Josh Gardner was ready. It was the morning of New Yearâs Eve, and the 50-year-old insurance professional from Sheridan had his laptop open and his finger hovering over the refresh button.
He knew the drill: Landmand Golf Club, the improbable public course carved into the Loess Bluffs of northeast Nebraska, would release its entire 2026 season of tee times at once.
Gardner didnât care about the date. He didnât care about the month. He just wanted in at the toughest public golf course tee time to book.
âI was online because I knew that thatâs what you had to do, and it just kept refreshing and I was getting the dial thing on the screen,â Gardner said. âI couldnât get into the site, couldnât get into the site, and then it just popped up and said, âAll times are gone. Please inquire back next year.ââ
He never even saw a calendar. All 11,000 tee times were gone in 45 minutes.
Gardner, still on the Landmand website â figuring heâd at least buy a hat from the pro shop â noticed an unfamiliar tab. It said, âThe Heartbeat.â
He clicked.
What he found was a description of an inaugural golf tournament, a collaboration between Landmand and 5 Clubs Golf, the Golf Channel morning show hosted by veteran broadcaster Gary Williams.
The format was unlike anything on the national amateur scene: 52 two-man teams, one representing each of the 50 states, one for Washington, D.C., and one wildcard. Three tournament rounds plus a practice round.
All-inclusive â lodging, food, drink, shuttles, player gifts. The whole package for $7,000 per team.
Gardner reached out to his golf buddy Jared Stiver.
âI ran the dates by him and he was like, âYeah, Iâm not doing anything yet in August,ââ Gardner said. âSo I signed us up.â
Then he kept his mouth shut.
âI didnât tell anybody else about it because I didnât know how many people from Wyoming knew about it, but I knew if I told people about it, it was going to lessen my chances to get drawn,â he said. âExcept I told people from other states. I told people from Montana and from the Dakotas.â
In February, the email arrived. Gardner and Stiver had been selected to represent Wyoming at The Heartbeat, scheduled for August 2â5, 2026. Four rounds at the course the Wall Street Journal called Americaâs toughest tee time.
âI was super pumped,â Gardner said. âBecause I canât get a tee time at the place, but I got drawn in a lottery to go play it.â
Stiver, 42, who runs a drilling fluids company in Sheridan, had a simpler read on the situation. Heâd heard about Landmand for years from golf buddies in Denver who had tried and failed to get on. He figured the lottery was a long shot.
âI didnât think there was any chance that we were going to get selected,â Stiver said. âAnd then I got an email that we were representing Wyoming and the fact that we were going to get to play four rounds there was outstanding.â
Farmerâs Course
How did a course carved out of the windswept bluffs of northeast Nebraska become one of the hottest destinations in golf?
Landmand founder Will Andersen is a fourth-generation Nebraska farmer whose great-grandfather Carl left Denmark in 1913 and settled in the northeast corner of the state. The family built a major ag operation â Willâs father was working 12,000 to 13,000 acres. But there was this one stretch of ground, 588 acres of dramatically steep loess hills near Homer, Nebraska.
âLandmandâ is Danish for farmer, and loess refers to loosely compacted yellowish-gray deposits of windblown sediment.
Like the Pacific gusts at Pebble Beach in California and the salty gales at St. Andrews, Scotland, this windy bluff country in Nebraska called out to a golferâs heart.
Andersen learned golf as a kid from his grandfather Bill Zellmer, smacking balls across a soccer field. He went on to play competitively, qualifying for the 2015 U.S. Mid-Amateur. After a stint working at a private club in Chicago, he came home and helped the family renovate a local nine-hole course. But his eyes kept drifting to those empty hills.
âI thought it was an amazing piece of ground,â Andersen says in âAnything But Little,â the Golf Channel documentary about the courseâs origins. âIâd been on it my whole life. It was probably high school is when I thought there could be a golf course out here.â
Several architects told him the land was too severe, the location too remote. Then a friend mentioned King-Collins, the design firm behind Sweetens Cove, the cult-favorite nine-hole course in Tennessee.
Designer Rob Collins got Willâs email on a golf course and called him back the same day. Two weeks later, Collins and his partner Tad King were standing on the property.
âWe got up there and no oneâs really talking,â Andersen recalled in the documentary. âTad just goes, âHoly crap. You own all this?ââ
King-Collins found their routing in two days. Construction began in September 2019.
The course opened for public play in late 2022 with fairways stretching over 100 yards wide and the greens averaging more than 14,000 square feet.
According to coverage by the Wall Street Journal, Andersen set Landmandâs course fee at $150, âwhich is less than the cost of a caddie at Pebble Beach, the iconic public course where rounds start at $675. And he hasnât jacked up the greens fees to keep up with the demand.â
âGolf Digestâ ranked it No. 24 among Americaâs top 100 public courses. By New Yearâs Eve 2024, when the 2025 tee sheet dropped, the entire season also sold out in under an hour.
âLike any living, breathing thing, Landmand continues to evolve year to year,â Andersen said when he announced The Heartbeat in January. âWe hope, through The Heartbeat, to showcase this natural process as well as the people and community behind it.â
Wyoming Quest
Gardner and Stiver are not strangers to unlikely golf adventures. The two are members at Powder Horn in Sheridan and are currently in the middle of a quest to play every golf course in Wyoming with two other friends. Theyâve knocked out 16 so far and have a couple more summers to finish.
Theyâre documenting the whole thing on a YouTube channel called Lowest Known Score â a riff on the âFKTâ concept from extreme sports, where athletes chase the fastest known time on a trail.
Gardner and Stiver are chasing the lowest known score at every course in the state.
âItâs never been done before,â Gardner said with a laugh.
But itâs not clear if any course in Wyoming can prepare players for whatâs waiting at Landmand.
âWhen you look at this thing online, thereâs like zero trees, there might be one,â Gardner said. âThereâs no water hazards. Itâs just in the rolling hills of Nebraska, and they did very little to adjust the layout of the terrain. So whatever was there is kind of what youâre playing. Lots of knobs and little valleys and the green complexes are absolutely massive.â
Heâs studied the flyover videos on YouTube. Heâs ordered the green-reading book. He knows about the three-hole stretch golfers have named Cornfield Corner â Landmandâs answer to Amen Corner at Augusta. And he knows about the wind.
âThe flags on the green, theyâre windsocks, like what youâd see at an airport,â Gardner said. âI have to think that the wind just screeches there.â

Swapping Gifts
Both men have plans beyond just playing well. Borrowing a tradition from junior golf and the Olympics, they want to bring something distinctly Wyoming to trade with the teams theyâre paired with each day.
âI want to do the same thing that kids do when they play national events â they trade something, a coin or a ball marker, something of significance from wherever theyâre from,â Gardner said. Heâs batted around ideas: ball markers made from a whiskey stave at Wyoming Whiskey, something that looks like a bullet casing from Weatherby. A divot tool carved from an elk antler. Heâs open to suggestions.
âWeâd need 10 of them,â he said. âTwo for us and then weâll play with four different twosomes. I just think that would be neat, but I donât know what it is.â
Stiver sees the bigger picture. A latecomer to golf who didnât really get into the game seriously until he was 30 after playing baseball as a younger man, he appreciates the improbability of whatâs unfolding â a couple of guys from Sheridan getting drawn to represent Wyoming at a course built by a farmer on ground many dismissed as ever becoming prime golf country.
âIt was a little bit of a âField of Dreamsâ type of situation,â Stiver said of Landmandâs origin story. âThey built it and people are coming.â
Gardner thinks The Heartbeat tournament is going to grow into one of the most coveted draws in amateur golf.
âI think in four or five years from now, thereâll probably be more people putting in for that than for some hunting tags,â he said. âBut we got lucky enough to be drawn for the inaugural one.â
As for what kind of competition, theyâre walking into, neither man is under any illusions. They submitted their handicaps with the application, and they know theyâre going to be in the field with some serious players.
âJosh and I are probably a little bit better than average,â Stiver said. âBut thereâs going to be some guys that probably played collegiate ball or better. Thereâs probably going to be some really good sticks there.â
The Heartbeat runs Aug. 2-5, 2026, at Landmand Golf Club in Homer, Nebraska.Â
The final two days of the tournament will be broadcast live on 5 Clubs on Golf Channel. Josh Gardner and Jared Stiver are open to ideas for a Wyoming-themed trading item â readers can reach out through lowestknownscore@gmail.com.
David Madison can be reached at david@cowboystatedaily.com.












