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The Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus to host the The Northern Trust

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May 29,2018

the staff off the Ridgewood blog

Paramus NJ, The Northern Trust (which was previously known as The Barclays), the first event of the Tour’s FedEx Cup playoffs, will be played August 21-26 at The Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus, New Jersey, will not only have incredible views of the best players in the world in a truly thrilling competition, but will have the very best that New Jersey can offer in Fashion, Food and Do-or-Die Drama.

The Ridgewood Country Club is a twenty-seven-hole private golf course and clubhouse constructed in Paramus, New Jersey and opened on May 30th, 1929. The Norman Revival clubhouse, located at the north end of the property, is the core from which three nine-hole loops extend toward the southwest, south, and southeast. The golf course was designed by A.W. Tillinghast, and the clubhouse by Clifford Wendehack. Tillinghast and Wendehack, respectively, were among the foremost golf and clubhouse architects of the early twentieth century.

THE NORTHERN TRUST is the first of four events in the FedExCup Playoffs, the culmination of the season-long competition that is the centerpiece of the PGA TOUR Season. Played in the New York/New Jersey Metropolitan area, THE NORTHERN TRUST features do-or-die drama as the top 125 players compete to advance, and for one in five, their season will end. With strong ties to the essential elements of New York culture, the event is a celebration of fashion, food and the best golfers on the planet. Many of the world’s top players have won THE NORTHERN TRUST including Adam Scott, Jason Day, Matt Kuchar and 2017 champion Dustin Johnson, who won the event for the second time in thrilling playoff over Jordan Spieth. Since the tournament’s inception in 1967, it has generated more than $46.2 million for New York/New Jersey Metropolitan-area charities, including $1.4 million in 2016.

Volunteer Registration Now Open . Experience a professional golf tournament from “inside the ropes” and enjoy unique behind-the-scenes experiences, plus daily access to the tournament grounds when not volunteering, volunteer uniform package that includes an official cap, shirt and volunteer pin, lunch on the days you work, invitation to the volunteer appreciation party and an additional weekly grounds ticket book for a guest.

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N.J. courses on the list as The Barclays announces future sites

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AUGUST 25, 2015, 12:31 PM    LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, 2015, 12:41 PM
BY ANDY VASQUEZ
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

EDISON — The Barclays will be spending a lot of time in New Jersey over the coming years.

The PGA Tour tournament, which changes sites each year, is being played at Plainfield Country Club in Edison this week. Tuesday morning, tournament officials unveiled the future rotation through 2022.

In the next seven years, the Barclays will be played in Jersey four times.

After two years on Long Island, the tournament will next be played in New Jersey in 2018, at Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus. That begins a  a stretch of three consecutive years in New Jersey.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/n-j-courses-on-the-list-as-the-barclays-announces-future-sites-1.1397925

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Hunter Mahan wins The Barclays, gets surprise visit from wife & daughter

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PARAMUS, NJ – AUGUST 24: Hunter Mahan celebrates with his wife Kandi, daughter Zoe and the tournament trophy after winning of The Barclays at The Ridgewood Country Club on August 24, 2014 in Paramus, New Jersey. (Photo by Darren Carroll/Getty Images)

Hunter Mahan wins The Barclays, gets surprise visit from wife & daughter

PARAMUS, N.J. — Hunter Mahan pulled away with three straight birdies late in the final round Sunday to win The Barclays, ending more than two years without a title on the PGA Tour.

The victory was the sixth of his career, and one of the most important.

Mahan had gone 48 tournaments worldwide without winning and began the FedEx Cup Playoffs at No. 62, guaranteed to play only two events. By closing with a 6-under 65 for a two-shot victory, he is assured of making the Tour Championship every year since the FedEx Cup began in 2007.

And by beating one of the strongest fields of the year, Mahan was sure to make a lasting impression on Tom Watson for when he makes his three captain’s picks for the Ryder Cup on Sept. 2.

“To get a win in an event like this and the timing, it feels unbelievable,” Mahan said. “So I’m extremely proud of myself. I felt great the last few weeks. My game was starting to come around. I knew this was around the corner, but to do it — and to do it today with a 65 — feels great.”

On a day when six players had at least a share of the lead, Mahan found a way to make it look like a comfortable win.

He rolled in a 10-foot birdie putt to take the outright lead on the par-3 15th, hit wedge to 3 feet for a birdie on the 16th and then rolled in a 20-foot birdie on the par-5 17th. That stretched his lead to three shots going to the final hole when Cameron Tringale bogeyed the 18th, and Mahan tried to inject a little drama.

Mahan drove into the trees, pitched out and then missed the green. But he holed an 8-foot putt for bogey.

Jason Day, who shared the 54-hole lead with Jim Furyk, would have needed to hole out from the rough on the 18th to force a playoff and he missed the green. Day closed with a 68 and shared second place with Stuart Appleby (65) and Tringale, who celebrated his 27th birthday with a 66.

Furyk now has failed to win the last eight times he has held at least a share of the lead going into the final round. He was in the mix until missing the fairway on the 14th and taking bogey, and he wound up with a 70 to finish in eighth place, four shots behind.

Tringale began the week with questions about disqualifying himself from the PGA Championship several days after the final major ended. He said he had doubts about whether he whiffed a tap-in for bogey and thus signed for a wrong score. He said he wanted a clear conscience.

“Didn’t expect it to be this clear,” Tringale said with a smile.

https://www.dallasnews.com/sports/golf/headlines/20140824-colleyville-s-hunter-mahan-wins-the-barclays-gets-surprise-visit-from-wife-daughter.ece

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George Jacobus: Ridgewood Visionary Paved the Way For Barclays Event

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Phil Mickelson

George Jacobus: Ridgewood Visionary Paved the Way For Barclays Event
By M. James Ward | August 21, 2014
Last Updated: August 23, 2014 5:36 am

Paramus, NJ—Thursday marked the start of the FedEx playoffs for the top 125 players on the PGA Tour. For the third time the event is played at The Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus, NJ.

Lost in the shuffle on who will finish high enough to advance to the second stage of the playoffs is a name few know or will even appreciate.

Before there was a FedEx Cup, or even for that matter a PGA Tour, there was a time when a fledgling group of vagabond players conducted events that comprised the heart and soul of professional golf here in America.

Golf on the professional side was miles away from the glamorous image seen today through the PGA Tour with such heavyweight stars like Tiger Woods, Rory McIlory and Phil Mickelson. In the early days professional golf was part competition, part exhibition, and part vaudeville. In most cases the most successful of players were usually in the employ of well-to-do clubs—many in the northeast United States. These clubs would allow their professional to “tour” in hope of adding publicity to the sponsoring club but the “touring pro” would also be responsible for working at the club—giving lessons and assisting with the membership in all golf related ways.

The Depression that impacted not only America but throughout the globe had a seismic impact on the development of professional golf in the 1930s. The events that existed were low key tournaments and the purses were small—with only a few high finishers making whatever money was available.

From 1933 to 1939 George Jacobus, who headed the New Jersey PGA Section for many years, became the first American-born President of the Professional Golfer’s Association of America (PGA).

Jacobus served as the head professional at Ridgewood and in his time a number of top tier players would grace the grounds of the Paramus club—most notably the Hall-of-Famer Byron Nelson who Jacobus offered a job after seeing him finish tied for ninth at the 1935 Masters. Nelson was hired as the first assistant for the sum of $400 for an entire season—plus half of his lesson fees. The incomparable sweet-swinging 23-year-old Texan would remain for a short time after laying the seeds of his considerable talents—winning the N.J. Open and the more prestigious Met Open—before moving ahead with what became a stellar playing career.

In those lean years The Ryder Cup Matches were nowhere near the kind of galvanizing and world-renowned event one sees today. Raising the money to handle the expenses in order to conduct the fifth edition of the matches was no small feat—especially for the visiting Great Britain & Ireland team. What was not known at the time was that four years later, for what would be a planned return to the States, was cancelled because of the outbreak of World War II throughout the European continent.

Jacobus was a visionary in getting Ridgewood to host the matches and, at the same time, provide for the kind of respect often times lacking for the professional game. In those years amateur golf was looked upon by many as the “gentlemen’s” way to play the game. Professional golfers were viewed by many as raconteurs analogous to card players, horse bettors and other loose money profiteers.

https://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/903871-george-jacobus-ridgewood-visionary-paved-the-way-for-barclays-event/

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So thinking about going to the Barclays this weekend

Barclays_theridgewood blog.net

So thinking about going to the Barclays this weekend

Visitor information for the Barclays being held at the Ridgewood Country Club
from the Ridgewood Police
Tournament Address:
The Ridgewood Country Club
96 West Midland Ave
Paramus, NJ 07652

General Parking:
General parking for The Barclays 2014 will be at Bergen Community College, which is walking distance to the courese. Parking is $10 per car. For GPS purposes, please use: 400 Paramus Rd., Paramus NJ 07652.
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Public Transportation:
The Barclays tournament will provide free shuttle service to and from NJ Transit’s Glen Rock Main Line Train Station.
Plese visit njtransit.com for further information regarding schedules, routes, etc.

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pjblogger_thebarclays_theridgewoodblog.net

Car and Taxi Service:
The drop off/pick up location for The Barclays 2014 will be located in the entrance to our VIP Lot 6 at The Garden State Plaza Mall. Please use the following address for GPS purposes: 1 Garden State Plaza, Paramus, NJ 07652.

Please follow signs for Lot 6.

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The Barclays: Ridgewood presents challenge as FedEx Cup opening tourney

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The Barclays: Ridgewood presents challenge as FedEx Cup opening tourney
Ray Slover
August 20, 2014 5:08pm EDT

Last year, Tiger Woods collapsed on the course after a shot at The Barclays. It was a moment that told us the world’s best-known golfer was in serious trouble.

This year, The Barclays begins without Woods. We won’t see Tiger until December at the earliest.

What we will see is the world’s best players at Ridgewood Country Club course in Paramus, N.J. Play begins Thursday in the first event of the four-week FedEx Cup playoffs. There are 122 players in this week’s field.

A bit about The Barclays:

— Ridgewood will be site of a FedEx Cup event for the third time. The others were 2008 and 2010. The course is a combination of the 18 toughest holes from among the three nine-hole courses that make up the venue. For this tournament, it plays as a par-71 over 7,340 yards.

“We kind of looked at the facility as a whole, and we wanted to lengthen the golf course a little bit to get a bigger event,” club head pro Reasoner told the New York Post.

“This golf course is so good it deserves to be on that stage,” Reasoner said. “The course itself deserves to be on that stage.”

Reasoner, we’re told, is the brother of former NHL player Marty Reasoner.

Vijay Singh won the 2008 Barclays. In 2010, Matt Kuchar won on the first playoff hole.

— Rory McIlroy, Jimmy Walker and Bubba Watson make up the elite threesome of the first two rounds. They are the world’s top-ranked golfers. McIlroy won three consecutive tournaments, starting with the Scottish Open. Then, he won the British Open and the PGA Championship.

McIlroy is the favorite to win the Cup, pegged at 5-to-2, according to The Linemakers. He also is a 4-to-1 favorite to win The Barclays.

McIlroy also gets the favorite designation from the Star-Ledger of Newark, N.J. The publication says to watch out for the following players, listed by their world rankings: Kuchar, No. 4; Rickie Fowler, No. 16, Jason Day, No. 34; and Kevin Streelman, No. 39.

Fowler, 25, is an interesting player to watch. He finished in the top 10 in all four majors this year, tying for second in the U.S. Open and British Open and tying for fifth at the Masters. He was tied for third at the PGA. If he is going to take the next big step, this could be the event. Trouble is, Fowler hasn’t won in more than two years, and that was his only Tour victory.

The Star-Ledger’s four players who won’t win: Bubba Watson, No. 3; Jordan Spieth, No. 8; Adam Scott, No. 5; and Phil Mickelson, No. 42.

Mickelson, a five-time major winner, was runner-up to McIlroy at the PGA Championship. But he readily acknowledges his problems.

“I know that I’ve made great strides this year in driving the golf ball … but it’s been a terrible year for my wedge and short irons. I also had a very poor year putting,” he told reporters this week.

Mickelson, 44, hasn’t won this season. He has four tournaments to snap his victory drought. He hasn’t come up empty the past 10 years.

“Now I have to play well this week and in the FedExCup to really make the year salvageable,” said Mickelson, a 42-time winner on the PGA Tour.

Henrik Stenson is the defending FedEx Cup champion. Scott comes in at 12-to-1 in Vegas odds. Stenson is 15-to-1.

https://www.sportingnews.com/sport/story/2014-08-20/golf-rory-mcilroy-fedex-cup-ridgewood-the-barclays-tiger-woods-phil-mickelson-odds

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Jersey native Morgan Hoffmann squeaks into The Barclays in his home state

The Greenbrier Classic - Round Two

Jersey native Morgan Hoffmann squeaks into The Barclays in his home state

By Brett Cyrgalis

August 18, 2014 | 9:32pm

Morgan Hoffmann couldn’t even bear to watch.

The Wyckoff, NJ, native knew what was on the line last week at the Wyndham Championship in Greensboro, N.C., coming into the final event before the FedEx Cup holding the No. 118 spot in the points standings.

With only the Top 125 moving on to The Barclays, starting on Thursday at Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus, N.J., Hoffmann needed a solid finish to ensure his appearance at the course he grew up just one town over from. And yet after celebrating his 25th birthday last Monday, he went out and missed the cut.

So he spent the weekend in North Carolina, pounding balls on the range, hitting putts into dusk — and never, ever, tuning in to see how the tournament was going.

“It was incredibly frustrating,” Hoffmann said on Monday, walking between the clubhouse and the range at Ridgewood with an air of confidence, knowing he snuck into his hometown event, and knowing he’ll have a gaggle of hometown support.

“I grew up a town over and I really wanted to make it,” Hoffmann said. “I’m just excited I’m here now and I get a chance.”

https://nypost.com/2014/08/18/jersey-native-squeaks-into-the-barclays-in-his-home-state/

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How a Bergen course landed big-time golf

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How a Bergen course landed big-time golf

AUGUST 18, 2014, 10:12 PM    LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 2014, 12:12 AM
BY ANDY VASQUEZ
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

On an October day back in 1935, a few caddies at Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus presented a seemingly ridiculous challenge to the young assistant pro.

They knew Byron Nelson was good. But they didn’t think he could hit the narrow flagpole from the patio behind the clubhouse. Today there’s a plaque on the stone patio that marks the spot from which Nelson, one of the legends of the game, hit that flagpole on his second try.

It’s just part of Ridgewood’s rich history, one that the venerable club will build on this week when it hosts The Barclays for the third time.

The top-ranked golfers in the world — including Rory McIlroy, Adam Scott, Phil Mickelson and Rickie Fowler — will be at Ridgewood this week to compete in the first event of the PGA Tour’s playoffs. The purse is $8 million, with $1.44 million going to the winner.

Ridgewood has hosted the Ryder Cup (1935), the U.S. Amateur (1974), the U.S. Senior Open (1990) and the Senior PGA Championship (2001). But when the FedEx Cup playoffs and The Barclays first arrived at Ridgewood in 2008, it was the storied club’s first foray into big-time, modern tournament golf. And for a long time, it looked as if Ridgewood might not get that opportunity.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/how-a-bergen-course-landed-big-time-golf-1.1069365#sthash.2th0RIVy.dpuf

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Ridge­wood Country Club in Paramus next for streaking McIlroy

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Rory McIlroy hits out of the bunker on the 12th hole during the second round of the PGA Championship golf tournament at Valhalla Golf Club on Friday. 

Ridge­wood Country Club in Paramus next for streaking McIlroy

AUGUST 17, 2014, 11:38 PM    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, AUGUST 17, 2014, 11:52 PM
BY TARA SULLIVAN
RECORD COLUMNIST
THE RECORD

The scenes from the final round of golf’s final major won’t soon be forgotten. Against a perilously setting sun, some of the world’s best players ­dueled atop a rapidly changing leader board, waging a battle rife with drama and thick with tension, fueled by fantastic shots and heart-stopping mistakes.

It was a PGA Championship that brought us so much, culminating in a second straight major win for Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland.

And yet, the tournament was as remarkable for what it didn’t have as what it did.

No Tiger Woods in the final round? No problem.

Woods has not been a factor this golf season, his advancing age and balky back keeping him out of action for months and putting him on the wrong side of the cut line when he rushed into action at the PGA. The doubts grow ever stronger that Woods will conquer his stated career goal of surpassing Jack Nicklaus’ 18 major titles (Woods has 14), and the most famous player of his generation won’t even participate this week in The Barclays, the first step in the season-ending FedEx Cup.

But Rory will. The world’s No. 1 player is bringing his surging game and meteoric profile to Ridge­wood Country Club in Paramus. For a sport in need of new faces, McIlroy is making his case as the first Woods replacement in years. He won’t ever match Woods’ mass appeal and cross­over popularity, but for the golf purist and traditional fan, he’s a very welcome sight.

The way McIlroy won at Valhalla in Louisville, Ky., the way he carried his lead into Sunday morning, lost it across a middling front nine and roared back to win, was, well, Tiger-esque.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/sullivan-paramus-next-for-streaking-mcilroy-1.1068866#sthash.xRMeNxPI.dpuf