Rehoboth Beach CC hosts first AJGA tournament
May 3, 2024
The first American Junior Golf Association tournament in the Cape Region appeared to be highly successful.
The event took place April 26-28 at host course Rehoboth Beach Country Club.
A qualifying round on Friday brought six boys and three girls into the field.
The actual competition included two 18-hole rounds on the weekend.
“It’s been awesome,” said RBCC Director of Golf Pat Mastrian.
One qualifier, Ryan Hoffner of Parkton, MD, won the Boys category with a 72-69, 3-under par 141 total.
Henry Bolster of Madison, NJ tied George Williamson of Sykesville, MD for second place at even par.
Andie Greenberg of Bethesda, MD won the Girls’ category with a 78-70, 4-over par finish in her first-ever AJGA event.
Lila Becker of Woodstock, MD took second place with a 7-over par total.
The Georgia-based AJGA runs over 140 tournaments annually for talented scholastic golfers. The Rehoboth tournament was a Preview event, the first AJGA tournament for most of the golfers competing in it.
AJGA Tournament Director Adam Stover said, “For some this is also their first-ever tournament on a national level. It’s important for them to get that exposure to be able to compete at the highest level. That’s what different about what they might see at the state level.”
Seventy-eight golfers began the tournament. Most came from the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast, with others from states further west as well as Toronto and Quebec, Canada.
“This week it’s 54 boys and 24 girls,” Stover said. He called that gender ratio “pretty standard” for their events. “For our Invitational events there’s a 96-player field, it’s often 60 and 36. It’s basically the same as our membership.”
“Everybody has absolutely loved it here this week,” Stover said. “The course allowed us to use their facilities, opened up a lot of them, opened up the upstairs ballroom at the clubhouse for our parents’ meeting. That view up there is sensational. For a lot of these kids from the Northeast this is one of the premier courses. I know these kids are really enjoying the opportunity.”
The parents’ meeting is a feature of Preview tournaments. “Most of that is for these first-time AJGA players to get a better understanding of our performance-based entries,” the organization’s system of ranking events sponsored by AJGA or other groups.
“We also go over with them our values and our mission, how we try to meet them out on the course every day. We want to develop golf’s next generation. Our big values are player code of conduct on the course, making sure parents understand we’re not going to let players do whatever they want,” he said, citing for example a “strike” system for misbehavior that could lead to penalty strokes.
“It also includes our Care for the Course standards,” Stover said. Penalty strokes can be imposed for failure to replace divots. Each golfer has a sand bottle for meeting that responsibility. Sand receptacles are kept at each tee box.
Stover said the meeting included a presentation from Rich Brazeau, an AJGA-approved college golf advisor. “Once you start playing AJGA events you’ll start seeing coaches come around,” he said. “He helps get them pick out events that will help them get recruited and then also gets them prepared for what happens when they are recruited.”
Stover emphasized the goal is not solely to provide a track for collegiate or professional golf success. “We’re not just trying to develop great golfers. We’re also trying to develop the next generation of people who golf, even if that doesn’t mean as a competitor. We want to teach the right values,” he said.
Rudy Blancke, a past RBCC club president, oversaw dozens of tournament volunteers. “We had 67 total, including 22 members and 45 others. I understand that was far more than normal,” he said.
Blancke said AJGA timing stations every 3 holes helped maintain pace of play. Each threesome is expected to complete each hole in 14 minutes.
Other volunteers helped with ball-spotting at troublesome locations, while others filled in as needed.
Volunteer Barry Covington said, “This is a pretty cool tournament. It’s amazing how good these kids can play,” he said.
After the Saturday first round I chatted with the two youngest girls in the tournament: Brynn Krosse, 12, of York, PA and Rose Hall, 13, of Yorktown, VA.
They loved the greens but the thick rough was challenging.
Both girls carry low single-digit handicaps and were a bit miffed at how they both finished 7-over for the first round.
Krosse finished Sunday T-8 at 11-over and Hall finished T-17 at 18-over.
Those are great starts for their first AJGA experience.
Demo Days at Rookery
The Rookery Golf Club near Milton is hosting two demo days for those looking to buy a better game.
Representatives from Cobra, Mizuno, Ping, TaylorMade, and Callaway Golf will be at the range May 17 from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Call the Golf Shop to book an appointment at 302-684-3000. Walk-ups spots may be open depending on availability.
Titleist staff will be there May 19 from 9:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. by appointment only. Go to titleist.com to register.