Date: Fri 19-Jul-1996
Date: Fri 19-Jul-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
golf-Adam-Bagger-sales
Full Text:
with cut: Adam Bagger Builds A Business One Ball At A Time
B Y S TEVE B IGHAM
When the hit movie Caddy Shack came out nearly 20 years ago, young boys and
girls flocked to their neighborhood golf courses to earn some extra money
hauling golf clubs.
But most of today's golfers either carry their own bags or rent a golf cart
and caddying isn't worth the money any more.
At the Newtown Country Club, 12-year-old Adam Bagger has come up with another
way to earn money out on the links.
From the sixth tee at the Newtown Country Club, the Brushy Hill Road youngster
has set up shop selling golf balls and occasionally ice-cold lemonade.
It's proven to be a lucrative business as many a golfer has ventured out onto
the course figuring he or she had more than enough balls, only to lose them in
the woods or in the drink.
"I recently became interested in golf and figured it would be a good way to
make some money," the Newtown Middle School eighth grader explained earlier
this week.
Adam, who recently began playing golf, was seen patiently awaiting customers
on the Elm Drive golf course Sunday when temperatures soared into the mid 80s
and the humidity level was off the scale.
This is Adam's first summer working the links, but judging by his success, it
won't be his last. On a typical Saturday or Sunday, the young entrepreneur
sells more than 120 golf balls at 50 cents apiece.
And, as Adam points out, every sale is at almost a 100 percent profit because
there's little or no overhead. He scavenges for his product. It is not
unreasonable to assume that some golfers have bought their own lost balls from
Adam - perhaps more than once.
"I spend about two hours a day looking for golf balls in the woods and in
people's back yards," Adam explained. "You have to be careful, though, there's
a lot of poison ivy and ticks."
The young man said he's found a boat load of golf balls in the gardens behind
the home of Bee publisher R. Scudder Smith on Elm Drive.
After locating the balls, Adam selects only those in the best condition and
washes them with bleach. After a thorough scrubbing, his product is ready for
the market.
"You have to have really good balls and then lay them out nicely," he said. "I
put mine in egg cartons."
Adam's supply doesn't figure to run dry any time soon. Afterall, as long as
hackers continue to slice and hook shots, golf balls will continue to be lost.
Newtown Country Club golf pro Paul Miller said the reaction from golfers has
been very positive.
"They like to see kids earning their own money," Mr Miller explained. "Some of
the guys buy balls even if they don't need them."
The middle school student said he's open to making deals with golfers and
often gives discounts to those golfers he's gotten to know.
Adam's success at the Newtown Country Club was not kept under wraps for long,
however. Local boys Tim Hoeffel, 12, Anthony Mason, 11, and Matthew DeLuca, 9,
have gotten into the act themselves, selling their wares on the other side of
the course. Adam has already laid claim to the back nine.
As for the competition, the Tim, Anthony and Matthew admit they're mostly out
to beat Adam even though they acknowledge that their business rival, though
new at the game, is an old pro.
"We've come up with our own ways of selling golf balls, but we've also taken
some pointers from Adam," acknowledged Tim.
Running a business is nothing new to Adam. In the past, he's run a successful
lemonade stand outside his parents' beach house in Breezy Point, New York.
The young golfer is hoping to receive a junior membership in September. That's
bad news to the other golfers as Adam will likely be a ringer on the par three
sixth hole where he's watched hundreds of golfers tee off this summer. In
fact, he's even witnessed a hole in one. But for now, he is content to measure
his golf success one ball - and 50 cents - at a time.
