Josh Sens
Josh Sens
The very best issues in life are free, aside from golf.
Golf prices cash.
Until you end up inside straightforward placing distance of Sharon, Penn., within the rolling, western reaches of the state the place Tom Roskos and Adam Scott (no, not that Adam Scott) have been raised.
Born seven years aside, Roskos, 47, and Scott, 40, weren’t mates as children, however they’d a lot in widespread. Each got here from modest properties. Each excelled at sports activities. And each have been launched to golf at Buhl Park Golf Course, a leafy 9-hole format that wasn’t bargain-priced. It was higher than that.
For anybody, at anytime, the worth of a spherical was nada. Zilch. That continues to be the case as we speak.
“While you’re a child, you don’t know any higher, so that you don’t know the way fortunate you might be to have a free course in your yard,” Roskos says. “However now, wanting again, we recognize how lucky we have been, and we acknowledge the significance of preserving a spot like this alive.”
How a course that costs nothing (considered one of a tiny handful of its form within the nation) got here to be is a narrative of nice wealth and generosity. It revolves across the turn-of-the-Twentieth-century industrialist Frank H. Buhl, who was born in Detroit, however constructed his life and fortune in Sharon (70 miles north of Pittsburgh), the place, within the late 1800s, he based a metal firm that bore his title.
Although Buhl and his spouse, Julia, resided in a Romanesque fort, they weren’t oblivious one-percenters, out of contact with native considerations. They gave lavishly to the group, funding the development of the world’s first hospital, in addition to a cemetery, a library, and an Episcopal church. Among the many Buhls’ different items to the general public was a 300-acre parcel, which they bought and remodeled right into a park, replete with mountain climbing trails, an 11-acre lake, and a 9-hole course which opened in 1914.
Over time, locals took to calling it the “Dum Dum” course, although this wasn’t regarded as a denigrating title. Extra probably, it was a time period of endearment for a monitor that was welcoming to all skills. Elite talent was not required. Cash wasn’t, both. That half had been dealt with by the Buhls, who endowed the park in perpetuity with the intention of preserving its facilities free.
Particulars of that sort, which have been misplaced on Roskos and Scott after they have been rising up, are high of thoughts for them nowadays.
In maturity, as in childhood, they’ve a lot in widespread. From their early days on the Dum Dum course, each went on to careers as licensed PGA professionals. In these roles, their paths intersected on a number of events. Lately, they’ve grown extra entwined than ever. Scott’s now the director of golf at Buhl Park, and Roskos is the manager director, which, technically, makes him Scott’s boss. However by no means thoughts the titles. The larger level is that this: Collectively, they’re stewards of the free 9-hole course that served as their springboard into the sport.
Roskos has been in his job longer, having signed on in 2015, by which level, the course had seen higher days. For all of the Buhls’ largesse, there have been limits to the funding they left behind. Their endowment earmarked $650,000 a 12 months for your entire park and all of its services, not simply the course. That was sufficient cash to maintain the greens charges at zero, however not sufficient for correct repairs of the grounds.
As circumstances declined, the course slipped towards the type of dying spiral that dooms so many cash-strapped operations. The board of trustees overseeing the endowment got here inside one vote of shutting Dum Dum down.
Recognizing the necessity for income, Roskos spearheaded a sequence of fundraisers, scraping collectively the cash to reopen a driving vary that had been added to Buhl Park within the Nineteen Nineties, solely to shutter in 2010. That was one thing. Buckets of balls introduced in some dough. But it surely hardly amounted to a long-term resolution. The funds remained threadbare. There was no clubhouse and no professional store, only a sign-in sheet on the vary. Course upkeep was minimal. Fairways and greens bought mown simply as soon as per week.
The Dum Dum course was nonetheless limping alongside in 2020, when Roskos and Scott had an opportunity encounter in an unlikely setting. Scott, who was between jobs in golf, was promoting vehicles at an area dealership, and Roskos was on the lookout for a car. As they chatted within the lot, the 2 bought to speaking about Buhl Park.
“We each agreed that, simply because a course is free, doesn’t imply it needs to be crappy,” Scott says. “But when it was going to be sustainable, extra elements of it must be run like a enterprise.”
In June of that 12 months, Scott got here aboard to assist with that. The timing was propitious, with golf being on the cusp of a pandemic increase. Seizing on that momentum, Roskos and Scott beat the bushes for monetary help, rustling up cash from non-public donations and grants, which they put towards constructing a small professional store with two pay-to-play simulator bays.
Extra income trickled in, as did donations, giving method to a extra bold venture: a clubhouse, with three simulators and a free-to-use indoor placing inexperienced, outfitted with high-tech coaching instruments.
Each bit counts. A big bucket of vary balls at Buhl Park prices $10. The simulators lease out for $20 to $40 an hour, relying on the day and time of 12 months. Snacks and drinks will be bought within the professional store, however a spherical nonetheless fetches the identical as ever: nothing. And a course that after ran at a $250,000 annual loss is now near breaking even. By including clinics and different choices, Roskos and Scott envision a day when it would flip a revenue, all of which might be poured again into the course.
Within the meantime, they’ve beefed up staffing and ramped up upkeep. The fairways are well-groomed. Greens now get lower 5 occasions per week. On a current autumn afternoon at Buhl Park, with foliage popping on the tree-lined format, the influence of those efforts have been plain to see. The vary was packed. Two of the simulators have been occupied. And the Dum Dum course was seeing numerous motion.
A par-34 that’s simply over 2,300 yards, it might by no means be mistaken for a championship routing. But it surely’s every thing {that a} golfer like George Mesaros might ask for.
A 65-year-old army veteran who served two excursions of obligation within the Center East, Mesaros was amongst these out within the fall air, having fun with a course that he performs 4 occasions per week. Standing on the tee field of the 4th gap, a brief, straightaway par-4, he waggled, swung, cut up the center and smiled.
“This place is invaluable to me,” he stated. “And you’ll’t beat the worth.”
For extra info on Buhl Park, or to supply your help, go to buhlpark.org.
Josh Sens
Golf.com Editor
A golf, meals and journey author, Josh Sens has been a GOLF Journal contributor since 2004 and now contributes throughout all of GOLF’s platforms. His work has been anthologized in The Finest American Sportswriting. He’s additionally the co-author, with Sammy Hagar, of Are We Having Any Enjoyable But: the Cooking and Partying Handbook.