Looking Back at Season 1 of Golfin' Massachusetts - MASSGOLF

Reflecting On Season One of Golfin’ Massachusetts

By: Richard Rapp | rrapp@massgolf.org

When we set out to create a new video series last summer, we knew it would require a period of trial-and-error. At the time, I figured that approach would be temporary, and soon we’d settle into a reliable framework for our episodes. Now, a season in, I wouldn’t say we’ve settled into a framework, but I’ve come to see our methodology less as trial-and-error, and more as recurring opportunity for improvisation. 

No two episodes of the series have been the same, because no two golf courses are. And really, no golf course worth a damn is the same course from one day to the next. The variability is fundamental to the game. So why not lean into it? 

Beyond the golf course itself, until we arrive on the property, we’re never quite sure what we’ll get in terms of guest personalities, historical markers, lighting, etc. The only variable I’ve come to rely on, really, is enthusiasm. The beauty of talking to someone, employee or player, about their home course, public or private, is that they are inevitably prideful and eager to tell its story with a personal slant. 

Personal slant is key. We’re not looking to catalogue the measurables for the sake of a golf course atlas. Fuzzy local lore, design oddities, turn shack must-haves, rituals—that’s the meat on the bone. 

Speaking of enthusiasm, these episodes are a labor of love, and I hope that comes across in our presentation. Our crew of usually two, at most three, genuinely seems to slip under the spell of whichever course we’re featuring and emerges from the shoot with a need to do it justice on screen.  

Essentially, we’ve been learning how to make a TV show, while simultaneously falling for these fantastic golf courses, which is a recipe for genuine, if unpolished, storytelling. What I’m saying is, we’re winging it (shoutout to the Chicken Wing Open), and I hope viewers enjoy the spontaneity and sincerity of it all. We’re Massachusetts golfers that love the game and how deeply its roots run in this state. 

Top 5 Moments from Season 1

With one season in the books, I want to pause and rewind to the top 5 moments that had me laughing, or daydreaming, or just generally golf-geeking in the editing bay: 

  • #1 | Steve St. Amand’s Stone Wall
    From Episode 2: Spooky Salem Steve St. Amand being an absolute character in general, but specifically, the moment when he talked about building a stone wall at Olde Salem Greens, which absolutely no one asked him to do. Stephen and I were quoting Steve-isms for months afterward. It’s hard to fathom that we played with a human who is as quirky and delightful as that golf course is.
     

  • #2 | Uncovering Super 8 Footage of Palmer & Player
    From Episode 4: South Shore CC We heard in passing that superintendent Jake Silva was in possession of old home video super 8s of Arnold Palmer playing a match against Gary Player at this beloved public track. But after downloading a few questionable software programs to extract the files from a DVD Jake lent us, I felt oddly…emotional? The footage is such a neat time capsule, and the realization that we were going to have a chance to share it with a larger audience reaffirmed that this video series is worth making.
     

  • #3 | Sunset on Nantucket
    From Episode 5: Nantucket The whole trip to Nantucket was fantastic, but the short November day meant the par-5 closing hole was drenched in golden light as we played in, and we had just enough time to walk to the beach to watch the sun dip behind an endless expanse of ocean. Zack was an awesome host, and this is not a paid ad: the food at SeaGrille was on another level. It was in my top 2 meals of 2024 (hello, Leeward in Portland, ME).

  • #4 | The Sherpa, Jonathan Sirois
    From Episode 1: Little Marion & Highland Links This was the first episode we shot, so with plenty of uncertainty, I think we really lucked out to have the club champ of Marion Golf Club, Jonathan Sirois, sherpa us around. Little Marion has developed a cult following (for good reason), but I haven’t heard anyone talk about it as eloquently as Jonathan. He had a line comparing the early George Thomas design to finding a Picasso finger painting and looking for strokes of genius, which I still think about.
     

  • #5 | Tony’s Infectious Laugh
    From Episode 3: Chicken Wing Open For Stephen, it would probably be the wings themselves. Not wanting to make a sticky mess of the camera equipment, I abstained. For me, it was Tony’s laugh that punctuated the episode. It was warm and joyful and built into a wild crescendo, which seemed fitting for Wyantenuck Country Club, particularly as the front nine plays its way up the mountain side.

 


About Mass Golf

Mass Golf is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization that is dedicated to advancing golf in Massachusetts by building an engaged and inclusive community around the sport.

With a community made up of over 130,000 golf enthusiasts and over 360 member clubs, Mass Golf is one of the largest state golf associations in the country. Members enjoy the benefits of handicapping, engaging golf content, course rating and scoring services along with the opportunity to compete in an array of events for golfers of all ages and abilities.

At the forefront of junior development, Mass Golf is proud to offer programming to youth in the state through First Tee Massachusetts and subsidized rounds of golf by way of Youth on Course.

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