An idea suggested eight years ago by a friend named Flip: 13 grown men will roam Hazeltine National Golf Club next week sporting Helga horns and braids, singing their hearts out in support of an American team that has won only two of the past 10 Ryder Cups.
Former neighbors and fellow Medina Golf and Country Club members Cal Franklin and Flip Saunders attended the Ryder Cup in Louisville, Ky., with several other friends in 2008, the last time the U.S. team beat Europe in a biennial event that is as much about nationalistic pride as it is golf.
They looked around at what would become such a festive setting for the home team and saw European fans dressed in their colors, singing, chanting and generally having a jolly good time.
"The Americans were sitting there, not doing anything," Franklin said. "It was Flip's idea to get outfits and sing songs."
Two years later, Franklin and a traveling group of 12 flew to Wales for the 2010 Ryder Cup, about the same time Saunders reported to NBA training camp as Washington Wizards coach. While there, they borrowed liberally from their beloved Vikings football team back home.
These grown men — many of them business owners and corporate executives — adapted the NFL team's "Skol Vikings" fight song and they wore Vikings jerseys and the Helga horns and braids, mostly so they could find each other in a crowd.
"We decided we needed to have a 'look,' " said Franklin, whose TN Marketing company produces video for enthusiast groups ranging from motorcyclists to golfers and counts the PGA of America as a longtime client.
Along the way, they invented chants and rewrote song lyrics — one of them, with apologies to the late John Denver and his country roads, "Take Me Home, Ryder Cup" — to fit their needs.