On a warm, clear Sunday afternoon聽last April, Atlanta Hawks swing man stepped up to a turf-颅covered platform brandishing a five-iron. With Pitbull blaring in the background,聽Bazemore set his feet and purposefully unwound his six-foot-five frame to send a perfect shot downrange. 鈥淏est ball of the day,鈥 he said, stepping back to admire the聽arc as it dropped, nearly 200 yards away, into a 15-foot-wide, spider-web-shaped target. As groups of golfers on either side of him plowed through pitchers of beer, a nearby screen flashed congratulations and awarded Bazemore nine points.
Clearly, this is not your grandfather鈥檚 good walk spoiled鈥攊t鈥檚 the Midtown 颅Atlanta site of , which has 23 locations across the country. The company transported the driving range into a three-story building, ditched the dress code, and added free-flowing drinks, hundreds of TVs, and pounding music.
Topgolf was invented in 2000 in England by twin brothers Steve and Dave Jolliffe, who were bored stiff with the usual bucket-of-balls approach to perfecting their golf swing. So they created an experience that was more like a video game. They equipped the balls with electronic tags, similar to a 颅marathoner鈥檚 timing chip, and devised a point system based on shot distance and 颅accuracy. When the ball hits one of the targets on the 215-yard range, sensors scan it and the score is added to a running tally.

The company opened its first U.S. 颅location in Virginia in 2005 and has since brought on investors including Callaway. Topgolf has done something that 颅traditional golf, as Topgolf 颅employees call it, has struggled to do: attract new players, particularly young ones. This year鈥檚 Tiger-less Masters saw an 11 percent decline in final-round TV viewer颅ship, and according to the National Golf Foundation, course closures have outpaced openings for eight years running. Despite the ascendance of fresh faces like Jordan Spieth and Rory McIlroy, the game is especially 颅unpopular with young people鈥斅璸articipation by those between 18 and 30 has declined 35 percent since 2006.聽
A fluky couple of bounces had me leading 颅Bazemore聽after the first round.聽Then he busted out a fairway wood and the drubbing began.
Of the 13 million people expected to visit Topgolf this year, more than two-thirds are under 35, according to company statistics. Half have never played before. The other half aren鈥檛 your typical white country clubbers, either. Though the company doesn鈥檛 track such data, the visitors I saw were more racially 颅diverse and included more women than the local links. It鈥檚 not hard to see why: with greens fees at some courses reaching well over $100 per person for 18 holes, 颅traditional golf is expensive and stuffy. Topgolf costs between $20 and $40 an hour for your 颅entire group, and on Fridays and Saturdays the place is usually packed late into the night. (It鈥檚 open until 2 A.M. on weekends.)聽
It doesn鈥檛 hurt that Topgolf has caught on with celebrities. Rapper Rick Ross recently posted a clip of himself on Snapchat taking some truly ugly swings. And last February, I that Bazemore had been hitting balls with his former Warriors teammates, including reigning back-to-back MVP Stephen Curry. So I asked him if he wanted to play.聽
The 26-year-old picked up the game two years ago, he told me, and has since become a Topgolf regular. I hadn鈥檛 swung a golf club in a decade before the weekend we met in 颅Atlanta, and I immediately sliced a ball straight into the side netting. Zero points. Bazemore, who over the past four seasons went from an undrafted rookie who couldn鈥檛 score to a sought-after free agent by working obsessively on his shot, has applied the same sort of effort to his golf form. He didn鈥檛 like what he was seeing of mine. 鈥淭uck your front shoulder in,鈥 he instructed. Slice. 鈥淏ut without moving your front foot.鈥 At one point, Bazemore produced a pointer from his bag to indicate my many flaws.
After some practice cuts, it was game on. A fluky couple of bounces had me leading 颅after the first round. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to regret all those pointers you gave me,鈥 I said. Then he busted out a fairway wood and the drubbing began. Afterward, shockingly sore but hooked, I Googled the Topgolf nearest my home in Santa Fe.聽
The good news: an Albuquerque spot may be in the works, and there鈥檚 further 颅expansion planned. In 2013, Topgolf was in nine cities around the country. The 颅company aims to have 50 locations in the next three years. As communications chief Adrienne Chance says, 鈥淲e鈥檙e looking forward to 颅growing not only Topgolf, but the game of golf 颅itself.鈥