News & Updates

  • 2024 Ute Creek Spring Men's Invitational

    Registration Form

    April 27 & 28

    Colorado Cup Points (Championship and Senior Championship Flights)

    Prize payouts depend on size of field

    Format: 36 hole individual stroke play

    All players must have a current USGA GHIN handicap

    Flights will be determined by most recent GHIN handicap

     

    ENTRY DEADLINE: April 22, 2024

    $175 entry fee must accompany application

    You will get an email with starting times before the tournament

     

    Mail to: Ute Creek Golf Course, 2000 Ute Creek Drive, Longmont, CO 80504

    (Include $175, with check made payable to Ute Creek Golf Course)

     
     

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  • 2024 Hispanic Education Foundation Golf Tournament

     
    HEF Logo
     
    Date:  June 14, 2024
     
    Individual Player: $125
    Team (4 Players): $500
     
    All proceeds of the tournament fund scholarships for graduates of St. Vrain Valley Schools.

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  • 2024 Longmont Professional Firefighters Tournament

    Longmont Professional Firefighters Local 1806 Golf Tournament

    Fundraiser for Colorado Professional Firefighters and MDA

    Includes:  Cart, Lunch and Range Balls
     
    Location:  Ute Creek Golf Course
    Date:  September 13, 2024
    Start Time:  8:00
     
     
     
     

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  • Ute Creek Golf Course Recognized for Environmental Excellence

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    February 07, 2024

    Ute Creek Golf Course Recognized for Environmental Excellence

    LONGMONT, Colo. – Audubon International is recognizing Ute Creek Golf Course for 10 years of certification as an Audubon International Cooperative Sanctuary through its commitment to environmental stewardship and efforts to maintain a comprehensive environmental management program focused on wildlife and habitat management, water conservation, resource management, and outreach and education.

    “We're very proud to count Ute Creek Golf Course among our members,” said Christine Kane, CEO at Audubon

    International. “They made environmentally sustainable golf course management an integral part of their operating principles long before it became an accepted option. Their leadership has already brought many benefits to their community over the past decade and will continue to do so long into the future.”

    To reach certification in the Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary Program (ACSP) for Golf Courses, a course must maintain a high degree of environmental quality in several areas including Environmental Planning, Wildlife & Habitat Management, Outreach and Education, Chemical Use Reduction and Safety, Water Conservation, and Water Quality Management. After designation, courses must go through a recertification process every three years.

    Ute Creek Golf Course is one of about 750 courses in the world to be designated as a certified ACSP for Golf course. Through participation in the ACSP for Golf, Ute Creek Golf Course has been involved in numerous environmental projects, including conserving energy and reducing water use, utilizing integrated pest management techniques, naturalizing areas, and managing resources in an environmentally responsible manner.

    “Everyone involved with the Ute Creek Golf Course is honored for the course to be recognized by Audubon International for the tenth year,” said Golf Course Supervisor, Dan Reese. “Sustainability is a top priority for the Longmont City Council, and the City of Longmont, and it’s terrific that Ute Creek Golf Course serves as an example of success in the City.”

    Audubon International is an environmental organization dedicated to educating, assisting, and inspiring millions of people from all walks of life to protect and sustain the land, water, wildlife, and natural resources around them. In addition to golf courses, Audubon International also provides programs for businesses, communities, and new developments. For more information, contact Audubon International at [email protected] or visit their website at auduboninternational.org

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    About Ute Creek Golf Course

    Ute Creek Golf Course, designed by the world-renowned golf course architects of the Robert Trent Jones II Group, opened in 1997. This 18-hole championship course is a Par 72, ranging in length from 5,509 yards to 7,167 yards. The views are amazing! Join us today for a truly enjoyable place to play. Learn more at www.golflongmont.com/ute-creek.

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  • 2024 Golf Longmont Players Card Available

    Golf Longmont Players Card

    Available Monday, November 20, 2023 at:  Shop Golf Longmont or
    at the Golf Course Pro Shop of choice.
     
    Save 32% at each course!

    $95 - Includes four 9 hole rounds with cart at
    Sunset Golf Course
    A $140 Value While Supplies Last!
     
    $168- Includes four 18 hole rounds with cart
    Twin Peaks Golf Course
    A $248 Value While Supplies Last!
     
    $200 - Includes four 18 hole rounds with cart at
    Ute Creek Golf Course
    A $292 Value While Supplies Last!
     
     
    Gift Certificates are available for all three courses
    online at:  Shop Golf Longmont

    Merchandise and certificates can also be purchased
    and picked up at each City of Longmont Pro Shop.

    Inclement winter hours vary
    Please call the shop of your choice for hours:
     
    Sunset Golf Course - 303-651-8466
    Twin Peaks Golf Course - 303-651-8401
    Ute Creek Golf Course - 303-774-4342

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  • Twin Peaks Ladies 9 Hole Golf League

    2023 Ladies 9 hole Twin Peaks flyer

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  • Sweet Spots Ladies Golf League

    Attention Lady Golfers!

    Come join the funnest golf league in Longmont!

    Sweet Spots Ladies Golf League

    The Sweet Spots Golf League is the longest running Ladies Golf League in Longmont , CO.

    The league golfs Wednesday evenings at Twin Peaks Golf Course.

     

    Informational Meetings held at Twin Peaks Golf Course:

    Wednesday, March 15th  5:30PM

    Wednesday, April 5th 5:30 PM

    Wednesday, April 26 5:30 PM

     

    All Ladies are welcome!

    If you cannot attend any of the meetings, please leave your name and email at the front desk.  Information will be sent to you.

    You can also contact the Sweet Spots League President, Celeste Miller:  720-391-8650 or [email protected]

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  • Sunset Ladies Leagues/Clubs

    Ladies 9 hole league: Play Thursday Mornings, Jodi Carlson, President.  Email:


     Ladies 18 hole League: Play Tuesday Mornings, Nancy Jackson. Email: 

     

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Upcoming Events

16Apr
Tue, Apr. 16  |  07:00 AM


27Apr
Sat, Apr. 27  |  07:00 AM


28Apr
Sun, Apr. 28  |  08:00 AM


04May
Sat, May. 4  |  08:00 AM


04May
Sat, May. 4  |  08:00 AM


Golf History

  • April 2024

    April 13, Ben Hogan lost Masters playoffs to both Sam Snead and Byron Nelson. In 1942, Nelson won the 9th Masters Tournament by one stroke over Hogan. It was the final Masters Tournament held before its World War II break.  In 1954, Hogan lost an 18-hole playoff to Snead by one shot. Ben Hogan remains the only player to lose twice in a playoff at the Masters. 
     
    April 122015 in his second appearance, Jordan Spieth became the first Texan to win the Masters since 1995.The 21-year-old set the mark for the most birdies in a single Tournament with 28. His 18-under-par 270 matched Tiger Woods’ 72-hole scoring record set in 1997.
     
    April 12, 1987, Augusta native Larry Mize made one of the most famous shots in Masters history when chipped in for birdie from 140 feet on the second playoff hole (No. 11) to defeat Greg Norman and Seve Ballesteros for the title.
     
    April 12, 1953 and 1954, the Masters Tournament finished on April 12. In 1953, Ben Hogan won the 17th tournament by five strokes over Ed Oliver. In 1954, Sam Snead, in his 3rd win of the Masters, defeated Ben Hogan, 70-71.  The date April 12, 1964, would mark the day Arnold Palmer won his seventh and final professional major, by six shots, at Augusta.
     
    April 11, in two different years the winning score of 271 was shot, at the time a tournament record. In 1965, Jack Nicklaus won his second Masters beating Gary Player and Arnold Palmer by nine shots. This was the 29th playing of the tournament. In 1976, Raymond Floyd won his only Masters with 271, eight shots ahead of Ben Crenshaw. It was the 40th playing of the tournament. On April 11, in 1966, Nicklaus, with a 70, won a three-way, 18-hole playoff over Tommy Jacobs (72) and Gay Brewer (78) to become the first player to win the Masters in back-to-back years.
     
    April 10, 1960, Arnold Palmer birdied the final two holes to win the 24th Masters Tournament at Augusta National, one shot over Ken Venturi and adding a second Masters to his 1958 title. Also on this date in 1961, he double-bogied 6 on the 18th hole, losing by one shot to Gary Player, who became the first international Masters champion.
     
    April 8, 1935, Gene Sarazen, one of the world's top players, beat Craig Wood in a 36-hole playoff, 144-149, to win the Masters one day after their great duel that featured Sarazen’s famous double eagle on the 15th hole at the August National Golf Club.
     
    April 7, 1946, the Masters Tournament returned from being off for four years during World War II and in its 10th playing was won by, interestingly enough, Herman Keiser, by one shot over Ben Hogan, who would win five years later. This was his only major title.
     
    April 4, 1937, In Masters history, Byron Nelson went birdie-eagle on Nos. 12 and 13, to a final-round 70 and two-shot victory over Ralph Guldahl in the 4th Masters. Nelson was the first of the Great trio that included him, Sam Snead and Ben Hogan, all born in 1912, to win the tournament. Lord Byron also won in 1942. Snead would not win until 1949 and Hogan 1951.
     
    April 1, 1901, the 1928 U.S. Open Champion, Johnny Farrell, was born, one year before Bobby Jones and Gene Sarazen. Farrell was a longtime head professional at Baltusrol Country Club in New Jersey, site of numerous majors, and won 22 PGA Tour events. He died in June 1988.

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  • March 2024

    March 28, 2024, six times a PGA Tour event has been decided after an eight-hole, sudden-death playoff, the most holes it has taken to decide a winner. (Cary Middlecoff and Lloyd Mangrum played 11 holes for the 1949 Motor City Open but were stopped by darkness and declared co-champions.) The first of the eight occasions was on March 28, 1965, when Dick Hart beat Phil Rodgers at the Azalea Open. Also on this date, in 1999, Dottie Pepper won the Nabisco Championship (now the ANA Inspiration) for a second time at Mission Hills CC, six strokes ahead of runner-up Meg Mallon.
     
    March 25, 1934, the first Masters finished. Then called the Augusta National Invitation Tournament, it was won by Horton Smith when he holed a 20-foot birdie putt at the 17th hole and finished one shot ahead of Craig Wood. That first year, the nines were reversed, and the 17th was today’s par-5 eighth hole. This is the only time the Masters finished in the month of March.
     
    March 19, 1950, Babe Didrikson Zaharias won the U.S. Women’s Open (pre USGA run) at Rolling Hills Country Club by nine shots over Betsy Rawls.
     
    March 18, 1951, amateur Pat O’Sullivan won the LPGA Titleholders Championship at Augusta C.C. by two shots over Beverly Hanson (also an amateur).
     
    March 14, 1936, Bob Charles, 1963 Open Championship winner, was born in Carterton, New Zealand. He is in a select group of the greatest putters ever.
     
    March 11, 1956, LPGA Tour’s Titleholders Championship of Women's Golf was won for the third time by Louise Suggs in a close contest with Patty Berg. She secured the win by one shot at Augusta Country Club.
     
    March 5, 1956, Mickey Wright (PGA of America, Hall of Famer), got her first LPGA Tour victory on this date. Wright was ranked the 9th greatest golfer of all time and the top woman Golfer by Golf Digest Magazine in 2000.

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  • February 2024

    February 29, 1948, Lawson Little is believed to be the last player to win a tour event on Leap Day. He won the St. Petersburg Open over Bobby Locke by 3 shots.
     
    February 13, 1918, Patty Berg, one of the greatest womens golfers, was born in Minneapolis. She was a founding member and the first president of the LPGA. Her 15 major title wins remains the all-time record for most major wins by a female golfer. She is a member of the World Golf Hall of Fame.
     
    February 6, 1971, Alan Shepard hit a couple of golf balls with a makeshift 6-iron on the moon as part of the Apollo 14 space mission. He snuck the club onboard the flight. Because of his spacesuit, he could only swing his right arm. On return, Shepard said he “shanked the first one; it rolled into a crater about 40 yards away. The second one, I kept my head down. I hit it flush and it went at least 200 yards.”
     
    February 2, 2024, Punxsutawney Phil did NOT see his shadow and predicts an early spring. More Golf for all!

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  • January 2024

    January 24, 1999, David Duval shoots a 59 to match what is then the best round in PGA Tour history. Duval moves forward from seven strokes off the pace for a one-stroke victory over Steve Pate in the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic.
     
    January 17, 1916, the Professional Golfers Association (PGA) was founded by a group of Professionals and leading amateur golfers at the Taplow Club in New York City.
     
    January 1, 1938, the 14-club limit imposed by the Rules of Golf became effective. Up until then, players carried as many as they wanted.
     
    Happy New Year! May your golf game be a source of pleasure in 2024.

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