Virginia Golfer Mar / Apr 2019 | Page 42

MyTurn by JIM DUCIBELLA Tidgewell’s Quest For 365 Goes Worldwide T 40 Rob Tidgewell achieved his goal of golfing 365 rounds in December at River Creek Club, but played six more rounds before the end of 2018. D u r i ng one r ou nd at T u r nb er r y, Tidgewell estimated the wind was blowing at 30 mph for the first five holes. Then the wind died down and the rain poured down. Tidgewell and seven buddies didn’t quit. “Everybody played, everybody was soaked,” he said. The Irish, it is said, invented the three- day weekend because you can’t cram all of their lousy weather into just Saturday and Sunday. But it wasn’t weather that almost derailed Tidgewell’s quest. Two weeks before the trip across the pond, his tour operator went belly-up. Some members of Tidgewell’s party pulled out and sought refunds. Tidgewell found another operator willing to help, but on such short notice, much of the work at keeping the itinerary together fell to him. Uncomfortable? You bet. However . . . V I R G I N I A G O L F E R | M A R C H / A P R I L 2 0 1 9 “I never realized how nice people are,” he said. “Take Royal County Down, one of the top five golf courses in the world. I called them, explained what was going on and they were like, ‘How can we help you? What can we do? We have you on the tee sheet, we continue to have you on here. How do you want to do this?’ Tidgewell and company are headed back to Ireland again this year. For a man who admits he isn’t blessed with an abundance of patience, the 2018 experience was a life lesson. “Stay on track,” he said. “Don’t get caught up in what could go wrong. Just be patient. Things will work out.” As you’d expect from someone who made his bones in sales, Tidgewell has a new goal: Play 1,000 courses in his lifetime. Unrealistic? Perhaps. But last I knew, his total stood at 625. vsga.org here is no truth to the rumor that Rob Tidgewell played 365 rounds of golf in 2018. He played 371. For the mathematically challenged, he averaged slightly more than one round per day. Others have tried similarly ambitious undertakings and basked in the acclaim that often accompanies such extravagance. Almost exclusively, however, those journeys are plotted from first swing to final putt. Tidgewell’s tale didn’t start out that way. The 63-year-old former sales executive had only been retired for a couple of months but had randomly logged about 40 rounds by the end of February. Friends at River Creek Club in Leesburg wanted to know his plans for his first blush of freedom, although they must have known that for an 8 handi- cap it would involve fairways and greens. He told them he might play as many as 300, maybe 350 rounds. It sounded absurd. “Three hundred fifty?” one friend mocked. “Why don’t you play 365? That’s a much better number.” “In March that became the target number,” Tidgewell said. Tidgewell and some buddies already had a four-week trip planned for Scotland and Ireland, where they were supposed to play 40 rounds in 27 days. He added to the itinerary. When they returned at the end of August, he was ahead of schedule. “Then it became a race to beat the weather before it got bad,” he said. But you don’t outrun Mother Nature. “We’d go out in the rain, the wind and the snow and we’d grind out the weath- er,” he said. He played in Ireland. He played in Canada and Scotland. He played in Ber- muda, and not just anywhere: Turnberry, Troon, St. Andrews, Castle Stuart, Royal Aberdeen, Royal Dornoch. “We were doing bucket list courses,” he said.