James E. Vos Memorial Invitational 2016

James E. Vos Memorial Invitational 2016

A Buddies Trip...A Lasting Legacy

"When buddie's golf succeeds it resuscitates the soul. We return to our lives as if from a spiritual retreat, reminded by imperfect pastors that we ought to quit chasing perfection and enjoy life." Golf Digest, December 2009.

A lesson like that knows no offseason. In 1988 four friends hatched an idea to spend two days in northern Michigan competing in three two-man events over three different courses--the winning team earning a full-course dinner and bragging rights until next year. It was right after the first 36-hole day, sitting on the deck at Shanty Creek Resort, watching the sun set over Lake Bellaire, reliving shots hit stoney and stone-like, mesmerized by a fervent purple and pink sky, the four friends instinctively knew, "This is perfect."

A trip was born, a lasting legacy begun. Since that first trip, friends and family have gathered each June, bound by the rich traditions of the game and lasting friendships forged in the cathedrals and cellars of Michigan golf: Boyne, Treetops, Garland, Wuskowhan, The Legend, Cedar River, The Chief, Wicked Trick, I mean, Crooked Stick, Bay Harbor, A-ga-ming, Black Forest, Antrim Dells, and countless others.

What began as four friends, 54 holes over two days has grown to as many as 28 golfers, 162 holes over 4 days. We are bound by the very things that make up the pillars of golf: love, honor, and respect.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Garland Lodge & Resort to Host 25th

Lewiston, MI--The James E. Vos Memorial Invitational tournament committee today announced the highly anticipated 25th anniversary event will return for the 10th time to Garland Lodge & Resort.

While not the site of the 1988 inaugural event, Garland played a role in the 1989 rotation when then Garland East (later split into Swampfire and Monarch) was visited by eight golfers on a very cold, rainy May day as part of a 36-hole day that included the then brand-new Michaywe Lakes golf course. Since then Garland has been in the event rotation a record eight more times--six consecutive (1992-1997) and more than any other northern Michigan golf resort--and remains the favorite site of many of the invitational's regular participants. This is the first time since 2003 the event has been held at Garland.

Garland and its four courses have created countless memories for the JEV Tourney. It was in 1996 on the Reflections course when tournament co-founder and namesake, James E. Vos, Sr. carded the only ace ever recorded in the tournament's 24-year history on hole #16, a downhill par 3 of 175 yards. The jubilant cheers were heard throughout the property. Leading up to the 25th anniversary event the tournament committee plans to interview the other three members in Senior's foursome that day for their perspective on the historic ace.

A preliminary course rotation has already been established for the 25th anniversary event. Plans call for the teams to face off all day Sunday, June 3--the tournament's first day--on the behemoth Monarch. The Monday, June 4 rotation includes Swampfire for the morning 2-man best ball and Reflections for the afternoon 2-man scramble. Tuesday morning's finale singles matches return to Swampfire.

The tournament committee is anticipating a record turn out for the 2012 event. The field has been opened to 28 golfers. As per tradition, invitations will be extended in January 2012 with participants expected to accept in February.

Friday, November 11, 2011

25th Anniversary Tournament Dates Announced

Byron Center, MI--In a surprising twist, the James E. Vos Memorial Invitational Committee strayed from its traditional Thursday through Saturday schedule, moving the tournament to a non-traditional Sunday through Tuesday schedule. The tournament will be held beginning Saturday evening, June 2 through Tuesday morning, June 5, 2012.

For years the tournament has stubbornly held to its Thursday-Saturday format. Even when schedules have forced the tournament out of its traditional early June dates, the committee has maintained its Thursday through Saturday format.

Why the change, and why now, especially considering this will be the tournament's 25th anniversary?

Tournament co-director, Mark Rice, explains. "We have long held to the Thursday-Saturday format. After two decades, our participants are familiar and comfortable with the format. Having said that, it has posed problems. Our participants have families so we try to end as early as possible on Saturday, allowing our players to return home and have a partial weekend with their families. Last year, heavy rain and fog delayed our Saturday morning start and that posed problems with players who had Saturday afternoon commitments."

Rice continues. "A Sunday-Tuesday tournament requires the same amount of vacation days for our players and allows them to be home on a Friday night and most of Saturday before coming to the tournament. We also try to set the dates to accommodate the most players and, frankly, this year the traditional dates posed some conflicts with some of our players."

Monday, August 1, 2011

Jock Doc

You all thought our own Doc Mulder was just a supreme athlete with incredible golfing skills, carrier of a bag of magic cremes and medicines, combined with a creative eye for photography. Oh, ye of little knowledge. Truth is, our official tournament photographer is so much more than that.

Doc Mulder was profiled in the July 10 Grand Rapids Press. Turns out he's a pretty famous, an exceptional doctor, an really good musician, and an all-around good guy. Check it out on mlive.com if you haven't already.

Congrats John Mulder! We are even more honored than before that you would choose four days out of the year to spend with our little ragtag group of guys.

www.mlive.com/living/grand-rapids/index.ssf/2011/07/profile_end-of-life_specialist.html

Sunday, June 12, 2011

2011 Tournament Highlights

Bellaire, MI--The 2011 James E. Vos Memorial Invitational tournament ended Saturday with the sun finally peeking out of the 3-days of cloud cover, and smiles all around, despite the lopsided ending. A full report will be forthcoming in 2012 including the tournament committee's awarding of the 2011 Stroke Saver trophy, honoring the winning team's MVP. A few highlights are included below.

-"The Gathering" occurred at its normal pre-tournament Wednesday night time of 9pm. Teams were selected and the day's pairings announced. This little pre-tournament time with everyone together again, has become a delightful tradition.
-Rookies Jim Baker and Jeff Stuk were welcome additions and fit in immediately. The tournament committee has already promised invitations in 2012 and sincerely hopes they will attend the 25th anniversary event.

-The Recovery Shots team of Jon Vos, Donovan VanZee, Jack Vos, John Mulder, Chris Grek, and Mark Rice defeated the Fairway Finders team of Dan VanderWal, Kyle VanderWal, Rodg Rice, Jim Warners, Jeff Stuk and Jim Baker in unexpected dominating fashion. The JEV tourney traditionally has always come down to the wire with either team having a chance to win it in singles play on the last day. Not the case this year. The Recovery Shots won going away, winning 13 out of 18 possible points.

-For the first time ever in JEV Memorial tournament play, four players shot sub-80 rounds in the same group during the same round. Kyle VanderWal, Dan VanderWal, Jon Vos, and Mark Rice all had rounds below 80. Playing in the 7:40am group in the tournament's opening round, Jon Vos shot 79; Mark Rice, 77; Dan VanderWal, 78; and Kyle VanderWal shot 76. The foursome had an amazing seven birdies and one eagle and would have shot 5-under 67 in a best ball.

-Last year's rookie MVP, Kyle VanderWal, cooled in his sophomore year but still posted his team's best individual record, going 3-2.

-The Grek legend grows. In their ninth meeting, Chris "VanderWal Slayer" Grek unbelievably drew Dan VanderWal's name again in singles, shooting his tournament best 80 and beating VanderWal 3&1. Chris has never lost to Dan in the tournament's singles competition.

-Clouds, light rain, and cool temperatures dominated the event held at Shanty Creek Resort and played on the resort's Legend and Cedar River courses. Despite the weather, the tournament continued on, undaunted.

-Next year's event venue and dates have not yet been announced but it is rumored the tournament will return to the friendly confines of Garland Resort for its 25th anniversary event. Garland was the sight of the tournament's only hole-in-one by none other than its founder and tournament namesake, James E. Vos.

Monday, June 6, 2011

2011 Tournament Headlines

Here's what's buzzing around the press tent as the JEV Memorial Tourney approaches.

1. Will Kyle overcome the sophmore jinx to become the first solo repeat winner of the Stroke Saver MVP Trophy?
2. Will the new tee policy and tee assessments quiet the debate of switching tees, or will it rage on like before?
3. Will the weather cooperate or will the heavens open up as in 1999?
4. Will John Mulder bring his magic creme? And just what does Don VanZee use that stuff for?
5. Will Dynomite VanZee make his magic feel good brew this year?
6. A new hip, bad knees, torn meniscus? Will old guys Rice Jr., VanderWal, and VanZee hold up in tournament conditions?
7. Dan VanderWal playing blue tees, claiming he can't swing hard for fear of dislocating his hip. Dan VanderWal not swing hard? This is a joke, right?
8. How will rookies Stuk and Baker do? Will they vie for the MVP trophy or will rookie nerves get the better of them?
9. Will we actually see Mulder in a photo, or will he be the one always behind the camera?
10. Will the VanderWal Slayer show up again?

Sunday, June 5, 2011

2011 Tournament Handicaps Posted

Bellaire, MI--The James E. Vos Memorial Invitational Tournament Committee today announced the starting handicap indexes and tee box determinations for its field of twelve. Leading the field with an index of +7 from the blue tees is last year's rookie sensation, Kyle VanderWal. Kyle went 83, 80, 82, 80 averaging 81 and going 5-1 in tournament play becoming the tournament's MVP and Stroke Saver Trophy winner. It remains to be seen if the sophomore jinx becomes a reality for Kyle. Kyle's dad, Dan VanderWal entered the 2010 tournament with an astounding +7 from the black tees (Kyle's +7 is from blue tees), but nagging hip problems kept Dan from playing his normal game and sending his 2011 index up 4 to +11.

Perhaps the 2010 sleeper award goes to Mark Rice who quietly shot 82, 84, 84, 80 for an 83 average and sending his 2011 handicap falling five strokes from +13 to +8, second only to Kyle's +7. This precipitous change seems to be the norm for Rice who is historically inconsistent, preferring to roller coaster + or - 4 or 5 strokes every few years. Pity the team who draws him for 2011.

A stroke behind Rice are the ultra-consistent duo of Jon Vos and Donovan VanZee. As has been reported before, Vos has never been out of single digits and heads into 2011 at +9. Vos was in danger of an off year, beginning 2010 with very uncharacteristic rounds of 88 and 85 on the A-ga-ming Sundance course. He rebounded nicely shooting the lowest round of the week--a 75--at Belvedere and finished with a more typical 83 on the Sundance course in Saturday singles. Like Vos, VanZee is solid as a rock. Since 2005 his index has never been above +11, achieving a low of +7 in 2006 after spectacular golf at Treetops in 2005 where he posted two sub-80 rounds.

Interestingly, almost everyone's indexes went down heading into 2011. This is possibly explained by the fact that the tournament spent two consecutive years at the same course (A-ga-ming) and played no less than six rounds on Sundance, allowing players to really get to know the course.

Movers and shakers from last year include Bob Warners and Jack Vos. Warners continues to astound everyone with his retooled swing and has sent his index plummeting from +21 in 2008 to +15 after 2010 and that from blue tees (he previously played from white tees). Sadly, Bob Warners will not be in the 2011 field. Jack Vos too, seems to have found his comfort zone, moving up tees and shooting strong scores of 89, 86, 94, and 86 to send his index falling from +17 to +13 heading into 2011. In two years Jack has fallen from +20 to +13. Way to go Jack.

Indexes are below. Tees indicate tee played in 2010 tournament to achieve current handicap index. Jim Baker and Jeff Stuk's handicaps are estimate as are the tees from which they will play.

Name, Tee, Index
Jim Baker, white, 14
Chris Grek, white, 13
John Mulder, white, 14
Mark Rice, blue, 8
Rodger Rice, white, 21
Jeff Stuk, white, 17
Dan VanderWal, black, 11
Kyle VanderWal, blue, 7
Donovan VanZee, blue, 9
Jack Vos, gold, 13
Jon Vos, blue, 9
Jim Warners, blue 13

In related news, the tournament committee announced today the tournament play stroke differentials between tee boxes at both Cedar River and The Legend:

Cedar River
Black-Blue: 461 yards, +/- 4 strokes
Blue-White: 565 yards, +/- 5 strokes

The Legend
Black-Blue: 495 yards, +/- 5 strokes
Blue-White: 468 yards, +/-4 strokes

New Tee Box Policy

Bellaire, MI--After months of deliberation, dialogue with players, and discussion, the tournament committee announced today new requirements and guidelines regarding the selection of tees to be played by participants in the 2011 James E. Vos Memorial Invitational.

Participants will be asked and expected to declare each evening the tees the expect to play the next day. It will be strongly encouraged for participants to declare at Wednesday evening's opening ceremonies the tees they expect to play for the duration of the tournament. Players will be encouraged to play from the same set of tees the entire week. Exceptions will be made in cases where health or other extenuating circumstances make it very difficult for a player to play the next day from previously declared tees. A case in point will be Dan VanderWal who, after March hip surgery, will be playing his first rounds of the year on a still healing new hip. He has already declared he will play from the white tees--giving his still tender hip a rest. How his hip responds and how far he will hit the ball is still largely unknown.

With the new requirements comes a change in policy regarding strokes given or taken away by moving tees. Previous methodology allocated 200 yard to be equal to approximately 1 stroke. A change from blue tees to white tees of 400 yards, for example, would be a handicap change of +/- two strokes.

While a player may, in fact, take one stroke to hit a ball 200 yards, the tournament committee also recognizes 400 yards constitutes a par 4 hole on most golf courses. The new policy roughly translates into one stroke for every 100 yards and four strokes for 400 yards. The specific stroke allocation between tees for the Shanty Creek courses will be announced when handicaps are announced. That announcement is expected later today.

The selection of tees and the corresponding stroke allocations have been the subject of spirited debate for years among the tournaments participants. Intended to encourage participants to play from the tees from which they get the most enjoyment, and to give some golfers who's game is "between tees" the opportunity to move during the week depending on each courses length, the previous system allowed players to switch anytime before a round, requiring they either give up or receive additional strokes, depending on whether they move up or move back a set of tees.

Despite its intent, it received criticism for making it too easy for players to move up or back, and it created the opportunity for players to more easily switch during a tournament--sometimes right before a match--depending on the course length and on which tees gave them the greatest stroke advantage during a match. In some cases, a player could move up tees, gain 400-500 yards and only give up 2 strokes in their handicap.

The new system is on a trial basis and the committee welcomes comment and dialogue by participants of the 2011 tournament. As always, the goal is for the spirit of the game and the values the tournament's namesake embraced to remain: friendship, honor, and love of the game.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Wednesday, June 8 Travel Plans Set

Bellaire, MI--Golf and travel plans for Wednesday, June 8 are set.
By my count nine of the twelve participants in this year's tournament will be headed north for tournament pre-play. Sadly, three of our members will be suffering downstate until after work on Wednesday before venturing to Shanty Creek Resort. Here are the current Wednesday plans as received by the tournament committee. Seven participants in the 2011 James E. Vos Memorial Invitational will be readying their skills Wednesday, all day at Lochenheath Golf Club in Williamsburg, MI, playing thirty-six holes.


Dan VanderWal
Kyle VanderWal
Chris Grek
John Mulder
Jon Vos
Rodg Rice
Mark Rice


Two other participants will join them for the afternoon round at Lochenheath:


Don VanZee
Jim Baker


Lochenheath is a wonderful "rising from the ashes" story of golf in Michigan. Designed by Steve Smyers and opened in 2001, the course caught the tail end of Michigan's golf boom. Striving to become a high end private course and located on the shores of Grand Traverse Bay and in the shadow of Grand Traverse Resort, the course received rave reviews when it opened but never found its niche, or enough equity members to achieve its private club status. The bank seized the property in 2007 and closed the course in 2009. That's when a handful of homeowners surrounding the course stepped up and stepped in and worked, quite literally with their bare hands to not the let course go under. The lovingly, painstakingly spent countless hours pulling weeds, mowing, convincing the electric company to allow them to keep the sprinklers on, and finding equity partners.


The course is back, and under new management. They've hired Mike Husby to serve as general manager. Mike is well-known in Michigan golf circles. He most recently served in the same capacity at Candlestone Golf Club in Belding, MI, overseeing a complete overhaul of that well-known but tired property, redoing all the bunkers, adding needed length and tee boxes, and improving the greens.


I asked Mike if he would answer a few questions for me for this report but I have not heard anything as of this writing.


For the complete reclamation story on Lochenheath, go to http://www.mgolf.net/features/Reclaim.html


For more information on Lochenheath and to see more photos, visit http://www.lochenheath.com/index.html

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Course Memorable



Shanty Creek Courses Play Historic and Memorable Role in Tournament's 24-Year History

Bellaire, MI--In its twenty-four year history the tournament committee has selected Shanty Creek Resorts and its sister courses only twice to host the James E. Vos Memorial Invitational. Both have played significant roles in tournament lore and history.

Part luck, part budget, part ignorance all came together to send the inaugural tournament to Shanty Creek in 1988. The foursome of Jack Vos, Thom Anema, Mark Rice, and tournament namesake, James E. Vos, decided to head north for a few days of golf. All four loved the game and were playing quite regularly, but none had ventured farther north for golf than Candlestone Golf Club in Belding.

The northern Michigan golf landscape was just beginning, but rapidly changing. In addition to long standing traditional classics like The Heather (circa 1972), Wilderness Valley (circa 1974) and Schuss Mt. (circa 1970), a handful of stun
ning new courses with curious names by big-name architects opened in the mid-1980's signaling a new era of golf. The Bear (1985), Treetops (1986) and The Legend (1986) were man-size courses built for the modern era. It was these courses that called these four friends north.

In mid-May 1988, what is now the James E. Vos Memorial Invitational began with these four friends making phone calls (no email then), reading brochures (no websites then), and selecting three courses to play over two days. They started at Wilderness Valley near Gaylord on a Friday morning, finished and drove to Bellaire where they played what is now known as the Summit course at Shanty Creek Resort. As has been reported before, it was that evening, watching the sunset over Lake Bellaire, enjoying a well-earned beer, and anticipating tomorrow's round at Schuss Mt. they knew a buddies golf trip was something special, something that must be both preserved and shared with others. The golf trip was born.


For entirely different but equally memorable reasons, the 2001 tournament at Shanty Creek Resorts will never be forgotten to those who attended.

By this time the tournament had grown in size and sophistication. The tournament now stretched over four days, 36-holes a day. The 2001 tournament had reached its highest historical number of participants. Twenty-four players participated in the 2001 tournament--a record to this day. The 2001 tournament also moved from its historical early June date to three weeks earlier--a before Memorial Day, mid-May date that would come back and bite it in Titanic-sized proportions.

Thursday's 36-holes started off normal enough. Played on a bright, warm, sunny northern Michigan May day at beautiful, newly opened Cedar River, everything seemed grand. Jon Vos' morning 79 scorched the course and earned medalist honors, closely followed by Dave Tanis' 81. Thom Anema earned the turnaround award shooting 90 in the morning followed by an 80 in the afternoon round on the same course--the low round of the afternoon, nipping Jon Vos' 81 by 2 strokes.

Thursday evening's dinner was festive, fun, and hopeful.... They had no idea what was coming.

Rain.

And not just any rain. The kind of Michigan May rain that rotates around a low pressure system and just sits and spins. It was as if the Low was stuck over Bellaire. The mood was somber Friday morning as the tournament committee wondered what to do. To wait it out would be to surely lose the morning round at minimum. Ever hopeful, and perhaps influenced by the likes of Tanis' and VanderWal's, the committee commenced play, with players donning or purchasing every bit of waterproof raingear, headgear, dry gloves they could find and afford.

It was a soggy affair. Not generally cold, but the kind of steady rain that slows play, frustrates the dickens out of you as you constantly clean grips, and eventually seeps into your bones.

Scores soared.

Where Thursday afternoon's Cedar River rounds averaged 88 with thirteen players shooting scores below 90, scores at The Legend ballooned to an average of 94 with only nine players shooting below 90 and most of those in the high 80s. With few exceptions, nearly every player's score went up, the notable exception being Thom Anema who somehow managed to shoot the morning's low round of 80. Remarkable golf given the conditions.

Friday afternoon scrambles were no better. The rain poured and the players slogged through a second soggy, wet, and colder afternoon round of scrambles. Wet as water rats, all were glad to be through with Friday's tournament play, ready for warmth, dry clothes, a good meal, and hope for what must be a better day tomorrow. It certainly couldn't be worse....

It was.

Saturday morning singles were played at the Shanty Creek sister course, The Chief. Located just across the street from Shanty Creek, the two twelve man teams made their way across M88 for the traditional 7:00am Saturday singles with clouds, no rain, and temps not yet out of the 40's. At least there was no rain...that is until the groups teed off. By hole #3 a light drizzle had started. By the 4th hole it had turned into a steady rain. By the 7th hole it was a downpour and the temperature was dropping. Miserable as they were, no one blinked, that is, until the 10th hole. Cold, miserable, and fed up, Steve Spoelhof, down 1 to Mark Rice in singles asked Mark if he wanted to quit and call the match a draw. The offer was not accepted and they played on. The two teed off on #10 and moved to hit their approach shots when the senior Spoelhof, John, drove up in his cart having given up on his match, and told son Steve they were done. Who could blame them? Two days of rain had taken its toll on everyone. And with that, regrettably, the Spoelhof family had played its last (to date) James E. Vos Invitational tournament. The tournament committee hopes they will return in 2012 for the 25th anniversary.

Despite the news that three matches had quit, forfeiting their points, the real news was those who played on. In what has been the worst conditions ever for this tournament, amazingly, over half the matches played on in miserable, soggy, cold conditions. Names like Vos, Anema, VanZee, Vandenberge, VanderWal, Tanis, and Warners deserve MVP status for continuing in such horrific conditions.

The best and most memorable of them all was the last match of the tournament pitting Jon Vos against Dave Tanis. As has been reported previously, these two titans never blinked. Dripping wet, shivering, they never once thought to quit. In the rain and cold they matched each other shot for shot to the last. In the end, on the 18th green, the match all square and each facing a slogging 8-footer to save par and a half, the two looked at each other and knew conceding the putts for a 1/2 was the right thing to do. Concede they did and the legend that is this match was birthed.

Scorecards from the singles match have never been found and the results of the day's singles matches at the Chief have never been recorded--the only matches ever played in the history of the tournament to not have been recorded. Needless to say, the tournament was moved back to its traditional early June date the very next year from which it has yet to be moved. The tournament has never returned to The Chief.

Monday, May 16, 2011

2011 Rooming List Announced

Bellaire, MI--The tournament committee today announced the tournament's rooming list. Players will be staying four to a condo in Schuss Village along the beautiful 18th hole of the Schuss Mt. golf course at at the base of Schuss Mt.


Unit 1
Mark Rice
Rodg Rice
Jack Vos
Jeff Stuk

Unit 2
Don Van Zee
Jim Baker
Jon Vos
Jim Warners

Unit 3
Chris Grek
John Mulder
Dan VanderWal
Kyle VanderWal

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Fairway to Heaven



Kewadin, MI--It was one for the ages.... In what will almost surely go down as one of the most memorable James E. Vos Memorial tournaments in history, the Fairway Finders scratched, clawed, and ground their way back from an almost insurmountable deficit, winning seven of eight possible points in Saturday singles to win the 2010 tournament 13-11. This one was a classic filled with every imaginable subplot: young vs. old, old rivals paired against one another yet again, the Clash of the Titans 2010 edition, VanderWal vs. VanderWal Killer--not just once, but twice, a first-time ever rookie MVP, and even some controversy. In the end the team of (pictured l. to r.) Mark Rice, Chris Grek, Kyle VanderWal, Jack Vos, Rodg Rice, Jon Vos, and Ken Terpstra will go down as the 2010 James E. Vos, Sr. Memorial Tournament winners and current holders of the coveted "Senior" Cup.

Thursday, June 10

In both 2009 and 2010 Thursday has proved to be a pivotal day--perhaps a more important day than the contestants consider it to be. With four matches (and thus, four possible points) in play Thursday morning and four in the afternoon, any team able to win 3/4's of those matches has a considerable lead, and that's exactly what the Recover shots pulled off.

Thursday morning's 2-man match play format was again played on the beautiful Sundance course at A-ga-ming Resort. Nerves were nowhere in sight on this morning as most every contestant had seen this track multiple times during the 2009 tournament.
The matches opened with Recovery Shots' Jeff Tanis and John Mulder squaring off against Rodg Rice and tournament rookie John Topliff. This was Tanis' first tournament in three years. If he or rookie Topliff were nervous it didn't show as both shot strong 42's in the morning front nine. This one was a seesaw affiar and a foreshadowing of how most matches would go the entire weekend. Topliff/Rice quickly jumped out to a 2 up lead through three holes with Topliff going par-birdie-par. Rookie nothing! But the match was far from over as each team showed steady nerves, never letting either team get more than +2. A net birdie by Rice on the par 4 5th brought his team again to +2 but steady play by Tanis/Mulder bent, but never broke. An incredible birdie by Topliff on the difficult par 3 8th brought his team for the third time on the front 9 alone to +2 for the match. Alas, it would be their biggest lead. The tide changed as the back 9 began and Mulder/Tanis got new life, each parring holes 10 and 11 to bring the match to level. The battle was drawn and blood was shed on every hole but one going forward. In the end, poor play by Topliff/Rice on holes 15 and 16 did them in with Tanis/Mulder winning them both with bogeys(!). While not dead, these crucial points put Tanis/Mulder up 1 going into 18 where they played steady with bogeys and a 2 up win.

In what would be Kyle VanderWal's only loss, paired with Ken Terpstra the Fairway Finder team took on the dangerous Bob Warners and steely veteran, Dave Tanis. The combination of Warner's revamped swing and Tanis' insanely frustrating consistency proved too much for Terpstra and "Junior." Up 1 through 4 and feeling like an even match, the thunder struck as Warner's birdied or net birdie holes the next three holes and team Warners/Tanis never looked back, ultimately winning 4&3.

On paper match 3 must have looked like a misprint. Fairway Finders' Mark Rice and Chris Grek were seriously overmatched against the Recovery Shots' Dan "Bomb and Gouge" VanderWal--playing from the way back black tees--and Don "Dynomite" Van Zee. Ah, but that's why they play the game. Despite the deep handicap differential, Rice knew they had a chance because he knew he had a secret weapon: Grek. There is a wonderful, baffling, unknown, mystique that surrounds Grek when he plays VanderWal. His nickname, VanderWal Killer, is steeped in tournament lore going back more than a decade. Whether singles or match play, something arises in Grek when he faces VanderWal and the numbers speak for themselves. In ten years Grek sports a 7-1 record in head to head competition and this match was no different. It was a battle the entire way. Blood was drawn on no less than twelve holes. Despite their longstanding friendship among the four, there was no love lost in this match. In the end, it was the VanderWal Killer's clutch net birdie on the par 5 14th that put the Fairway Finders ahead for good and they would go on to win 2&1 thereby avoiding the difficult 18th. It would be the Fairway Finders only victory in the morning matches.

The final morning match would go down the 17th hole as well. Fairway Finders' brother's Vos (Jack and Jon) went up against Brian VanHall and Jim Warners. On this day, blood was not thicker than water. Another tough match, it was the Shots' Warners/VanHall going dormie with Warner's net par on 15. They then lost the par 5 16th, but closed the deal with pars on 17 to win 2&1.

The afternoon stroke play matches played on the Sundance course were more of the same. Little did the Fairway Finders know the hole they would be in by nightfall. Similar to match play, holes are won by which team has the lowest net individual score, but the strokes count and matter creating potentially +2 or +3 swings on any given hole. Nonetheless, it was the Recovery Shots who would again rise to the occasion and win 3 of 4 possible points.

The match of the afternoon was Junior VanderWal's coming out party. Paired with John Topliff and against his "old man," who was paired with Jim Warners, the younger VW clearly had something to prove, as did his father. Hard fought the entire way it was Junior's stellar 80 vs. Dan's unbelievable 90 that won the day, and +2 victory over Dan and Jim Warners. Even with the win, the Fairway Finders were in a huge hole. In what looked like a repeat of last year's victory, the Recovery Shots had a commanding lead.

Recovery Shots 6
Fairway Finders 2

Friday, June 11

Played at the glorious, Belvedere Golf Club, the Fairway Finders started Friday morning's match play in an all too familiar position. Down four points, there was still plenty of time left, but Friday is moving day in this tournament and the Finders had to do just that--move. Perhaps trying to get something going they sent out the formidable team of Kyle VanderWal and Jon Vos against the Recovery Shots Bob Warners and tournament photographer, John Mulder. They delivered, winning the first hole and never looking back, winning 4 & 3 on the strength of Jon Vos' impressive 75--the low round of the tournament. Next, with equal hope came the Finders Chris Grek and John Topliff vs. the Shots Danny "Bomb&Gouge" VanderWal and Dave Tanis. Could the VanderWal Killer strike again? Sort of. This hard fought match never strayed from more than all squre or 1-up and ended with both teams carding a 1/2 point. VanderWal avenged the previous day's 90, shooting 78.

But the match of the morning, and one that will go do down in tournament lore as one of those you don't forget, was between the Fairway Finders, Jack Vos and Mark Rice vs. the Recovery Shots Jim Warners and Don Van Zee. Friends off the course, all four of these gentlemen love to compete and clearly had something to prove. Tension was thick before anyone teed off as some pointed conversations occurred regarding selected tee boxes and pace of play. It grew thicker on #1 green as a birdie putt was conceded by Rice, but not accepted by Van Zee, causing Van Zee to miss the putt. Further rules challenges spilled over on hole #5 and the tone of the match was set. Rice/Vos jumped out to an early 2-up lead thanks to Vos' steely play and some miscues by Van Zee/Warners. It would stay that way through hole #7. Van Zee/Warners would get one back as they made the turn and another on the par 5 10th to draw the match to even.

Game on. The battle was engaged.

All square through hole #12, the Shots drew blood again on Van Zee's working man's par on #13. They would give it back on the deceptively short par 3, 14th. Playing only 157 yards to a deep green, this little hole docile enough but plays uphill and into a slight breeze, hidden by the trees surrounding the green. Here Rice/Vos would benefit from hitting second. Both Warners and Van Zee pulled short irons and came up short of the green giving Rice/Vos a clear clue to club up. Both went back to their bags to get "more club." Both tee shots found the green resulting in pars. When neither Warners nor Van Zee managed to get up and down, the match was all square once again.

The holes were running out.

Rice's 8-foot birdie putt on the the short par 5 15th followed by Vos' net par on the uphill par 4 16th and suddenly the Fairway Finders, almost miraculously, found themselves dormie: 2-up with 2 to play. A par on the 165-yard uphill par 3 17th would almost assure them of a 2&1 victory. So despondent on 17 tee was Warners that he was heard to mutter, "Well, I guess our goose is cooked."

The choke hold was on....

Rice went first, depositing his 6-iron to a front pin on the green but 30 feet right and deep. Vos too, put his tee shot on and deep. Warners followed, missing the green short left. Van Zee hit a clutch iron to 20 feet. A two putt from either Rice or Vos and this match was over, but it wasn't....

To this day no one is sure what caused it.

Was it Warner's hopelessness on 17 tee? Was it Van Zee's frustration at watching his mammoth drive's eclipsed hole after hole by his brother-in-law playing from the forward tee boxes? No one knows, but something clicked, first in Van Zee and then in Warners. Rice knew it. Before Van Zee even squared to putt, he knew, and he watched as Van Zee calmly stroke the putt that never left its intended line until it fell in the bottom of the jar. Incredible. Recovery Shots 1-down with one to play...and all the mo with the difficult #2 handicap long par 4 18th to go.

On the 18th tee, anger, frustration, and andrenaline all mounted in Van Zee as addressed his tee shot, reared back and followed through in his best Gary Player walk through impression as only he can do, absolutely pummeling his drive. Warners followed in like fashion causing Rice and Vos to nervously hit mediocre drives. This time, it was Warners turn to step up. Both Rice and Warners (both getting strokes on this hole) came up short on their approach. Nerves got to Rice again and he badly fumbled his chip shot, leaving him a twisting 12-footer for par. What was Warners thinking at this moment? Not known for his short game prowess, an up and down would likely tie the match. Could he do it?

Do it he did. His chip, while not great, was serviceable, leaving him a slippery 5-footer. Rice missed, Warners made and what followed will forever be remembered (thanks to John Mulder's quick shutter-finger) as "The Leap." Wow! What a match.



The traditional Friday afternoon 2-man stroke play scramble event continued last year's handicaping system. Prior to 2009 scramble pairings have pitted low handicap players on both teams against each other. Mid-handicaper and higher handicapers the same. No equitable strokes given, the teams square off head-to-head, even up. Handicaping a scramble format is a delicate affair which is why it's never been attempted before 2009. The downside of not handicaping is the same players always play the same players in a scramble format in order to keep both sides even. A new scramble format was attempted in 2009 involving weighted handicaps, and the teams were selected by lot. "Lower handicap" teams started "in the hole" to the higher handicap team and were forced to work their way out of the deficit, even the match, and pull ahead by the time the 18-hole match ended. Of the four matches, one team started out -6, another -5, a third -4 and a fourth level. In the end the new format seemed to work, or at least, be a "neutral." One team lost by one stroke, another by 2 strokes, and a third by 4. This format always seems to produce one blowout and this year was no exception with one team winning by a whopping 9 strokes.

By Friday's end and leading up to Saturday singles, the Fairway Finders had made no progress, splitting both Friday's morning and afternoon matches, and remaining in a deep hole.

Recover Shots 10
Fairway Finders 6

Saturday, June 12

The situation was desperate for the Fairway Finders. At no time in the tournaments 23 years had any team come back from a 4-point deficit headed into Saturday singles. Holding the tie breaker, the Recovery Shots needed to win only two of Saturday's eight matches to retain the Cup. The Fairway Finders needed 6 1/2 points out of a possible 8--almost impossible.

To make matters worse, one of team Fairway Finders had to leave Friday night for a family emergency leaving one of the other Finders having to play singles matches against two other Recovery Shots. That person was Kyle VanderWal, but the odds were against him. Every other time this has happened, the matches have split. A split match the first round of the day would have most assuredly doomed the Finders' chances. Kyle played a nearly flawless round, shooting 80 and closing out BOTH Brian VanHall and Jim Warners 5&4. Maybe, just maybe the Fairway Finders had a chance.

Recovery Shots 10
Fairway Finders 8

Matches 3 & 4 featured the Fairway Finders Rodg Rice square off against John Mulder, and Jack Vos against Bob Warners. Blood flowed in Rice/Mulder match. How each could stand the emotional swings no one knows. While Mulder led most of the way, holes were won or lost on no less than 14 holes. Mulder was up by as many as 4 through 8 holes but Rice battled back actually drawing the match to all square on the par 5 16th. Mulder would prevail winning 17 & 18 for a 2-up win. The Vos/Warners match was just as evenly contested with blood drawn on no less than 13 holes. Vos would shoot his best round of the week, an 86, which would prove to be too much for Warners, winning 2&1.

Recovery Shots 11
Fairway Finders 9

With four matches left the Fairway Finders situation was more desperate than ever, needed three wins and a tie--points from every match--in order to win. They would win them all.

In what might have been the most anticipated match of Saturday singles, Fairway Finders Jon Vos drew his old rival, Recovery Shots Dave Tanis in what was anticipated to be Clash of the Titans V2. These two have faced each before in one of the most memorable JEV Memorial tournament matches. In 2001, played in a bitter cold, pouring rain even ducks wouldn't be caught in, these two matched each other shot for shot in a singles match for the ages at The Chief. After 18 holes with each facing a soggy, uncertain 6-footer for pars to halve the match, they looked each other square in the eye and knew conceding each other's putt was the right thing to do. Would this time be any different? Alas, it would. Perhaps fatigued from gruelling tournament play, the normally solid Tanis faded early in this one, shooting 45 on the front nine on his way to a 90, losing 4&3 to Vos.

Match 6 was another doozy. Fellow Grand Havenites Ken Terpstra (Fairway Finders) and Donovan "Dynomite" Van Zee (Recovery Shots) clawed, scratched, punched each other, neither giving an inch and all square almost the entire round with only the occassional player gaining a hole advantage. Down the stretch it was Terpstra's stellar play on the back nine's hardest holes that won the day. Terpstra net-birdied the #5 and #3 handicap holes--both key victories--the first bringing the match to all square; the second giving Terpstra a +1 advantage with three holes to play. He would win, closing out Van Zee on 17, 2&1.

Could it be? Could the improbable come back actually be in reach?

Recovery Shots 11
Fairway Finders 11

For all the mystique around Chris Grek's (Fairway Finders) seeming ability to tame the mighty Dan VanderWal (Recovery Shots), what's lost is how often these two have played against each other, and how improbable the fact that they get paired against each other. Matches are determined the night before with names being drawn from a hat. Grek's chances of drawing VanderWal in Saturday singles were slim, but draw him he did. Coincidence? Think again. And again, improbably, impossibly, the Vander Wal Killer struck gold. Four up through 10, Grek quickly won holes 11 and 12 and the match was over with a stunning 6&5 win over Bomb & Gouge. To be fair, this was not VanderWal's best day. Clearly hurting with physical ailments, Dan shot another uncharacteristically poor round of 89. Nonetheless, the mystique goes on....

Needing at least a tie in the last match, Fairway Finders Mark Rice faced Jeff Tanis in an ongoing rivalry. Perhaps stunned by Rice's par-birdie-birdie-par start, Tanis lost the first four holes to go 4-down and would never fully recover. Always the competitor, Tanis made it very close, however, clawing his way to just 2-down through 15 and with Rice stumbling, but the early lead was too much. Rice would close it out with a par on 17.

No one would have guessed, but unbelievably they had done it. With a combination of luck and good play, the Fairway Finders had staged the never-before comeback, winning seven of eight matches on the last day to win the James E. Vos Memorial Trophy. It was one for the ages.

Fairway Finders 13
Recovery Shots 11

Congratulations to the 2010 James E. Vos Memorial Tournament Champions: Ken Terpstra, Jon Vos, Chris Grek, Jack Vos, John Topliff, Kyle VanderWal, Rodg Rice, and Mark Rice.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Stoked Saver


Bellaire, MI--The James E. Vos Memorial Invitational tournament committee confirmed today Kyle VanderWal will, in fact, return in 2011 to defend his 2010 "Stroke Saver" MVP title. The announcement comes on the heels of disappointing news that rookie, Sam Vos, has withdrawn from this year's tournament.

The junior VanderWal stunned the tournament last year with stellar play, dropping just one early match and going on to a 5-1 record ending with a "single-double" in Saturday singles--a feat never before accomplished.

Kyle's first round loss seems so unlikely now. The seemingly perfect pairing with the always dangerous, highly competitive, Ken Terpstra got off to a fast start against opponents Bob Warners and Dave Tanis, going 1-up on the first hole. But the match was on after that with Warners either birdieing or net birdieing five consecutive holes on the front nine for a 42 and a 3-up lead. Terpstra and VanderWal would never recover with Kyle shooting his highest round of the weekend: an 83.

It was all-Kyle-all-the-time after that.

Paired with John Topliff in Thursday afternoon stroke play they defeated Jim Warners and his dad, "Gimpy" VanderWal +2--a win that surely put a smile on the younger VanderWal's face. Friday morning the young VanderWal, paired with Jon Vos, took his revenge on Bob Warners, defeating Bob and partner John Mulder 4&3. Friday afternoon's scramble match, paired with Chris Grek and against Jim Warners and John Mulder, was nothing short of a pummeling. Warners and Mulder played admirably but were simply overmatched on this day losing by a whopping 9 strokes, a match they would likely just as soon forget.

But it was Saturday's play that cemented the MVP trophy. While the two Fairway Finders and Recovery Shots teams were evenly matched 8 on 8 heading into the tournament, John Topliff had to unexpectedly leave Friday night due to a family emergency leaving the Fairway Finders one man down going into Saturday singles. Tournament rules allow the team which is down one player to send a player of their choosing out in singles match play to face two opposing team members, effectively playing two separate singles matches. The likely choice was Kyle who willingly accepted the challenge and drew Jim Warners and Brian VanHall as his two singles opponents.

It's a heavy load to bear and tournament history has shown the likely outcome is a split. The tournament has seen this awkward three-way singles pairing on three previous occasions and every time it has ended in a split with each team winning one and losing one.

But this was no ordinary tournament and no ordinary rookie. Perhaps playing his steadiest round of the tournament Kyle fired an 8-over score of 80, defeating both Warners and VanHall 5&4. Dormie by hole 13, he closed them out with par on the 14th hole. Though no birdies on the card, it was his stellar play, especially on the return nine (and perhaps the erratic play of VanHall and Warners) that earned him the rare "single-double" and the coveted Stroke Saver MVP.

Kyle is surely a marked man as he enters the 2011 tournament. He is not only the reigning MVP but has the unfortunate distinction of being yet another VanderWal to win the Stroke Saver trophy. The VanderWal family has owned the MVP distinction two year's running, the senior VanderWal winning in 2009. While other father-son combos have held the MVP honor, it has never happened in consecutive years until last year.

In related news, Kyle replaces Sam Vos who unexpectedly withdrew from the 2011 tournament due to other golf commitments. Vos, who plays on the West Michigan Christian High School golf team, will likely be playing with his team in Michigan high school regionals at that time.

While saddened by Vos' withdrawal, the committee wishes Sam well and anticipates his entry into the 25th anniversary tournament in 2012.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Field Set for 2011 Tourney

Bellaire, MI--Tournament directors today announced the field is set for the 2011 James E. Vos Memorial Invitational to be played at Shanty Creek Resort. Twelve participants will compete this year, six of whom will walk away with the coveted tournament prize--the Senior Cup--so named not for the age of the participants but for the tournament's founder and namesake: James E. "Senior" Vos.

The field was very much in question this year with many long time participants having conflicts or simply deciding to take a year off. In February the tournament directors trimmed the field maximum from 16 to 12 participants due to lack of interest and even considered canceling the 2011 tournament. Stuck at nine participants for weeks, the tournament field stopped accepting applications on April 12 when tournament co-founder and longtime participant, Jack Vos, announced his return for a twenty-fourth consecutive year, bringing with him rookies Dr. Jeffrey Stuk, and the young Samuel Vos--grandson of the tournament's namesake--bringing the total participants to twelve.

Participants for the 2011 James E. Vos Memorial Invitational will include nine veterans and three rookies (Jim Baker, Jeff Stuk, Sam Vos), although half of Dan VanderWal's hip will also be a rookie:

Jim Baker
Chris Grek
John Mulder
Mark Rice
Rodger Rice
Jeffrey Stuk
Jack Vos
Jon Vos
Samuel Vos
Dan "Gimpy" VanderWal
Donovan VanZee
Jim Warners

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Sunday, January 30, 2011

2011 James E. Vos Memorial Tournament Invitations Announced


Byron Center, MI - January 31, 2011

The James E. Vos Memorial Tournament Committee announced today invitations have been sent out for its 2011 tournament scheduled for June 8-11 at Shanty Creek Resort in Bellaire, MI.

Overlooking beautiful Lake Bellaire, Shanty Creek hosts the 24th annual event for its third time. The resort holds special significance in the tournament's history. Its Schuss Mt. and Shanty Creek courses hosted the inaugural event held in 1988, and it was sitting on the balcony of the resort, enjoying the sunset when the inklings of an annual tournament first took root among the four founding players including James E. Vos, the tournament's namesake.
The tournament returned to Shanty Creek thirteen years later in 2001 and hosted one of the most memorable tournaments in the invitational's history. Played in May instead of the traditional June time slot, the tournament experienced some of the foulest weather ever. Friday's 36 holes were played on The Legend course in a steady, cold rain. Amazingly, no one quit or gave up. The player's woke up Saturday morning to near freezing temps. After a long frost delay, everyone teed it up, ready to make the most of. By the second hole, the skies opened up and another all-day deluge let loose. Controversy and courage ensued as some players simply could not take another day living like river rats. Others, most notably Jon Vos vs. Dave Tanis battled it out to the bitter end, each conceding lengthy putts at the 18th for a half. That day and specifically that round forever lives in the infamy of the James E. Vos Memorial Golf Invitational. A related story about the 2001 tournament will be posted at a later date.
Excitement is already building for the 2011 tournament. Receiving invitations this week are:
Mark Rice (tournament co-chair)
Jack Vos (tournament co-chair)
Jon Vos
Jim Vos
Thom Anema
Dick Anema
Rodger Rice
Jeff Tanis
Dave Tanis
Donovan VanZee
Dirk VanZee
Bob Warners
Jim Warners
Ken Terpstra
Joel Neiwenhuis
Doug Gulker
Tony Vroon
Mark Vandenberge
Phil Vandenberge
Brian VanHall
Steve Elenbaas
Dan Vanderwal
Kyle Vanderwal
Chris Grek
John Mulder
John Topliff

A deposit of $100 is required to reserve a spot in the field of 16 by the end of March, 2010. Deposit checks should be made out to Mark Rice and mailed to:

2539 Marfield Dr. SW
Byron Center, MI 49315

Thursday, January 27, 2011

2011 Tournament Venue Announced

January 27, 2011 - The James E. Vos Invitational Tournament Committee is pleased to announce the 2011 tournament will be contested on Shanty Creek Resorts' Legends and Cedar River Courses (http://www.shantycreek.com/). Site of the innaugural 1988 tournament and the 2001 tournament--one of the most memorable tournaments in the James E. Vos Invitational history--the resort is home to four different courses, of which the Legend and Cedar River courses are considered the best. The Arnold Palmer/Ed Seay-designed Legend, opened for play in 1986 just as the golf boom was hitting northern Michigan. It has stood the test of time and is considered by some tournament contestants to be one of their top 5 courses in Michigan. From its jaw-dropping tee shot on hole #1 the course rarely lets up as it winds its way through valleys, up bluffs, and alongside streams. Rarely will you see another golfer. The newer, Tom Weiskopf-designed Cedar River, was an instant favorite when it opened for play in 1991. Its broad-shouldered fairways are more forgiving than its sister Legend course, but the course is no less stunning and features plenty of gut-check holes including the cut-as-much-as-you-dare 8th, and the deliciously dangerous short par 4 13th--a Weiskopf design trademark.

Whatever your favorite, the tournament's return to Shanty Creek promises two great venues and a lot of fun.

Invitations and further details for the 24rd annual tournament will be delivered in the coming weeks. This year's tournament will be limited to sixteen competitors.