area. No shuttle bus required. I immediately met up with familiar faces, Karen, our Dell mobile marshals co-chair, and Diane, both of whom have been marshaling for over 30 years and have seen it all! They walked Brian and me through the registration process in the villa to get all of our stuff and then proceed to the MM meeting for our player assignment. Ran into Maureen, the chair of gallery control for Travelers for a quick hug. David was also there and we chatted a bit before our meeting got started, primarily about the changes we were all experiencing this year with the FedEx schedule reshuffling resulting in the Northern Trust taking over for our traditional spot in the FedEx playoffs, at Liberty National in Jersey City. We regretted not being able to get together on Labor Day at TPC Boston. Evidently, the pre-championship communication with Northern Trust has been even worse than what I've experienced leading up to the Travelers. Glad I didn't commit to volunteering for the Northern Trust tournament from the sounds of it. Some familiar faces from Boston were here at Travelers, including Chris and Jim "The Mayor", and I got a chance to chat with them, both great guys. Renewing old acquaintances and comparing war stories is always a special part of marshaling. Our 7am meeting got started at 7:40, with 30 marshals present. Greg, our chairman, commented that there were too many marshals for the number of high caliber players remaining after the cut. (Phil & Jordan hadn't made it, two fan favorites). That left Bubba Watson, Brooks Koepka, Jason Day as the most prominent players in need of "Roving Marshal" support, (at least that's what our credentials called us). Brian and I were assigned to Keegan Bradley and Ryan Moore in the second to last pairing of the day, teeing off at 1:45pm, with Kim as our lead marshal, a very nice lady who has marshaled at both Travelers and Boston for years. She also happens to be the Mayor's wife, God bless her!
After a nice breakfast at the volunteer villa, courtesy of Dunkin Donuts, we arranged for our guest passes for Mary and Lauren to be carted over to the willcall ticket barn, somewhere way over in guest parking. A big thank you to Taylor Whiting, volunteer services coordinator, for doing that for us. We then decided to walk about the course a bit since we had lots of hours to kill, heading over to the practice range first, which was huge, with great spectator viewing from the elevated grandstand. After awhile, we walked to the clubhouse, brand new this year and a duplicate of the layout at TPC Boston. We were not allowed to tour the inside but that was to be expected on tournament day. The adjacent Fan Zone was a mudpit from the previous week of rain and thousands of spectators churning the grass into a mess, but the grounds keepers had done well installing rubber mat walkways to minimize the chaos. Brian and I headed to the 18th hole, scene of many spectacular finishes to check it out. A vast bowl shaped hillside surrounding the green with grandstands and corporate pavilions on top created quite the stadium for golf. It was empty now but we'd get a taste of it later on.
It was a long time in the planning, but it finally arrived. I was going to marshal at the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, CT. My friends at the Dell/Deutsche Bank Championship had been inviting me for years to come down to marshal and since there would be no FedEx Cup event at TPC Boston this year, now was the time. I had enticed my son Brian to accompany me as well, after he'd gotten exposed to the inside-the-rope experience at last year's Dell. In addition, my wife Mary and Brian's wife Lauren would be accompanying us so there was an added dimension to the experience. It would almost be like having our own personal gallery walking along with us. Our Dell mobile marshal co-chair David had been in communication with me over the winter, stating the need for experienced mobile marshals at the Travelers, which implied our level of experience over so many FedEx Cup Championships was highly valued. Brian and I committed to the mobile marshal committee, but on a limited schedule, working the two weekend days only, not the entire 4 day + Pro-Am tournament.
I won't delve into the details, but the pre-tournament communication with the Travelers was a bit disorganized at best. The usual drill is to get periodic emails from the volunteer coordinator as well as the mobile marshals chair, informing you of important details such as the uniform pick-up procedure, volunteer credential, parking details, guest passes, shift schedule, etc. Suffice to say that each of these details changed repeatedly as the date got closer, requiring phone calls to the Travelers office to clarify specifics. It's partially due our being long-distance out-of-state volunteers, and partially due to Travelers policy of not sending anything by mail. It ultimately necessitated us to show up in street clothes, then change into the Travelers official shirt and hat in the parking lot. At this stage in my marshaling career, you'd like to have things run as tightly as you've come to expect at TPC Boston, but not so much here evidently. Oh well, it all worked out in the end, and the essensce of being a marshal is responding to the situation right then and there, and dealing with it in a way that supports the overall objective of contributing to a first class event for one and all.
We arrived at TPC River Highlands on a glorious sunny day, the second day of summer, perfect conditions especially since the course had been drenched in rain recently and was basically a quagmire. A nice feature was having parking immediately adjacent to the course, a short walk to the volunteer villa and mobile marshal morning assembly area. No shuttle bus required. I immediately met up with familiar faces, Karen, our Dell mobile marshals co-chair, and Diane, both of whom have been marshaling for over 30 years and have seen it all! They walked Brian and me through the registration process in the villa to get all of our stuff and then proceed to the MM meeting for our player assignment. Ran into Maureen, the chair of gallery control for Travelers for a quick hug. David was also there and we chatted a bit before our meeting got started, primarily about the changes we were all experiencing this year with the FedEx schedule reshuffling resulting in the Northern Trust taking over for our traditional spot in the FedEx playoffs, at Liberty National in Jersey City. We regretted not being able to get together on Labor Day at TPC Boston. Evidently, the pre-championship communication with Northern Trust has been even worse than what I've experienced leading up to the Travelers. Glad I didn't commit to volunteering for the Northern Trust tournament from the sounds of it. Some familiar faces from Boston were here at Travelers, including Chris and Jim "The Mayor", and I got a chance to chat with them, both great guys. Renewing old acquaintances and comparing war stories is always a special part of marshaling. Our 7am meeting got started at 7:40, with 30 marshals present. Greg, our chairman, commented that there were too many marshals for the number of high caliber players remaining after the cut. (Phil & Jordan hadn't made it, two fan favorites). That left Bubba Watson, Brooks Koepka, Jason Day as the most prominent players in need of "Roving Marshal" support, (at least that's what our credentials called us). Brian and I were assigned to Keegan Bradley and Ryan Moore in the second to last pairing of the day, teeing off at 1:45pm, with Kim as our lead marshal, a very nice lady who has marshaled at both Travelers and Boston for years. She also happens to be the Mayor's wife, God bless her!
After a nice breakfast at the volunteer villa, courtesy of Dunkin Donuts, we arranged for our guest passes for Mary and Lauren to be carted over to the willcall ticket barn, somewhere way over in guest parking. A big thank you to Taylor Whiting, volunteer services coordinator, for doing that for us. We then decided to walk about the course a bit since we had lots of hours to kill, heading over to the practice range first, which was huge, with great spectator viewing from the elevated grandstand. After awhile, we walked to the clubhouse, brand new this year and a duplicate of the layout at TPC Boston. We were not allowed to tour the inside but that was to be expected on tournament day. The adjacent Fan Zone was a mudpit from the previous week of rain and thousands of spectators churning the grass into a mess, but the grounds keepers had done well installing rubber mat walkways to minimize the chaos. Brian and I headed to the 18th hole, scene of many spectacular finishes to check it out. A vast bowl shaped hillside surrounding the green with grandstands and corporate pavilions on top created quite the stadium for golf. It was empty now but we'd get a taste of it later on.
By then, Mary and Lauren had arrived so we met at the 1st tee area which was a sea of humanity by this time. Justin Thomas walked by us on his way to the tee and I walked up to check things out. I ended up standing a few feet away from the standard bearer and scorer for his pairing, when Justin came over and introduced himself to them, and to me, shaking my hand and saying, "Hi, I'm Justin, thanks for helping out today." I then realized there were no roving marshals in sight and that he had been omitted from having any assigned to him. I considered contacting Greg to offer to switch our assignment but this would have created a domino effect, leaving Kim by herself or having to hustle to get other marshals to help her out. Brian and I couldn't cover his pairing for however many holes and then also walk 18 with Bradley and Moore. If this had been happening at TPC Boston I would have had a headset and made the decision to coordinate the situation somehow with David, but I was a rookie here. We later heard at our am meeting on Sunday that this had been a regrettable scheduling oversight.
Mary and Lauren wanted to see some more players so we headed back to the range and saw more players, including many lesser known chaps who needed some identifying info from me or Brian, ("Who is Scott Brown? Where is he from? Has he won anything?") That type of thing. Mary knows a bit about golf or she wouldn't be here, but us marshals pretty much know everyone after awhile. Always amazing watching these guys warm-up, hitting shots I could only dream of. It was time for lunch so we scored something at the concession stand, very nice set-up they had here, virtually no line. We then found a shady picnic table where we found our buddy Chris. He'd already finished his round as lead marshal for the Brooks Koepka pairing, sharing his experience learning the golf course as it was his first time seeing also. Very hilly and a tough layout, especially the finishing holes 15 through 18. Koepka drew a fairly sizable gallery so it was a good assignment. He said he would have liked to have had us along as there were no familiar faces on his crew. The discussion then digressed to other subjects including his having his son and daughter both in college and how silly the tuition sticker prices had gotten. Brian and Lauren graduated in 2012 and they're already amazed how much tuition costs continue to rise since then. We eventually said goodbye to Chris who was now off to work the 13th hole as a marshal just to help out. At the first tee we met up with our lead marshal Kim who knew we were experienced but new to the TPC River Highlands lay out, so her instruction mainly consisted of identifying the best places for us to marshal from as we walked along with Keegan and Ryan. Kim initially didn't make the connection that we were father and son until she got to chatting with the two ladies constantly walking along with us, who explained the whole relationship. We then got to know her better as well as you can while we were taking care of marshaling business. Keegan Bradley was having a very good day, eventually finishing second. Being a New Englander, from Vermont originally, he got a huge amount of crowd support. It was interesting marshaling for him as his lengthy pre-shot routine is pretty unique, with starts, stops, resets, club spins, lining up putts with his distinct left eye dominant head tilt. As a marshal, you don't want to be too early in signaling the gallery for quiet, standing with your arms raised for 5 minutes.
We found the hilly terrain challenging at times, on what proved to be a rather difficult walking course, especially for spectators. The hills provide frequent stadium-like viewpoints, as well as grandstands and pavilions, which promote a much more stationary gallery. Lots of people sitting on hillsides forced us to take a knee while marshaling so we wouldn't be blocking anyone's view.
The sizable crowd and perfect summer weather reminded me of a U.S. Open rather than a FedEx cup look. However, this crowd was pretty tame and quite respectful, no heckling or idiotic shout-outs. I heard ''Bababoie'' only once all weekend. There were times when our 3-person roving marshal crew wasn't really needed as the set-up at Travelers has a great disparity of marshals hole-to-hole. Sometimes we'd count up to 10 marshals surrounding a green, other places 1 or 2 or even none at one spot. By late afternoon, a few of the holes with lots of marshals weren't doing too much marshaling, mostly spectating or standing in bunches talking. Brian commented later that this drove him nuts! He's become pretty serious about this, living up to the high standard of marshals we've cultivated at Boston. One of our specialties is handling the gallery when balls land outside the ropes. Today, we'd often arrive at the scene where the hole marshal on site had only begun the process of getting the crowd into position to allow Bradley or Moore to make the shot back into play, but needed a whole lot more help: little things like placing a tee to mark the rope post-hole so that it could be replaced quickly or making sure the crowd isn't standing so close as to cast moving shadows on the ball.
When we got to the closing holes 15 through 18 we saw the real teeth of this golf course, an incredibly challenging layout, compounded by a change in the weather with wind, a bit of rain, but thankfully dodging a lightning cell to the south. We could feel the electricity from the gallery as both players took extra time over their shots to negotiate the water hazard adjacent to 15, 16, &17. You could feel them taking a breather once we got to the 18th hole, hitting up to the huge stadium green. It was a great day, different than the FedEx cup we've gotten to know so well at TPC Boston, but worth the trip to Connecticut. Looking forward to Sunday.
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