THE BMW X1, one of the major raffle prizes at Mango Tee 38, goes on full display three weeks before tee-off — adding even more excitement to Alabang Country Club's highly anticipated member-guest tournament. Photograph courtesy of Mango Tee
GOLF

Mango Tee at 38: Are you ready?

A big part of the Mango Tee’s charm is how it embraces presentation and sponsorship.

DT

The Mango Tee isn’t just another club tournament. At Alabang Country Club, it has grown into something closer to a season — eight full days when members clear their schedules, sponsors line up, and the fairways in the south feel more like a festival than a quiet suburban course. From 31 January to 7 February, the 38th Mango Tee promises the same mix of competition, camaraderie, and celebration that has made it one of Philippine golf’s most anticipated member–guest events.

SARAH MEDINA, shown here with Randy Nonato, is the first woman to chair the Mango Tee organizing committee.

This year, the tournament also marks a milestone in its long history: the chairperson of the organizing committee is G&W Clubshare president Sarah Medina, the first woman to hold the post. Until 2015, the Mango Tee featured only male participants, making her leadership a symbol of how the tournament — and the club itself — has evolved.

What makes the Mango Tee so special is how naturally it has grown over time.

Decades ago, it was a simple club event. Today, organizers call it “the sweetest golf tradition in the south.” The tournament is older than many of the players who now tee off, and by its mid-30s editions, it was already famous for long waiting lists, packed prize tables, and a social calendar that rivaled many corporate events.

The 36th and 37th editions showed just how far the event had come.

Schedules stretched across multiple days, team formats encouraged real camaraderie, and nightly award ceremonies and themed socials kept the clubhouse alive long after the last putt dropped. Each year added more sponsors, better production, and higher expectations — all while staying true to a simple idea: members inviting friends to their home course for a week of competitive but genuinely fun golf.

For 2026, Alabang is embracing the Mango Tee as a full-on “golf festival.”

The 38th edition stretches over eight straight days, turning what could have been a standard three- or four-day tournament into a full club takeover.

Teams still consist of an Alabang member and a guest, grouped by handicap, and daily play is staggered to keep the course and clubhouse buzzing. Beyond the scorecards, players can look forward to social events, sponsor activations, and evening programs that have become Mango Tee signatures.

Alabang calls it an “8-day golf tournament,” but that barely captures it.

There’s food, entertainment, and plenty of chances to reconnect with friends, business partners, and fellow golfers.

With demand growing each year, the club now has a structured online registration guide for Mango Tee 38, covering tournament fees, player kits, access to sponsored lounges, and social events.

Past editions have become known for generous prize tables, hole-in-one challenges — sometimes featuring cars or trips — and multiple flights that let players of all skill levels compete meaningfully. While the focus is on fun and fellowship, winning a division — or the overall title — still carries serious bragging rights.

A big part of the Mango Tee’s charm is how it embraces presentation and sponsorship. The 37th edition, for example, felt more like a mini tour stop than a typical club event, with strong brand presence, on-course activations, raffle prizes and hospitality setups.

Early messaging for 2026 leans on words like “iconic,” “celebrated” and “electrifying,” signaling that the club is continuing to push the tournament as a flagship social-sporting property in the south. For sponsors, it’s a rare chance to engage with a golf-savvy, socially active audience over an entire week.

In a landscape where many club tournaments come and go, the Mango Tee stands out because it has endured— and evolved. It keeps club culture alive, reminds members and guests that golf is as much about community as competition, and gives Alabang Country Club a distinct identity on the national golf map. It’s a long-running event that continues to innovate in format, presentation, and hospitality, while staying true to its roots.

As the 38th Mango Tee unfolds, it will test swings, nerves, and short games, as always. But just as importantly, it will show why this tournament remains a staple in conversations about Philippine club golf.

For eight days each year, Alabang proves that a well-run member–guest can feel every bit as special as a tour stop — just with more laughter, more stories, and, true to its name, a little more sweetness.