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Published on Taipei Times http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2007/03/17/2003352744 On the piste and on course for a birdie Just when you thought there were no more sports combinations to be made, skiing and golf have joined skis and clubs
By Cindy Hirschfeld
"We get interest from people all over the country," said Doug Fish, whose marketing firm has organized Race and Ace ski-and-golf events in the Pacific Northwest since 2003. "They take pride in the fact they can do both in one day. It's something they like to tell their friends about." Race and Ace combines a dual giant slalom ski race (two runs) with an 18-hole scramble golf tournament. Race times and golf scores are ranked and then added together, with the lowest score winning. There will be two Race and Ace tournaments this spring: On May 5 in Oregon, at Mount Bachelor and the Meadows course of the Sunriver Resort; and two weeks later at the Tamarack Resort in Idaho, which has both a ski area and a Robert Trent Jones Jr. golf course.
Spirits weren't dampened, though. The event simply became an all-day ski fest. Not surprising, since these tournaments generally resemble spring break, not hard-nosed competition. At the Burchett Classic, competitors wear costumes, and the winning team dons pink blazers in a sly nod to the green jackets awarded to the champions of the Masters golf tournament. Participants at the yearly ski-golf tournament at Big Mountain in Whitefish, Mont., come out in Hawaiian shirts or retro ski wear. Still, Fish of Race and Ace said, some competitors are serious. "They'll show up to race in speed suits," he said, "and we get some scratch golfers." Bryan Paligo, 33, of Bend, Oregon, has won the elite individual division in three of the five Race and Ace events he's entered. A former ski coach and a dedicated golfer (with a two handicap), he admits he takes the event "a little more seriously than most people." And with a good possibility of firm spring snow on a May morning at Mount Bachelor, which Paligo calls "ideal race conditions," coupled with a sun-drenched afternoon on the greens, who can blame him? On the other hand, Ian Griffiths, 32, a self-described hacker on the golf course who has played in several of the Whiteface tournaments, said: "There's a lot of trash talk going on in the beginning. But some of the better golfers are not very good skiers, so everyone really has a chance." Ski-golf events are rare in the East. A late-April event the last three years at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, with Bode Miller as host, is being transformed into a skiing-only event a couple of weeks earlier to take advantage of better snow. At the Attitash ski area in New Hampshire, there's another variation: a nine-hole golf course temporarily built on a black-diamond ski trail for an annual on-snow golf tournament next week. Todd Anthony, the resort's grooming manager, said he and his staff use snow-grooming machines to sculpture features like elevated tees and greens, roughs made from churned-up snow and holes marked by institutional-size food cans. Players must compete on skis or snowboards.
This course lacks one amenity, however, that's important to ski-golf competitors like Griffiths. Describing the approach of his ski-golf team at Whitefish in Montana, he said, "After we'd triple-bogey our third hole, it was time to settle down and get that beverage cart over to us."
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