PLAY GOLF! 9 Holes for $9, 18 Holes for $18 at CBAY!

Daily Deals at CBAY can’t be beat!

If you book online you’ll see that every morning (including weekends) from 10:00 – 10:30 AM, you can play 9 Holes for $9 and 18 Holes for just $18! But you better act fast. Once they’re booked for the day they’re gone! Remember that these tee times must be booked online to receive the promotional rate!

Price doesn’t include cart fees, but you can’t beat the green fee price! Prepayment online is required and this price can’t be combined with other promotions or discounts.

Our Best Rate is online this weekend! Take $10+ OFF your round!

#PLAYGOLF

Take $5 OFF a 9 hole round &

 $10 OFF an 18 hole round if you BOOK ONLINE 

Our cheapest rates will be booked online this weekend through July 29th! See these specials for yourself. And remember, you must book online to receive the discount price.

The 13 numbers you need to know from the final round of the British Open

Still looking to make sense of the madness that took place Sunday afternoon at Carnoustie? Here are a few significant digits (metric system, this week) that you’re welcome to borrow the rest of the week.

— Number of bogeys Francesco Molinari made in his final 37 holes, nearly unthinkable given the pitfalls that await during every trip ’round Carnoustie, among the hardest links courses in the world.

— Number of Italian major champions as of 6:53 p.m. in Carnoustie, the moment Molinari officially became the British Open champion.

— Finishing position of Rory McIlroy, who put on a late charge after a rough Sunday start. It was the first major championship runner-up finish of McIlroy’s career

2.5 — Number of years Molinari plans to play until retirement, according to a hilarious list compiled by fellow Tour pro Wesley Bryan.

— Number of top-five finishes in Molinari’s last six starts; wins at the BMW Championship and Quicken Loans National plus runner-up finishes at the John Deere and the Italian Open had him red-hot entering this week.

https://twitter.com/TheOpen/status/1021091883462922241

 

— Players tied for the lead at one point during a rollicking back nine

— Number of different players that held a share of the lead on Sunday.

15 — Number of birdies made by Sam Locke, the 19-year-old Scottish amateur golfer (and professional barista). Only nine players made more birdies than Locke, who earned low am honors but was undone with a back-nine 42 on Sunday and slipped to a share of 75th.

27 — Number of players who finished under par for the week, up from 2007 at Carnoustie (19) and way up from 1999 (0).

30 — Spots that Eddie Pepperell jumped on Sunday after a final-round 67 left him as the early clubhouse leader despite being, as he said, “a little hungover.”

35 — Molinari’s age; he’s the youngest major winner since Sergio Garcia at the 2017 Masters and continues a trend of older British Open winners. Only three Open winners have been 32 or younger since 2007.

50 — Tiger Woods’s projected World Ranking after finishing T6; good enough to qualify for the WGC-Bridgestone in two weeks.

82 — The highest score of Sunday’s final round belonged to Zander Lombard, a relatively unknown South African who fell from the edge of contention to a share of 67th after a 40-42 effort on Sunday. His was the only final-round score in the 80s.

SOURCE:  GOLF

Adult/Junior Tournament this weekend!

Adult/Junior Golf Scramble

Sunday, July 29  |  2 PM

That’s this Sunday!

2 person scramble – one adult and one junior! So bring out your daughter, grandson, niece, mentor, mentee — adult and junior don’t have to be related.

Entry Fee: Only $25

Special Prizes for winning teams!

Register now and spend  a day on the course!

Ready to Register? Questions? Call us at 715) 682-8004.

Take up to $10 OFF your round this week! Book Online!

Take $5 OFF a 9 hole round & up to $10 OFF an 18 hole round if you 

BOOK ONLINE

Our cheapest rates will be booked online this week through July 29th! See these specials for yourself. And remember, you must book online to receive the discount price.

Cannot be combined with twilight pricing or other discounts. 

Questions? Call us at 715) 682-8004.

Save 20% with our Punch Pass!

Playing a lot of golf? GOOD!

Save some money while you’re at it!

Our Punch Passes save you 20% from our daily green fee rates. It’s ten rounds of golf bundled for the price of eight! You can’t beat it.

Firm, fast ‘Car-nasty’ takes center stage

Carnoustie, historically the toughest course in The Open’s rota, could see low scoring this week

 

 

CARNOUSTIE, Scotland – A record heat wave has tee shots at Carnoustie running faster than a caffeinated Usain Bolt.

Players are hitting as little as 7-iron off the tee, and even long-irons are crossing the 300-yard barrier. The toughest course in The Open’s rota is providing a different type of test this week.

“Car-nasty” became notorious in 1999, when lush rough and narrow fairways made the course near-impossible. The course was damp again in 2007. Even with easier conditions, 7 under par was Padraig Harrington’s winning score.

Now players will face a firm and fast Carnoustie on fairways that have been yellowed by a record heat wave in the United Kingdom.

Last month was the second-hottest June on record in the United Kingdom. Motherwell, Scotland, recently hit 91.8 degrees, the highest temperature ever recorded in Scotland.

“I don’t remember the last time we went six weeks without rain,” a British farmer recently told the New York Times. “Only a proper week of full-on British rain can save the situation now.”

That’s not in the forecast this week. Carnoustie has received half its usual rain over the past three months. There have been occasional sprinkles this week, but not enough to alter the conditions. The forecast for the remainder of the week calls for minimal precipitation.

That means the 7,402-yard course, the longest in The Open rota, will play significantly shorter. And the rough that tormented players in 1999 now offers little penalty because it is so dry and brittle. With well-watered greens and breezes that may not blow harder than 20 mph, there is some talk about an unprecedented week of scoring at Carnoustie. No one has finished double-digits under par in seven Opens here.

“When the wind is blowing, it is the toughest golf course in Britain,” said World Golf Hall of Fame member Sir Michael Bonallack. “And when it’s not blowing, it’s probably still the toughest.”

Some are comparing this week to 2006, when Tiger Woods won at Royal Liverpool. He hit driver just once on a course so parched that balls kicked up dust when they hit the turf. He shot 18 under par to beat Chris DiMarco by two shots.

This week, Woods put a new, lower-lofted 2-iron in his bag to send his tee shots scooting down the fairway. There’s one problem, though.

“I haven’t been able to use it that many times … because I’m hitting my other irons so far,” he said. That includes a 333-yard 3-iron on the 18th hole.

That hole used to play as a par-5. Now players who hit driver are left with little more than a pitch shot. Dustin Johnson drove it into the burn fronting the green. The 12-yard-wide hazard crosses the fairway 450 yards from the tee.

Along with the bothersome Barry Burn, which plays an outsized role for such a narrow hazard, it will be imperative for players to avoid Carnoustie’s penal pot bunkers.

“I haven’t seen one yet that … I could actually hit it on the green out of,” Dustin Johnson said.

Carnoustie’s bunkers, among the toughest in the British Isles, are comparable to miniature water hazards because both hand out a one-shot penalty. Some of the vertical faces are 6 feet tall. The bunkers are so small that players are often left with awkward stances, and the ball is so close to the face that it’s impossible to do much more than pitch out.

Johnny Miller lost the 1975 Open here when he needed two shots to get out of a fairway bunker on the 18th hole. He made bogey to fall one short of the playoff won by Tom Watson.

There are, however, a few opportunities for long hitters to blow their tee shots over the traps because the rough is of little concern. On other holes, it is better to lay back short of the bunkers.

“There’s 5,000 different ways … to play these holes out here,” Reed said. The safe play often leaves a more difficult approach shot, though.

“There’s no perfect strategy that eliminates risk,” said Harrington. “It’s very difficult to play short of the bunkers all the time. The beauty of the course is that there are a lot of different ways of playing it, but eventually you’re going to have to grow up and hit the shots.”

Players will certainly have plenty of decisions to make. Carnoustie has just three par-3s, leaving players with 15 tee shots on par-3s and par-4s. They may be hitting wood off the tee of the 248-yard 16th, as well. Jack Nicklaus hit driver into that hole in the 1968 Open.

Choosing a club isn’t the only challenge. Trajectory will have an outsized effect on the distance shots travel.

During Tuesday’s practice round, Reed hit two tee shots with 6-iron on the 16th, which was playing downwind. The “chipped” shot, the one he hit with 70 percent of his strength, rolled 40 yards past the shot he hit with a full swing.

“Trajectory means a lot,” Woods said. He didn’t foresee a lot of opportunities to hit driver because it is so difficult to control a ball that rolls on Carnoustie’s sloping fairways for 60 or more yards. But U.S. Open champion Brooks Koepka said he could hit up to 9 drivers.

“Sometimes we can just take all the bunkers out (of play) by hitting driver,” he said. “There’s no reason not to take advantage of that, especially with the rough being not so thick.”

Source: PGATour.com

Keep your junior golfer in the swing of things with Junior Golf Camps Level 2!

LEVEL 2 JUNIOR GOLF CAMP INFORMATION

(INTERMEDIATE-ADVANCED) SKILL LEVEL

Our Level 2 Junior Golf Camps are offered as a “Graduate Program” after the successful completion of Level 1. Like Level 1, we will be offering a couple of different one-week camps for your junior to participate in. Level 2 sessions go into further detail and therefore are two hours long instead of 90 minutes. Level 2 Camps will cost $225 for the week, with free entry into two of our junior developmental tour events.

Camps give your child an immersion into the game, they are 5 days in length for 120 minutes each day and are based around games, challenges, and learning the skills needed to play the game of golf. Camps are age-specific so we create the appropriate games and coaching to ignite passion as your child sees that golf can be fun and easy to learn. Clubs are provided! All you need to do is drop your child at camp and the rest is up to us. Camps run all summer long.

Level 2 Schedule: Each session will run from (10 AM-Noon)

August 13-18 (August 16=Off) Ages (5-9) (6 max participants)

August 20-24 Ages (10+) (6 max participants)

*Additional Camps/Spots will be made available based on demand

We have two more FREE Level 1 Golf Camps this summer!

LEVEL 1 JUNIOR GOLF CAMP INFORMATION

(BEGINNER-INTERMEDIATE) SKILL LEVEL

Our Level 1 Junior Golf Camps are always offered to youth for Free! This is our way of giving back and allowing juniors easy access to the game. Please note the format change from previous years. We are offering multiple one-week camps in order to accommodate more juniors through a busy summer season.

Camps give your child an immersion into the game, they are 5 days in length for 90 minutes each day and are based around games, challenges, and learning the skills needed to play the game of golf. Camps are age-specific so we create the appropriate games and coaching to ignite passion as your child sees that golf can be fun and easy to learn. Clubs are provided! All you need to do is drop your child at camp and the rest is up to us. Camps run all summer long.

Level 1 Schedule: Each session will run from (10 AM – 11:30 AM)

July 30-August 3 Ages (10+) (16 max participants)

August 6-10 Ages (5-9) (16 max participants)

We have our Junior Golf Tour Event on July 22!

Junior Developmental Tour

For a junior to advance in our hat system (What’s the hat system? Check it out here!) they will play in our Junior Developmental Tour where they play 9 holes with their teammates from weekly sessions on a Sunday afternoon with a parent or grandparent caddying. This gives them the opportunity to compete which unfortunately in the past was not an option for beginning junior golfers. Unlike other sports where you play matches, games, and scrimmages right away (baseball, football etc), golf has been set up that you only play tournaments when you are a “good golfer.” Well, how are you meant to get good if you can’t play tournaments? So this is why we created a junior tour where our players can learn how to play the game with their friends with very little pressure on a course they can succeed with lots of fun and prizes.

Junior Tour Schedule

July 223:00 Shotgun Start

August 19: 3:00 Shotgun Start

September 16: 3:00 Shotgun Start

October 14: 3:00 Shotgun Start