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By Dave Shelburne
"I look like a bumble bee with a glandular
condition," Eric Tracy said. That'll play.
Outrageous plays well enough these days for Tracy, a
longtime Los Angeles-area radio sports voice who is
better known to thousands of charity-tournament
golfers as Mulligan Man. When Tracy shows up at a
charity event in his colorful knickers and argyles,
he takes it as his personal responsibility to make
sure everyone has a good time.
It's partly the nature of this outgoing man and
partly business. Tracy fell into this love/work
opportunity almost by accident but has thrived
emotionally and professionally as a charity-golf
jack-of-all-trades who offers his services as
Webmaster, organizer, master of ceremonies and
greeter. He can be found on course in gear at least
once a week, plying his trade as the man tournament
organizers hire to help make their events enjoyable
and profitable.
"I'm running around the course with my bull horn
doing schtick," he said, "keeping people in a good
mood all day."
"He was great," said John Page, whose Fender Museum
Kids Rock Free tournament at Paradise Knolls in
Riverside benefited from the Mulligan Man's help on
course, at the banquet and in Internet exposure.
"We're a young nonprofit organization and we'd only
done one tournament," Page said. "Eric added a level
of professionalism. He took the emcee duties to a
new level with his ease and having fun with it and
in the sense that he was a golfer. And he gave us
all kinds of recommendations -- like how to smooth
out a raffle so it won't take forever and bore the
golfers."
As Mulligan Man, Tracy tries to keep golfers
comfortable in what for some might be an unfamiliar
situation, and he tries to help their score. "I play
one hole with every group, and since I'm a pretty
good golfer, I can put teams in position to get a
birdie or eagle. But my shot doesn't count because
I'm not in the foursome, and that's why I'm Mulligan
Man."
His duties don't end there. Tracy then serves as
emcee at the ensuing banquet and auction.
"By that time I've met everybody," he said, "and
I've got this God-given ability to remember names,
so I'm on a first-name basis with my audience. And
they're in a mood to spend more money."
Tracy secures many of the items up for bid.
"Businesses that want to reach golfers donate
everything from vacation trips to golf clubs to
phone services to golf accessories," he said. "They
know it's going to charity." Tracy estimates he
helps businesses give away $6,000 to $10,000 in
products and golf opportunities at every event he
emcees.
How did this all get started? "Pure serendipity,"
said Tracy, 50, who is affiliated with KFWB radio
and was playing in a lot of charity golf tournaments
when one day ... "I thought they needed a master of
ceremonies, so I volunteered, and I wound up doing
20 a year. I liked being involved with charities,
but it was becoming my life, so I started charging.
I thought that would slow the demand, but it turned
out I got even busier.”
"Then I discovered the tournaments weren't getting
the word out as much as they'd like," he said, "so
(in 1999) I created a charity-golf-schedule segment
on the radio station's Website. "This benefited the
charities and the radio station," he said, "and it
also gave more golfers the opportunity to play
private courses they otherwise wouldn't get to play.
Ninety percent of charity events are on private
courses."
Then Tracy thought the hosting courses (which allow
charity events on the days their facilities are
closed to membership play) might as well benefit,
too. So he began writing reviews for several
Southern California golf magazines. The
publications, in turn, listed the charity tournament
schedules.
"I started thinking, what's the next step?" Tracy
said. "Instead of being an expense, I could be an
asset." Because of the Website, businesses saw an
opportunity to reach golfers and asked him if he'd
like to donate their products at the tournaments.
"This year, Mulligan Man distributed between
$350,000 and $500,000 in goods and services," he
said, "and the charities keep 100 percent of the bid
money."
Tracy, who works for organizations large and tiny,
worked 43 charity tournaments last year and might
double that total this year. A bachelor until 47,
Tracy now is married and has a 1-year-old daughter.
But that probably won't slow him down.
"Somehow this thing I want to do is giving me a
great sense of accomplishment," he said. "I'm
helping the tournaments and putting grits on the
table. I've reinvented myself without even knowing
it."
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By Michelle Flores
If there’s anyone from whom
a tournament organizer should accept advice, it’s
Eric Tracy. Available for hire as an entertainer and
master of ceremonies for charitable golf outings,
“The Mulligan Man” estimates he’s participated in
300-plus tournaments and knows well the missteps
made at some well-intentioned events. For his
tourney money, organizers would be wise to address
three key areas:
(1) Registration.
Registration should be organized and flawless. Even
for events that draw a full field of tournament
pros, count on nearly half the players to arrive in
the last 45 minutes before the start “so you better
be ready, “ Tracy said.
(2) Pace of Play and
Scheduling. “Golf does not run six hours,” warned
Tracy. “If you can play in 5 ½ hours, golfers can
accept that. Five hours is incredible. Five hours
and 31 minutes and they’re miserable.”
(3) Banquet and On-Course
Contests. Wrap things up with an organized and
entertaining banquet. Tracy’s pet peeve:
“nickel-and-diming golfers” for every beat-the-pro,
longest-drive and similar contest that run up
out-of-pocket expenses on game day. Tracy would much
rather pay $10 more for the round and see organizers
give that money back to players in the form of a
more enjoyable tournament experience. “The revenue
the charity makes (on contests) is not worth the bad
taste it leaves in the players’ mouths – and it
slows down the game,” Tracy said.
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By Tom Hoffarth
The foursome on the ninth fairway at Valencia
Country Club fidgeted about, hoping someone in the
scramble group had some magical answer to getting
their ball between two menacing bunkers and onto the
green that seemed so distant even at 230 yards away.
None seemed brave enough to step up first to hit.
Which seemed kind of strange, since these were
firefighters, participating in the first
Firefighters Quest For Burn Survivors Charity Golf
Tournament. Some of these guys probably felt
more at ease with an axe than an 8-iron.
Suddenly, a golf cart sped around a corner toward
them. And from it came a booming voice. "THIS LOOKS
LIKE A JOB FOR THE MULLIGAN MAN!" Startled already
by the bullhorn, the four turned to watch as the
fellow with an even-louder pair of purple knickers
and argyle socks leaped from the cart, grabbed his
fairway wood and bounced over to help like some golf
superhero. They couldn't help but burst out
laughing. "Where were you 15 holes ago?" one
of them said. Eric Tracy had 'em.
All day long, Tracy, the longtime Southern
California sportscaster and 12-handicap golf
enthusiast, played as if he were putting out a
brushfire. By the time he was finished with a
group, he knew all their names and was on to the
next. By the time the group finished the hole, they
were usually one or two strokes better off than they
thought they'd be when they teed off. And, yes,
Tracy's help counted on their card.
This anything-but routine that Tracy has created for
charity golf tournaments over the past two years was
born from an idea he came up with after playing in
and organizing similar events. While it was a
tournament, Tracy saw a need for levity. And he
noticed that when people were playing well and
having fun, it tended to make the whole event more
successful as far as donations were concerned.
But his playing day didn't end there. After
participating on at least one hole with every group,
it was time for the post-event awards ceremony and
prize auction. He noticed that serving as Master of
Ceremonies wasn't always a job everyone volunteered
for. He knew he could have as much fun with that as
he could on the course. With that, The Mulligan Man
was born.
"I just love to do them,'' said Tracy, a
sportscaster at KFWB-AM (980), who also created
CharityGolfOnline.com, a website linked to the
radio station in 1999 that helps promote charity
events.
"I have this gift of remembering names, and nothing
seems to make a person feel better than if you
really remember his or her name," Tracy said. "It
really makes a difference.''
The three goals Tracy hopes to accomplish at a
charity golf event are simple:
1) Make sure everyone has a good time;
2) Try to raise more money for the organization than
it would have otherwise; and
3) Make the banquet move at a brisk pace.
Aside from his bullhorn and cart with the
KFWB/Mulligan Man banner, Tracy will do almost
anything to help a group on a particular hole, while
giving them something to take away from the
experience. If somebody hooks a shot, Tracy will
reach into his pocket for a KFWB map of Southern
California, telling them he hopes it helps them find
the hole better next time. He'll also give golf
tips to those patient enough to listen. And if he
happens to shank one while he's playing, well, it's
easy for him to drop another and hit again. "After
all,'' he'll explain, "I am the Mulligan Man.''
At the post-tournament banquet, Tracy keeps the
procession moving with stories and jokes, calling
out the participants by name in hopes that that will
induce them to share in the fun and donate more to
the raffles and auctions. He also has plenty of
items to giveaway, thanks to donations by the
Dodgers and Angels, clubs he has a 13-year
relationship with from his baseball reporting.
There are more than 5,000 charity golf events each
year in Southern California. By the end of
2000, Tracy will have helped with more than 50 of
them, with many being return engagements.
"As far as I'm concerned, Eric has earned a
long-term position as Master of Ceremonies at the
Big Brothers Golf Classic,'' said Robert Howard,
chairman of the organization's event at Riviera
Country Club the past six years. "I received many
more compliments and renewals than normal with Eric.
I might also add that this year we raised more
money than ever as Eric put our golfers in the mood
to spend."
"I was fascinated by how quickly he made friends,''
said Cynthia Short, Western Regional Director for
the National Jewish Medical and Research Center,
which sponsored the Real Estate Industry Cure Asthma
Golf Classic at Industry Hills Sheraton Resort.
"He made the banquet move smoothly, kept the crowd
laughing and, most important, raised significantly
more money on the auction items than we
anticipated."
The grass-roots tournaments like the one put on by
the Glendale firefighters are the kind that Tracy
seems to enjoy most. The volunteer group
started as a response to help people after several
firefighters were burned during the Malibu-Calabasas
fires in 1996. Aside from setting up a web
site and trying to raise money through other means,
it was suggested they try a golf tournament. Tom
Propst, the organization's executive director, said
that without Tracy's help as a consultant -- long
before he even stepped onto the course -- it would
have been next to impossible to pull off.
"We had never done this before, so he was a
lifesaver in that aspect,'' said Propst. "I
realize this is the first time and people are still
getting to know who we are and what we do, but this
really helped, and Eric made a great impression.
Everyone enjoyed themselves.''
Tom Hoffarth is a columnist and media beat
writer for the Los Angeles Daily News.
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By Patrick Wilder
David Munoz's father Augustine died after
battling pancreatic cancer. He had been treated by
the USC/Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center and the
Munoz family was grateful for the care and treatment
Augustine had received.
But David Munoz decided to go one step beyond
gratitude, establishing a research fund in his
father's name and starting a golf tournament to help
raise money for early detection of pancreatic
cancer. In the event's first year, it raised
$60,000, proving that golf and determination can be
a driving force.
Eric Tracy has taken that kind of individual
determination one step further. There are more than
5,000 charity golf tournaments every year in
Southern California alone, 250,000 countrywide. But
while these golf tournaments can raise much-needed
funds, getting the word out is the hardest part.
Word of mouth is one way to publicize golf
tournaments, and FORE Magazine's Upcoming
Tournaments section is another. Now, in addition to
those there's the Internet.
Tracy is a familiar name to Southern California
sports enthusiasts after nearly 20 years in radio.
For the past three years he has been a sports anchor
for KFWB. Prior to joining the all-news station,
Tracy was the morning sports anchor and an ensemble
player on The Ken and Barkley Company, one of
Southern California's more popular morning drive
radio programs on KABC Talkradio.
In 1994 and 1995 Tracy co-hosted KABC Sportstalk
with Steve Edwards. Beginning in 1983 he was a
member of the Los Angeles Dodgers radio broadcast
team as the creative force and host of Dodger
Forecast, Dodger Confidential, Baseball Spotlight
and Dodgertalk.
Even though 12 years of reporting on the Dodgers
may make his name more synonymous with baseball than
golf, Tracy has been swinging a driver since he was
age 20. "My father died when I was very young," he
says, "and I remember what a golf nut he was. Golf
was a link to my father."
Eric serves as master of ceremonies for dozens of
charity tournaments and organizes the Big Brothers
Golf Marathon. But inspiration meets innovation at
the KWFB Charity Golf Website
(www.kfwb.com/charity). The interactive website
gives every charity a chance to list its tournament
for the world to see, free of charge. The
information goes straight to the people who want it
-- the players. It's a public service website, by a
golfer for golfers.
With a few clicks of the mouse, even the least
Net-savvy user can send all the information needed
to Tracy. Once at the Charity Golf Page, click in
the link marked "Register Your Tournament," fill in
the name of the event, the course it is being played
at, the date and city, what charity it benefits, the
entry fee, contact information and charity
information, and hit "Register me." Tracy then
formats it for the web and posts it to the website.
Players can search by date or by course. More
than 100 courses are listed, with dates up to
several months in advance.
Tracy's future plans include automating the entry
system and listing all 5,000 events that are held in
Southern California yearly. Right now, he's just
happy to list as many tournaments he can, and hopes
that the clubs will get the word out to the people
who organize their events.
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