The seed was planted a few years ago when Gary Potter received a request from former CGA executive director Warren Simmons, asking for a pledge for a fundraising event in which Simmons was participating.
“I was kind of curious, and that’s where it started,” Potter recalls.
Now that seed that was inadvertently planted by Simmons is set to bear fruit in Colorado in the form of the Colorado Golf Hall of Fame Classic 100.
On April 7 (or March 31 in the case of some determined participants, pictured below) at the South par-3 layout at the Greg Mastriona Golf Courses at Hyland Hills in Westminster, Potter and about 15 of his cohorts on the Colorado Golf Hall of Fame board of directors plan to play 100 holes for a couple of good causes. Through a ProFund campaign in which participants garner pledges for the 100-hole event, the Classic 100 will raise money for the History of Golf in Colorado Foundation — a 501c3 which benefits the Colorado Golf Hall of Fame and its museum — and for youth programs that will be determined in coordination with the Colorado Golf Foundation.
(Updated March 31) More than $95,000 has been pledged to the causes. Some individual sponsors have committed to pitch in $1,000 each.
“It’s a hell of a success,” said Potter, himself a Colorado Golf Hall of Fame inductee, and the campaign captain for the Classic 100. “Our goal Jan. 31 was to get to $40,000 overall, so doubling that is a great success.”
The Colorado Golf Hall of Fame was established in 1973 and this year — May 14 at Cherry Hills Country Club to be exact — it will induct its 44th class, Craig Stadler and Ann Finke (READ MORE). The Hall of Fame will hold its CGHOF Team Championship June 13 at Riverdale Dunes in Brighton, where the CGHOF museum is located. The public is welcome to participate in the tournament. The $125 entry fee includes golf, carts, tee gifts and lunch. Contact Potter for more information at garytpotter59@gmail.com.(Among the Hall of Fame’s inductees — and board members — are Dan Hogan and John Gardner, pictured together at top during last month’s Denver Golf Expo.)
As for the Classic 100, Colorado Golf Hall of Fame board member Dave Richardson, a longtime regular at Hyland Hills, persuaded course officials to donate the South par-3 facility for the event, which figures to last about five hours. Colorado Golf Hall of Fame board members are invited to participate in a celebration after the golf has wrapped up on April 7.
Greg Mastriona, after whom the Hyland Hills golf facility is named, was inducted into the Colorado Golf Hall of Fame in 2014.
The Classic 100 participants have garnered pledges from more than 480 donors, with that total likely to increase. Steve Bell has 80 sponsors, with Potter (75), former USGA staffer and CWGA executive director Maggie Giesenhagen (51) and Castle Pines Golf Club general manager Keith Schneider (49) also garnering more than 45.
All of which tells Colorado Golf Hall of Fame president Scott Radcliffe — another Classic 100 particpant — one thing. “We have some really nice friends, and they believe in us,” he said.
Just Schneider and Potter, who like Giesenhagen have been inducted into the Colorado Golf Hall of Fame, have received combined pledges totaling more than $35,000. And Bell checks in at more than $13,000.
“The best part is we have over (480) sponsors,” Potter said. “That’s a broad base. Some don’t even play golf, but they support the Colorado Golf Hall of Fame. It’s amazing.”
Anyone interesting in being a Classic 100 sponsor — or for more information — can contact Potter at garytpotter59@gmail.com.
First of all, there aren’t that many female head golf course superintendents around. In Colorado, she’s one of just a handful.
Then there’s that dog that seems to tag along with Kimbrel most of the places she goes in her job overseeing the maintenance of the Dunes and Knolls courses at Riverdale in Brighton.
Chase, a 6-year-old border collie, is something of a fixture at Riverdale. He’s a goose dog, chasing geese away that try to settle in at Riverdale. But his presence goes far beyond that.
“He spends most of his time with me, but if I’m not doing something fun, he’ll find something more fun to do,” said Kimbrel, Chase’s owner. “He goes up to the pro shop every day for his bacon. He goes into (general manager Steve Bruening’s) office for beef jerky. I’ve got to put a sign on him, ‘Please don’t feed Chase.’ He just knows everybody here.”
Similarly, Kimbrel is a well-known and well-liked fixture at Riverdale, where she and the maintenance staff have long been recognized for keeping the public courses in very good condition.
Appropriately — since the Colorado Golf Hall of Fame is located in the clubhouse at Riverdale — Kimbrel will be recognized this weekend with the Hall of Fame’s Lifetime Achievement Award. She’ll be among a handful of honorees when the Hall holds its 42nd annual induction dinner Sunday (June 8) at the Club at Rolling Hills in Golden.
Three people will be inducted into the Hall of Fame that night — C. Paul Brown, Jim Johnson and Greg Mastriona. Receiving awards that evening, along with Kimbrel, will be Doug Rohrbaugh (Golf Person of the Year) and Colorado Golf Club (Distinguished Service Award after hosting the Solheim Cup last year). For more about this year’s inductees and honorees, CLICK HERE.
For the unassuming Kimbrel, the Lifetime Achievement Award comes as an unexpected honor.
“I was shocked,” she said. “I was floored. It’s quite an honor, and I was taken aback.”
Kimbrel came to Riverdale in 1988 after stints at Hyland Hills in Westminster and Bear Creek in west Denver. At first, she served as superintendent at the Dunes Course, then was promoted in the 1990s to director of maintenance, with her overseeing the Dunes and Knolls, with separate course superintendents working on her staff (Theresa Troup and Rob Neuhauser).
Kimbrel received a teaching degree from the University of Northern Colorado, where she played intercollegiate soccer and was an AIAW All-American in 1980 and ’81. But after working at a golf course during summers in high school and college, golf is where she found her professional calling.
“One thing led to another, and here I am 30 years later,” the 54-year-old said. “I was probably 18-19 years old when I first saw a green. I was just amazed by them. I fell into (golf-related work) but I just really loved it.”
Kimbrel’s superintendent’s skills were put to the test in the 1990s as Riverdale hosted the 1993 U.S. Amateur Public Links Championship and the Nike Colorado Classic (on what is now the Web.com Tour) in 1996 and ’97. Stewart Cink, who went on to win the 2009 British Open, was the champion at Riverdale Dunes in 1996.
“That was really cool preparing the course for those events,” Kimbrel said. “There was a lot to that.”
And Riverdale officials received very positive feedback from hosting those big tournaments.
“The players were very pleased,” Kimbrel said. “(For the Colorado Classic), the first tour official came out a month or two before the tournament, and they said, ‘Oh my gosh, they’re going to love this place.’ We definitely got kudos.”
After the national Publinks was played at Riverdale, Kimbrel was named the Turfgrass Professional of the Year in 1993 by the Rocky Mountain Regional Turfgrass Association.
It takes something to stay at one place of employment for more than a quarter-century. So what has kept Kimbrel at Riverdale since 1988?
She cites support from a strong management team and the financial backing from Adams County that the courses need to succeed. Beyond that, there’s the camaraderie of a maintenance staff that includes a handful of employees who have been working there for more than 20 years.
Despite being the director of maintenance, Kimbrel still very much enjoys personally doing work involving course upkeep.
“I’m pretty hands-on still,” she said. “I still enjoy the work.”
She’ll usually take an early-morning tour of the courses — with Chase, of course (pictured above) — to see any issues that may need addressing. She’ll often cut cups, hand water and do other routine maintenance. “That is a good day and the part of the day I enjoy the most,” she notes.
Of course, there are also plenty of more traditional management tasks — budgeting, invoicing, exchanging emails, meetings, etc. And given that last September’s flooding left the Riverdale maintenance building and the equipment in 8 feet of water, Kimbrel was busy over the winter dealing with those matters.
Though, as mentioned, female head golf course superintendents are somewhat rare, Riverdale has two of them as Troup is the superintendent at the Dunes and has been at Riverdale even longer than Kimbrel.
Kimbrel said she’s always been well-received and respected by her fellow Rocky Mountain Golf Course Superintendents statewide.
“I don’t feel like (gender) has ever been an issue,” she said. “If anything, I probably get more attention.”
Asked if she sees herself as a bit of a pioneer in the role she plays, Kimbrel said, “I don’t really think of myself as that. I remember there was a gal at Myrtle Beach (S.C.) when I first got into the business and started thinking about doing it for a career, and I remember having a couple of conversations with her. But I guess I don’t think of myself that way. But there definitely aren’t very many of us.”
Besides her professional success as a director of maintenance, Kimbrel is a fine player. She maintains a handicap of between 5 and 6, and she’s won six CWGA team championships with Stacey Arnold. They’ve captured three Chapman titles, two Brassies and a Mashie.
“We are so fortunate. We have one of the best (state or regional) golf associations in the whole country,” Kimbrel said. “People who move out of state after playing in CWGA events are so disappointed. I’m truly grateful to be able to play in such well-run tournaments — and I hear that a lot.”
Kimbrel was inspired to play by several women who were regulars at Willis Case Golf Course — Carol Flenniken, Lynn Zmistowski and Katie Fiorella, all now members of the Colorado Golf Hall of Fame.
“After college I picked up golf and I’ve spent a lifetime trying to get better at it,” Kimbrel said.
The three are scheduled to be inducted in the 42nd class of the Hall of Fame, on June 8 at the Club at Rolling Hills in Golden.
Appopriately, Johnson was the longtime PGA head professional/director of golf at Rolling Hills, collectively serving in those capacities from 1975 to 2001 before retiring.
Mastriona spent all of his career with the Hyland Hills Park and Recreation District, first as an assistant golf course superintendent at Hyland Hills Golf Course, then for 40-plus years as executive director of the district. The courses at Hyland Hills now bear the name of Mastriona, who retired at the end of 2012.
Joining the inductees in being honored on June 8 will be three recipients of special awards from the Colorado Golf Hall of Fame.
Doug Rohrbaugh, the head professional at Ironbridge Golf Club in Glenwood Springs, earned the Golf Person of the Year award after winning the HealthOne Colorado Senior Open, the Colorado PGA Professional Championship and the Colorado Senior PGA Professional Championship, plus qualifying for the U.S. Senior Open.
Colorado Golf Club in Parker, which hosted the Solheim Cup in 2013 after being the site of the 2010 Senior PGA Championship, will receive the Distinguished Service Award.
And D’Ann Kimbrel, a highly respected course superintendent at the Riverdale golf facility in Brighton for more than 25 years, gained the Lifetime Achievement Award.
Brown has had a stellar record as both a player and volunteer in Colorado golf. He served on the Colorado Golf Association Board of Governors for 19 years, beginning in 1981. And he’s been the volunteer men’s golf head coach at Colorado Mesa University since 2010.
Brown, a second-team All-Pac-10 golfer at the University of Arizona, holds the distinction of being the only amateur winner of the Rocky Mountain Open since 1966. He claimed the title in 1987. Brown also captured the Colorado West Amateur championship 13 times, and the CGA Western Chapter title five times from 1983 through ’93.
With the impending honor of Johnson, a dozen longtime members of the Colorado PGA will have been inducted into the Colorado Golf Hall of Fame since 2009. Johnson, a native of Greeley, spent a total of 31 years working at Rolling Hills, including five as an assistant professional.
As a member of the Colorado PGA, he’s won seven major awards from the Section, including Golf Professional of the Year in 1985 and Senior Player of the Year three times. He also competed in two U.S. Senior Opens and a Senior PGA Championship.
During Johnson’s years at Rolling Hills, he helped found the Ashley Forey Invitational, arguably the most prestigious girls high school tournament in the state, aside from the state meets.
Mastriona has the rare distinction of having several courses in Colorado named for him, all at Hyland Hills — 18- and 9-hole regulation layouts as well as two 9-hole par-3 courses. He was a driving force in expanding Hyland Hills from an 18-hole layout into the facility it is today. And as head of the Hyland Hills Park and Recreation District since 1972, he not only oversaw the golf courses, but a popular water park that was his brainchild, Water World.
Hyland Hills has long been highly regarded among public golf courses in Colorado, and it hosted the U.S. Women’s Amateur Public Links Championship in 1990.
And Mastriona was a major proponent of junior golf throughout his career as the Hyland Hills junior program became a standard for success, with 300-500 juniors participating each summer.