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When Caves Valley Golf Club in Owings Mills last hosted the BMW Championship in 2021, fans were treated to a six-hole playoff between Patrick Cantlay and Bryson DeChambeau that Cantlay eventually won.

Baltimore County and Maryland officials hope for a similar fervor and attendance when the penultimate leg of the FedEx Playoffs returns to Caves Valley this week. Only the top 50 golfers in the FedEx standings qualified for the BMW Championship, and the field includes the World No. 1 and reigning British Open and PGA champion Scottie Scheffler, Masters winner Rory McIlroy and U.S. Open champion J.J. Spaun.

In 2021, Caves Valley welcomed more than 100,000 visitors over the nearly week-long tournament, with more than $23 million spent locally, said Abigail Vitaliano, deputy director for Baltimore County’s Department of Economic and Workforce Development. The event supported at least 450 jobs with more than $20 million in labor income, and the event generated more than $53 million in statewide economic impact, she said

A fan’s guide to the BMW Championship: Parking, tickets, tee times and more

“We’re really excited to welcome the crowds,” Vitaliano said. “We’re really excited to showcase all that Baltimore County has to offer. Especially where the course is situated, there’s a lot going on in the Owings Mills area and across the county.”

Vitaliano added that this year’s financials are promising.

“We know anecdotally that this year, we’ve been ahead on ticket sales, we’ve been ahead on corporate sponsorship. So it’s very clear that people are excited to come back to the Baltimore County area,” she said.

Vince Pellegrino, senior vice president of tournaments at the Western Golf Association — which sponsors the BMW Championship, said the organization recently completed an economic impact study of last year’s tournament at Castle Pines Golf Club in Castle Rock, Colorado. According to that analysis, the average spend per visitor for the event’s entirety was $1,300, and attendees stayed there an average of 3 1/2 nights.

Pellegrino did not have specific numbers on ticket sales or corporate sales for this week’s tournament, but was optimistic that the BMW Championship could match or even exceed last year’s numbers.

“I would say similarly, we’re seeing the same kind of uptick as it pertains to attendance and the impact that we think this will have on the community,” he said. “So I would say we’re probably in the $60 million total direct output and economic impact to the greater Baltimore area.”

Pellegrino said about 20% of last year’s visitors traveled from outside of Colorado to watch the event in person, and another 16% lived elsewhere in the state. Vitaliano said Owings Mills’ proximity to Interstate 95 makes it an appealing destination for golf fans along the Eastern seaboard.

“We saw a lot of folks come in last time from the I-95 corridor — people from New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,” she said. “So we’re hopeful to expand and exceed, and we’re really just hopeful since 2021 was successful and we brought it back this time that people really start to look at the county like the premier playground for world-class sporting events.”

Pitching Baltimore and Maryland overall as venues for athletic contests is a priority for Terry Hasseltine, president of the Sport and Entertainment Corporation of Maryland.

With the Preakness at Pimilico Race Course, the CIAA men’s and women’s basketball tournaments at CFG Bank Arena, the Baltimore Running Festival and the Maryland Cycling Classic in the streets of Baltimore, and Army-Navy football games at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore and Northwest Stadium in Landover, the area is equipped to host large-scale sporting events, he said.

“The other day was my 17th year of being in Maryland, and our rĂ©sumĂ© just has gotten stronger and better year after year.” Hasseltine said. “We’re starting to be consistent on the radar where people think about, ‘Where should we put on our next big event?’”

Billowing clouds rise above Scottie Scheffler, the world’s top ranked golfer, who smiles while practicing putts during the BMW Charity Pro-Am at Caves Valley Golf Club. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

Caves Valley is only the fifth golf course to host the BMW Championship more than once, joining Cog Hill Golf and Country Club in Lemont, Illinois (four times), Conway Farms Golf Club in Lake Forest, Illinois (three), Crooked Stick Golf Club in Carmel, Indiana (two), and Olympia Fields Country Club in Olympia Fields, Illinois (two).

Pellegrino said BMW officials took note that the 2021 tournament raised a record $5.6 million for the Evans Scholars Foundation, which provides college scholarships for caddies.

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