Motlow Foundation will host annual golf tournament on September 9

Local golfers will gather at Bear Trace Golf Course inside Tims Ford State Park on September 9 for the annual Motlow College Foundation fundraising golf tournament. (Photo Provided)

TIMS FORD STATE PARK, Franklin County — It funds scholarship for Moore County students attending Motlow State Community College and it’s one of three annual benefit golf tournaments hosted by the Motlow College Foundation. The 29th Annual Motlow College Foundation Golf Tournament is scheduled for Friday, Sept. 9, at Bear Trace Golf Course at Tims Ford State Park.

The tournament is a four-person scramble with lunch at 11 a.m. and tee time at noon. In addition to awarding cash prizes for first, second, and third places for two flights, special prizes will be awarded for closest to the pin and longest drive. Stan McNabb Automotive is also sponsoring a hole-in-one contest.

The entry fee for the tournament is $450 per team, which includes green fees, cart rental, mulligans, food, drinks, and a goody bag. Hole sponsorships are also available for $125. Proceeds from the tournament will benefit scholarships for Motlow State students.

This year’s sponsors include Southern Tennessee Regional Health System, FirstBank, Jacobs, Nissan-Decherd, The Accord Group LLC, Daves-Culbertson Funeral Home, Foundation Trustee Don Midgett, Vanderbilt Tullahoma-Harton Hospital, Franklin County Industrial Development Board, and Ascend Federal Credit Union.

For more information, contact the Motlow College Foundation office at 931-393-1543 or [email protected]. Register online at www.motlow.edu/give/golf-tournaments. •

{The Lynchburg Times is an independently-owned, community newspaper located in Lynchburg, Tennessee the home of The Jack Daniel Distillery. We focus on public service, non-partisan, rural journalism. We cover the Metro Moore County government, local tourism, Moore County schools, high school sports, Motlow State Community College, as well as whiskey industry news and regional and state stories that affect our readers.}