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Last Update :9/4/2015 CCV to Host PGA Champions Tour Event - The Dominion Charity Classic
From Left: Tom Chewning, Tom Farrell, Tim Finchem, Bobby Wadkins, Curtis Strange and Robert Wrenn
COUNTRY CLUB SCORES PGA TOUR DEAL
With the backing of one of the area’s biggest corporations and a venue at an elite local country club, the PGA is coming back to Richmond.
The PGA Tour on Thursday announced the creation of the Dominion Charity Classic, a golf tournament on its Champions Tour to be held next year at Country Club of Virginia’s James River Course.
Richmond-based utility giant Dominion Resources struck a deal with the PGA for naming rights on the event, which will bring the tournament to CCV for at least the next four years and will run next year from Oct. 31-Nov. 6.
“It’s a very proud moment in our history,” Tom Chewning, past president of CCV and former CFO of Dominion, said at the podium at a press conference at the club Thursday.
The announcement also featured Dominion CEO Tom Farrell, PGA Commissioner Tim Finchem and Champions Tour players and Virginia natives Curtis Strange and Bobby Wadkins.
CCV beat out at least two other local clubs in landing the event – Independence Golf Club and Hermitage Country Club had both been vying for it.
The course's clubhouse will be open to some spectators during the event
Farrell, who is a member of CCV, as well as Kinloch Golf Club in Goochland, said Dominion began discussions with the PGA about six months ago. He said the association’s reputation of giving to charity was a draw for Dominion, which is routinely one of the largest corporate donors among local companies.
“It’s the principal reason we’re involved,” Farrell said.
Neither Dominion nor the PGA would disclose the amount or the terms of Dominion’s deal to win naming rights.
Dominion spokesman Ryan Frazier said the money used for the sponsorship will come from the company’s overall earnings.
Champions Tour spokesman Mark Williams said the money from Dominion will be combined with other sponsorships and vendor revenue generated by the event to help put it on and pay for the purse.
Net proceeds from the event will be distributed to a yet unnamed charity that assists military veterans and will be chosen by Dominion.
CCV will open its normally private grounds to public ticket holders during the event. Its clubhouse will be open only to certain tiers of ticket holders, Williams said. The James River course was built in 1928.
In addition to bringing an outside crowd, the deal for the tournament involves the PGA paying an undisclosed fee to CCV each year during the four-year stretch. Williams said the fees will help CCV prepare for the event, including renovations to its 18th green.
The main attraction of the week-long event will be a three-day, 54-hole Champions Tour play-off tournament with a $2 million purse. The Champions Tour was formerly the Senior PGA Tour and features pros over the age of 50. Its current big names include Fred Couples, Tom Watson, Bernhard Langer and Colin Montgomerie.
The tournament will feature a 54-player field and will be the second of three play-off events for the Champions Tour’s new Charles Schwab Cup play-off structure.
The Dominion Charity Classic will be the first Champions Tour event to be held in Richmond since 1990, when the tour was still the Senior PGA and the Crestar Classic was played at Hermitage with a purse of $350,000.
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