"IF YOU LIKE GOLF"
weekly online golf column
by
Chris Dortch
April 4, 2006
David Stone came under golf’s spell in the usual way for a young
boy growing up in the early 1960s. He was a full-fledged member of
Arnie’s Army, recruited by the swashbuckling Arnold Palmer, the
everyman’s champion who always put on a show—whether he won major
championships or lost them—drawing untold millions to the game in
his wake.
But Stone was a bit different than the typical Palmer foot
soldier. Yes, Palmer’s allure attracted him to golf, but Stone,
who grew up on a farm 70 miles south of Nashville, Tenn., chose a
different path to make his mark on the game, a path that would one
day earn him honors and nationwide respect and recognition.
Superintendent David Stone
shows off #7 green at The Honors Course |
In
his own way, Stone, the long-time greens superintendent at The
Honors Course, has impacted the game as much as a major champion,
and on April 11, he’ll be honored in a way that is unique to his
profession. On that night, with his family, friends and protégés
looking on, Stone will be inducted into the Tennessee Golf Hall of
Fame, taking his place alongside such great Tennessee players as
Cary Middlecoff and Lew Oehmig, club professionals as Harold Eller
and Don Malarkey and Jack Lupton, The Honors Course chairman and
Tennessee golf benefactor.
That a greens superintendent, typically a behind-the-scenes guy,
will be so honored might be surprising to some, but not to anyone
who knows Stone or is familiar with his work.
“David Stone is the Cary Middlecoff of superintendents,” said Dick
Horton, executive director of the Tennessee Golf Association.
“Cary was the greatest player Tennessee has ever produced, and
David is the greatest superintendent.”
Little did a 12-year-old Stone know when he was pilfering stray
Bermuda grass out of the bunkers at the Buford Ellington Course at
Henry Horton State Park, where he began playing, how those blades
of grass would shape the rest of his life. Stone was so captivated
with the game that he built his own mini course on the family
farm, complete with greens.
“Whenever I’d go to Henry Horton to play, if I saw a worker on the
course, I’d always ask questions, how high they set their mowers,
that kind of stuff,” Stone said. “Eventually I decided I needed to
have a place to hit balls and putt, so I started building my own.
“I’d take plastic bags with me to the course, and when I saw
Bermuda in the bunkers, I’d take it home with me. I planted it in
these big pots. I had Bermuda spreading everywhere. That’s what I
used for my greens.”
Before long the accomplishment of growing the perfect putting
surface overtook the thrill of hitting a perfect tee shot. After
high school Stone enrolled in the University of Tennessee’s turf
grass management program, where he was one of only two students
who aspired to enter the golf business. Stone absorbed all the
knowledge he could, and after he earned his degree in 1971 he was
on his way.
Stone’s first job was Crockett Springs in Nashville. It was there
Stone learned an important lesson that impacts his work to this
day—it doesn’t take a lot of money to be successful.
“We had anything but money,” Stone said. “One winter I was paid by
the court just to maintain the course while it was going through
bankruptcy. So I was accustomed to providing the best conditions
without much money to work with. I learned that it might take
money for some areas of a course, but greens don’t require much
money. It’s just a lot of technique and know-how, being observant,
really watching them closely.”
Stone’s reputation grew quickly. One day, a member at Knoxville’s
Holston Hills Country Club played Crockett Springs and went back
to his club raving about the greens. At the time, Holston Hills’
head professional also served as greens superintendent, a dual
role that must have been difficult. The course, an original Donald
Ross design, was in poor condition.
The member’s high praise about Stone’s work at Crockett Springs
was all the endorsement the young superintendent needed. Stone was
offered the job in Knoxville, and though it paid barely more than
he was making, the financial instability at Crockett Springs made
his choice clear.
It
didn’t take Stone long to drastically improve the conditions at
Holston Hills, and once again, word traveled fast. After just a
year in Knoxville, Stone received another job offer, this from
Richland Country Club in Nashville. For Stone, it was an
opportunity to return home and make a lot more money. But after
making a decision that spoke volumes about his character, Stone
stayed at Holston Hills.
“I
just felt like I couldn’t go somewhere and just give a one-year
commitment,” Stone said. “It didn’t make economic sense for me to
stay, but I went to Holston Hills to do a job, and it was going to
take more than a year to get things straightened out. I stayed,
and I’m glad I did.”
Stone couldn’t have known it then, but his decision to stay at
Holston Hills would one day lead to the job of a lifetime.
Stone remembers well a hot July Saturday in 1982. Holston Hills
professional John Wylie called him and asked if he wanted to play
golf with P.B. Dye, son of the noted golf course architect. Dye
was helping his father with a project in Ooltewah, Tenn., near
Chattanooga, but heavy rains had shut down operations for a couple
of days. Seizing the opportunity to play some golf, Dye set up a
game at Holston Hills, a course he had heard a lot about.
“We had a great day,” Stone said. “We talked about The Honors, but
not that much. P.B. said they’d had somebody in mind for the
superintendents job, so I thought that was the last I’d hear of
it.”
Stone was wrong. Once again, word of mouth would help spread his
reputation as a grass-growing genius. Young Dye was so impressed
with the conditions at Holston Hills he went back to his father
and couldn’t stop talking about Stone. A call was placed to Stone,
but he wasn’t sure what to think, or how to proceed.
“I
didn’t know much about the course,” Stone said. “I didn’t know who
Jack Lupton was. I really didn’t think I’d be that interested. But
I wanted to meet Pete Dye, so I went.”
Stone’s opinion of the project changed as soon as he set foot on
the property. “You could see what was going on right away,” Stone
said. “This wasn’t going to be a small-time operation. The course
was going to be special.”
Stone was eventually offered the superintendent’s job, but he was
conflicted. He liked Holston Hills, enjoyed being close to his
beloved University of Tennessee football team and wasn’t sure he
was ready to leave Knoxville. So in negotiating with Lupton for
compensation, Stone set the stakes higher than he thought Lupton
would be willing to go. His request didn’t involve money.
A
few years before, Stone had played Atlanta’s famed Peachtree Golf
Club and noticed that the greens superintendent lived on the
course.
“I
thought that was a neat situation,” Stone said. “So I told Mr.
Lupton, ‘I won’t consider the job unless you build me a house on
the property.’ I figured that would be the end of it, that I’d
never hear from them again.”
Stone was wrong. A couple of days later, Pete Dye called.
“He told me Mr. Lupton wanted to see me,” Stone said. “So I went
back down there. Jack said, ‘I think it’s an excellent idea for
you to have a house on the property.’ ”
The deal was done. Lupton built Stone a home just inside the front
gate of The Honors. Stoned took occupancy in 1983 and has lived
there since, all of a minute’s drive by golf cart to his office in
the course’s maintenance building.
Stone’s reputation has grown exponentially, right along with the
course he has maintained and readied for such prestigious
tournaments as the 1991 United States Amateur, the 1994 Curtis
Cup, the 1996 NCAA Men’s Championships and the 2005 U.S.
Mid-Amateur. The Honors has turned up since its inception on
various rankings of the world’s top golf courses. Stone, who won
the USGA’s Green Section Award for lifetime achievement in 1995,
is a big reason for that.
“To watch what he’s done with such a demanding job as The Honors
Course has been truly amazing,” Horton said. “And the fact that
he’s been their one and only superintendent. That in and of itself
tells you a lot about David.”
Stone has done his job with the same down-home, simplistic,
budget-conscious approach he learned at Crockett Springs, which is
to say he doesn’t reach very far into Lupton’s wallet to keep The
Honors’ in top condition.
Stone’s method of maintaining some of the world’s greatest putting
surfaces is impressive in its simplicity. His tool of choice is a
pocketknife.
“I
discovered working on the crew at Crockett Springs, even before I
became superintendent, that if we let the greens go without water
too long we ended up with these hard spots,” Stone said. “They
wouldn’t hold [shots] and we couldn’t get them to take water
again. I learned how to feel with a knife blade the firmness that
would hold a golf shot without being overly wet, but not so firm
that they start to cause problems by not taking water.
“Daily checking is the mainstay of our program to this day. We
check with a knife blade and we have a ratings system for the
firmness of the greens and the moisture. We do all of our watering
based on that. We make minute changes or big changes, whatever is
needed. It all depends on that knife.”
That will make a great chapter in Stone’s book some day.
Suffice it to say Stone’s system travels well. More than 20 future
head superintendents have passed through his program at The
Honors, including many now working in Chattanooga. And by
extension, the assistants of those superintendents have learned
Stone’s way of doing business.
“There’s a reason we all have great greens in Chattanooga,” said
Wes Gilbert, the superintendent at WindStone Golf Club who
satisfied his college internship requirement by working at The
Honors. “We all grow greens like David’s taught us to.”
“All the golfers in
Chattanooga
have been the beneficiaries of David’s influence,” said Scott
Wicker, a former Stone assistant and the superintendent at Black
Creek Club. “Quite a few of the [Chattanooga area] superintendents
worked for David at one time or another. That was where we went to
school. … I’m not sure if there’s a more influential person in
[Tennessee] golf, in any facet of the game. Golf in
Chattanooga
is about the best deal going, with great conditions everywhere. A
lot of that is David’s influence.”
None of Stone’s protégés was surprised when the Tennessee Golf
Foundation announced Stone had been elected to the hall of fame.
“I knew it was just a matter of time,” said Jeff Hollister,
another former Stone assistant and superintendent at Chattanooga
Golf and Country Club. “David’s taught so much to a lot of us, and
even today he’s willing to share everything he has.
Superintendents, no matter where they work, or how much money
their courses spend, know that David will always give them a
straight answer and would never lead them down a wrong path. In
that way he’s been so influential.”
Stone goes out of his way to cultivate relationships with other
superintendents. “I’ve been lucky to have had great people working
for me,” he said. “And I’ve learned a lot from them, too. I’ve
never tried to hide anything I know or do here at The Honors. It’s
all about making the game better. That’s what we all want.”
Largely because of Stone’s influence, Chattanooga’s
superintendents are a close-knit group. “We’ve all got one another
on speed dial,” Wicker said. Once a month during golf season, the
superintendents get together to play and share ideas. In March, 14
of them traveled to Atlanta’s Settindown Creek, where they were
joined by Courtney Young, yet another Stone disciple, for a day of
golf and fellowship.
“It’s about fun for us,” Stone said. “But it’s also about getting
better. We’ve played at courses from the top of the [budget]
spectrum to the bottom. But everywhere you go, you can learn
something.”
Stone has never stopped learning. His turf grass testing center
and sod farm located by The Honors’ maintenance building—Horton
calls it Ooltewah Country Club—allows Stone to study the merits of
the latest putting and fairway surfaces and experiment with
various chemicals.
Captivated by the variety of birds that call The Honors home,
Stone has cultivated them and learned as much as he could, even
joining the Chattanooga chapter of the
Tennessee Ornithological Society. The local bird watchers annually
take one of their field trips at The Honors. “They tell me it’s
become their most popular site for a field trip,” said Stone, who
has hand-raised numerous orphaned birds during his time at The
Honors.
Stone is also a student of golf. Ten years ago he committed to
playing better, with a goal of breaking 90 from The Honors’ green
tees. He reached his goal after taking lessons, reading books,
watching The Golf Channel and experimenting. “Just sifting through
a lot of good and bad information,” he said. Wes Gilbert, among
others, occasionally seeks help from Stone, a short-game wizard.
One of these days, Stone says, he might even sit down to put all
he’s learned in print. There’s a file on his computer titled
“Book,” and one can only imagine the wisdom it contains. In
typical modest fashion, Stone wonders whether he’s collected
anything anyone can use.
“If I feel like there’s enough good information in there, after I
retire, I might could do a book,” he said.
At
57, Stone is a long way from retirement. His upcoming induction
into the Tennessee Golf Hall of Fame has only increased his love
for the game, and the job he unwittingly set himself up for those
many years ago as he plucked public course Bermuda grass to build
his own greens.
“[The hall of fame] is just such an awesome honor,” Stone said.
“You look at the names of the people who are in there … it just
humbles you. A lot of people who have worked with me over the
years, and who I’ve learned from, made this possible. I’ve been so
fortunate to have worked at The Honors. I’ve never stopped being
intrigued by the challenges here. And I never will.”
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