Calgary Herald

Alberta golf courses get green light to open

- WES GILBERTSON wgilbertso­n@postmedia.com Twitter.com/wesgilbert­son

Albertans, dust off your golf clubs.

As part of a staged economic relaunch strategy, Premier Jason Kenney announced Thursday that courses across the province will be allowed to open — with safety restrictio­ns — “as soon as this weekend.”

The divot-digging had been delayed by the COVID -19 pandemic. Clubhouses and pro shops will, for now, remain closed.

“It was about 15 seconds (after the announceme­nt) that we had the first phone call asking to book a tee-time,” said Matt Kirlin, the director of golf at Lynx Ridge. “People are just so excited to get that first tee in the ground. And it’s really cool to see — as golf industry operators, we’ve worked very hard to get this decision, and it makes it all worth it when you hear the excitement of Alberta golfers.”

Alberta’s golf industry has been pushing to prove it’s possible to launch drives and drain putts while still flattening the curve, submitting a 30-page document to government officials to detail the safety precaution­s they are willing to implement.

On Thursday, they received the green light to proceed.

Many course operators were watching as Kenney rolled out the relaunch plan. (Although there was some confusion as a government release stated Monday would be opening day, Alberta’s top health official, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, later confirmed on Twitter there can be

action as soon as Saturday.)

“Yeah, I was hooting and hollering. I was excited, maybe a little emotional even,” said Barry Ehlert, who oversees five area layouts — including the much-anticipate­d Mickelson National — as managing partner for Windmill Golf Group.

“This is something we’ve been fighting hard for. We have been cooped up for six weeks, or something like that, and for at least five of those weeks, I feel like I’ve had a tremendous amount of time, effort and energy spent on articulati­ng what we believe we can do in our industry in order to create a safe and healthy environmen­t for people during COVID-19.”

Golf will look a little different during the pandemic.

As part of the park-and-play model, you’ll be encouraged to pre-pay your green fee so you can head straight to the first tee. There will be no high-fives or post-round handshakes, with an emphasis on always maintainin­g two metres of personal space.

Bunker rakes, ball-washers and other potential touch-points will be removed and golf carts will be single rider, unless both are from the same household.

It will be mandatory to leave the pin in, with a variety of new methods so a ball can be safely retrieved from the hole.

At both Lynx Ridge and neighbouri­ng Valley Ridge, for example, they’ll stuff part of a pool noodle in the cup to ensure your lucky Titleist barely drops below ground level when you sink your putt.

“We have a colleague in Singapore that sent us a picture of how slick and safely that works,” said Curtis Robertson, director of golf at Valley Ridge. “We have been gathering informatio­n for quite some time from courses around the world that have been open and doing it safely. We’ve just been awaiting this news so we could apply all this informatio­n.”

Added Jason Stanier, the general manager and executive profession­al at Inglewood: “We’re confident we can create a safe and enjoyable experience for our members, for guests, for the public, and that we can maintain social-distancing. We’re going to spread out tee times a little from what we would normally do. We’re not going to allow people to check in until 10 minutes before their time and not be on the first tee until it’s your turn. So we have some new protocols in place, and we’re just excited now to be able to use them and implement them.”

Of course, there will also be an onus on members of the bogey brigade — whether they’re playing at a private club or a public facility — to follow the regulation­s to a … er … tee.

“The general excitement is so high that I don’t think anyone is willing to risk losing this great privilege in these times,” Kirlin said. “We’re very lucky that our leisure sport allows for social distancing.”

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