Elevate Your Events: The Power of Audio Quality

Sound and Announcements at a Golf Tournament: Getting Heard Across the Course

Audio is easy to forget when you’re planning a golf tournament — right up until 120 players are spread across the course and you need every one of them to hear the shotgun start. A round of golf isn’t an indoor event with a captive, seated audience; it’s an open-air challenge where your voice has to carry across acres of fairway. As the founder of Colorado Under Par, I’ve learned that a little planning around sound prevents the small chaos of a start nobody heard or an awards ceremony nobody could follow. Here’s how to handle it.

The three moments that actually need sound

Unlike a conference, a golf tournament only needs audio at specific points — but it needs it to work flawlessly when it counts:

  • The shotgun start. Your single most important audio moment. Every group, scattered across 18 holes, has to hear the instructions and the horn at the same time. If half the field misses the announcement, your start is already behind.
  • Pre-round announcements and the welcome. Rules, format, contest holes, sponsor thank-yous, and any safety notes — delivered while players are gathered before they head out.
  • The awards ceremony. Winners announced, sponsors recognized, the day capped off. This usually happens outdoors near the clubhouse or on a patio, with people eating and talking, so you’re competing with crowd noise.

Match the gear to an outdoor course

Indoor PA advice doesn’t translate to a golf course. A few things that do:

Choose equipment built for the distance. A small clubhouse speaker won’t reach a shotgun field. For the start, you need enough volume to carry outdoors — a quality portable PA, and for larger or spread-out courses, an air horn to physically signal the start as a backup to the announcement.

Go wireless and portable. A wireless mic lets whoever’s running the start and the awards move freely without being tethered. Battery-powered, portable systems matter when your “stage” is a patch of grass with no outlet nearby.

Plan for wind and open air. Sound disperses fast outdoors with nothing to reflect off. Position speakers to face the gathered players directly, and account for wind direction — it can carry your announcement away from exactly the people who need it.

Test it before players arrive

The cardinal rule: never assume it works. Do a real sound check before the field shows up — walk out toward where the farthest groups will be and confirm you can actually be heard, check the mic for feedback, and have fresh or backup batteries on hand. Two minutes of testing prevents the worst-case version where you’re shouting unheard instructions over a confused field.

Bring help if you need it

For a small scramble, a decent portable PA and a sound check will cover you. For a large event with a formal awards program or any live music, a professional with the right outdoor gear is worth the cost — they’ll handle coverage, levels, and the things that go wrong so you can focus on running the day.

Final notes

Sound at a golf tournament isn’t about production value — it’s about everyone hearing the two or three things they genuinely need to hear. Get the start and the awards covered with the right gear and a real sound check, and you’ve eliminated one of the quiet ways a smooth-looking event can stumble.

When you’re ready to run your next one, you can list your golf tournament on Colorado Under Par and reach players across the state.

Best regards, Andrew Mueller, Founder, Colorado Under Par

 

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