Thursday, April 26, 2018

LADIES NIGHT GOLF LEAGUE

Every Tuesday from May 1st thru September

5:30 pm start time thru May

6:00 pm start time starting in June

9 holes only

Optional Clinic – Second Tuesday of the Month

30 min. prior to tee time  ONLY $10

The post LADIES NIGHT GOLF LEAGUE appeared first on Shaker Run Golf Club.

LADIES NIGHT

Every Thursday from May 1st thru September

5:30 pm start time thru May

6:00 pm start time starting in June

9 holes only

Optional Clinic – Second Tuesday of the Month

30 min. prior to tee time  ONLY $10

The post LADIES NIGHT appeared first on Shaker Run Golf Club.

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Cinco de Derby

JOIN US SATURDAY, MAY 5th

CINCO de DERBY

Ole’ for the Run for the Roses!

LIMITED MENU 2 pm to 10 pm

Drink Specials

Complimentary Chips n’ Salsa

Fabulous Derby Fixins

Come for the Derby and Stay for the Fun!

The post Cinco de Derby appeared first on Shaker Run Golf Club.

Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Mother’s Day Brunch

Celebrate Mom at Shaker Run!

Sunday, May 13th, 2018

First Seating – 11:00 am

Second Seating — 1:15 pm

FABULOUS BRUNCH MENU

TO MAKE RESERVATIONS

Danielle Dostal

ddostal@shakerrungolfclub.com

513-727-0007 x 225

The post Mother’s Day Brunch appeared first on Shaker Run Golf Club.

Thursday, April 19, 2018

Men’s Stag Day

Friday, May 18th

1:00 Shotgun Start 

Original Shaker Run

Shamble Format:  2 Best Balls of 4 Net 

Sign up as either Two or Four Players 

$35   MEMBERS             $75   GUESTS

plus tax on all fees

Includes:

18 holes and cart

Prize fund

Dinner

½ Rack Dry Rub Ribs (Homemade BBQ Sauce)

Barbecue Chicken

Baked Beans

Potato Salad

Cole Slaw

Cornbread

Peach Cobbler

Tea / Lemonade / Coffee

 

The post Men’s Stag Day appeared first on Shaker Run Golf Club.

Thursday, April 12, 2018

SWINGDINE Now Open

The menu will provide a variety of house made selections

along with tempting made from scratch desserts

to complete your dining experience.

 

We look forward to seeing you at SWINGDINE Restaurant at Shaker Run.

Hours of Operation

Monday – Wednesday 10am – 10pm

Thursday – Saturday 10am – 11pm

Sunday 10am – 8pm

The kitchen will close one hour prior to closing each day.

The post SWINGDINE Now Open appeared first on Shaker Run Golf Club.

Monday, April 9, 2018

Couples Friday Night

Join us starting Friday, April 27th @ 5:30 pm

sign up by 2:00 pm day of league

The post Couples Friday Night appeared first on Shaker Run Golf Club.

Sunday, April 8, 2018

Patrick Reed holds off Jordan Spieth, Rickie Fowler to win Masters by one shot

<p class=”speakable-p-1 p-text”>AUGUSTA, Ga. – Never one to back down from a fight, Patrick Reed sure had one on his hands Sunday in the final round of the 82nd Masters.</p>
<p class=”speakable-p-2 p-text”>The hero of the 2016 Ryder Cup took some mighty blows from Augusta National Golf Club but never went down – he is Captain America, after all – and now has a green jacket to drape over his red, white and blue cape.</p>
<p class=”p-text”>Armed with a three-shot lead after 54 holes, Reed, the fiery, confrontational raging bull, channeled his emotions, held his nerve and called upon his considerable golf skills to withstand a host of the game’s best players on a tense, wild Masters Sunday that had the staff handling the famous white scoreboards working overtime.</p>


<p class=”p-text”>“To win your first major is never going to be easy,” said Reed, who had never broken 70 in his previous four starts in the Masters. “It definitely wasn’t easy today. I knew it was going to be a dogfight.</p>
“It’s just God basically saying, ‘Let’s see if you have it.’ Everyone knows you have it physically with the talent, but do you have it mentally? Can you handle the ups and downs throughout the round?”
<p class=”p-text”>He did just that with a final-round 1-under-par 71, holding off challenges from Rickie Fowler, Ryder Cup rival Rory McIlroy and Ryder Cup partner Jordan Spieth to win his first major title in 17 attempts. With a huge birdie from eight feet on the 14th and gut-check pars on 13, 15, 17 and 18 – the last a four-foot par save to conclude matters – Reed finished with rounds of 69-66-67-71 to end at 15-under 273.</p>

<div class=”partner-outstream”>
<div class=”partner-video”> “I stuck to my game plan all week,” Reed said. “Even today, I didn’t stray from it at all. It’s something that I needed to learn, especially at a place like this, how important it is to stick to what I believe.”</div>
</div>
<p class=”p-text”>Reed wound up one clear of Fowler, who shot 65-67 on the weekend but came up short in his bid to win his first major, while Spieth, who delivered the biggest charge with a 64 that included a last-hole bogey, wound up two back.</p>
<p class=”p-text”>“Patrick, he’s not scared,” said Fowler, who since 2013 has eight top-10s in majors, the most without a victory. “He’s not scared on the golf course. He’ll play aggressive. He’ll play his game. He won’t back down.</p>
<p class=”p-text”>“Gave it our all, left it all out there. Made P. Reed earn it.”</p>
<p class=”p-text”>Jon Rahm shot 69 to finish four back. McIlroy, trying to complete the career Grand Slam, added to his star-crossed Masters history with a final-round 74 and tied for fifth.</p>
<p class=”p-text”>Reed got off to a shaky start with an opening bogey but settled down when he canned a 15-footer for birdie on the third hole – “I needed that,” he said – and added another red number at the seventh when he stuffed his second shot from 133 yards to a foot for another birdie.</p>
<p class=”p-text”>By this time, the battle was joined by a few players, including Spieth, who kept pecking away at his deficit with one birdie after another. The 2015 Masters champ made seven birdies in his first 13 holes and finally caught Reed with the last of his nine on the 16th hole.</p>
<p class=”p-text”>“I’m kind of glad he ran out of holes,” Reed said.</p>
<p class=”p-text”>Reed, however, never lost at least a share of the lead and made birdie on the 12th from 22 feet – his first birdie on the devilish par-3 hole.</p>
<p class=”p-text”>Then fortune shined on him when his approach to the par-5 13th from 186 yards stayed on the bank fronting the green instead of rolling into Rae’s Creek and Reed made par.</p>
<p class=”p-text”>He regained the lead with a birdie on the 14th from eight feet and then two-putted from 75 feet on the 17th for par and two-putted from 25 feet on the 18th to win the green jacket, his sixth PGA Tour title and $1.98 million.</p>
<p class=”p-text”>“Everybody really likes battling Patrick, because he loves it so much and eats it up,” said Spieth, who has a win, two seconds and a third in five Masters starts.</p>
<p class=”p-text”>“My only wish or regret from the week was that I was playing with him at some point on the weekend. But he’s a member of the Masters club now, he’ll have a green jacket forever. His name is etched in history.”</p>
SOURCE:  <a href=”https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/golf/masters/2018/04/08/patrick-reed-holds-off-jordan-spieth-rickie-fowler-win-masters/497557002/”>usatoday.com</a>

The post Patrick Reed holds off Jordan Spieth, Rickie Fowler to win Masters by one shot appeared first on Shaker Run Golf Club.

Saturday, April 7, 2018

Big names line up for Masters dream

AUGUSTA, Ga. – Chasing a first Green Jacket is obviously tough. It is tougher if you start slower than you would have liked.

But a handful of big-name players clawed their way into contention on Friday, as tough scoring conditions presented themselves.

While 2015 winner Jordan Spieth came back to the pack, plenty who want to join him at the Champions Dinner, like Rory McIlroy, Dustin Johnson, Justin Rose, Justin Thomas and Rickie Fowler, made their moves.

McIlroy – chasing the career Grand Slam – added a 1-under 71 to his 69 opener to sit 4 under and tied fourth.

Johnson – the world No. 1 – birdied three of his last 11 holes to put up a 68 and move to 3 under and into sixth place.

Thomas – the FedExCup leader – produced a sublime 67 to rebound all the way to sixth place and will start six back Saturday.

Fowler couldn’t buy a putt for most of the day, but scratched out a 72 all the same to stay 2 under.

Rose – the runner up on two occasions – used a 70 to creep up on things and also sit 2 under.

They might not be leading the way – Patrick Reed dominated Friday to post in the clubhouse at 9 under – but they are close enough.

“Being up there around the lead going into the weekend, it’s a good position to be in,” McIlroy said.

“But I think I’m happier with how I’ve felt and how I’ve handled certain things and how my thought process has been. That’s been a pleasing thing.”

McIlroy was referencing his experience. In the past he felt the need to play aggressive almost always. Now he knows – especially on tough days – to bide his time.

And with heavy rain and possible high winds due Saturday, there is going to be plenty of grinding to come.
<div class=”native-ad-marker”> “With the amount of times that I’ve been in contention or around the lead whether it be a regular PGA TOUR event or a major … every experience that you have in that arena in those situations, you learn a little bit from it each time,” he explained.</div>
“Sometimes pars might be a little bit boring and you might feel as if you want to get a little bit more out of your round, but as you look up the leaderboard and you’re still there around the lead, that’s taken awhile for me to adjust to.

“When I first came out here on TOUR, I thought all these guys birdied every hole and you just had to hit unbelievable shot after unbelievable shot and hold the putt afterwards. It’s not quite like that.”

Thomas can make it two majors in a row with a big weekend and further solidify his spot at the top of the FedExCup.

His goal was to find his name on the iconic Augusta scoreboards on Friday and his six birdie, one bogey effort allowed it.

“You always want to see your name on that big board, because that means you’re doing something right, and I was glad to see I got thrown up there later in the day,” he said.

Fowler spent energy not getting annoyed with the plethora of putts that wouldn’t drop for him – instead believing his luck may change on the weekend.

He three-putted the 13th, 15th and 16th holes coming home.

“I’m happy where we’re at after two rounds,” he said.

“Definitely looking forward to the weekend and the putts are definitely due to fall.”

Johnson signaled his intentions early with an eagle on the par-5 second and although he was forced to grind through the middle of the round he stepped up when it counted with a couple of late birdies on 13 and 18.

The last world No. 1 to win the Masters was Tiger Woods in 2002.

In all there are eight major champions with 14 majors between them within seven shots of Reed’s lead. But only Bubba Watson (seven back) has won at Augusta.

SOURCE:  <a href=”https://www.pgatour.com/news/2018/04/06/masters-augusta-national-big-names-rory-mcilroy-jordan-spieth.html”>PGATOUR.com</a>

The post Big names line up for Masters dream appeared first on Shaker Run Golf Club.