If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, the Solich Caddie & Leadership Academy should be in full blush as it embarks on its sixth season.
These days, the Academy is not only thriving at the course at which it started — the CGA-owned and operated CommonGround Golf Course in Aurora — but its ideas are taking root both statewide and in a few locations elsewhere.
Currently, the seeds are being planted on the Western Slope, at Lincoln Park and Tiara Rado Golf Courses, where the city of Grand Junction recently agreed to host a Solich pilot program, starting this year.
CGA executive director Ed Mate said the plan is for four youngsters to caddie at the two Grand Junction municipal courses this golf season, and to participate in the accompanying Cowboy Ethics leadership program and to do volunteer work.
“We got great response from the city,” Mate said. “They’re totally on board. They want to support it. They feel it will be a real opportunity for a few kids. It’s exciting to be able to take our flagship program to that part of the state.”
Founded in 2012, the Academy — named for former caddies and current oilmen and philanthropists George and Duffy Solich (pictured below) — creates opportunities for boys and girls to build leadership skills and develop character through caddying and Academy programming. George Solich originally suggested the idea after reading a magazine article about a caddie camp in Nantucket, Mass.
The Solich Academy promotes the use of caddies by paying the base caddie fees through an educational grant, with participating golfers having the option of adding a tip. In addition to the caddying, a major component of the Academy is that all of the caddies are required to attend weekly leadership classes and do volunteer community-service work each summer. Ideally, some of the participants will become good candidates for the Evans Scholarship for caddies at the University of Colorado.
Frank Wilkinson, a longtime Grand Junction resident and a member of the volunteer CGA Board of Governors since 2009, has spearheaded the effort to bring a Solich Caddie & Leadership Academy chapter to western Colorado. He’s seen how the Solich Academy has thrived at CommonGround and, over the last couple of years, at Meridian Golf Club in Englewood, and believes a scaled-down version will be ideal for his hometown.
Between the two existing Solich Academy sites, CommonGround (almost 1,100) and Meridian (about 330) produced more than 1,400 caddie loops for participating youngsters in 2016. Over the past five years, CommonGround and Meridian have generated almost 5,400 loops, with CommonGround on its own racking up almost 4,800. And 13 Solich caddies have gone on to earn full-tuition and housing Evans Scholarships at CU.
Based on the program’s goal of getting each caddie 30 loops or more each summer, the hope is to produce 120 loops or so in 2017 at the Solich Academy pilot program in Grand Junction.
“I’ve heard awesome, awesome stories about the kids who have participated in the program at CommonGround” from fellow CGA Governors and the association staff, Wilkinson said this week. “We anticipate we’re going to be successful. (If so), it can become a template for what can be done in other places around the state” — particularly at public courses that might be interested in small-scale programs.
Among Grand Junction residents, besides Wilkinson, who have helped the Solich Academy become a reality at Lincoln Park and Tiara Rado are a variety of amateurs, PGA professionals and city employees: Rob Schoeber, director of Grand Junction Parks & Rec; Mike Mendelson, the head professional overseeing the two courses; Doug Jones, golf superintendent of GJ Parks & Rec; Rick Ott, men’s club president at Lincoln Park; and Dan Sommers, instructor at Lincoln Park.
“We’re going to need all these guys to continue to provide input to make this a success,” Wilkinson said.
Mate and Wilkinson made a recent presentation to Grand Junction officials that cemented the deal to bring the Solich Academy to the Western Slope.
“As the meeting developed it was interesting to see how they became engaged in the idea and starting seeing the benefits,” Wilkinson said.
Wilkinson, who calls Lincoln Park his home course, is a member of the men’s club at both Tiara Rado and Lincoln Park.
“Frank Wilkinson couldn’t be more passionate about kids and caddying,” Mate said. “He’s been lobbying for this for several years.”
Men’s club and women’s club events on weekdays at the two courses figure to create caddie loops, along with weekend events. Solich Academy advocates plan to engage such groups — via email blasts and the like — to make it known that caddies are available, and those advocates will also be the ones to coordinate arragements for specific loops.
“There’s going to be a learning curve for the players,” Wilkinson said. “Like myself, I haven’t taken a caddie very often. But both of these golf courses, the terrain is very amenable for this. They’re not very hilly.”
While Grand Junction will be the third active Solich Academy chapter in Colorado — Fort Collins Country Club at one point also featured Solich caddies — there are also several programs in other states that saw what was being done in Colorado and tried to create something similar, according to Mate.
That includes the Caddie & Leadership Academy of Southeast Wisconsin, launched by Phil Poletti, a Western Golf Association director who Mate calls “kind of the pied piper of caddie and leadership academies”; Goat Hill Park golf course in Oceanwide, Calif., started by John Ashworth of golf clothing fame; and the Golf Association of Philadelphia. Of those, the Wisconsin program most closely mirrors the Solich Academy model, down to the Cowboy Ethics leadership training. The Northern California Golf Association Youth on Course Caddie Academy also includes subsidized used of caddies, but no leadership training element.
“It’s a really good model,” George Solich said of the Solich Academy in September. “The goal is to have it at a lot of different places across the country that can benefit kids and give them an opportunity.
“We have some good momentum. It would be great to see it thrive (further). The Evans Scholars Foundation is moving this way too. They have a (WGA Caddie Academy) for girls in Chicago. John (Kaczkowski, president and CEO of the WGA) and I have talked (about) how does all this kind of fit together. I think the idea is, finding more kids you can give the opportunity to.”
Added Mate: “There are some organic things happening out there, which is great. We’re not saying our model has to be used.”
Whatever the case, the caddie academy idea is certainly gaining traction. And the Grand Junction pilot program is but the latest example, albeit a small one.
“This program is all about quality vs. quantity and about having the supply and the demand meet,” Mate said. “We don’t want to have 40 kids when there’s demand for four. But if there’s demand for 10 kids, we want to meet that demand. We’ll play that by ear. Knowing it’s a special person who takes a caddie, are there enough of those people out there to generate 120 loops for these four kids? If we achieve (that number), we’ve done well.”