The 27-hole public facility is the second-oldest course in the Raleigh, N.C. area and becomes the first non-private operation in McConnell’s portfolio. Creation of a McConnell Golf Training Center is planned as part of the 10-year lease arrangement.
After purchasing a dozen private golf club properties throughout the Southeast over the past 13 years, Raleigh, N.C.-based McConnell Golf has announced that it will begin its first affiliation with the public golf sector with the addition of Raleigh Golf Association (RGA), a 27-hole public golf facility in south Raleigh, to the McConnell Golf portfolio through a 10-year lease arrangement.
Despite RGA being a public golf facility, John McConnell, Owner and CEO of McConnell Golf, said the latest addition fits the company mold. “Raleigh is a growth area and (RGA) is the second-oldest course in the region and is a classic design,” McConnell said. (RGA was founded in 1929).
McConnell said he is excited about “returning to his roots” through the arrangement with RGA, noting that he grew up on a farm in Virginia playing public golf.
“The main reason that I am doing this RGA deal is that it gives [McConnell Golf] a great opportunity to help grow the game of golf for those who may not be club members or have a regular golf course to play,” McConnell said. “I grew up on a farm and played the public courses and fell in love with golf when I was paying a couple of bucks for green fees.
“I want to offer a place for kids, beginners, seniors and others from all kinds of walks to have a place that helps them enjoy the game,” McConnell added.
RGA is walker-friendly, with minimal distances from green to tee and the facility’s 27 holes — each nine averages less than 3,000 yards from the back tees — offer unique challenges for all levels of player. The facility is equally popular among senior, women and junior golfers, McConnell Golf says, having played host through the years to a variety of corporate, fund-raising, tournament- and league-play events.
“What I really like about RGA is that these 27 holes will not cause you to quit the game, as they are very fun holes and not that challenging — which is the problem with most modern courses,” John McConnell said.
McConnell Golf also plans to establish the first McConnell Golf Training Center at RGA, as a place where the company can offer expert training at very reasonable rates.
“We will offer a great venue for high-school golf as well,” McConnell said. “[The RGA addition] is truly an opportunity for us to give back to this community. I want it to very affordable golf, a fun venue, and fast-paced for those [for whom] time is an issue.”
McConnell said he hopes the RGA addition will help change the perception of public golf around the North Carolina capital city and beyond. “Bottom line, I want to eliminate those same old negatives that people say about golf: too costly and takes too much time,” McConnell said. “This is a game to be enjoyed for a lifetime. The best family times ever can be created playing golf.”
Michael Shoun, McConnell Golf ‘s Vice President of Agronomy, said the company’s general practices and discounts on materials would translate into immediate improvements at RGA.
“We’re excited about [RGA], because I really think that we can take that course and step it up a level compared to what it is today, and give people who are not able to go to the private clubs the chance to play a good, quality public course,” Shoun said. “We’re going to be able to do some things there that they’ve never been able to do.”
In February, Charlotte’s Providence Country Club became the 12th private golf club property in the McConnell Golf portfolio, which now includes a total of 225 private golf holes around the Carolinas and Tennessee.
The company’s collection of clubs in North Carolina includes Raleigh Country Club and TPC at Wakefield Plantation in Raleigh, Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, Old North State Club in New London, Treyburn Country Club in Durham, Brook Valley Country Club in Greenville and The Country Club of Asheville.
In South Carolina, McConnell Golf owns The Reserve Golf Club in Pawleys Island and Musgrove Mill Golf Club in Clinton, and McConnell Golf also manages the Grande Dunes Members Course and Ocean Club in Myrtle Beach. In Knoxville, Tenn., McConnell Golf recently purchased Holston Hills Country Club, becoming the fourth McConnell Golf course designed by Donald Ross. Other courses operated by the company have been designed by such well-known names as Arnold Palmer, Tom Fazio, Pete Dye and Greg Norman.
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