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Soon, Henry lost interest in water sports: he was learning to swing a club. The members of the Mid-Pacific Country Club, where he toted bags, liked young Henry and, since he had no clubs of his own, would let him use their clubs at the end of their round, and he would hastily practice until the member’s time to go home. His skills, learned on everybody else’s equipment, developed quite rapidly playing with the likes of Ted Makalena and Masa Kaya growing up. Soon he was invited to become a member of the club, and eventually its pro. Before that, Henry entered the U.S. Army and had the opportunity to hone his skills even more. Before his discharge, he had won a number of service-related tournaments and gained considerable confidence in his game. One Mid-Pacific club member, a doctor who also played on Maui, asked Henry if he would consider leaving Oahu to help pioneer golf on the nearby island of Maui and sign on as pro at the Maui Country Club. “It sounded great to me at the time, but when I got there, the club hired me but kept me on probation for six months. After my probation, they signed the contract. It was a long try out.” Maui Country Club was a nine-hole course that comprised half of the holes on Maui. “There were really no tourists on Maui then, and maybe only 50,000 people lived on the island. Most of them worked for the plantation. But many took a liking to golf.” A year later, in 1962, the mayor, who was a member of the Maui Country Club, “asked me to breakfast at his house and told me across the table he would like me to take over as the pro for the Waiehu Municipal Golf Course, which also had just nine holes. I guess I wanted badly to work with the people and quickly agreed. I spent the next 23 years of my life at the Muni.” “In 1986, with Maui golf growing and tourism becoming so important, I joined Makena Golf Club. Nine years later I went back to Waiehu, again as head pro at our Municipal Course. Now I think I have made my final move. When the former director of instruction at The Dunes at Maui Lani, Bill Greenleaf, asked me to join The Dunes, their golf school so impressed me that I just had to join the program. That was in 2002 and I’ve never had more fun or more satisfaction at my job than I am having right now.” Teaching is buried deep in the roots of Henry S. Yogi. Few professionals or even professors have given so much to students and done so over such an extended period of time. He is respected, perhaps revered, by those who have grown up learning golf.
His junior programs have often embraced a
fledgling golfer at the age of seven, and carried that golfer right
through high school which then resulted in the grant of a golf
scholarship to a highly accredited college on the mainland. The number
of these students is large and their gratitude may be even larger.
Last year a tournament in his honor was staged
on Maui. It was named MAHALO! (Thank you!) and attracted so many of his
past students from Maui and the outer islands that the tournament was
oversubscribed, and many had to watch the 200 who competed showing
their peers the skills they had learned from Henry. Since a number of
these students are now golf professionals and teaching pros, the play
was quite respectable.
Henry has spent most of his golf time at
teaching, but has at times participated in such events as the Hawaiian
Open (twice), the Senior PGA Tour’s Kaanapali Classic, The PGA Club
Professional Senior Championship (twice), and he has joined TOUR events
in Florida several times.
At one tournament, he was paired with
Australian Bruce Smith, who scored a course tying record of 64. Says
Henry with a big smile, “Now that was something to watch.” But, truth be told, he enjoys watching a beginner develop even more. “I have lots of housewives coming here now.
They may come only once a week, but they practice hard at home. The progress they show, at times, it really surprises me.”
But it seems the young ones are his favorites.
“The kids? You work with them and it’s like you are a painter and they
are the canvas. They suck in what you teach and give you 200% back. I
just love that.”
In person, Henry is quite reserved until he talks about his associates at The Dunes at Maui Lani Golf School.
And Henry is proud of the school set-up itself.
“We also have a great place to teach. Our 15- acre practice facility,
which was designed by course architect Robin Nelson, includes a 390-
yard driving range, 45,000 square feet of tee area, five target
greens—plus the large practice putting green, a sand bunker, and a
short game practice area.”
And when the student wants to carry the
professor with him, he can buy a 9-hole every stroke teaching lesson
for just $145. A price one may quickly recoup at a friendly game of
skins.
“The Dunes is not a typical layout in Hawaii, and it has some surprises for you. Play within your game. Don’t try to try for more power than you know you can deliver. Don’t underestimate the tradewinds or overestimate your chance to land a birdie. Don’t take a chance with your driver unless you can really control it. A 3-wood off the tee will cut down on costly mis-hits. And don’t try things that have not worked for you before. Play within your game. You’ll have more fun and a better score when you do.”
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