Subscribe
Demo

As part of the fun surrounding our 50th anniversary, Golfweek walked down Memory Lane with a number of former employees who helped make the brand what it is today.

We continue with one of the names who started it all, Tom Stine. Tom’s father, Charley, started Florida Golfweek in the garage of his home and within a few years, Tom moved back to be part of the family business.

Advertisement

Stine’s recollections of the early years, elevating the business to become a national player, and some of the relationships made along the way reads like a Who’s Who of the golf industry in the last 50 years.

Golfweek: There’s not even a thought of 50 years of Golfweek if there was no Stine family. When you think about the fact that it’s 50 years old and you think about going way back into your childhood, and growing up and watching your dad build this thing and then becoming such a big part of it, what’s the first thing that goes into your mind at 50 years?

Tom Stine: Wow, that’s a really good question to start. The first thing that goes into my mind, I guess, is we never thought this far in advance. We never thought beyond the end of the year. We never thought much beyond six months. It was hand-to-mouth. And it was all Dad’s idea. His original idea for Florida Golfweek and putting out a news publication. He did not want to put out a feature golf magazine. He wanted to publish the news. If it happened last week, it would be in this week’s Golfweek. And one of his other mandates was that we would run all names and all scores. Not just the top 10 or the top five and not just their scores, but if you WD’d, your name would be in Golfweek and it would say WD. And if you shot a million, it would say that you shot a million. And we were insistent upon that. When people would want to send us their results, you have to send us all of your results. We just don’t want to hear who finished in the top 10.

GW: It’s interesting, asking players about Golfweek. The first thing they talk about is the agate (the scoreboard). They all read the agate. How what how important was that to the development of the magazine that players to read this?

TS: It was essential. It was absolutely essential. It was essential for the players because you’ve got to remember this was in the 70s and you couldn’t get this anywhere else. Golf World was around, but Golf World limited themselves to only certain tournaments and only certain results because, given their format and the expense of their format, that’s all they could afford to do. And the other wasn’t important enough. Our attitude was exactly the opposite. Every name would be in there. Consequently, we had mothers and fathers and brothers and grandmothers and aunts and uncles who wanted to subscribe to Golfweek because their nephew or their niece or their grandson was playing in some junior tournament in Pittsburgh and they got to see his name in print, even if he finished way down the list. It was a cool thing, you know, light years before the internet. There was no other way to know. There was no other way to see results.

Tom Stine and his dad, Charley, talk with Jack Nicklaus.

GW: We’ve got to ask you just because we’ve heard so much about this. Fact or fiction: This really started in a garage?

TS: It started in the garage. Swear to God. Dad’s garage, which I don’t know, a year or so after we started it, we put paneling on the walls of the garage, but we were still in the garage and it went from there. Dad is the one who started it. He and my stepmother Jackie, who’s still alive and doing well, they were instrumental and dad got help from some local guys who worked at the paper – the Winter Haven (Florida) News Chief. And literally, he just started going out to tournaments, calling tournaments and telling him what he was doing and if you’ll send us your results, we’ll print it and we’ll send you copies. This was light-years before the ABC Invitational in Podunk, Florida, ever got publicity for anything. So they said, “Great. We’d love to do that. We get all of our names and it just continued on from there.”

Advertisement

GW: You talked a little about Jackie. She was actually the golf wonk, right? From what I’ve heard, your dad was a decent golfer, but Jackie was actually a good player, right?

TS: Jackie was a good player and she was an avid player. She would play anytime, anywhere, any weather. Dad would say, you know, I’m going to go, I need to drive and review this course and do a feature. And Jackie was there. She went every time. And she could beat his brains out. He was an average golfer on a good day.

GW: That makes it even more impressive, his passion for the game, though, right?

TS: He was a journalist. All his life, he worked at newspapers and he had a couple of small-town newspapers for a while in Ohio. He worked at big newspapers like the Cleveland Plain Dealer and the Columbus Citizen-Journal and several others in Ohio. He was a newspaperman and that’s where the lifeblood came from. Golfweek showed his passion for news and he was an excellent editor, and that’s what he did when he worked at the Cleveland Plain Dealer, he worked on the copy desk, editing all the copy and so forth. And so it was well-written, grammatically correct, accurate, and presented, easy to read, and complete. That was the real key to what he was doing.

Advertisement

GW: We just recently spent some time with Joe Staranka, who at the time was at the PGA of America, just starting when you started the magazine, and he went on to become the CEO of the PGA of America. He said Charley would talk his ear off. He would tell Joe what should be done differently. Charley had opinions on everything. Joe said he listened to about 10% of it and put it into action, but he always had an opinion.

TS: He did. He did. And if you asked him, he would tell you what his opinion was. And he didn’t give a damn whether you liked it or not, or it hurt your feelings or not. It’s like, well, you asked me, so I’m telling you, I don’t think this makes sense. Or I think you ought to turn it upside down and do it that way. Or he would compliment the heck out of them. And he was that way with organizations and associations and with players. He had an appreciation for all players, the best guys, and the not-so-best guys. It was important to him.

Tom and Charley Stine led Golfweek from a Florida garage into a national publication.

Tom and Charley Stine led Golfweek from a Florida garage into a national publication.

GW: Let’s get to you and your tenure at the magazine. You’re in New Mexico. Your dad comes out to visit. You’re not even thinking about this. I know you had a journalism degree, but you had played football in New Mexico, and he comes out to visit. And tell us the rest of the story from there.

TS: Well, it’s a long story. It’s not really a simple story. He was constantly trying to get me to come and help him. And I was a banker and was working my way through the banking business and he’d say we’re growing and I can always find a place for you. You could help me with this, you could help me with that. And it was like, ‘Dad, I can’t, I can’t do that.’ He kept it up. I guess the breaking point was when I went through a divorce, and as anybody who’s been through a divorce knows, that’s kind of a point in your life where things change or you decide to make things change. And after him asking and asking and so forth, I called him up one day and said, ‘Dad, I’m going to come and help you.’ I literally packed up my car and drove across the country and drove to Winter Haven and started, you know, started the next day after I arrived, doing whatever needed to be done.

Advertisement

GW: Did you know when you looked at the books and started to comb through the fact that your dad was a good newspaper man, but not a publisher and not a sales guy by nature, that there was potential here?

TS: The concept made sense. The concept of Florida Golfweek publishing golf news in a state like Florida,where the only comparable was Golf World, which was a national magazine. But we knew it was going to be hard and so I said, OK, let’s go for this. My focus was on sales, both advertising sales and circulation sales. However, we could get circulation, any deals we could make with golf associations and so forth. And it didn’t happen overnight. I mean, this was a long, hard slog through the snow to get it to work. It took a long time, but it worked because it did make sense.

Read the full article here

Leave A Reply

2026 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.