"IF YOU LIKE GOLF"
weekly online golf column
by
Stan
Crawley
June 8, 2004
Having the name Ira Templeton attached to the Chattanooga Open
had a special meaning for many of the participants and volunteers
Monday, but nobody appreciated it as much as Buddy Templeton and
Danny Tribble.
The annual event was changed this year from the Coca-Cola
Chattanooga Open to the Ira Templeton Chattanooga Open, honoring
the late Creek's Bend owner who passed away on April 13, 2003.
Coca-Cola remains a sponsor.
For everyone involved, the change has been a positive one.
"It's very special for me to have Ira's name attached to this
tournament,'' said Tribble, the tournament director and owner of
the Hickory Valley course. "It's special because Ira was so
special.
"Really, he was so much like my dad, with a lot of the same
mannerisms. He was like another dad in a way.''
Tribble said Templeton deserves the recognition of having the
tournament named in his honor.
"He meant so much to this event,'' Tribble said. "I don't even
know where to start. Nobody wanted this tournament and we had the
first one at Brainerd as a one-day event. Ira then invited us over
here to Creeks Bend and it's been here ever since.
"He helped raise sponsor money through the years and did so
many things. And Buddy has done the same in his absence this
year.''
Buddy Templeton, Ira's son, now runs the Creeks Bend course .
"Having his name on it gave me some incentive when I was
raising money for the tournament,'' Templeton said. "I wanted to
make it remain successful.''
Templeton was successful in his fund-raising efforts. Even
though the field is down from 144 to 137, the purse is up in every
division, including $3,000 to the top professional.
"It's still hard at times without him,'' Templeton said.
"Sometimes I forget and think he's still sitting over there in his
chair. He told me just before he passed away that we had been
working side-by-side for 35 years. He said, 'You'll miss me, but
in about a year you'll be all right.' ''
Ira Templeton would be pleased because Buddy and Tribble have
kept the tournament so successful.
"But he might be mad at me for spending so much money on the
clubhouse and course,'' Templeton said. "We've remodeled the
clubhouse and worked on cart paths and tees. We've made a lot of
general improvements.''
Many of the golfers praised the course as they were leaving
Monday afternoon. Templeton said much of the credit should go to
Patrick Shutters, the former Notre Dame High School and UTC
place-kicker.
Shutters, who will become Templeton's son-in-law on Dec. 4 when
he marries Maggie Templeton, has been hired as the Creeks Bend
golf course superintendent.
"I went to school with Patrick's parents, and I'm crazy about
the kid, even though I give him a hard time,'' Templeton said.
"He's real interested in the course. In fact, he reminds me of me
about 30 years ago.
"He has worked very hard to get the course in great condition.
And he has a lot of good boys out there working for him. They've
worked really hard the last week getting everything ready.''
Said Tribble, "The fairways are awesome. The greens are always
good. Really, everything looks good. Probably the best it's ever
been.''
Zeb Patten, who shot a 6-under 64 on Monday for a share of the
lead, said it would be very special to win the first Ira Templeton
Open. Patten lost his father, Boehm Patten, not long ago,
"Winning this would be very special for me,'' Patten said. "It
would mean a lot. I played in the same group with Ira the last
time he won the Metro here at Creeks Bend. He was real cool, he
knew my dad, and he was so good to me.''
A new name for the tournament, good people running it, an
improved purse, a friend in the chase for the championship, and a
top-notch golf course.
Ira Templeton would have been very proud.
(E-mail Stan Crawley at
wscrawley@earthlink.net)
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