Williams College B&G Golf League Marks 50th Season

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Sports
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The Williams College golf league marked its 50th anniversary this year. See more images of play here.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — It is about 6 p.m. on the last evening of the season for the Williams B&G Golf League.
 
On the course, the last foursomes are finishing up their nine-hole rounds. In the clubhouse, the drinks and the jokes flow easily as some of the league's most veteran players reflect on the its first half century at Taconic Golf Club.
 
"You're getting a lot of junk for your article," retired coach Renzie Lamb remarks, using a more colorful word than "junk."
 
Around the table across from the bar are gathered representatives of Williams' athletic, facilities, information technology and admissions departments — a small sample of the 50 or so players who participated in the 50-year-old league this summer.
 
Ask those players what makes the B&G League special, and one theme keeps popping up again and again.
 
"It brings various constituencies of the college together," Lamb said, turning serious for a moment. "That's the most important thing. It's good for the college."
 
"The league gives us the opportunity to meet people from other departments," league treasurer Peter Landry said. "You meet faculty, administration and staff."
 
That was the goal of the league when it was founded in 1963 by Pete Welenetz and John English, then the director of Williams' Building and Ground Department and secretary of the Alumni Society, respectively.
 
"[English] and Pete Welenetz were the spark plugs who got it started," said journalist Thomas Bleezarde, who worked with English, also the college's public information officer. "They saw a lack of interaction between the faculty, staff and Buildings and Grounds workers.
 
"B&G employees were not in a position to join [Taconic]. ... [English and Welenetz] wanted to do away with the feeling that B&G employees and other college employees were second-class citizens.
 
"We really have been carrying on that tradition."
 
The original bylaws of the league specify that it was open to all full-time employees and retirees of the college as well people "actively engaged in business with Williams College upon application."
 
Bleezarde said the original intent was to go beyond the college community and build "town-gown" relationships as well. Today, there are a few regulars drawn from college contractors, but most of the players are either Williams employees or retirees.
 
Husbands of women who work for the college are also eligible to play in the men-only league. There have been women's leagues at the college over the years, including one that played on Monday nights on one half of Taconic while the B&G played the other nine.
 
The B&G League plays on Monday nights from May through the end of August or beginning of September, depending on the year.
 
League membership has gone from a high of about 60 down to about 30 at one point, Landry said. This summer, there were regular league members with about two dozen alternates who were available to fill out foursomes in any given week — of that number, about eight actually played.
 
The good news for the 2014 season was the arrival of a handful of first-time players.
 
"We hope that young kids can come along and keep this going," Lamb said.
 
Michael Newton, an IT specialist who arrived at the college two years ago, was drawn to the league right away.
 
"It's a tough course," Newton said. "I'm still learning."
 
In addition to the fellowship, the league offers an opportunity to play Taconic, which in 2014 was ranked 39th on Golf Magazine's list of "Top 100 Courses You Can Play."
 
"The course brings people in," said Lamb, who started playing in the league in 1968. "We have a great reputation."
Part of that reputation is the challenge Taonic presents.
 
"You learn how to play," Landry said. "Either your game gets better or you quit."
 
He said only about a third of the league's regulars are members at Taconic. League members pay an annual dues and $19 per week to play nine holes at the club.
 
"You're not going to play anywhere for $19," league president Jim George said.
 
Players are grouped by handicap and assigned to foursomes by the league. The goal is to get groups that represent a cross-section of the college work force.
 
On Tuesday, the B&G League held its playoffs and season-ending banquet. Bruce Decoteau of the Facilities Office won the A Division on a tie-breaker.
 
"It's just a way to get together after work and get to know people and have some fun," he said later in the clubhouse.
 
Williams' director of admissions, a nearly 30-year veteran of the league, agreed.
 
"It's the only way to blend faculty, staff and Buildings and Grounds together," Richard Nesbitt said.

Tags: golf,   summer league,   Williams College,   

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Williams Grad Rows for Gold on Sunday Morning in Paris

U.S. Rowing
PARIS -- Williams College graduate Ben Washburne and the U.S. Paralympic PR3 Mixed Four with Coxswain will row for a gold medal on Sunday at 4:50 a.m. at Vaires-sur-Marne Stadium.
 
The Americans won their heat on Friday to advance to the gold medal race.
 
Racing in the second of two heats, the crew of coxswain Emelie Eldracher (Andover, Mass./Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Ben Washburne (Madison, Conn.), Alex Flynn (Wilmington, Mass./Tufts University), Gemma Wollenschlaeger (St. Augustine Beach, Fla./Temple University), and Skylar Dahl (Minneapolis, Minn./University of Virginia) took control during the second 500 meters, walking away from the field to win the race by nearly five seconds at the Vaires-sur-Marne Nautical Stadium.
 
“It feels pretty exciting,” Dahl said of the heat victory. “It feels like what we wanted to do. We accomplished our goal in the first step of this regatta. Overall, we’re feeling pretty good about it. We have a lot of fun together. We get along really well because we’re all so young. We’re actually friends, too, not just teammates, and I think that makes a big difference. I think that translates onto the water a lot of the time.”
 
With the top two boats advancing to the final, Australia took an early lead and held a half-second advantage at the 500-meter mark. That’s when the American crew made its move, turning a half-canvas deficit into a length lead at the midway point of the race. The U.S. continued to power away from the rest of the crews, taking more than a boat-length of open water with 500 meters to go. At the line, the American boat clocked a 6:57.18, with France overtaking Australia to claim the other spot in the final. France finished with a time of 7:02.13.
 
"We didn’t really know what anybody was going to do. We just focused on our race,” Washburne said about Australia’s start. “We had a plan, and I think we stuck to it. They went for it in the beginning. I’m just happy we could execute our plan.”
 
“I think the call is just, as a boat, we’re unified and ready to go,” said Eldracher about their move in the second 500 meters. “This is a boat that has a unified purpose, and so whether it’s me saying it or not, this boat will go together, and they’ll make that happen every stroke down the course.”
 
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