Weyburn schools receive Golf in School kits
Students in Weyburn are going to get a chance to play golf during the quickly approaching school year and beyond with the purchase of four indoor kits.
The Golf in School kits include a package of clubs, balls, and flags for students in grades 1 to 5 and a higher quality set for high school students. St. Michael School teacher Chad Klein said the city’s schools have been working on getting the kits for a couple years. He said golf used to be part of the physical education agenda when Graham DeLaet attended St. Michael.
“I wanted to start the program here at the school again, not because of Graham but because it was something else for kids to do,” Klein said. “There are some kids I know that like golf but there wasn’t something for them at school. It keeps kids active, gets them involved in a school activity. The Graham factor is just a bonus.”
Overall the community purchased two sets of the youth kit and a pair of senior kits. Klein coaches junior golfers in his school while utilizing the Weyburn Golf Club. He said having the kits is a benefit for when the weather isn’t favourable.
“The physical education teachers are eager. I like them too because when it’s ugly for golf practice we can stay inside. Grades 8 and 9 have golf as part of their phys. ed. now and the teachers are going to be able to do more both inside and out,” he said.
The kits also come with a lesson plan manual for teachers if a golf professional isn’t available. The kits were delivered by Golf Saskatchewan to Weyburn Golf Club pro Brett Berkner. He said the addition of the kits to all Weyburn schools should benefit the course in the long run as well.

“We’ve talked about it for awhile, we got a grant this year for them so it’s nice to give them to the schools. Hopefully that will increase our junior numbers and increase the members at our golf course,” Berkner said.
Fittingly, DaLaet is the national ambassador for the Golf in Schools program.
Carnduff Golf Club irritated with irrigation issues
The Carnduff Golf Club (CGC) is planning on an irrigation upgrading project worth approximately half a million dollars.
The nine-hole course’s current watering system dates back to the late 1980’s and is a “mess” according to Kris Carley. Karley is a member of the town’s council and sits on the golf club board as a member of the local civic government. He said the current annual maintenance costs are out of control.
“We’re spending anywhere from $10,000-$20,000 each year minimum on the system,” he told Golf Saskatchewan. “That’s not even manpower, that’s just parts and pieces.”
A couple weeks ago 16 sprinkler heads were leaking, Carley said each replacement is $500. To add to the $8,000 bill to replace the heads, the new ones don’t fit properly forcing holes to be dug to make proper adjustments allowing the system work.

The course has a deep well system but due to lack of rain over the past two years the water supply is scarce, that applies to a nearby creek as well. Carly said fuel costs are skyrocketing adding to the operating costs of trying to keep the course green.
“We’re running pumps that cost $50-$60 a day just to fill our reservoir to actually water out of. We’ve shut down our fairways, we’re only watering the tees and greens,” he said.
At a recent CGC board meeting the voting members approved a decision to spend upwards of $500,000 to fix the irrigation system. Carley said a local man donated over $100,000 to the club posthumous, they allotted $100,000 towards the project from that gift. The Carley family of companies also donated $50,000 towards the goal. Carley said the club has sent out request for proposals for the potential job that has a trio of options. One of the choices could be working with the town on a green project involving their lagoon system. The lagoon is receiving an $8.5 million upgrade, using wastewater to hydrate the course is possible. Carley said that option could potentially lead to more funding. He’s applied for a grant through the town for $50,000. The last two years the rink has being awarded money through the “facility’s grant.” Refurbishing the deep well is another costly option. Despite the dry conditions and ongoing water woes, Carley said the club had a positive year.
“We were able to raise memberships this year. We lowered member prices and got more members in so we’re hoping to make a profit this year. We could potentially roll that over into the project as well,” he said.
The irrigation upgrade will almost double the course’s sprinkler head count from 160 to 300. One new tee box will be constructed during the renovations, another tee box will be added on a hole and a new green will be built. Carley said they could potentially expand a handful of holes, the blueprints will include those options and direction.
The course is working on future fundraising initiatives to raise the rest of the money. He said the club has little debt so borrowing a portion of the needed funds is a possibility. The club would like to have the upgrades completed by 2020.
Carley put a plea out on the Carnduff course’s Facebook page seeking assistance with an application into the Kraft Heinz Project Play contest featuring a $250,000 grand prize.
Sask. seniors finished at Canadian championships
Saskatchewan’s three representatives at the Canadian Women’s Mid-Senior Championship won’t play the final day of the tournament due to missing the event’s cut.
Saskatchewan senior champion Jo-Anne Schiller was the low shooter carding a 189 (93, 96) over two rounds at the Lookout Point Country Club in Thornhill, Ont. Fellow Lloydminster Golf and Curling Curling Club member Robin Acton shot 190 (102, 88). Melfort’s Judy Sefton finished with a two-round total of 191 (99, 92).
The cut line was set at +35, the final 72 golfers will conclude the championship Thursday afternoon.
A highlight for the Saskatchewan team was meeting Marlene Stewart Streit, the most accomplished amateur golfer in Canadian history. Streit was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2004.

CP Women’s Open exceeds expectations for Wascana Country Club CEO
Prior to golf history being made Aug. 26 at Regina’s Wascana Country Club, the course’s chief executive officer was overjoyed with last week’s CP Women’s Open.
Greg Dukart said Sunday afternoon, before Brooke Henderson became the first Canadian to win the tournament since 1973, that the event exceeded the expected wow factor.
“I think it has,” Dukart quipped. “The support of the spectators has been overwhelming. Over 1,100 volunteers put this together, it’s quite a week.”
A few short months ago, the Wascana C.C. was concerned with the shape of the course. Dukart said earlier this season thousands of yards of dead grass peppered fairways and greens in large part due to a rain storm in January. Crews worked long days throughout the summer in preparation of the six-day event. Dukart said the feedback was spectacular from the players and public.
“The stunning views of the golf course and how good the greens are is what people said. Our superintendent Chad Fawcett worked tirelessly to get the greens, fairways, and collars back from the ice devastation. They brought them around to very high standards,” he said.
The 2018 CP Women’s Open was the first LPGA event ever held in Saskatchewan. Last year the Wascana C.C. hosted the Canadian Mid-Amateur Championships. Dukart said the legacy of hosting the professional ladies’ tournament will be remembered for a long time.
“I think people that were part of this are going to be part of history for a long time, they should be very proud of themselves,” Dukart said.
The event is moving back to Ontario next year. There has been no public discussion regarding a future professional tournament returning to Saskatchewan or Regina. Dukart said the Wascana C.C. board of directors and shareholders will make any decision regarding future events.
Canadian Women’s Senior’s Mid-Senior Championship underway in Ontario
A trio of Saskatchewan women are competing in the Canadian Women’s Senior’s Mid-Senior Championship in Thornhill, Ont. this week.
Saskatchewan senior champion Jo-Anne Schiller, Judy Sefton, and Robin Acton are in the field of 132 golfers. Lethbridge’s Schiller opened the 54-hole tournament with a plus-21, 93. Judy Sefton of Melfort shot a 27-over, 99 during round one and Acton shot 102, 30-over.
Acton, who plays out of the Lloydminster Golf and Curling Centre tees off first on Wednesday, she will begin her round at 11:14 a.m. Saskatchewan time. Sefton will start at 11:25, Schiller’s tee time is 11:36 a.m.
The event will conclude on Thursday. You can see the complete leaderboard here.
Duchscher shoots overall low at MJT Order of Merit Championship
Steven Duchscher saved his best golf of the season for the Maple Leaf Junior Tour Championship this past weekend in Swift Current.
Duchscher, 18, stroked a 141 (68, 73) at the Elmwood Golf Club on Aug. 25 and 26 taking the junior age group championship as well the lowest overall honour. The Saskatoon golfer hit five bogeys and one double-bogey on the par 71, 6,386-yard host course. He had nine birdies and an eagle as well helping him finish at 1-under par.
Lethbridge’s Rylie Seaman was second overall winning the juvenile boy’s division with a score of 146 (71. 75). Josh Nagy of Saskatoon, Medicine Hat product Nolan Burzminski, and Cole Bergheim of Red Deer all shot 148 during the tournament. Bergheim won the bantam age category, they played from 5,936-yards.
Martensville’s Jax Gipman, 19, won the collegiate age group with a 153 (74, 79) and Max Regier was the low peewee boy golfer. Regier fired a 73 on day one and a 5-over 76 in round two. Fellow 12-year-old Darien Herlick of Weyburn was eight shots back at 157 (75, 82).
The junior girls in the championship played the Elmwood at 5,156-yards. Sarah Grieve, 15, carded a two-round score of 167 (83, 84), one shot ahead of both Yorkton’s Ella Kozak, 12, and Carey McLean, 16, of Deer Valley. Moose Jaw’s Raylyn Schmidt, 16 was just three was just three shots back. Grieve, McLean, and Schmidt play in the 15-18 age group, Kozak competes in the under-15 category.
You can see the complete results from the championship here.
Alena Sharp pays tribute to Humboldt Broncos throughout CP Women’s Open
REGINA – Throughout the entire week at the CP Women’s Open, Alena Sharp would write the number 16 on her golf balls.
It was one the Hamilton native’s ways of paying tribute to the 16 people that died in the April 6 bus crash involving the Humboldt Broncos junior hockey team.
Sharp said earlier in the event that she felt as though she had 16 angels watching over her at the Wascana Country Club.
“I totally was thinking about them all day. Even on the last putt,” Sharp said after her final round on Sunday. “I wrote 16 on my ball just to give me a reminder of it.”
Thirteen people survived the crash that happened as the Broncos were on their way to a Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League playoff game.
Sharp played this year’s Canadian championship with a golf bag that featured the Broncos’s green and yellow colours and team logo. The bag is being given to the Jim Pattison Children’s Hospital and will be auctioned off at a fundraiser next month.
Sponsor obligations along with trying to learn the course prevented Sharp from making the trip to Humboldt, which is located 2 1/2 hours north of Regina. The busyness of the tournament also didn’t allow her to meet any of the survivors.
“I haven’t met them, but they’re always in my thoughts,” Sharp said.
Brooke Henderson of Smiths Falls, Ont., has captured the Canadian headlines during the tournament, but Sharp shot a 1-under 71 on Sunday to finish the event at 6 under. Anne-Catherine Tanguay (73) of Quebec City was 4 under.
As Sharp was walking on the cart path to the sixth hole on Sunday, she saw Henderson putting on the practice green and ran over to give her friend and Olympic teammate a hug before Henderson started her round.
Sharp said that she was excited for Henderson, who is aiming to become the first Canadian champion of the event since Jocelyne Bourassa won in Montreal in 1973.
“Hopefully she can stay strong in the last little bit, the last few holes and bring the win in,” Sharp said.
Sharp has struggled with consistency this season and said that it’s been a mentally tough year for her. She said that it’s always tougher to play at home but felt as though she has taken a step in the right direction with this week’s play.
“I’m just battling through some mental demons,” Sharp said. “I’m happy walking off of this week, I played well under the pressure and have a lot of positives to take to next week.”
Canada’s Brooke Henderson shoots 65 to win CP Women’s Open by four strokes
REGINA – Brooke Henderson ended Canada’s long drought at the CP Women’s Open on Sunday, firing a final-round 7-under-par 65 to win the national championship by four strokes.
Henderson finished with a 21-under 267 total, sealing the win with a short birdie putt on the 18th hole at the Wascana Country Club.
“It’s amazing, just surreal,” Henderson said. “The crowds here have been so amazing all week, and to finish it off the way I did is really a dream come true.”
American Angel Yin was alone in second place after a 68 and American Jennifer Song (67) was six shots behind at 15 under. Australians Minjee Lee (68) and Su Oh (69) were seven strokes off the pace in a fourth-place tie with South Korea’s Amy Yang (68) and American Austin Ernst (69).
It was the first time a Canadian has won this tournament since Jocelyne Bourassa took the 1973 event – then called La Canadienne – at Montreal.
Henderson earned US$337,500 of the $2.25-million purse for her second victory of the season. It was her seventh career LPGA Tour win, moving her one behind Sandra Post’s record for all-time victories by a Canadian.
Henderson, who started the day with a one-shot lead, was aggressive from the start on an overcast, chilly morning in front of a vocal group of adoring supporters.
Displaying a steely focus and no sign of nerves, she found the fairway with her opening drive and cleared a greenside bunker with her second shot, sticking the ball 12 feet from the pin.
Henderson is one of the biggest hitters on the Tour but her short game can be inconsistent at times. The 20-year-old from Smiths Falls, Ont., set the early tone by sinking the birdie putt for a two-shot lead.
She gave the stroke back on the second hole after her drive found the rough. A line of fairway-hugging trees forced her to chip out on the fairway and Henderson would settle for bogey.
Back-to-back pars followed, allowing Oh to briefly pull even with the Canadian. However, Oh missed a 10-foot par putt on the fifth hole and Henderson drained a 25-footer for birdie to regain the lead.
Canada’s @BrookeHenderson wins the 2018 #CPWO, becoming the first Canadian to win since 1973 https://t.co/rtdHhQ7ueb
— CP Women’s Open (@cpwomensopen) August 26, 2018
After a birdie-bogey run, Henderson showed her form on the par-3, 206-yard eighth hole. With a challenging pin placement, she elevated her tee shot perfectly to clear a greenside ridge and bunker to leave herself an 18-foot putt.
She hit the birdie to move to 16-under for a three-shot cushion on Oh and defending champion Sung Hyun Park of South Korea.
Henderson was playing to win and not to just hang on.
A steady rain started to fall as the last few groups made the turn. Some of the Tour’s biggest names were chasing Henderson but no one could get hot enough on the back nine to get close.
Yin hovered a few shots back but Henderson wouldn’t budge.
“It’s great for golf in Canada, women’s golf, and it’s great for her too,” Yin said. “I mean, people shouting her name left to right since the first hole, like (since) nine in the morning. I bet you she feels pressure.
“But she’s used to it and she handles it pretty well, and she finished the job.”
The Canadian was making almost every shot look easy. The greens softened up a touch and Henderson was going for the pins. Approach shots were usually in tight and the putter was working.
Yin rolled in her third straight birdie on No. 15, and Henderson answered by knocking in her fourth birdie putt in a row to keep her three-shot lead.
She maintained that cushion through the 17th hole, allowing her to fully enjoy the moment on No. 18 as the packed gallery roared during her walk up the fairway.
After a beautiful drive, Henderson’s approach shot from 69 yards out cozied up to the hole. She tapped in the short putt and the celebration was on.
Henderson raised her arms in the air and hugged her sister Brittany, who was on her bag all week. Their ecstatic father, Dave, ran on to the green and doused them in champagne.
Park (71), who finished at 13 under, will retain her No. 1 position in the world rankings. She was tied with three-time CP Women’s Open champion Lydia Ko (69) and several others.
American Mo Martin was another shot back at 12 under after firing a course-record 62.
Hamilton’s Alena Sharp (71) was at 6 under, two shots ahead of Quebec City’s Anne-Catherine Tanguay (73).
The 2019 CP Women’s Open will be held at the Magna Golf Club in Aurora, Ont.
Back-to-back Lobstick wins for Brown
Saskatoon’s Kim Brown is the Women’s Lobstick champion for the second year in a row.
Brown went undefeated in the match-play event on route to back-to-back titles at the Waskesiu Golf Course. She won the qualifying round shooting a 6-over, 76 on Aug. 20 just edging Saskatoon’s Abra Thompson. During the head-to-head portion of the four-day tournament Brown downed Dianna Sutton, Beth Davis, and Pauline McDougall. She defeated Kathy Ziglo, also of Saskatoon in the championship flight final on Aug. 24.
The senior champion was Arlene Segin. Veronika Duchscherer was the junior champion and the low net score belonged to Thompson.
You can see all the brackets here.
Canada’s Brooke Henderson leads after three rounds of CP Women’s Open
REGINA – Canada’s Brooke Henderson feels most comfortable with her game when she’s on top of the leaderboard.
A solid third round has left her in that very position as she prepares to take a run at history at the CP Women’s Open.
Henderson moved into the lead Saturday with a 2-under-par 70, leaving her at 14-under 202 and one shot ahead of Japan’s Nasa Hataoka (69) and American Angel Yin (71).
“It’s a lot more fun (on top) and I feel like I can kind of go off the crowd a little bit more,” Henderson said. “It’s just really exciting and I feel like when I have a lot of confidence in my game, that’s when I tend to make a lot of birdies and I tend to play really well.”
After back-to-back scores of 66, Henderson had to deal with windier conditions at the Wascana Country Club.
Her length off the tee was impressive but her short game was inconsistent at times. Henderson did manage to hit some big putts when she needed to and spent most of the afternoon alone in first place.
On Sunday, she’ll try to become the first Canadian since Jocelyne Bourassa to win this tournament. Bourassa was victorious in 1973 in Montreal.
Yin missed an eight-foot birdie putt on her final hole that would have given her a share of the lead. Defending champion and world No. 1 Sung Hyun Park of South Korea (70) was two shots back.
Australia’s Su Oh (69) and American Austin Ernst (70) were three strokes off the lead.
The 6,675-yard course sets up well for Henderson’s style. She’s one of the LPGA Tour’s longest hitters and is not afraid to go for it.
If Henderson can attack the par-5 holes and stay consistent on the greens, she’s got a great shot of winning the event.
“I definitely do play better when I’m aggressive,” she said. “I play smart but aggressive and when I’m kind of chasing birdies, I feel like that’s kind of where I’m playing my best. But it just kind of depends on the conditions.”
Play will begin earlier than usual in an attempt to avoid the wet weather that’s expected to arrive by lunch hour. The fourth round will start at 7 a.m. local time and the last group will tee off at 9:01 a.m.
Henderson, from Smiths Falls, Ont., started the day one shot behind second-round leader Amy Yang, but the South Korean bogeyed her first two holes to give the Canadian the outright lead.
They were joined in a group with Yin, who hovered near the top of the leaderboard for most of the day.
With a vocal group of supporters cheering her at every turn, Henderson opened with four straight pars before a drive on the par-4 fifth hole found the rough and led to a bogey. She responded by rolling in a 12-foot birdie putt on the sixth.
She was aggressive after the turn with birdies on Nos. 12 and 13. Henderson nearly eagled the 14th hole, but her chip from the rough hit the back of the cup and bounced out for a tap-in birdie.
She ran into some trouble on the 16th hole but recovered nicely. Henderson pulled her drive and her second shot landed in the rough beside a greenside bunker.
Standing in the sand, she flopped a wedge that came up short but she hit a 20-footer to save par.
“To be able to get up and down when I kind of ran into a little bit of trouble there on 16 I think was really key and just (helped me) keep my composure a little bit,” Henderson said.
Henderson and Yin both struggled on the 17th green. Yin had an eagle putt but settled for par while Henderson missed a four-foot par putt.
Yang, meanwhile, struggled to a 75. She was in a five-way tie for seventh place at 10-under 206.
Hamilton’s Alena Sharp (70) and Anne-Catherine Tanguay (70) of Quebec City were nine shots off the lead.
Henderson, 20, has one victory this season and six wins over her LPGA Tour career. Her best career finish at this event came last year in Ottawa when she tied for 12th.
“She’s gritty and determined and aggressive,” Sharp said. “I think that is a huge thing to have out here, especially with the wind.”
The winner of the US$2.25-million tournament will earn $337,500. The runner-up will pocket $209,358.