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The Invitational Shootout

Two-Person Scramble Charity Golf Event

Ten Years Later: The Redemption of Howley & Shinkle Still Echoes Through Shootout History

May 25, 2026 by retlaw17 1 Comment

Howley/Shinkle

There are champions. There are legends. And then there are the men who survived the chaos of the Invitational Shootout long enough to have their names permanently etched into tournament folklore.

In 2016, that honor belonged to Mike Howley and Ray Shinkle.

Now, somehow, unbelievably, alarmingly…it has been ten years.

A full decade since Howley and Shinkle captured the 2016 Invitational Shootout championship in a performance for the ages at Water’s Edge Golf Club in Worth. 

The Run That Changed Everything

Back in 2016, the Invitational Shootout was already gaining its reputation as the Midwest’s premier two-person scramble. The field was loaded. Confidence was high. And yet, through the smoke, noise, and emotional devastation, Howley and Shinkle emerged victorious.

But the story of their triumph begins three years earlier during a catastrophic playoff defeat to Rob Garcia and Billy Les at the 2013 Invitational Shootout. Little did Howley and Shinkle realize their redemption would come three years later over BOTH Billy Les and the GOAT, George Les. 

The Pressure of Shootout Greatness

Winning the Invitational Shootout has never been easy.

The event is not merely a golf tournament. It is an endurance test of focus, friendship, strategy, hydration, emotional resilience, and one’s ability to function while hearing somebody yell “LET’S GO!” from three fairways away.

By the back nine, every putt suddenly feels historic.

And in 2016, nobody handled the moment better than Howley and Shinkle.

A Championship That Aged Beautifully

Ten years later, the 2016 title has only grown in stature.

Part of that is because the Shootout itself has become bigger than ever. What started as a fun gathering of golfers has evolved into one of Chicagoland’s most beloved golf traditions — a tournament where stories live forever and every participant believes, deep down, that this could finally be their year.

But the other reason the 2016 championship still resonates is simple: Howley and Shinkle perfectly represented the spirit of the Shootout.

Competitive. Relentless. And fully prepared to fight for their dignity.

Climb That Mountain

Mike Howley and Ray Shinkle in 2013

Mike Howley and Ray Shinkle in 2013

The playoff loss in 2013 created more scar tissue for both Howley and Shinkle than they cared to realize. The opportunity of a lifetime turned into the nightmare that would never end. 

“I couldn’t believe how bad both Mike and Ray played in sudden death in 2013. It was like they forgot how to play the game” said 2004 Shootout Champion Joe Hill. “It was sad to watch. Mike had never won The Shootout, so I understood why he felt apart under the weight of such enormous pressure. But at the time, Ray was tied with George Les for most Shootout titles, so I never expected him to crumble in the heat of the moment”.

“It was pretty clear Mike and Ray were shocked by their own buffoonery” said McMouw Cup Champion Mick McDonnell. “I told pretty much everyone I knew that these two guys were done. You can’t go throughout something so traumatic and ever recover your manhood. Yet somehow three years later these two guys vanquish The GOAT and his son. It’s truly shocking.”

Where Are They Now?

Ten years later, both men remain deeply connected to Shootout history.

Howley, of course, continues serving as one of the central figures behind the event itself — a man whose fingerprints are all over the tournament’s growth, traditions, and unique personality.

Shinkle, meanwhile, still carries the quiet confidence of a three-time champion. Ray is one of only four men to win the Shootout with multiple partners – George Les, Walter Lis and Shane Hennessey-York.

And honestly? He’s earned it.

The Legacy Lives On

Every year, new teams arrive believing they can make history.

Some do.

Most leave muttering about lip-outs and “if only that drive stayed in bounds.”

But only one team can forever claim the title of 2016 Invitational Shootout Champions.

Ten years later, the names still stand tall:

Mike Howley. Ray Shinkle.

Champions. Legends. Survivors.

And perhaps most importantly, living proof that greatness can happen when two golfers reclaim their manhood after a crushing defeat.

Filed Under: 2026, Champions, Featured Tagged With: Mike Howley, Ray Shinkle

The Connolly Cup Joins the Madness at the 2026 Invitational Shootout

May 18, 2026 by retlaw17 1 Comment

CONNOLLY-CUP-2026

The Invitational Shootout has never been just a golf tournament.

It is part competition, part family reunion, part psychological experiment, and part annual reminder that grown men will invent almost any excuse to create a trophy, argue over handicaps, and spend the next 12 months reminding someone that they lost.

For years, the McMouw Cup has carried the banner for tournament-within-the-tournament absurdity. It has produced injuries, confusion, trash talk, emotional collapses, questionable trophies, and performances that were either heroic or deeply concerning, depending on your perspective.

Now, in 2026, a new internal rivalry enters the arena.

Prepare yourselves for the inaugural Connolly Cup.

The Connolly Cup will feature 10 golfers connected to Mark Connolly, which immediately makes it one of the largest, most complicated, and potentially exciting side competitions in Shootout history.

The inaugural Connolly Cup field includes:

  • Vince Petrella
  • Sanup Desai
  • Connor Glick
  • Bob Connolly
  • Cameron Muirhead
  • Stephen Kaidantsis
  • Eric Combs
  • Mark Connolly
  • Tyler Troha
  • Arthur Bidwill

The Connolly Cup already features two former Shootout champions in Arthur Bidwill and Tyler Troha, who stunned the field in 2024 by winning the Invitational Shootout as rookies. Their 71 at George W. Dunne National came in historically difficult conditions, with blustery winds, a 142 slope rating, and enough cicadas to make even the most mentally stable player question his life choices.

Troha, famously not a fan of bugs, somehow managed to block out the insect invasion long enough to help claim the title. Bidwill, meanwhile, embraced the chaos, won the long drive contest, and helped deliver one of the great rookie performances in tournament history.

That alone makes Bidwill and Troha dangerous.

Also entering the Connolly Cup spotlight is big Connor Glick, winner of the 2025 Longest Drive competition after launching one 290 yards while claiming he was “just trying to keep it in play.” This is exactly the kind of statement that makes tournament officials nervous and everyone else immediately intimidated.

Then there is Cameron Muirhead, who quietly added his name to Shootout history by winning Closest to the Pin on Hole #3 in 2024. In a field full of flamboyant personalities, Muirhead may represent the most dangerous type of competitor: someone who simply hits good shots and lets everyone else self-destruct.

The Rest of the Field

The rest of the field enters with less documented Shootout mythology, which only makes them more mysterious.

Mark Connolly, as the central figure in this entire operation, will be prepared with Glick this year after playing with Troha in 2025. If Mark’s fairway finder is working, that should give Connor license to unleash his prodigious length.

Bob Connolly brings the all-important Connolly name to the proceedings, which means every shot he hits will carry added weight, but he’s also got game. Bob’s got a new partner in 2026 and they may be the dark horse team.

Vince Petrella enters as a wild card, which in Shootout terms means nobody knows whether he is about to shoot the round of his life or run out of golf balls. He’s now a seasoned veteran of Shootout pressure, which should help bring out his best.

Sanup Desai may be the mystery man of the field. Every great internal Shootout competition needs at least one player whose scouting report is vague enough to make everyone nervous. Desai could be steady, explosive, erratic, or all three within a four-hole stretch.

Stephen Kaidantsis brings a name that already sounds like it belongs engraved on a trophy, which may be a competitive advantage before a ball is even struck. Whether the golf matches the typography remains to be seen.

Eric Combs rounds out the inaugural field and should not be overlooked as he lives within the closet proximity to George Dunne of anyone in the field. Combs, who was paired with Joe Connolly in 2025, knows the course like the back of his hand and has reportedly created his own yardage book and is a green-reading magician.

What the Connolly Cup Really Represents

That is the beauty of the Connolly Cup.

Nobody really knows what it is yet.

But that has never stopped the Shootout before.

The McMouw Cup did not become legendary because it was sensible. It became legendary because it combined family pride, mild humiliation, selective memory, and golf scores that required emotional processing.

The Connolly Cup has all the ingredients to follow that same path.

There will be bragging rights.

There will be accusations.

There will be one player who insists he “actually hit it pretty well” despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

There will be someone who starts calculating Connolly Cup standings before the round is over.

And there will almost certainly be one putt that haunts somebody until 2027.

The Invitational Shootout has always been a legacy factory. Some legacies are built on championships. Some are built on clutch shots. Some are built on surviving George Dunne without losing your swing, your partner, or your ability to make eye contact at dinner.

In 2026, the Connolly Cup begins its own chapter.

Ten players.

One trophy.

A lifetime of exaggerated stories.

May the best Connolly-adjacent golfer win.

Filed Under: 2026, Connolly Cup, Featured Tagged With: Connolly Cup

“King” George Les: The Standard of Greatness at the Invitational Shootout

May 10, 2026 by retlaw17 1 Comment

KING GEORGE LES
In every great tournament, there is eventually one competitor who rises above the rest. One player who stops merely winning and starts defining the standard for everyone else. At the Invitational Shootout, that player is unquestionably George Les.

For years, the Invitational Shootout has built its reputation as one of the most competitive two-person scramble tournaments in the Midwest — a tournament where pressure, nerves, clutch putting, and chemistry matter just as much as talent. Champions come and go. Great teams emerge for a season or two. But sustained dominance in the Shootout is extraordinarily rare.

That is what makes George Les different.

With six Invitational Shootout championships, Les has separated himself from the field in historic fashion, doubling the total of every other three-time champion in tournament history.

That achievement alone tells the story.

The next tier of legends — Paul Manolitsis, Shane Hennessy-York, and Ray Shinkle — each own three championships. That is an incredible accomplishment in an event that has produced more than three decades of elite competition. Yet George Les stands alone with six titles, creating a gap between himself and the rest of the field that resembles the dominance of a dynasty rather than the success of a single player.

It is why many around the tournament now refer to him simply as:

“King George.”

Les first etched his name into Shootout history in 2007 when he teamed with Dallio to capture the championship at Water’s Edge Golf Club. Four years later, he returned to the winner’s circle in 2011, proving the first title was no fluke. Then came the run that elevated him from champion to legend.

In 2014, Les and Paul Manolitsis claimed another title. In 2018, the pair won again in dramatic fashion when Les buried a clutch birdie putt on the final hole to avoid a playoff and secure the championship. Tournament coverage afterward described him as “the greatest player in tournament history.”

At that point, Les had already become the first four-time champion in Shootout history.

Most players would be satisfied with that legacy.

George Les kept going.

GEORGE-GOT

In 2023, he captured championship number five alongside Manolitsis at George W. Dunne National Golf Course, officially becoming the tournament’s only five-time champion at the time.

And then came 2025.

The 30th edition of the Invitational Shootout already carried added significance because of the tournament’s milestone anniversary. But the story became even more memorable when George Les teamed with George Les Jr. to win the championship.

That victory was different.

It was no longer simply about collecting another trophy. It became a passing of the torch — a grandfather and grandson winning together on one of the biggest stages in tournament history.

And with that win, the number changed from five to six.

Six championships.

A number that feels almost untouchable in an event this competitive.

What makes Les’ dominance even more impressive is the era in which he accomplished it. The Invitational Shootout has consistently featured strong fields, experienced scramble players, and countless teams capable of going low. Winning once requires talent. Winning repeatedly requires something deeper: composure, timing, chemistry, and the ability to perform when every shot matters.

The greatest champions in sports often develop an aura around them — a feeling that they expect to win when the pressure is highest. George Les appears to carry that same quality at the Shootout.

Multiple-Time Invitational Shootout Champions

Player Championships Winning Years
George Les 6 2007, 2011, 2014, 2018, 2023, 2025
Paul Manolitsis 3 2014, 2018, 2023
Hennessy-York 3 2015, 2017, 2019
Ray Shinkle 3 2002, 2003, 2016
Walter Lis 2 1994, 2004
Billy Les 2 2013, 2022

Everyone else is chasing history.

George Les owns it.

There is also something fitting about the nickname “King George.” The Invitational Shootout has always carried a unique personality — competitive, slightly theatrical, deeply loyal to tradition, and filled with larger-than-life characters.

Every legendary tournament eventually develops its folklore, and George Les has become central to the mythology of the Shootout itself.

When future generations look back at the history of the tournament, they will see many worthy champions. They will see dramatic finishes, rivalries, and unforgettable moments. But above all, they will see one player whose record towers over the rest.

Six championships across nearly two decades.

A dynasty hidden inside a scramble tournament.

A benchmark that may never be matched.

At the Invitational Shootout, there are champions.

And then there is “King” George Les.

View the full Invitational Shootout history.

Filed Under: 2026, Champions, Featured, History Tagged With: George Les

The 2026 Invitational Shootout Is Set to Ignite at George W. Dunne National

April 11, 2026 by retlaw17

On Friday, June 5, 2026, the greatest two-person scramble in the Midwest returns to center stage at George W. Dunne National Golf Course—a course known for its championship pedigree and a layout that rewards both bold play and steady nerves.

But let’s be clear:
This isn’t just about golf.

This is about energy, legacy, competition, and unforgettable moments.

A Tradition That Keeps Evolving

Every year, the Shootout builds on its own legend.

In 2025, we saw everything from emotional family triumphs to fierce competition for the coveted McMouw Cup. A grandfather-grandson duo stole hearts with a story that reminded everyone why this event is different—it’s not just about winning, it’s about who you share it with.

And then there’s the competition itself.

Teams don’t just show up—they come ready. Ready to fire low scores. Ready to outplay, outlast, and out-celebrate. Ready to etch their names into Shootout history.

Why George Dunne Is the Perfect Stage

There may not be a better public course in the Chicago area to host an event like this.

George W. Dunne National Golf Course delivers:

Championship-caliber conditions that demand precision
Wide but strategic fairways that reward smart aggression
Greens that test your nerve when it matters most

It’s the kind of course where anything can happen—and usually does.

The Shootout Experience

From the first tee to the final putt, there’s a pulse to this event:

Teammates locked in and feeding off each other
Friendly trash talk echoing across fairways
Clutch shots that swing momentum in an instant
Laughter, pressure, and adrenaline all blending into one

Because every Shootout produces moments that get talked about all year long—the shots, the comebacks, the unexpected heroes.

2026: Bigger, Louder, Better

If recent years are any indication, 2026 is shaping up to be the most electric Shootout yet.

New storylines will emerge
New champions will rise
New memories will be created

And somewhere on that course, on a crucial hole, at a pivotal moment…

someone is going to hit the shot of the day.

Are You Ready?

Whether you’re a returning competitor or stepping into the Shootout for the first time, one thing is certain:

You won’t forget it.

So mark your calendar:
Friday, June 5, 2026
George W. Dunne National Golf Course

 

Filed Under: 2026, Featured, History

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