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Golf News Magazine - January 2007
Four New Desert Golf Courses on 4,000 Acres in the
Planning
Stages
By Dan Poppers
Part 2 of a 2-Part Interview Republished
by permission from GolfNews Magazine.
When asked the date and place of his birth, Ernie Vossler gave
me an answer that nobody has ever given. “I don’t really
know the day I was born. The day I observe is Thanksgiving, November
29, 1928. And I don’t really know the city where I was born,
but Fort Worth, Texas, is where I was found.” Ernie Vossler,
a long-time resident of La Quinta, Calif., is a unique individual.
He’s a wise man in its truest sense—he is a man of
wisdom; wisdom that is straightforward, uncluttered with depth.
Harry Truman-like courage and common sense, that’s how Ernie
Vossler can be described. He suggests to young people that one
of the most important things in life is to have the honor and credibility
that when you say something, it means something. He practices what
he preaches. He is the embodiment of authenticity. Vossler is Chairman
of the Board of Landmark Golf, PGA Hall of Fame member,
and five-time winner on the PGA Tour. Joe Walser Jr. is Landmark Golf Vice-Chairman and sat in with us during the interview
that took place at Landmark Golf headquarters in Indian
Wells. Landmark Golf’s portfolio of historic and
current golf projects include Mission Hills CC (Rancho Mirage),
Mission Hills Resort (China), PGA West, SilverRock Resort, Shadow
Hills, La Quinta Hotel Golf & Tennis, Oak Tree GC, Paradise
Valley and dozens more. Vossler lives with wife Marlene Hagge in
La Quinta.
GolfNews Magazine (GNM): Your childhood is unique; tell us about
it.
Vossler: At three months old, I was left in a basket on the
doorstep next door at the neighbor’s house. Obviously, I
was too young to actually remember, but I know this by a newspaper
clipping. It was the year of the depression, 1928. They already
had three boys, so they decided they didn’t need me; and
another neighbor had no children. So, they took me over there.
I got given away twice in one day!
My mother went blind when I was five years old. When I was 10 or
12 years old, my dad bought a car for her and took me to a friend
in the licensing department and got me a driver’s license.
There was a restriction on the license that my mother had to be
in the car when I was driving it, and she was blind!
GNM: [laughs] Makes a hell of a lot of sense!
Vossler: But let
me tell you something. She knew when I went around a corner too
fast.
GNM: How has your early childhood experiences that includes
being given away twice as an infant and your parents dying when
you were young affected your life as an adult?
Vossler: I know
only one thing. I am in this world all by myself. I’ve got
to make my own decisions. I can’t let Dan Poppers, Joe Walser
or Marlene Hagge make my decisions. I’m very vocal the way
I feel.
GNM: How about in the arena of trust?
Vossler: I’m
not very trusting until I know the situation and the people. But
what I do know is that boy over there [he points to Joe Walser]
can ask me for whatever I’ve got and he’s got it. And
it’s the same feeling between both of us. I’ve known
him for 40 years. Outside of my family, I don’t think there
is another person I feel that way about.
GNM: Can you think of
some things in your personal and business life that if you could
do over again, you would do them differently?
Vossler: I’m
sure there is a lot of them. Probably I should have saved more
money than I did. Probably should have helped people play the game
of golf more than I have.
After we got so involved in Landmark and building our golf courses,
Joe and I got out of things we used to do in Oklahoma City when
we were golf pros. Had we brought to this community that desire
we had there, then this community would be better today. There
are a whole lot of kids out here today that aren’t playing
golf that could be. That’s one thing we did in the Oklahoma
communities.
GNM: You mean in Oklahoma, you gave hands-on help.
Vossler: Exactly.
GNM: If a young person asked you, ‘What’s important
in life and what’s not?’ how would you respond?
Vossler:
The most important thing is to be truthful. Second, be a religious
person to some degree. And, third, have the honor and credibility
that when you say something, it means something.
GNM: How much
of these three elements do you think is going on these days?
Vossler:
I have no idea, but everyone here [at Landmark Golf] does
it. We are a place of honor. If somebody here tells you they’re
going to do it, they’re going to do it!
GNM: If a young person
asked you how to succeed in business, how would you answer?
Vossler:
If you’re going to succeed in business, you have to prepare
yourself all the time. You’ve got to be honest. You have
to be on time. It’s not hard to be successful in the business
world.
GNM: If she or he asked you, ‘How do I find peace
within myself?’ how would you answer?
Vossler: I think Joe
has seen me do this. I’ll take a piece of paper and draw
a line down the middle of it. One side is ‘Good’; the
other side ‘Bad.’ I write it down. When I summarize
all of this, I try to get more ‘Goods’ in my mind than ‘Bads.’ So,
when I go home at night, however ridiculous these people think
I am, I am at peace with myself because I did take a look at what
we talked about all day long.
So, I go home thinking I know what’s going on. The next day
I find out that probably I didn’t, but that’s okay
because I was at peace that night.
GNM: In last month’s GolfNews,
we touched upon the Federal Government’s
unjust take over of Landmark Land assets back in the 1990s. Why do you think
the government confiscated assets like they did? Of course, it affected you dramatically,
but it also affected a whole lot of other lenders? What was that all about?
Vossler:
They had some bad regulations that people who were dishonest could take advantage
of. They didn’t decide who was dishonest and who was honest. They didn’t
give us the opportunity to solve our problem ourselves, which we could have done.
We bought a savings & loan and borrowed money from our savings & loan,
and did so very responsibly with secured assets.
But there wasn’t any market at that time, because there were so many bad
savings & loans and banks around that other properties were available, and
people bought those but didn’t buy ours. George Bush [Sr.] knew exactly
what was going on…
GNM: And exceptions could have been made?
Vossler:
Yes, in my opinion.
GNM: What seems horrific, from my understanding,
that once Landmark Land Company sued the Federal Government and
won the lawsuit, the judgment in favor of Landmark Land Company
was only $21.5 million, when the assets that the government took
from Landmark Land were worth an estimated $1 billion. How is it
possible that this injustice would be allowed to take place? I
don’t
understand it. I am dumbfounded at that kind of reasoning. Do you have any insight?
Vossler: If you were to talk to someone that really knew all the details, they
would tell you there was unfairness in this deal, but that was the only way those
in the government could figure out a way to clean up the savings & loan and
banking industry. That’s who we elected for the offices at the time; so
we had to do what they said.
GNM: And how do you continue to deal with the emotions?
The anger and bitterness. The feeling that you were screwed, if
that is a fair, blunt statement.
Joe Walser: We were screwed.
Vossler:
We say that we were screwed every now and then to the right people,
but we can’t do our business and
have that chip on our shoulder.
GNM: What can we learn from what happened to
Landmark Land Company?
Vossler: Pay attention. I paid attention
but it didn’t
do any good. I did my homework and was the only one on the [Landmark Land] Board
to vote against the purchase of the savings & loan. And when we voted [in
the affirmative] to purchase the savings & loan, I resigned from the Board.
I understood financing and what was happening. We already had a very strong financial
partner at the time—Olympia and York out of Canada. They helped us get
a line of credit worth $70 to $100 million. Just pay attention. The savings & loan
deal was a boondoggle.
GNM: Would it also be another lesson to say don’t
do something unnecessarily? It sounds like the savings & loan purchase wasn’t
necessary to accomplish what you were trying to achieve.
Vossler: To some of
our Board members, the idea was to borrow money from our savings & loan and
pay interest to ourselves. It’s called ‘greed.’
GNM: So, maybe
that’s another lesson.
Vossler: We are in a different situation today.
Landmark Golf has many excellent golf projects.
GNM: You got to know
Ben Hogan very well. Will you share some of your experiences because
I know he was a special person in your life.
Vossler: I would have
loved to been him. He was a strict disciplinarian with himself
and everyone around him. I would have hated to caddy for him. He
was humble down deep.
He was a physical specimen. He was all muscle. People don’t realize he
had huge calves. I don’t know how he worked out. I never
saw him do a push-up or anything, but he had a body like steel.
So, he was disciplined both mentally and physically.
I do not know anything bad about Ben Hogan. He’s treated galleries differently
than Arnold Palmer has treated them. But he had an objective, and that was only
to shoot the lowest score on the hole he was playing. He wasn’t worried
about whether you were in the right place or not. I must have played, at least,
20 rounds of competitive golf with him. I got to play a round in the U.S. Open
with him. He was consistent. That’s another trait that he
had. He was very, very consistent.
He very rarely knew what you shot on the golf course. I can tell
you one story. That round I played with him was in the [U.S.] Open
in 1959 at Winged Foot. The greens were ‘bowl-shaped,’ and
a lot of the holes were set up that I either had to hit a long
iron or fairway wood to the green. Before the tournament, I had
asked him, ‘Hey, pro, how do you play this golf course when
the greens are bowl-shaped? I would rather have the ball roll off
where I could pitch back up.’
He said, ‘Well, if I were you and it worried you, if I had
a 4-wood to the green, I would use a 3-iron and lay-up in front
of the green.’ As
luck would have it, who do you think I got paired with? Ben Hogan.
The first hole at Winged Foot is two wood shots for me, Par 4.
It had rained the night before, so the fairways were pretty soft.
He out-drove me about the width of this room [which is about 12
to 15 yards]. I wanted to hit that 4-wood to the green so bad,
but I didn’t do it. I took out a 3-iron and hit it short
of the green. He walked up, took four or five steps, took out his
wood—POW—hit
it right to the middle of the green. I said, ‘Pro, what did
you tell me about this?’ He said, ‘I’m better
than you are.’ True
story.
GNM: How did that make you feel?
Vossler: I’ll finish
that up. As we played, I shot lower than him that day. I shot 70
and I think he shot 72. We didn’t have pressrooms in those
days. You guys had to chase us down. I was sitting in the locker
room when we finished and Ben said, ‘Let’s
go have a beer.’ We’re sitting on the bench and here
come about ten of you writers. They wanted to know how we did this
or that. Since I beat him by a couple of shots, they were asking
all the questions of me not him. Since they weren’t asking
him any questions, he finally said to me, ‘What
the hell did you shoot?’ I said, ‘You kept my score!’ He
said, ‘But I don’t know what you shot.’ I
looked at him, ‘I
shot 70.’
GNM: Did he have any reaction?
Vossler: No. He
kept my score and didn’t even know what I shot.
GNM: The
stereotype that he didn’t
talk much during a round, is that true?
Vossler: He didn’t
have much to say.
GNM: As close as you were, I think you mentioned
once to me that he either said one word to you during a round of
golf or winked, and that was it. Do you remember that?
Vossler:
Yes, I remember it very well. Every once in awhile, he might say ‘Good
shot, fellow.’ He called you ‘fellow.’ He
never called me ‘Ernie’ in my life. It was ‘fellow.’ But
I had nothing but respect for him. I never saw him mistreat anybody.
Even when a gallery person got out of place, he would get a marshal
or someone to move him.
GNM: How do you define ‘success’?
Vossler: That’s a tough
question. [Pause] It’s a different thing in different people’s
eyes. Some people are limited to a certain degree of success, and
that’s all
they can do and they’re very successful. You take a guy like
Phil Knight of Nike, who is a friend of mine, and obviously there
is no telling what success is to him. I define success as doing
what you want to do. If you do what you want to do, you’ll
be successful. If you’re doing something you don’t
want to do, you are going to fail.
GNM: How about an update on
Landmark Golf? What are some of the projects you are currently
working on?
Vossler: We manage two facilities here in the desert—Shadow
Hills and SilverRock. We manage a project in Fallbrook, The Golf
Club of California; and we manage a project in Pahrump, which is
a suburb of Las Vegas, Mountain Falls Golf Club. We are in the
planning stages and working on a big 4,000-acre project in Riverside
County with the Glorious Land Company. The property is six to eight
miles east of Indio called Paradise Valley. We’ve been working
for the owners five or six years, and they are very honorable.
Four golf courses are part of the design. We’re
also involved in Paradise Ridge in Scottsdale, Arizona.
GNM: Ernie,
do you still have a multitude of TV sets in one location and simultaneously
watch different sports events?
Vossler: I’ve got a cabinet
that has six TV sets in it.
GNM: How is it possible to watch six
different sports events at the same time? How do you learn to do
that?
Vossler: They’re not different sports events,
for one thing. It’s a situation that allows me to watch pro
football or college football.
GNM: So, you can watch six different
football games at the same time?
Vossler: Yes.
GNM: To me, that’s
an art form. Not everybody can do that well.
Vossler: It’s
not hard. I promise you.
I understand football very well. That’s my hobby.
GNM: You have a long time love affair with the Palm Springs area,
correct?
Vossler: When I arrived in the Palm Springs area to live
permanently to develop property, I never once thought about living
anywhere else. I’ve had a lot of opportunities.
I think this is a wonderful place to live and raise a family. You couldn’t
make me leave. I haven’t told many people this story. I originally came
out here on Ben Hogan’s recommendation. I’m trying to learn to play
golf [in Texas], practicing like hell and playing with Hogan now and then. He
said, ‘What are you going to do this winter? I said, ‘I don’t
know.’ He said, ‘You’re not going to learn to play golf here
[in Texas]. You need to go to Palm Springs. I have a friend that has a house
at Thunderbird,’ and there wasn’t but three courses here at that
time. ‘He’s got a little guest house out there; I’ll call him
and see if you can come stay in it.’ So, he did and I came out. Loved
it. Practiced at Thunderbird everyday. That was in 1954. I learned about the
weather and said this is where I want to be. As years went on, I said to Joe
that we need to go to Palm Springs. That’s how we got here. One decision
we made was we wanted to build a Ben Hogan Golf Club. Ben traveled around the
desert for a couple of days looking at property, and came back to Thunderbird.
He had his white hat on his knee, dirt fell out of it, and he said, ‘Man,
that’s the worse looking properties I’ve ever seen. There ain’t
going to be anybody that will build a golf course in any of those places.’
GNM:
This is one time Ben was wrong. Thank you, Ernie, for sharing so
much of your personal and professional life with us.
Vossler: You’re entirely welcome.
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