Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Plan your Holiday Party

It’s a great time to book your Holiday Party!

Fine food, impeccable service and a warm, inviting ambiance will create an affair that you and your guests will always remember. With a beautiful banquet space, personalized event planning, & menus for every occasion, you’ll be in good hands at Warren Valley.

Panoramic Views | Expert Service | Event Coordinator

Small and intimate, or large and lavish, our guest services team can deliver a perfect day.

Inquire about booking your next event with us!

BOOK NOW

Call:  (313) 561-1040

 

The post Plan your Holiday Party appeared first on Warren Valley Golf Course.

Monday, October 25, 2021

Langer earns his place in History

In the third round of the 2021 Dominion Energy Charity Classic, Bernhard Langer carded a 3-under 69 to get to 14-under overall, then defeated Doug Barron on the first playoff hole to earn his 42nd Champions Tour title.


Bernhard Langer wins Dominion Energy Charity Classic, becomes oldest winner in PGA TOUR Champions history

Bernhard Langer became the oldest winner in PGA TOUR Champions history Sunday at 64, beating Doug Barron with a 6-foot birdie putt on the first hole of a playoff in the Dominion Energy Charity Classic.

The German star thrust both arms in the air after winning for the 42nd time on the PGA TOUR Champions and the first time since March 2020.

“It comes down to the putt,” Langer said. “That’s how tight it is out here.”

At 64 years, 1 month, 27 days, Langer broke the age record of 63 years, 5 months, 4 days set by Scott Hoch when he teamed with Tom Pernice Jr. to win in the 2019 Bass Pro Shops Legends of Golf.

Langer closed with a 3-under 69, also making birdie on the par-5 18th in regulation to match Barron at 14-under 202 on the Country Club of Virginia’s James River course.

Barron also finished with a birdie in a 68. He missed a 6-foot birdie try in the playoff before Langer ran in the winner to end a string of five playoff losses.

“He’s just an anomaly. He’s incredibly, incredibly gifted and he’s one of my heroes and good friends,” Barron said about Langer. “I’m very fortunate to call him a very dear friend. If I’m going to get beat, I don’t mind getting beat by him.”

Langer, also the 2017 winner in Richmond, increased his lead in the Charles Schwab Cup season standings in the playoff opener.

Second-round leader Steve Flesch was third at 12 under after a 73. Ernie Els (63), Ken Duke (68), Tim Petrovic (71) and Steven Alker (72) were 11 under.

Defending champion Phil Mickelson shot a 71 to tie for 47th at even par. He has three victories in five PGA TOUR Champions starts, winning the Constellation FURYK & FRIENDS two weeks ago in Florida.

SOURCE: pgatour.com

The post Langer earns his place in History appeared first on Warren Valley Golf Course.

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

Rory’s journey back

Coming off a great win this past weekend, Rory opens up about the highs and lows of the game of golf. Finding what works for his game both physically and mentally.


Rory McIlroy undergoes an increasingly common journey: The return to a ‘true self’

If you’re a recreational golfer, especially one who likes to spend time on the range, you’ve likely had this experience at some point: A single swing thought clicks into place and you start hitting the ball very well—and very consistently. Your confidence grows with the success, and after another dozen great shots, it becomes irresistible to add a little something—a new move, more speed, anything. It even works, at first, and a good thing becomes even better. Then, slowly and subtly, you start to lose it. The thing you added spirals out of your control, and you’re not sure exactly how to fix it. The shots get worse, and perhaps unconsciously, in ways you won’t realize until later, you lean into the new thing rather than losing it, which only makes things worse. By the time your bucket of balls runs out, you’re a sweaty, angry mess, and those perfect moments from just minutes earlier are a distant memory. It’s only later, with clarity, that you are able to revert back to the original thought and rediscover your form for next time.

If that sounds familiar, you’ve experienced in microcosm, and in metaphor, what many professional golfers endure over a period of years. The beats are all the same: the initial success, honed in whatever unique style they possess, that gets them to the top of the sport. This is often followed by the nagging desire to constantly tweak and improve, which leads to a departure from what worked in the first place, which leads to the golfing wilderness and the blind struggle to escape, which leads to a thousand false solutions, which is finally resolved—if it’s resolved at all—only by returning to the “true self” that propelled them to the heights in the first place.

Rory McIlroy, who has never given a dull interview, hit this theme hard after his victory Sunday the CJ Cup.

“I feel like the last couple weeks I’ve realized that just being me is good enough,” McIlroy said, “and maybe the last few months I was trying … not trying to be someone else, but maybe trying to add things to my game or take things away from my game. I know that when I do the things that I do well, this is what I’m capable of. … That starts with being creative and being visual and maybe sort of sifting through the technical thoughts and not maybe being as technical with it. … Sometimes I forgot that in a quest to try to be too perfect probably, but this week was a great reminder that you don’t need to be perfect to be a great golfer.”

As far as epiphanies go, it may sound basic, but in a game like golf that is so fickle even for the best players, where the default strategy is to master the technical side of the game in an attempt to reduce and control the chaos that constantly threatens, it seems to have struck him as especially profound. The idea that he’s good enough to trust himself, to simply visualize what he wants to do and then execute, seems to have run contrary to how he was operating before, and the effect on his psyche—you can feel it from afar—is liberating. Two weeks ago, he was ready to give up golf for the year in frustration. Now he’s a champion again.

SOURCE: golfdigest.com

The post Rory’s journey back appeared first on Warren Valley Golf Course.

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Still a few seats left! Comedy Show & Dinner

Motown Mark presents The Tom Massey Anniversary Show & featuring Bill Reno

Join us for a fantastic evening of laughs and a delicious dinner at Warren Valley Golf Course!

Comedy Show & Dinner

Dinner at 6:00 pm
Comedy Show at 7:30 pm

$50 per person includes dinner
$30 per person – Show Only
*Cash Bar

BUY TICKETS ONLINE

The post Still a few seats left! Comedy Show & Dinner appeared first on Warren Valley Golf Course.

Monday, October 11, 2021

Koepka vs. DeChambeau – THE MATCH

7 things to know about Wynn Golf Club, the host course for Brooks Koepka vs. Bryson DeChambeau

Let’s get ready to rumble! Another heavyweight golf bout is on its way to Las Vegas, but this time around, the venue won’t be Shadow Creek. When brawny rivals Brooks Koepka and Bryson DeChambeau go head-to-head the day after Thanksgiving in the fifth edition of The Match, they’ll do so at Wynn Golf Club, behind the casino hotel of the same name. Like Shadow Creek, which hosted the first iteration of The Match, a $9-million extravaganza starring Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson, the Wynn is an impeccably manicured Tom Fazio design that commands a hefty price tag. But unlike Shadow, it hasn’t been the backdrop for any recent high-profile televised events. If you’re thinking of playing the course — or just watching the event — here are seven fun facts to stuff into your trivia bank.

1. It’s a strip tease

Though it doesn’t cost as much as Shadow Creek, which recently bumped its peak-season greens fees to $1,000, the Wynn still charges plenty: $600 a round. It does so with convenience as a calling card. As the lone resort course on the Strip, it’s the only spot in town where you can roll out of your penthouse suite, ride the elevator to the ground floor and stroll directly to the first tee.

2. It was going to be a water palace

Nearly four years ago, when then-CEO Steve Wynn closed the course, blueprints were in place to transform the site into Wynn Paradise Park, a lavish aquatic playland. But Wynn wound up resigning amid sexual misconduct allegations (he no longer has any involvement with the property), and the new brass determined that a pristine golf course made more sense than what amounted to a giant swimming pool.

3. It’s a Fazio, redux

Often, when a golf course gets reworked, a new architect is called upon. In this case, though, the ownership turned to the original designer, Tom Fazio, who carried out the job with his son, Logan.

4. It has a Rat Pack past

The Strip is not St. Andrews. No one would call it hallowed ground for golf. And yet there’s history here. Long before this property became the Wynn, it was home to the Desert Inn, a resort and casino with a course of the same name. The PGA Tour, Senior Tour and LPGA Tour all competed regularly on its fairways. So did Frankie, Dino and the boys.

5. The caddies are sticks

The Wynn’s loopers aren’t just pack mules who can work a laser. The caddie corps includes former collegiate golfers, mini-tour players and assorted others whom you wouldn’t want to face in a money game. In short, you can count on savvy insights, to say nothing of some very Vegas-sounding counsel, such as: “Take this one off the Barry Manilow sign.”

6. It’s a mix of old and new

Though the rebuilt course has new greens and fairways and eight entirely new holes, it covers mostly the same footprint as its predecessor, and it preserves elements from its past, including more than 120 mature trees that date to the days of the Desert Inn. A dramatic waterfall still flows behind the 18th green, just as it did on the original Wynn course, though the hole, once a par-4, now plays as a par-3. Though Bryson and Brooks won’t be playing all 18 (theirs will be a 12-hole match, on a yet-to-be specified routing), you can bet they’ll be playing the closer. It’s just too much of a Vegas spectacle to omit.

7. Aces are wild

The odds are slim (roughly 12,500 to 1) but the payoff is fat. Anyone who makes a hole-in-one on the par-3 18th at the Wynn walks off with a cash prize of $10,000 from the resort. That rule does not apply to Brooks and Bryson, who will getting paid far more for their time in Vegas, whether they make an ace or not.


PHOTO CREDITS: BRIAN OAR

SOURCE: golf.com

The post Koepka vs. DeChambeau – THE MATCH appeared first on Warren Valley Golf Course.

Wednesday, October 6, 2021

Art Contest

ART CONTEST

Sponsored by the City of Dearborn Heights in conjunction with the 100 year Celebration of the Warren Valley Golf Course in 2022. The golf course, designed by famed architect Donald Ross, is an integral part of our watershed system and helps to reduce local flooding. It is also a great place to have fun through the years and is an important part of our city.

Create 2D artwork (drawing, painting, etc.) with a golf and nature theme.
Include your name, phone number, school and grade on a paper with each artwork submission.

Open to school age children K-12
$100 • First Place | $50 • Second Place | $25 • Third Place

Entry Deadline is December 15th
Drop of your artwork to any Dearborn Heights Libraries.

The post Art Contest appeared first on Warren Valley Golf Course.