Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Steve Brady of Oakland Hills makes the Michigan Golf Hall of Fame


Rochester native Steve Brady joins Michigan Golf Hall of Fame

EAST LANSING — A player and instructor, PGA professional Steve Brady of Rochester was one of three inductees into the Michigan Golf Hall of Fame.

“It’s not really about me, but about the people who helped me along the way,” said Brady Sunday night at a ceremony at the Henry Center at Michigan State University.

The trio joined legends like Walter Hagen, Horton Smith and Chuck Kocsis in raising the number of Hall of Fame members to 101.

Fred Muller, the head golf professional at Crystal Downs in Frankfort, called course designer and Traverse City native Tom Doak the greatest living golf course architect during his introduction remarks.

“I’ve been blessed to do something I really wanted to do in some of the most beautiful places in the world,” Doak said.

Doak, 52, has designed courses in 15 states, as well as Tasmania, Australia and Scotland. He is currently working on a project in China, but also recently designed a practice area at Marygrove University in the Detroit area.

He credited golf course architect Pete Dye and his wife Alice for teaching him the architecture business, but he has made a name for himself with a traditionalist style that has spawned “bucket list” creations like Pacific Dunes in Bandon, Ore., Mullen in the Nebraska sand hills, Cape Kidnapers in New Zealand and The Renaissance Club in Gullane, Scotland.

Brady, 54, was an All-American golfer at Saginaw Valley State University in 1980 before embarking on a professional playing career. He won three Michigan Opens and two Michigan PGA Championships among several other titles while also earning his way into 10 Buick Opens, playing what is now called the Web.com Tour, and being part of two U.S. Opens and three national PGA Championships.

For the last 16 years, he has worked at Oakland Hills Country Club in Bloomfield Hills, where he is director of instruction. He was introduced by his son Matthew, a golfer at Elon University in North Carolina who is planning a career in law.

Fritz Balmer, 73, started his service to Michigan golf in 1975 when he was asked as a member of Spring Meadows Club to be the club representative to the Golf Association of Michigan, where he served as a committee leader, rules official and eventually a key figure in the organization’s history.
The Wisconsin native, who is also an accomplished player after taking the game up at age 20, is best known for taking the lead for the GAM during a critical management void in 2000 as an appointed executive director and then serving two more years as the president of the organization. He directed the hiring of current executive director David Graham, who introduced him for induction.

“This is truly humbling,” Balmer, of Fenton, said. “There are so many great golfers that have given so much. I’ll remember this evening forever.”

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