The Day

Baker happy to see Travelers Championsh­ip going stronger than ever

- By JOE MORELLI

Dan Baker took in the final round of last year's Travelers Championsh­ip at TPC River Highlands like he had several times in the past, even before Travelers took over title sponsorshi­p in 2007.

“The build-out is fantastic. There were a lot more fan amenities,” Baker said. “It's great to see. We kept it alive. I'm happy it's going stronger than ever.”

Before Travelers, the event was known as the Canon Greater Hartford Open, from its early days at Wethersfie­ld Country Club, to the Tournament Players Club in Cromwell, then the redesign now known as TPC River Highlands.

Baker, a 1984 Newtown High graduate, was the tournament director of the Canon GHO beginning in 2000. Canon dropped its title sponsorshi­p after the 2002 tournament. The tournament lacked a title sponsor in 2003 — a number of companies helped piece that year together, a bridge plan to maintain a spot on the PGA Tour calendar.

Baker stayed on for the first year under Buick's three years as title sponsor in 2004 before moving on.

“I smile every time see it on TV. I smile and think how we were close to going under. I think about the bridge year in 2003 when everyone bought in,” Baker said.

Nathan Grube took over as tournament director in 2005 and remains in that position today

“Dan and I talked at the beginning. We've bounced ideas off each other. He made himself available,” Grube said. “We both felt the responsibi­lity to take care of this tournament.”

Baker, 53, has been the senior director of of partnershi­p developmen­t for the PGA of America for the past 13 years. He oversees golf-related companies sponsoring events, tournament­s and programs for the approximat­e 29,000 PGA profession­als across the country.

Now living in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, Baker also oversees the PGA Merchandis­e shows in Orlando and Las Vegas and the PGA golf retirement plus annuity program and PGA member benefits.

His current boss — the president of the PGA of America — is Suzy Whaley, a former state resident. Back in 2003, Baker was the tournament director when Whaley played in the GHO, the first woman to qualify for a PGA Tour event.

“Sometimes, the golf world is such a small world,” Baker said. “Sometimes, things come full circle. She is a terrific leader of people. She always had tons of great ideas. I always feel like I can take anything to her. She is incredibly creative and has a great pulse on the golf industry.”

Baker will join everyone else watching the Travelers Championsh­ip on TV at the end of June — the tournament will have no fans on site due to the COVID-19 pandemic. He will think back to the large crowds the tournament had during the GHO days and think about how the tournament has grown since.

“You see Nathan and Andy Bessette (the executive vice president and chief administra­tive officer), it's a team,” Baker said. “I have a lot of respect for them. They are always out there trying to make the tournament better.”

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