“ Every day the golf course is dying. ” For weeks, the Kapalua Plantation Course looked more like a wasteland than the crown jewel that usually kicks off the PGA Tour season. Grass turned yellow, then brown, and fairways cracked. The course was on the brink of collapse as Maui’s century-old water dispute left it starved of irrigation. By last weekend, it seemed unthinkable that the Sentry – the PGA Tour’s traditional season opener – could survive here. But as NBC analyst Mark Rolfing put it, two “monumental” decisions will hopefully give the dying course at least a fighting chance.

Rolfing, talking to Damon Hack at Golf Channel , revealed the decisions that have been taken. The first of them was the PGA Tour, local sponsors, and government officials convincing Hawaii’s Water Comm

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