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Stars aling for Genesis Scottish Open at the Renaissance
Stars aling for Genesis Scottish Open at the Renaissance

The Herald Scotland

time05-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Herald Scotland

Stars aling for Genesis Scottish Open at the Renaissance

When MacIntyre turned that near miss into a glorious triumph last year, those same grandstands were shoogled to their foundations after propping up a frenzy of thunderous, foot-stamping, hand-clapping jubilation. 'We are trying to figure out what we can do for an encore,' smiled John Sarvadi, the chief executive officer of the Renaissance as it prepares to host the Genesis Scottish Open for a seventh year in a row. In that time, we've certainly got our money's worth with a championship that will be headlined by MacIntyre, McIlroy and the world No 1, Scottie Scheffler. The last three champions have all won by a slender one-shot margin while the three before that prevailed in a play-off. MacIntyre's moment 12 months ago was certainly something to savour as he became the first Scot since Colin Montgomerie in 1999 to conquer in the domestic showpiece. The Oban left-hander's winning putt on the final green was just about sooked into the cup by the collective will of the entire population of East Lothian. 'Last year was my first as CEO so I take the credit for arranging a Bob MacIntyre win,' added Sarvadi with a chuckle. 'I remember watching him standing over that putt and thinking how great this would be for Scotland and the Renaissance. It was a magical moment for everybody.' The hot seat Sarvadi snuggled into, of course, used to be the reserve of his older brother, Jerry, a man so steeped in the Renaissance, they should call him Michaelangelo. 'This was his baby, and he had the vision, the passion and the determination to get this place done,' said John of a journey that began 20 years ago when his older sibling negotiated a lease for a 300-acre stretch of linksland just over the wall from Muirfield. 'It was always part of the vision at this club to have a professional event here. Jerry had been involved at Sawgrass and he was always in and around the Players Championship there. 'Our other brother, Paul, is the CEO of Insperity and that company been involved in an event on the Champions Tour for 25 years. 'So, an event was always a goal. But I don't think we could ever have envisaged this. 'In 2018, we hosted final qualifying for The Open. We had the Claret Jug sitting there and I thought that was mission accomplished event wise. But to be here now with a co-sanctioned tour event, a sponsor like Genesis who were a game-changer for us and the very the best players in the world? It's hard to comprehend and we are very proud of that.' Like everything, you've got to start somewhere and having co-hosted the Boys' Amateur Championship with neighbouring Muirfield in 2016, the Renaissance dipped its toes into the professional scene in 2017 when it welcomed the golden oldies for the Scottish Senior Open. 'Those events were all part of the journey,' reflected Sarvadi. 'You have to earn your stripes as a host venue. We took some steps to prove ourselves, show our mettle and that's how we got to this stage.' The current deal to host the Genesis Scottish Open runs through to 2026 and Sarvadi is keen to keep the alliance going. 'A lot of the pre-eminent tour events in the world of golf have settled in to a host club,' said Sarvadi, who divides his time between East Lothian and Texas. 'The players like that. They like the familiarity. From a set-up point of view too, the planning is easier as people know what they are doing and working with. The feedback gets better too. Justin Thomas came off last year and said, 'the more I play this course, the more I love it'.' Such comments are music to the ears. In 2019, though, there were a few bum notes as the aforementioned McIlroy criticised the links for being 'too easy.' He would change his tune, of course, and ended up hitting the high notes with victory in 2023. Taking the rough with the smooth is par for the course as a tournament host. 'We get feedback every year,' said Sarvadi of these constructive comments. 'We assess it, we get the data were shots end up and we factor all that in. We got Padraig Harrington in as a player consultant and he works with the course designer Tom Doak. 'But it's not just about the Scottish Open. We have to keep it playable for the members while providing a good test for the pros. So, there are always tweaks. "We have changed some lines, added bunkers, rough, mounding, a few tees for more options in different conditions. It's like a big painting. You're never quite finished with your masterpiece.' Golf has been a big part of the Sarvadi family for years. 'It was the one thing us brothers could do together without fighting and arguing,' said Sarvadi with a chortle as he reflected on this healthy sibling rivalry that existed in this hugely successful triumvirate. There is deeper meaning to the Renaissance project too. 'Our father loved everything about golf,' added the 59-year-old who spent a distinguished career in the banking sector. 'The course and the club is a family legacy; a tribute to his love of the game and what it taught us. 'My 35-year career in banking was wonderful but it doesn't come close to this. I would never have dreamed that this would be my second career. 'When Jerry decided to slow down and we discussed succession, my brothers kept looking at me. It was a great opportunity and something of an obligation too. 'It's a special project; one that helps us give back to the game and one that's in honour of our father too.' While the Renaissance prepares to welcome the world's best again, we are still waiting to hear about the return of The Open to Muirfield. Imagine that? Finish up the Scottish Open on the Sunday night and hop next door for a week at The Open? 'The are reasons to do it, there are reasons not to,' said Sarvadi. 'The R&A obviously have a big say in that as would the tours. I did ask some of the players and officials about it and they said they've love to have it back-to-back. 'They could set up in East Lothian for a couple of weeks. Those are on-going discussions.' There should be plenty of golfing affairs to discuss next week. For the golf scribblers, there should be plenty to write about too. Encore, please.

How to turn job hopping into a win on your résumé
How to turn job hopping into a win on your résumé

Fast Company

time26-06-2025

  • Business
  • Fast Company

How to turn job hopping into a win on your résumé

Short-term jobs are common in today's employment landscape, so don't fret if you have a few brief stints on your résumé. Not only can such experiences at several organizations showcase the breadth of your experience, your ability to adapt to new corporate cultures is also a skill you can sell. But you do have to sell it it, and HR experts explain how to positively spin your employment scorecard and answer questions about your résumé that hiring managers may ask. Should you list all your short-term jobs on your résumé? Your résumé can be the first impression you make, so let it reflect an accurate history of your experience. 'Your résumé sets the tone for a transparent dialogue with potential employers,' says Jaune Little, director of recruiting services at Insperity who is based in Houston. 'Honesty builds trust, and trust is the foundation of any successful professional relationship.' From her vantage point as a recruiting executive, Little says today's career paths are less linear. 'Many professionals are taking on project-based or exploratory roles to build skills, broaden their exposure, or recalibrate their long-term goals,' she continues. This kind of career agility reflects curiosity and self-awareness but knowing how to frame them in a conversation or cover letter can be make or break, she notes. The extended deadline for Fast Company's Next Big Things in Tech Awards is this Friday, June 27, at 11:59 p.m. PT. Apply today.

Green in prime position to break Champions Tour hoodoo
Green in prime position to break Champions Tour hoodoo

West Australian

time16-05-2025

  • Sport
  • West Australian

Green in prime position to break Champions Tour hoodoo

Australian Richard Green made a long eagle putt and finished his round with a birdie to fire a nine-under-par 63 for a two-shot lead after one round at the Regions Tradition. Green, who has yet to win on the PGA Tour Champions, gave himself a nice head start on Thursday toward winning his first senior major championship. He sits two strokes ahead of a quartet tied at seven-under 65 - Jerry Kelly, Stewart Cink, New Zealand's Steven Alker and South Korea's Charlie Wi - at Greystone Golf & Country Club in Birmingham, Alabama. "Everything was going well," Green said. "I started really nicely, hit it really close a lot during the round. Just been a bit of a result of a lot of work." Green had drained six birdies through 11 holes before his eagle at the par-5 13th hole. The lefty reached the green in two and rolled in a fast-moving putt for eagle to jump to eight under and sole possession of the lead. He birdied his very next hole, a par-3, before bogeying No.16 and birdieing No.18. "Look, it's a marathon," Green said. "It's hard to play awesome golf every day, but certainly try. "It's just give yourself a chance, get through every day giving yourself a chance into the next day, giving yourself a chance into Sunday and then hopefully you're there with a chance on Sunday, that's all you can really do." Cink, who won the PGA Tour Champions' Insperity Invitational earlier this month, could be in the running for his first senior major title after a big day. He went six under par in a seven-hole stretch from Nos.7-13, with five birdies, one bogey and an eagle putt at No.13. "It feels great and there's some memories fresh from getting a win there, but it's not like you can go out there and just sleepwalk your way to winning," Cink said. "You've still got to do the right things. There's a reason we got a win (at the Insperity) and the reasons are what we have to keep doing here and forward and we'll hopefully pick up some more wins. But there's no guarantee." Alker has nine wins on the 50-and-older circuit to his name, but just one major, the 2022 Senior PGA Championship. He got off to a smooth start to the week with seven birdies and no bogeys on his card. "Everything's pretty solid," he said. "You've just got to try to get it in the fairway here because you never know, you could get a mud ball in that rough and anything can happen. So I did pretty well keeping it in the fairway and gave myself some chances." Germany's Alex Cejka, who won this event in 2021, is alone in sixth after a six-under 66. Tied at five-under 67 are Y.E. Yang of South Korea, Thomas Bjorn of Denmark and Australian Greg Chalmers.

Green in prime position to break Champions Tour hoodoo
Green in prime position to break Champions Tour hoodoo

Perth Now

time16-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Perth Now

Green in prime position to break Champions Tour hoodoo

Australian Richard Green made a long eagle putt and finished his round with a birdie to fire a nine-under-par 63 for a two-shot lead after one round at the Regions Tradition. Green, who has yet to win on the PGA Tour Champions, gave himself a nice head start on Thursday toward winning his first senior major championship. He sits two strokes ahead of a quartet tied at seven-under 65 - Jerry Kelly, Stewart Cink, New Zealand's Steven Alker and South Korea's Charlie Wi - at Greystone Golf & Country Club in Birmingham, Alabama. "Everything was going well," Green said. "I started really nicely, hit it really close a lot during the round. Just been a bit of a result of a lot of work." Green had drained six birdies through 11 holes before his eagle at the par-5 13th hole. The lefty reached the green in two and rolled in a fast-moving putt for eagle to jump to eight under and sole possession of the lead. He birdied his very next hole, a par-3, before bogeying No.16 and birdieing No.18. "Look, it's a marathon," Green said. "It's hard to play awesome golf every day, but certainly try. "It's just give yourself a chance, get through every day giving yourself a chance into the next day, giving yourself a chance into Sunday and then hopefully you're there with a chance on Sunday, that's all you can really do." Cink, who won the PGA Tour Champions' Insperity Invitational earlier this month, could be in the running for his first senior major title after a big day. He went six under par in a seven-hole stretch from Nos.7-13, with five birdies, one bogey and an eagle putt at No.13. "It feels great and there's some memories fresh from getting a win there, but it's not like you can go out there and just sleepwalk your way to winning," Cink said. "You've still got to do the right things. There's a reason we got a win (at the Insperity) and the reasons are what we have to keep doing here and forward and we'll hopefully pick up some more wins. But there's no guarantee." Alker has nine wins on the 50-and-older circuit to his name, but just one major, the 2022 Senior PGA Championship. He got off to a smooth start to the week with seven birdies and no bogeys on his card. "Everything's pretty solid," he said. "You've just got to try to get it in the fairway here because you never know, you could get a mud ball in that rough and anything can happen. So I did pretty well keeping it in the fairway and gave myself some chances." Germany's Alex Cejka, who won this event in 2021, is alone in sixth after a six-under 66. Tied at five-under 67 are Y.E. Yang of South Korea, Thomas Bjorn of Denmark and Australian Greg Chalmers.

Richard Green shoots 63 to grab top spot at Regions Tradition
Richard Green shoots 63 to grab top spot at Regions Tradition

Mint

time15-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Mint

Richard Green shoots 63 to grab top spot at Regions Tradition

Australian Richard Green made a long eagle putt and finished his round with a birdie to fire a 9-under-par 63 and take a two-shot lead after one round of the Regions Tradition on Thursday in Birmingham, Ala. Green, who has yet to win on the PGA Tour Champions, gave himself a nice head start toward winning his first senior major championship at Greystone Golf & Country Club. He sits two strokes ahead of a quartet tied at 7-under 65: Jerry Kelly, Stewart Cink, New Zealand's Steven Alker and South Korea's Charlie Wi. "Everything was going well," Green said. "I started really nicely, hit it really close a lot during the round. Just been a bit of a result of a lot of work." Green had drained six birdies through 11 holes before his eagle occurred at the par-5 13th hole. The lefty reached the green in two and rolled in a fast-moving putt for eagle to jump to 8 under and sole possession of the lead. He birdied his very next hole, a par-3, before bogeying No. 16 and birdieing No. 18. "Look, it's a marathon," Green said. "It's hard to play awesome golf every day, but certainly try. It's just give yourself a chance, get through every day giving yourself a chance into the next day, giving yourself a chance into Sunday and then hopefully you're there with a chance on Sunday, that's all you can really do." Cink, who won the PGA Tour Champions' Insperity Invitational earlier this month, could be in the running for his first senior major title after a big day. He went 6 under par in a seven-hole stretch from Nos. 7-13, with five birdies, one bogey and an eagle putt at No. 13. "It feels great and there's some memories fresh from getting a win there, but it's not like you can go out there and just sleepwalk your way to winning," Cink said. "You've still got to do the right things. There's a reason we got a win (at the Insperity) and the reasons are what we have to keep doing here and forward and we'll hopefully pick up some more wins. But there's no guarantee." Alker has nine wins on the 50-and-older circuit to his name, but just one major, the 2022 Senior PGA Championship. He got off to a smooth start to the week with seven birdies and no bogeys on his card. "Everything's pretty solid," he said. "You've just got to try to get it in the fairway here because you never know, you could get a mud ball in that rough and anything can happen. So I did pretty well keeping it in the fairway and gave myself some chances." Germany's Alex Cejka, who won this event in 2021, is alone in sixth after a 6-under 66. Tied at 5-under 67 were Y.E. Yang of South Korea, Thomas Bjorn of Denmark and Greg Chalmers of Australia.

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