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06/08/2007 - Philadelphia, PA (Sportsbook Betting Lines) - Making sure that everyone on a club's staff has proper understanding of, and appreciation for, a property's history and unique characteristics is always a challenge--especially when the club is over 100 years old and tradition-rich, but many of its managers and employees are so young they don't remember black-and-white TV.
To help staff members at storied Oakmont Country Club respect and keep its unique legacies front-of-mind, General Manager Tom Wallace relies on a slide that he now features prominently at the beginning of all new-employee orientations, and also during team development sessions with his most experienced department heads. It shows a portrait of a distinguished gentleman from a bygone era, and four letters: WWHD.
The initials stand for "What Would Henry Do?" The reference is to the man pictured: Henry Clay (H.C.) Fownes, who built the famous course and club outside Pittsburgh in 1903.
After coming to Oakmont from The Country Club in Pepper Pike, Ohio (suburban Cleveland) as the new millennium began, Wallace sensed that success in his new role would hinge on being able to promote full passion for, and devotion to, the qualities that make Oakmont one of the true shrines of not only golf, but the club business.
That might sound like a surprising objective after coming to a place which, at the time, had hosted 15 major championships and was the first U.S. golf club to be designated (in 1987) as a national historic landmark. Unlike at many private clubs, however--where subsequent generations of founding families are still prominent and active, and can thus serve as living, breathing reminders of a club's traditions and special attributes--there had not been any embodiment of the Fownes legacy at Oakmont for over 50 years. After nearly a half-century when H.C. and his son, W.C., served as the club's only two Presidents, W.C. resigned in 1949. Save for some distant, non-active descendants, there has never since been a strong on-site Fownes family presence at the club.
Wallace sensed that this void might be making it difficult for staff to understand and uphold the club's sense of place, especially with Oakmont struggling, like all private clubs, to find the best solutions for the challenges it was now facing as the new century began. These included: declining member rounds; a golf course in need of restoration and modernization; an outdated, inefficiently designed, and undersized clubhouse; and a general strategic inertia that was making it challenging to both attract new members and get existing ones to use the club to its fullest. And just to notch up the pressure a little bit more, Oakmont's 16th and 17th major championships--the 2003 U.S. Amateur and 2007 U.S. Open--were on the horizon, meaning the world would soon be stopping by once again to take another close look at how--and if--the club was maintaining its great reputation.
As he and his staff renewed the focus on "remembering our foundation" to address the issues at hand and prepare for the upcoming tournaments, Wallace knew that more than slogans and slides would be needed. Fortuitously, another big event--the club's 100th anniversary--would occur in 2003. This offered the perfect opportunity to draw on Oakmont's rich history and blend its traditions into new facilities and operations more in step with the changing club world. "As the Board of Governors, Long-Range Planning Committee and I approached that anniversary and looked at our infrastructure, it was clear that we couldn't start our second 100 years not taking care of our national historic landmark," Wallace says. "But at the same time, we had been disappointed to see that more wasn't being done to emphasize the great history of the club throughout the facilities. We had to move forward--but while doing so, we also wanted to do all we could to enhance the understanding, and value, of our tradition."
So while an impressive 260-page, full-color coffee table book was produced to properly commemorate its first 100 years, a sizeable campus renovation began, to give Oakmont the facilities it would need to thrive for another century.
Golf in the Snow - On the golf side, the blending of tradition with new ideas has been led by the club's longest-tenured department head, PGA Professional Bob Ford. Just the seventh head golf professional in Oakmont's 100-plus years. Ford has held the position since 1979, when he succeeded Lew Worsham, the club pro who beat Sam Snead in a playoff to win the U.S. Open in 1947.
Ford has since done more than his part to uphold the tradition of bringing honors to the club, winning numerous Pittsburgh-area tournaments, competing on the national tour, and earning National Merchandiser of the Year and National Club Professional of the Year awards from the PGA. He has also led the club into new areas of golf-related activity, most notably through the Golf House all-weather practice facility and training center.
It has been a difficult "challenge," Ford admits, to watch the number of annual member rounds at Oakmont fall from a peak of 30,000 10 years ago to 22,000 currently. But he's proud of his operation's ability to stabilize rounds for the past five years--and even prouder of the success of the Golf House, where players can hit year-round from covered and heated bays, and have their swings analyzed by state-of-the-art video equipment.
"We took a lot of heat when we said we were going to build it [in the late 1990s]," reports Ford, who himself heads south for a "winter job" as head professional at Florida's prestigious Seminole Club. "The reaction was, you're going to spend a lot of dollars for a small group of guys to hit a few golf balls in the winter.
"But I'd say that now, easily half of our membership makes regular use of it-- pretty much anyone who hits a golf ball on our course also hits balls [in the Golf House]. And when tournaments like the U.S. Open come, we can sell it as a hospitality center, and that alone more than pays for what it's cost to build and operate."
The Golf House's popularity has added some non-traditional, non-seasonal duties to the maintenance side of Oakmont's golf operations--and even though some 25,000 balls are picked up every two weeks during the winter, Grounds Superintendent John Zimmers says there are still countless more to be gathered up once the snow melts for good. But Zimmers--who came to Oakmont in 1999 to join a distinguished list of predecessors that includes Paul Latshaw (who went on to Augusta National) and Mark Kuhns (now at Baltusrol)--appreciates the added value that the Golf House has brought to Oakmont's overall golf operation, even if it does make for a little extra work.
Zimmers also has renewed appreciation for the original H.C. Fownes course design most responsible for putting Oakmont so prominently on the golf map. Oakmont's current superintendent is just now catching his breath (and storing it up for the Open preparations) after directing the final phases of an extensive restoration that, he feels, has taken the course back much closer to the original inland-links style that Fownes intended.
In Oakmont's case, "taking it back" went well beyond the usual tree removals or narrowing of fairways; it also meant painstaking restoration of the club's trademark--and plentiful--bunkers.
"While the average course may have 60 to 70 bunkers," Zimmers notes, "we've had as many as 300. That got scaled back to around 180 at one time, but after this latest renovation we actually put about 30 back, so we now have around 210."
And this wasn't a matter of just digging holes and dumping sand randomly around the course. Instead, Zimmers became quite in tune with "what Henry would do" by poring over old photos and drawings, to keep all decisions as historically true as possible. The restoration process, which even included adding new rows in the famous "church pew" bunkers, gave Zimmers new appreciation for what is still Oakmont's most special attribute.
"What [Fownes] designed is fascinating--he definitely had unique ideas," Zimmers notes. "And I now know more than ever why in the end, it's the condition of the golf course that affects everything else here. If the course isn't good, no matter how great the kitchen is performing, more people are going to think the soup's bad."
Rave Reviews - But just as there's now a much smaller chance, after all the work and money put into restoring it, that Oakmont's course will now meet with any displeasure, the risk of dissatisfaction has been greatly reduced on the clubhouse side, too. Last month, two big events of 600-plus people each--an Easter Sunday brunch and a Grand Reopening reception--gave members a first chance to see the results of extensive work that has also been completed to expand, upgrade and increase the functionality of Oakmont's broad-gabled clubhouse, which still stands on the same spot, and remains remarkably similar in structural appearance, to what was first erected in 1904.
Phase One of the project involved an upgrading of the infrastructure (HVAC, electrical, fire systems, etc.); renovating and expanding the clubhouse's main entrance, foyer and ballrooms; extending the terrace off the back of the building; creating new men's and women's rooms on the main floor; and expanding one end of the house to create a new, separate banquet kitchen. There is also a new Fownes Room, featuring H.C.'s portrait, that will be used for small private functions (and maybe visited by staff who need a little extra personal direction from Henry).
Phase Two, to begin later this year and end before next year's Open, will focus on upgrading the remaining infrastructure and look of the clubhouse's living room, runway, library, and front desk. While they must work until then in a facility that's literally a mix of old and new, the Oakmont staff has already seen enough, based on how smoothly last month's big events were pulled off, to enthusiastically embrace the improvements the renovations are bringing, and show a revived, can-do spirit as a result.
"Having the new banquet kitchen for Easter was a lifesaver," enthuses Facilities Manager Rob Hirst, as he leads a whirlwind tour of what's been accomplished to date in the clubhouse. And Hirst is equally charged up about the new storage and organizational areas that the renovation has carved out of space that was previously unaccessible or unusable in the venerable building's sprawling understructure and catacombs.
"They even put in an elevator to the basement that wasn't in the original plan, and they had to hand-dig out [the shaft]," Hirst notes. "We lost some of our great places to hide where no one could find you," he jokes. "But set-ups are going to be so much faster and easier now."
To keep Hirst's crews hopping, the Oakmont F&B team has big plans for how to make the most of its new capabilities. At the culinary end, Executive Chef Thomas Pepka will continue to direct expansion of the elaborate menus and presentations.
At the same time, Oakmont's ambitious food and wine programs will continue to grow under the direction of an energetic team led by Assistant GM Chris Hampton, Beverage Manager Brad Ladik, and Banquet Manager/Event Coordinator Peggy Schaal. And the service staff will continue to receive expert guidance in what can be offered and provided to members and guests through the intensive training and direction coordinated by Assistant Manager Carl Gurtner, Dining Room Floor Manager Mary Agnes Rieger, and Manager-in-Training Katie Keenan.
All told, F&B has grown into a $2 million annual operation at Oakmont that is now well-balanced between a la carte and banquet business, and making significant positive contributions to cash flow. "We are making money in operations now--close to $1 million over the last couple of years," says Wallace. "And the long-range plan is to continue and improve upon that trend." Also making significant contributions to the bottom line will be revenues from the club's newly renovated Gatehouse and Pro's Cottage lodging facilities, which are now proving to be very popular not only with local members, but also those from outside the area who have joined Oakmont through a new national membership status initiated in 2001.
Through data mining from the new POS and operations systems implemented under the direction of CFO Jim Springborn, the Oakmont team expects to find an endless stream of ways going forward to identify and capitalize on how all members, current and future, want to use the club. The last several years brought almost twice as many new members as the previous five, Wallace reports, and overall membership's average age has come down slightly over the same period.
Of all the numbers now at their disposal, however, the one that everyone on the Oakmont team remains most focused on is 500,000-plus--the number of positive "moments of truth" (defined as "anytime an employee interacts with a member") that team members collectively strive to achieve over the course of a year.
And when there is evidence of staff providing these moments in a way that would make Henry Fownes proud, another figure often comes into play: $100 gift certificates to local retail establishments that top managers are empowered to award on the spot. Which proves that there is indeed something very special and unique about the "new" Oakmont--it's a place where it actually is possible to take slogans to the bank.
Aces or eight's. Contact Joe Barks at jbarks@clubandresortbusiness.com.
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Kansas City, MO - Kansas City has not officially named Matt Cassel its starting quarterback, but there can be no doubt now.
NFL Betting
After praising his leadership and work ethic through spring workouts, the Chiefs announced Tuesday they had signed the 27-year-old Cassel to a multiyear contract. Terms were not disclosed, but he will almost certainly be one of the highest-paid members of the team.
"We are excited to be able to reach a long-term agreement for Matt Cassel to be a Kansas City Chief for many years to come," owner and board chairman Clark Hunt said in a statement. "His proven leadership on and off the field will be a tremendous asset to the organization."
Patriots made him their franchise player, meaning his salary for this season will be about $15 million.
New head coach Todd Haley, taking over for Herm Edwards after a 2-14 season, refused to name a starter at any position during offseason workouts. But it was obvious to everyone the team belonged to Cassel.
"I go out there each and every day with that focus that I'm the starter," Cassel said during a June minicamp. "Competition brings out the best in everybody."
The signing will come as welcome news to Cassel's new coaches and teammates. Amiable and hardworking, online football betting he appeared to win over everyone at minicamp.
"I think he's got some unique leadership qualities. I think his teammates like him and have respect for him. I think he's doing a pretty good job on the field, too," Haley said last month. "He's doing everything that I'm asking him, that our coaches are asking him to do. I don't have one single complaint how he's carrying himself."
After one workout, wide receiver Devard Darling declared Cassel "a breath of fresh air."
"He has a lot of swagger, a lot of confidence. It's good for us," said Darling. "We trust in him that he's going to go out there and lead us all the way."
nse to accommodate his specific abilities.
Trapped on the bench behind Heisman winners Carson Palmer and Matt Leinart at USC and then unable to unseat Super Bowl MVP Brady at New England, Cassel seemed destined to be a backup all his life. As Brady was helped off the field last September, Cassel seized the opportunity he'd been waiting for since high school.
In his only sustained action since his teens, he hit 349 of 555 passes for 3,949 yards at New England. He had 23 touchdown passes and 13 interceptions as the Patriots, who had gone unbeaten through the regular season the year before, finished 11-5 and out of the playoffs.
Chiefs general manager Scott Pioli, who had been Bill Belichick's assistant in New England, engineered the trade after the Patriots became convinced that Brady would recover fully from his knee operation.
"Since Matt arrived in Kansas City, he has embraced the team and the community," Pioli said. "His work ethic, his ability and competitive presence is what we expect from our players."
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