117th Mass. Amateur: Booska family bonds on display at GreatHorse

Country Club of Greenfield’s Cody Booska, left, walks alongside his father, Dennis, who caddied for him at the 117th Massachusetts Amateur Championship at GreatHorse in Hampden.

Country Club of Greenfield’s Cody Booska, left, walks alongside his father, Dennis, who caddied for him at the 117th Massachusetts Amateur Championship at GreatHorse in Hampden. STAFF PHOTO/GARRETT COTE

Dennis Booska, right, looks into a rangefinder while his son Cody, left, looks on during the 117th Massachusetts Amateur Championship on Tuesday at GreatHorse in Hampden.

Dennis Booska, right, looks into a rangefinder while his son Cody, left, looks on during the 117th Massachusetts Amateur Championship on Tuesday at GreatHorse in Hampden. STAFF PHOTO/GARRETT COTE

Cody Booska, left, bends down to read the green while his father Dennis, right, looks on during the 117th Massachusetts Amateur Championship on Tuesday at GreatHorse in Hampden.

Cody Booska, left, bends down to read the green while his father Dennis, right, looks on during the 117th Massachusetts Amateur Championship on Tuesday at GreatHorse in Hampden. STAFF PHOTO/GARRETT COTE

Cody Booska, left, hits a shot into the 11th green while his father, Dennis, looks on during Day 2 of the 117th Massachusetts Amateur Championship on Tuesday at GreatHorse in Hampden.

Cody Booska, left, hits a shot into the 11th green while his father, Dennis, looks on during Day 2 of the 117th Massachusetts Amateur Championship on Tuesday at GreatHorse in Hampden. STAFF PHOTO/GARRETT COTE

Cody Booska and Dennis Booska look at their notes on the par 3 15th hole at GreatHorse during the 117th Massachusetts Amateur Championship on Tuesday at GreatHorse in Hampden.

Cody Booska and Dennis Booska look at their notes on the par 3 15th hole at GreatHorse during the 117th Massachusetts Amateur Championship on Tuesday at GreatHorse in Hampden. STAFF PHOTO/GARRETT COTE

By GARRETT COTE

Staff Writer

Published: 07-09-2025 9:00 AM

Modified: 07-09-2025 10:42 AM


HAMPDEN — As the Country Club of Greenfield’s Cody Booska stepped to the tee box on the 14th hole (his fifth of the day after starting on No. 10), he turned to his dad, Dennis, who was caddying for him, and asked, “Where’s Brady?”

“He just got here,” Dennis Booska replied.

Dark clouds had rolled in over GreatHorse, and Cody wanted Brady, his younger brother, to grab his rain gear out of his truck before heading out to the course to come watch Day 2 of the 117th Massachusetts Amateur Golf Championship.

And while Cody and Dennis didn’t end up needing any jackets or umbrellas as the sun reappeared, Cody was still elated to see his brother had made the hour-long trip to support. Booska ended up shooting a 10-over-par round of 82 with a 41 on each side to miss the cut, but appreciated having his father and brother by his side both days of the tournament.

Cody is hoping Brady, who is a talented golfer himself having won the WMass championship at Franklin Tech in 2022, can draw some motivation from being at the Mass. Am as a spectator and get there next year as a competitor.

“It was a little family affair,” Cody Booska said. “I’ve played in, I don’t know how many Mass. Ams, but [Dennis has] caddied for me in all of them. Having him back on the bag after a little hiatus was nice. I wish I could have extended it a few more days… I don’t think Brady has ever been up here either, so for him to be able to see the place, he was in awe. Hopefully this gives him some juice to work on his game and get here himself.”

Dennis said he felt honored that his son chose him to caddy given that Cody had a long list of friends that offered to hop on the bag.

“I’m just happy that he allows me to do it, because he’s got five or six friends that would jump on the bag in a second,” Dennis said. “But he lets dad do it. It’s fun, we have a good time out there.”

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But as Cody said, he’s always picked his father, and that wasn’t going to change this week.

“It’s always going to be him until he can’t,” Cody added. “He’s the one who got me into golf, and to be able to have him here is awesome.”

Lebeau duo enjoys the ride

The tournament itself may not have gone the way Belchertown’s Zach Lebeau had wanted, missing the cut at the 117th Massachusetts Amateur Championship at GreatHorse with a total score of 12-over par. But as he stood atop the hill on the 18th green alongside his dad, Keith, the two were all smiles.

For Monday and Tuesday’s opening rounds, Keith hauled Zach’s golf bag through the steaming sun, rain showers and strong gusts of wind. The two grins outside of the clubhouse were proud looks from the father and son after completing the mental and physical challenge the 7,600-yard layout of GreatHorse provides.

Lebeau finished his second round 7-over par (79) after shooting a 5-over 77 on Monday. But none of that mattered. They were just happy to share their passion in such a prestigious event.

“The whole reason why I wanted to play is that I knew he was going to carry my bag and be here with me,” Zach said. “I know I’m not going to compete with the top guys and all that, but he gets to carry my bag and we get to hang out for five hours two days in a row at a place like this, looking at all the views. The scores are irrelevant at the end of the day.”

Keith got Zach and his brother, Sean, into golf as kids. He used to drop them off at Mill Valley Golf Links in the morning and pick them up later in the evening. Zach and Sean would swim and play golf all day, and patiently wait for Keith so they could tell him they once again broke 40 over nine holes.

Dad didn’t believe it — at first.

“‘What are you guys, playing three holes?’” Keith joked. “They lived at the golf course, and they just kept playing and playing and eventually you get good. But I’ve been playing 40 years and I’m nowhere near that good. [Zach] hit some crazy shots the last couple of days that I would never be able to hit. To come up here and watch him play, we had a lot of fun.”

Ever since Keith began playing golf 40 years ago, he always carried his clubs over his shoulders. He never took a golf cart, and most certainly didn’t use a push cart. Whether he’s caddying for one of his sons or playing himself, clubs will be carried.

On Monday, the high temperatures and extreme elevation of GreatHorse got the best of him. Keith had to call it quits about halfway through the round, so Zach lugged his own bag the rest of the way. That wasn’t the case on Tuesday.

Keith wouldn’t be denied.

He mustered up the strength and energy to carry Zach’s clubs all 18 holes, helping his son finish with a par on the final green. And even after struggling on Monday, there was no thought of a push cart — from either of the two.

“My one rule is you strap that thing on your back and you go,” Zach said.

Dad shared a similar mindset

“I carried my bag at Westover [Golf Course] in that league for over 30 years,” Keith said. “I carry it all the time. I don’t take a cart, not even a push cart. It’s just one of those things. I love carrying the bag.”

He may love it, but he did admit it wasn't easy — especially considering Zach loaded up his bag with a ton of golf balls and other essentials.

Zach could only laugh as he realized during Monday’s round that the sunscreen he put in his bag was no longer there.

“When I picked up the bag [Monday] and realized he’s got about four dozen golf balls, I’m like, ‘You don’t need that many golf balls,’” Keith said. “I took the sunscreen out, too. It was adding too much weight. On one hole [Zach] asked me for the sunscreen and said he had some in the bag. I said, ‘No you don’t. I took it and threw it in the truck.’”

With the high school football season fast approaching and summer practices on the horizon, the two football coaches cherished their time together on the picturesque course.

Zach, the former offensive coordinator at Amherst Regional High School and new OC at Simsbury High School (Conn.), noted that once the fall season begins, he likely won’t see his father until Christmas time. Not only is Zach busy, Keith, who is the head coach at Belchertown High School, certainly is, too.

Just as they always do, sports gave Keith and Zach a lasting memory — this one coming at the 117th Massachusetts Amateur Championship.

“Once football season starts, we’re basically just texting each other at that point,” Zach said. “We don’t see each other much in the fall, and probably won’t until Christmas. So it’s really cool to be able to spend two days out here.”

“Agreed,” Keith added.