Austin American-Statesman

Onion Creek

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damage to the course and maintenanc­e equipment.

Club officials debated what to do when they saw the scale of the destructio­n. Some members wondered if the club would commit to repairing the front nine holes along the creek. Jafarian said the club weighed the risks of another severe flood but decided to rebuild.

Peter Contreras, a member of Onion Creek and an assistant athletic director for the University Interschol­astic League, said the character of the club resides in those original golf holes.

“I believe the lure of that place is the history and the tradition,” Contreras said.

Shortly before dawn on Oct. 31, rains pushed Onion Creek to 40 feet above normal stage. The swiftly moving water tore turf from the golf club’s putting surfaces, destroyed bunkers and ripped trees from the ground, including the only one next to the sixth green. Fourteen of the course’s 27 holes were submerged.

Plenty of work remains. Uprooted tree trunks rest in the grass next to cart paths. Dumpsters and Caterpilla­r equipment sit on the course. A tire hangs on a tree branch above the creek along No. 16.

But crews have cleared most of the debris, which included brush, rocks, trash, lawn chairs, a toilet seat and an old photograph from a military funeral. Two weeks ago, Onion Creek acted as the host course for the UIL Class 5A golf championsh­ips.

The only golf course designed by three-time Masters winner Jimmy Demaret, Onion Creek opened in 1974.

For 12 years, the course served as the host of the Legends of Golf, a tournament for retired PGA Tour players such as Demaret, Jack Burke Jr., Sam Snead and Arnold Palmer. The event led to the creation of the Champions Tour.

After opening the original front nine holes this summer, the club will work on the nine newer greens designed by Ben Crenshaw and Bill Coore. The original back nine will be completed last, Jafarian said. The club hopes to have all 27 holes finished by October. The work includes restoring bunkers.

The club plans to plant a new grass, Tif-Eagle Bermuda, on the putting surfaces.

Tif-Eagle can be mowed lower to increase putting speeds and is used at world-renowned golf courses such as PGA Na- tional in Florida, Kapalua Plantation in Hawaii and the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island in South Carolina.

Most of the project can be completed in-house by Onion Creek or its parent company, Dominion Golf Group of San Antonio, Jafarian said.

The club also launched a membership campaign to coincide with the restoratio­n. Onion Creek hopes to reach 500 golf members by the end of May, and that would help offset the $1 million cost of the work on the greens and bunkers. Membership had grown from 400 before the campaign to 492 as of Tuesday, Jafarian said.

“Even though this was devastatin­g and it had a significan­t impact on business, we’re excited that members have supported us and the community has supported us,” Jafarian said, “and we are able to turn this into something positive.”

 ?? RALPH BARRERA / AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? The original front nine holes at the Onion Creek Club are scheduled to reopen in July. Here, employeesw­ork on making sure the second hole’s green is sloped so it will drain properly.
RALPH BARRERA / AMERICAN-STATESMAN The original front nine holes at the Onion Creek Club are scheduled to reopen in July. Here, employeesw­ork on making sure the second hole’s green is sloped so it will drain properly.

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