Virginia Golfer Nov / Dec 2019 | Page 28

photo-sharing app. He began posting pictures and compelling narratives about golf courses, clubs, travel and other stuff under the Sugarloaf Social Club flag. Sug- arloaf, since closed, was a Florida course Gilley frequented in college. However social media posts find fol- lowers, Gilley’s musings—he’s compared them to Bat signals for golf nerds—found plenty of them. The like-minded audience has mushroomed to nearly 30,000. Social media are full of “influencers,’’ but Sugarloaf, while hardly alone in the golf space, is clearly an ascendant voice. “The point of Sugarloaf above all else is connecting these sort of folks and creating a community,” Gilley says. “Instagram, Gilley and Lewis have found a home at Richmond’s Jefferson Lakeside Country Club, which features a classic Donald Ross design golf course. 26 V I R G I N I A G O L F E R | N O V E M B E R / D E C E M B E R 2 0 19 Sugarloaf Social Club frequently scouts and shares courses that kindle their golf spirit. From left to right: Sperryville’s Schoolhouse Nine; Laurel Mill Golf Course in Ridgway, Pennsylvania; and Lewis on the hunt in Maine. because it was really devoted to photogra- phy with some light storytelling, was a per- fect way to share the journey of a golf nerd.” Yet Sugarloaf never pigeonholes what golf should be to people, because the true golf journey never stops being about discovery. “There’s so much individuality in personal tastes, interests and curiosity,” Lewis says. So Sugarloaf’s ethos “is all about being an individual. If you’re interested in something that’s not the mainstream, go explore it.” YOUNG GUYS, BUT OLD GOLF SOULS Pinehurst’s president Tom Pashley took that flier on Sugarloaf when he accepted Gilley’s and Lewis’ impromptu invitation for a meeting two years ago. Impressed by their passion and attitude toward posi- tioning renovated Pinehurst for a newer demographic, he hired them on. “We all sit down and just like that we’re talking about Donald Ross and the nuanc- es of design and the simple but crucial importance of just helping people have fun on the golf course,” Pashley recently told GOLF magazine. “These were young guys, from a differ- ent generation, but their golf souls were as aged as mine.” Former Pinehurst golf pro Jeff Crabbe, now general manager of Jefferson Lake- side Country Club in Richmond, says he had the exact same sensation when he met the Sugarloaf boys. vsga.org Gilley resides in Oakton, Lewis in Rich- mond, and both are Virginia State Golf Association members. The pair met in the halls of D.C. bureaucracy about eight years ago, working for a Florida con- gressman. Lewis was chief of staff, Gilley the communications director. Golf was a shared passion, although they came at the game from much different directions. Gilley, now 30, was an accomplished junior golfer who played at Florida’s Rol- lins College. Lewis, 36, was a relative golf greenhorn. But it wasn’t long before golf became their bond and brainchild. When Instagram launched a decade ago, Gilley intuitively recognized the fun and connectivity potential of the