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June 21, 2011

Providence Journal: http://www.projo.com/golf/content/CVS_Charity_Classic_Andrade_Faxo_06-21-11_V9O_v2.39c62.html

By Paul Kenyon and Jim Donaldson

BARRINGTON — Billy Andrade has added another group of Best Buddies in Rhode Island.

Andrade, the co-host of the CVS Caremark Charity Classic, won new admirers Monday when he hit a 9-iron within two feet, five inches of the hole on the 136-yard 17th hole in the first round of the 13th annual tournament.

That earned $25,000, not for Andrade, but for the Best Buddies program which pairs special-needs children with high school students. In one of several significant changes this year, the Classic dropped the long-drive contest that had been part of the event on the 15th hole and replaced it with the closest-to-the-pin contest. In a twist, the players were not trying to win money for themselves. Each of the 20 contestants was paired with one of the tournament charities and played for that charity.

The first group to reach the 17th gave everyone a target. Brett Quigley, playing for the American Red Sox, R.I. Chapter, hit his shot within 12 feet. Andrade beat it with his 9-iron that made the Best Buddies program $25,000 richer.

Thrill of a lifetime

The team of Ray Keough, Nik Middleton, John Shannon and Gary Woodland became the first champions of the amateur shootout. They nipped the foursome of Rob Antrim, Dan Hargett, Marshall Hart and Mark Miller by one shot, 8-under to 7-under.

The amateurs all spoke about the thrill, and the challenge, of playing in front of large crowds.

“It was very different,” said Keough, who is from Exeter. “I was very nervous. I did not have a lot of coffee this morning. I didn’t need a lot of energy.”

Keough had one of the key shots for his team, hitting his approach on the par-4 14th within three feet, leading to a birdie. Hart, who does a lot of work with CVS and has played in the event 10 times, said he loves coming every year. The chance to play in the tournament itself was simply an added bonus. He had a terrific description of the difference between playing in the pro-am and playing among the pros.

“It’s the difference between practicing the piano and playing in Carnegie Hall,” he said.

MORE >>

June 20, 2011

WPRI Channel 12  http://www.wpri.com/dpp/sports/golf/pro-am-winners-set-to-compete-on-monday

BARRINGTON, R.I. (WPRI) – Sunday’s Pepsi-Am winners are set for a big day on Monday.

For the first time ever, the two winning groups will play as part of the regular field at the CVS Caremark Charity Classic at Rhode Island Country Club.

The morning group winners were Nicholas Middleton, Ray Keough, Chris Willis, and John Shannon led by pro Vicky Hurst.

The afternoon group winners were Mark Miller, Rob Antrim, Marshall Hart, and Kevin McFadden led by pro Morgan Hoffman.

Two foursomes get to tee it up with the pros

June 20, 2011

EastBayRI.com http://www.eastbayri.com/detail/144045.html

BARRINGTON — In the latest twist to the CVS Caremark Charity Classic, the amateur entries into the 13th playing of the event were filled Sunday, June 19, at Rhode Island Country Club.

Following the successful integration of LPGA Tour players years back, this summer eight amateur players from the annual Pepsi Pro-Am have qualified to move on to the Pepsi Max Amateur Shootout, and will tee it up on Monday among the tournament’s main field professionals.

“We thought wouldn’t it be great to let the amateurs go out there and tee it up with the pros during the tournament,” Classic co-host and Barrington native Brad Faxon said of the decision to allow the ams into the main field.

Exeter’s Ray Keogh along with Nik Middleton, John Shannonand and Chris Willis, of nearby North Attleboro, finished first in the morning shotgun at 17-under-par 54.

Group pro, LPGA youngster Vicky Hurst, provided plenty of support for her team, though the double eagle the ams picked up on the 11th hole was done without the use of her drive.

Rob Antrim, Dan Hargett, Marshall Hart and Mark Miller teamed with newly-turned pro Morgan Hoffman to win the afternoon shotgun going away at 19-under-par 52.

For their efforts, the Sunday morning winners tee off Monday at 10:40 a.m. followed 20 minutes later by the afternoon winners.

The 13th CVS Caremark Charity Classic officially tees off at 10:30 a.m. with LPGA stars Suzann Pettersen and Juli Inkster teaming with their respective partners, Barrington native Brett Quigley and Peter Jacobsen.

A late development saw Rickie Fowler withdrawing from the Classic due to a knee injury suffered at the U.S. Open. He’ll be replace by former CVS winner David Toms, who’ll team with another former Classic champ Camilo Villegas.

“Rickie really wanted to be here, but he hurt his knee really bad. But look who we got to replace him? David Toms. Not bad,” Faxon added.

Visit Sports at eastbayri.com often Monday and Tuesday for tourney updates and photos.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Providence Journal: http://www.projo.com/golf/content/CVS_Charity_Classic_Pro-Am_06-20-11_RFOOA5N_v2.4205d.html 
By Paul Kenyon
 

BARRINGTON — Chris Willis wants to make sure that he conducts himself properly Monday when he plays golf at Rhode Island Country Club. He will be taking part in a golf outing unlike any he has ever had.

Willis and his partners, Nick Middleton, Ray Keough and John Shannon, will not be watching the CVS Caremark Charity Classic, as they usually do. They will be competing in it.

“The biggest thing on my mind is etiquette,” Willis said. “You want to make sure you do the right thing. You want to respect the game, respect the person you are playing with.”

The foursome will get to live out a fantasy of any sports fan. They will be playing alongside co-hosts Brad Faxon and Billy Andrade, Hall of Famers Ben Crenshaw and Juli Inkster, as well as reigning U.S. Women’s Open champion Paula Creamer in the 13th CVS Classic.

They earned the right to take part in a new tourney program by winning the morning half of the Sunday pro-am. Sparked by Shannon’s net double eagle on the par-5 11th, the foursome combined with LPGA pro Vicky Hurst to record a net score of 17-under-par 54.

Monday, the Shannon-Keough-Middleton-Willis team will tee off at 10:40, just after the foursome that includes the teams of Suzann Pettersen-Brett Quigley and Inkster-Peter Jacobsen, and just before the group of Andrade-Bill Haas and Faxon-Gary Woodland.

The winners of the afternoon session, at an even more impressive 19-under 52, include another CVS employee, Mark Miller, a 22-handicap. His three partners, Marshall Hart, Rob Antrim and Dan Hargett are all CVS vendors who come in from other parts of the country to help defray costs of the event and raise money for charity. They won their part of the pro-am with the help of Morgan Hoffman, a former Oklahoma State star, who was playing in his first event as a pro.

They will begin play at 11 a.m. The two amateur teams will be competing for prizes, not the $1.55-million purse that the 20 pros will be vying for. But they will be walking the same walk, facing the same challenges as the pros. They will be warming up with, meeting and then taking to the course with the pros.

It is an intriguing addition to the tournament.

“We’re trying to create what we all seek, the ultimate golf experience,” said Greg Costello, the tournament director.

The team that won the morning session certainly likes the idea. All are average golfers, all with handicaps between 10 and 21.

“I gave up tickets to the U.S. Open to play here,” Middleton said. “This is the most fun golfing event I have all year, no doubt.”

It was great just to play in the pro-am. Hurst was a joy to play with, her partners said.

“It was her 21st birthday,” Keough said. “She was a great person to be around. She’d help us out, make suggestions, then get out and rip it.”

Monday it will go far beyond that. The crowds will be much larger than they were on Sunday. The amateurs will be introduced by tournament announcer Scott Cordischi, the same way the pros will be. The amateurs will see the difference in the way the course is prepared from the pro-am to the real tournament. They will have to perform the way the pros do with everyone watching.

Keough hopes to make it a doubly big day. He has tickets to the Red Sox game Monday night. He hopes to be able to play in the CVS and then head to Fenway. When he gets there he will have great seats — “Right behind home plate,” he said — but Terry Francona is not going to invite him out to take batting practice with his team. He is not going to ask him to shag fly balls.

At the CVS, though, he and his partners are going to be on the playing field. They are going to be part of the show.

“We’re going to have to really focus on everything we do,” Keough said. “We don’t want to hit anybody.”

Keough’s team won the chance to have the inside-the-ropes experience thanks in large part to their work on the par-5 11th Sunday. There, Willis hit a great drive, leaving the team 223 yards to the hole. Except that Shannon thought it was 240 yards. He hit his rescue-3 club 15 feet above the hole — or maybe it was 30 feet, one of the partners said — and made it for eagle. With his handicap stroke, it meant a net double eagle.

The format will be the same for the amateurs Monday, although with a key ingredient missing. The pro-am is held under a scramble format, meaning all players hit drives, but the team then selects only the best one. Everyone hits his second shot from that spot. Monday, there will be no pro to help.

Hargett was already thinking ahead even as he and his partners were celebrating their victories in the afternoon pro-am. Asked if he was nervous, he responded, “Yes, can’t you tell?”

The 20-player field in the 14th CVS is a strong one. It includes four of the top players on the LPGA Tour, U.S. Open champion PaulaCreamer, Morgan Pressel, Suzann Pettersen and Hall of Famer Juli Inkster. The men taking part include Hall of Famer Ben Crenshaw and six players who will come directly from finishing competition in the U.S. Open Sunday, Zach Johnson, Davis Love III, Bill Haas, Brandt Snedeker, Gary Woodland and Matt Kuchar, the leading money winner on the PGA Tour last year.

WOONSOCKET, R.I. (June 19, 2011)

http://www.cvscharityclassic.com/content/press-releases/2011/eight-amateur-golfers-set-%E2%80%9Cplay-pros%E2%80%9D 

Eight amateur players from Sunday’s Pepsi Pro-Am have qualified to move on to the Pepsi Max Amateur Shootout, and will tee it up on Monday among the tournament’s main field professionals.

CVS Caremark Classic June 2011

From left: Nik Middleton, Chris Willis, Vicky Hurst, Ray Keough, John Shannon

Ray Keogh (Exeter, R.I.), Nik Middleton (Atkinson, N.H.), John Shannon (Cincinnati, Ohio) and Chris Willis (N. Adelborough, Mass.) finished at the top the pack in the morning shotgun at 17-under-par 54. Their pro Vicky Hurst, who was celebrating her 21st birthday, provided plenty of support for her team, though the double eagle they picked up on the 11th hole was done without the use of her drive.

The winners of the afternoon shotgun also ran away with the Pepsi Pro-Am, finishing at 19-under-par 52. Amateurs Rob Antrim (Noblesville, Ind.), Dan Hargett (Richmond, Va.), Marshall Hart (Nashville, Tenn.) and Mark Miller (Newport Beach, Calif.) teamed with professional Morgan Hoffman, a recent Oklahoma State grad who was playing in his first professional event.

April 6, 2011

CUBE 3 Studio is pleased to announce the CVS Caremark Marketing Support Center has been awarded LEED certification.

CVS Caremark Marketing Support Center

CVS Caremark Marketing Support Center

The LEED® green building certification program is a voluntary, consensus-based national rating system for buildings designed, constructed and operated for improved environmental and human health performance. LEED addresses all building types and emphasizes state-of-the- art strategies in five areas: sustainable site development, water savings, energy efficiency, materials and resources selection, and indoor environmental quality.  More at http://www.usgbc.org/ 

LEED Certification is important because it helps designers employ green strategies that not only help sustain the environment but it also benefits the building owners financially and the tenants health, psychological wellbeing and overall comfort. 

CVS Caremark Marketing Support Center achieved Certified level (28 points), LEED for New Construction v2.2, it is a building renovation and addition, approx. 55,000 sf, open and closed office plans, entire conferencing center.

Specific LEED items of note:

  • Maintained over 75% of the existing building, reducing landfill waste and amount of new building materials needed
  • Managed to divert over 75% of the construction waste from landfills by recycling.
  • Used nearly 30% in recycled material (reduces need for virgin materials)

This is second CVS Caremark building to be awarded LEED certification.  The Retail Pharmacy Customer Care Center was also awarded Gold level certification. More >

February 28, 2011

CUBE 3 Studio is pleased to announce the CVS Caremark Retail Pharmacy Customer Care Center has been awarded LEED Gold certification.

 The LEED® green building certification program is a voluntary, consensus-based national rating system for buildings designed, constructed and operated for improved environmental and human health performance. LEED addresses all building types and emphasizes state-of-the- art strategies in five areas: sustainable site development, water savings, energy efficiency, materials and resources selection, and indoor environmental quality.  More at http://www.usgbc.org/ 

LEED Certification is important because it helps designers employ green strategies that not only help sustain the environment but it also benefits the building owners financially and the tenants health, psychological wellbeing and overall comfort. 

CVS Caremark Retail Pharmacy Customer Care Center achieved Gold level certification (40 points), LEED for New Construction v2.2, it’s a ground up building, approx. 165,000 sf of open & closed office space, a training center, full service cafeteria, call center and data center – this building also had a 400+ car parking garage attached to the building.

Specific LEED items of note:

  • Used a white roof to minimize the heat gain of the building, protecting the natural habitats around the building
  • Water use was reduced by over 30% with no irrigation system installed and low-flow fixtures throughout the building
  • A nearly 28% cost savings on energy use with the actual design compared to a standard design for the building
  • More than 20% of the materials came from within 500 miles of the project site (reducing emissions from transport)
CVS Caremark Retail Pharmacy Customer Care Center

CVS Caremark Retail Pharmacy Customer Care Center