Monday, August 27, 2018

Delicious Food • Refreshing Drinks

Try our Specials for this week!

Come on in and enjoy any of these delicious offerings, while overlooking the magnificent view of Makefield.

Buffalo Chicken Quesadilla  $8

Buffalo chicken, pepper jack/cheddar cheese

Served with ranch or bleu cheese

Chicken Roma  $9

Grilled chicken w/ roasted red peppers, provolone & pesto

Pulled Pork Sandwich  $9

BBQ pork, cheddar & coleslaw

Served with fries

Bacon Avocado Burger  $12

8oz burger with swiss, avocado and lettuce, tomato & onion

♦ Drink of the Week ♦

Blue Hawaiian   $7

BOOK A TEE TIME AND HAVE LUNCH WITH US!

 

 

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Thursday, August 16, 2018

Celebrate Happy Hour with us on Friday, Aug. 17th

Relax, Unwind and Have a great time with us on Friday Night!  

Happy Hour ♦ Party on the Patio

Friday, August 17th

5 pm – 8 pm

Food & Drink Specials

$5.00 appetizers

$2.00 Miller Lite & Yuengling Drafts

Great Times with Great Friends!

 • Sit by the Fire and enjoy the Best Views and Vistas in the Area •

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Try our Weekly Food & Beverage Specials!

Come on over to The Highlands Grille this week for our Weekly Specials.  These delicious offerings will be sure to satisfy any appetite.  Our Drink Special of the Week will be the Makefield Mojito!  See you at the Highlands!

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Monday, August 13, 2018

PGA Championship 2018: Brooks Koepka deserves our attention, and it shouldn’t have taken so long

ST. LOUIS — Brooks Koepka is a tough guy to miss. He’s the one with the million-dollar smile, steal-yo-girl biceps and the mightiest swing in golf. He’s built like Ben Watson, but he putts like Ben Crenshaw. The next time he’s rattled will be the first. He’s now won three of the past six majors he’s entered and joined some elite company in the three-major club (more on that in a minute).

And yet, despite all of that, I’m afraid somehow we have missed him.

Koepka held off — I can’t believe I’m typing these words — a 64 from Tiger Woods on Sunday at a major championship and hoisted yet another major trophy at the end of the week. After two bogeys in his first five holes, he played the final 13 flawlessly with five birdies and a closing 66 to win by two. All of this with Woods doing his thing ahead of him.

“You could hear the roars when we were on 10 and 11, and then you could kind of hear it trickle down as they changed the leaderboards all the way through,” said Koepka. “You could hear a different roar like every 30 seconds. So we knew what was going on. It’s pretty obvious when Tiger makes a birdie. I think everybody at the golf course cheers for him. I’m sure everyone is rooting for him.”

Tiger’s 64, though remarkable, wasn’t enough to catch Koepka. A 62 would have put him in a playoff. It would have taken a 61 from Big Cat for the outright win.

Brooks Koepka kind of flexed on Tiger Woods (of all people) on a Sunday at a major championship.

“I remember when I watched Adam win at the Players. I loved his golf swing. He’s got the best golf swing ever, I think. It’s so pretty to watch. He’s one of the nicest guys once you meet him, too. He really is,” Koepka said. “And then, I mean, Tiger for obvious reasons. As a kid growing up, that’s the whole reason that all of us, or people in my generation, are even playing golf was because of him. And to duel it out with them, it’s pretty neat. I don’t think I ever dreamed of that, that situation that I was in today.

“It really is surreal. It’s really cool.”

No category exists for a golfer whose four wins include three majors, all before his 30th birthday. We don’t know what to do with that. I’ll struggle to figure this out for the rest of 2018 and into 2019. It is irreconcilable that someone could win three of his first 20 major starts but only one of his first 80 non-major starts on the PGA Tour.

I suppose we should start with what we know:

  • Koepka has joined Woods, Jordan Spieth, Tom Watson and Jack Nicklaus as the only Americans with three majors by the age of 28 since World War II.
  • Koepka has joined Woods, Nicklaus, Gene Sarazen and Ben Hogan as the only golfers to win the U.S. Open and PGA Championship in the same year.
  • Koepka joined Spieth and Rory McIlroy as the only golfers to win multiple majors in a single season over the past decade.
  • Koepka has won three of his past six majors and finished in the top 15 a stunning 11 (!) times at majors since 2014.

And he didn’t even play this year’s Masters because of an injury.

“Three majors at 28,” said Koepka. “It’s a cool feeling. It really is. You know, hopefully I can stay healthy. I’ve kind of had some trouble with that over the past two years, three years, whatever it was. Missed the British [Open] and then to miss Augusta. You know, I think I’m much more disciplined now, so I should be able to play every major, making sure my body’s healthy.”

Maybe for now we can think of Koepka the way baseball thought of John Smoltz. The former Braves pitcher was terrific in the regular season. A Hall of Fame pitcher. And he was even better in the playoffs. It’s easy to deride athletes who show up big in big moments but don’t perform when the chips are up. Why don’t you do that all time? Even they struggle to explain it.

“For some reason, I can really tune in in the majors, and I have no idea why,” said Koepka earlier in the week. “They really get my attention.”

Now he has our attention. Koepka wasn’t hard to miss before. He clubs the ball and picks off trophies — big ones, not middling ones or plates or medals. He collects. He has done so at an historical rate thus far, and now we’re staring at a bizarre scenario in which Koepka could legitimately win as many or more majors than he does normal PGA Tour events.

“I would think [my game] suits the majors, having won three of the last six I’ve played in. So I guess [it] suits them. Need to figure out Augusta a little bit, haven’t quite had the results there that I’ve had elsewhere. But this golf course set up beautifully for me,” Koepka said. “I’m looking forward to the next few years. If I can stay healthy and actually show up to a major, I feel like I’ve got a good chance.”

In some ways, this is fitting. Koepka’s game is as impossible as his resume. He pounds the horizon with his fists and then releases preposterous chip shots with the delicateness of a man half his size. It doesn’t compute that the man who led the PGA Championship in driving distance and finished second from tee to green would also finish top 20 in putting. That’s not a fluke, either. It’s who he is, and it’s a harbinger for what the future looks like, too.

“I’m excited for the next few years,” said Koepka. “As fans, like, I’m a fan of golf. You should be excited. I mean, Tiger’s come back. You look at what Dustin’s doing, Justin [Thomas], Rory, Spieth … I mean, it’s a great time to be a golf fan. I can’t wait to duel it out with them.”

SOURCE:  CBSSports

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Women’s Invitational – Register Today!

Attention All Ladies!

Save the Date • Tuesday, August 21st

Women’s Invitational

9AM Shotgun Start

Eligibility: Open To All MHGC members, their guests, general publicField Limit: 40 Teams of TwoAwards: At end of competition following lunch, awards for all flight winners gross/net – Flights determined by combined course handicap.

Format: Two player, fourball (best ball) team – Flighted based on combined team course handicap

Handicap:80% of individual USGA Handicap- Flighted Gross & Net Divisions – Both players must have verifiable USGA handicaps.

Entry Fee: $100/player, $200/Team – Includes greens fees, cart, range balls, continental breakfast, lunch, tee gift and prizes

Event: 18 Hole Stroke Play event – flighted based on combined team handicap and number of teams. Prizes for low gross and net team for each flight.

Entry Deadline: August 17th Close of Business

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Thursday, August 9, 2018

Time to register for the next Nine & Dine!

Couples Nine & Dine

Sunday, August 26th

5:00PM Shotgun Start

9 Hole Scramble
$90/Couple – Fee includes green fees, cart, dinner and prizes

ENTRY DEADLINE: FRIDAY, AUGUST 24TH CLOSE OF BUSINESS

All Ability Levels Welcome •  Fun golf event with a fun format

Make Up Your Own Team or Have The Pro Shop Pair You

The post Time to register for the next Nine & Dine! appeared first on Makefield Highlands.

Celebrate Happy Hour with us this Friday!

Wind down from your busy week with us on Friday Night!  

Happy Hour ♦ Party on the Patio

Friday, August 10th

5 pm – 8 pm

Food & Drink Specials

Great Times with Great Friends!

Live Music 🎶  Great Food  &  Drinks 🍸 🍻 🍷

 

The post Celebrate Happy Hour with us this Friday! appeared first on Makefield Highlands.

Wednesday, August 8, 2018

PGA Championship 2018: More than a major at stake. Who will be the player of the year?

ST. LOUIS — The PGA Championship is the year’s final major. But there’s still plenty to be decided in golf. Justin Thomas, who won Sunday at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational and is the defending PGA champion this week at Bellerive, has three wins. So do Dustin Johnson and Bubba Watson. Justin Rose and Jason Day, meanwhile, have two victories this season. The year’s first three major winners were Patrick Reed, Brooks Koepka and Francesco Molinari.

So, who will be the player of the year?

The Wanamaker Trophy is far more significant a prize, of course, but any of the aforementioned players hoisting it would be a defining mark on a tremendous season, and give said player a leg up on the honor.

Here’s a breakdown of the candidates so far.

Justin Thomas: Though his win Sunday was his first since February it came on a difficult Firestone course, much the way his previous victory took place on a tough PGA National course at the Honda Classic, which he won in a playoff over Luke List. Thomas’ other victory came last fall at the inaugural CJ Cup in Korea—also in a playoff, over Marc Leishman.

Dustin Johnson: His three wins came in Maui, Memphis and Canada. They also were the most impressive among the group in terms of margin of victory. Johnson won at Kapalua by eight, TPC Southwind by six and Glen Abbey by three. The top-ranked played in the world, he also has missed just one cut in 15 starts, has two runner-up finishes and two third-place finishes, and has finished in the top 10 a staggering 10 times in 15 starts. By comparison, Thomas has seven top-10s in three more starts.

Bubba Watson: Like Johnson, Watson’s victories came on a differing tracks with wins at Riviera and TPC River Highlands, bookended around his title at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play at Austin Country Club. Watson however has just two other top-10s.

Justin Rose: The WGC-HSBC Champions and Fort Worth Invitational were Rose’s two victories on the PGA Tour this season, but he also won in Turkey and Indonesia and rose to as high as No. 2 in the world before Thomas supplanted this past weekend. In 13 total starts in 2018, Rose has five top-10s.

Jason Day: If it seems like Day has barely played this year it’s because he has. The Aussie has made just a dozen starts but has won two of them, at Torrey Pines and Quail Hollow. He has just three other top-10 finishes, though.

In terms of major performance, Johnson and Rose have the better resumes. Johnson tied for 10th at the Masters and third at the U.S. Open, while Rose finished in the top 10 in both Opens, including a runner-up at Carnoustie.

But there’s still one more major to go.

SOURCE:  Golfworld

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Friday, August 3, 2018

Hey Everyone! It’s a Party on the Patio!

Friday’s in August just got a whole lot better at The Highlands!

Live Music 🎶  Great Food  &  Drinks 🍸 🍻 🍷

The post Hey Everyone! It’s a Party on the Patio! appeared first on Makefield Highlands.

Join us for a fun evening of golf, dinner & prizes!

Couples Nine & Dine

Sunday, August 26th

5:00PM Shotgun Start

9 Hole Scramble
$90/Couple – Fee includes green fees, cart, dinner and prizes

ENTRY DEADLINE: FRIDAY, AUGUST 24TH CLOSE OF BUSINESS

All Ability Levels Welcome •  Fun golf event with a fun format

Make Up Your Own Team or Have The Pro Shop Pair You

The post Join us for a fun evening of golf, dinner & prizes! appeared first on Makefield Highlands.

Register Now for the Women’s Invitational

Attention All Ladies!

Save the Date • Tuesday, August 21st

Women’s Invitational

9AM Shotgun Start

Eligibility: Open To All MHGC members, their guests, general publicField Limit: 40 Teams of Two

Awards: At end of competition following lunch, awards for all flight winners gross/net – Flights determined by combined course handicap.

Format: Two player, fourball (best ball) team – Flighted based on combined team course handicap

Handicap:80% of individual USGA Handicap- Flighted Gross & Net Divisions – Both players must have verifiable USGA handicaps.

Entry Fee: $100/player, $200/Team – Includes greens fees, cart, range balls, continental breakfast, lunch, tee gift and prizes

Event: 18 Hole Stroke Play event – flighted based on combined team handicap and number of teams. Prizes for low gross and net team for each flight.

Entry Deadline: August 17th Close of Business

The post Register Now for the Women’s Invitational appeared first on Makefield Highlands.

Join us for great food and fun times!

The Highlands Grille

Open Daily 7 am to 9 pm

Now offering Weekly Lunch Specials

HAPPY HOUR

Friday’s 5pm – 8pm

Drink & Appetizer Specials

“NEW” Updated Menu Offerings

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