Monday
Aug052019

Boyle tours Glen Club in 65 for Illinois Open lead

Writing from Glenview, Illinois

Monday, August 5, 2019 

It’s no surprise that big hitters abound all over golf these days, be it the top of the PGA Tour or at the local muni.

But hitting it long is one thing and making something of the distance gained is another.

Chris Boyle, a 23-year-old assistant at Balmoral Woods in Crete, made plenty of his ability to pound the ball on Monday at The Glen Club. His 7-under-par 65, a scorecard painted with eight birdies and marred by a solitary bogey, carried him to the lead of the 70th Illinois Open by two strokes over 2015 champion David Cooke.

Tim “Tee-k” Kelly, Justin Regier and Dave Pecorella are tied for third at 3-under 69.

Boyle played high school golf at Jacobs and his college golf at Methodist University in North Carolina. He’s played in but a few tournaments as a professional, but if Monday is an indication, he’ll be in contention early and often.

“It’s been a lot of hard work, a lot of training, a lot of reps, a lot of bad rounds,” Boyle said. “But hard work pays off eventually. This is just step one of a three-day tournament.”

It was all in the head, Boyle explained.

“I was prepared mentally, prepared to win,” Boyle said. “I’m playing solid, so I’m looking forward to Wednesday afternoon. I really feel I should be holding the trophy at the end of this. I see it. I just want to go do it now.”

First comes Tuesday at Ridgemoor Golf Club, where the other half of the field commenced hostilities. That’s where Cooke opened with a 5-under-par 67 in the morning, taking the lead for some five hours.

“I’m going for all the par 5s in two, stay aggressive all day long,” Boyle said of his Ridgemoor manifesto.

He was in the third from last group in the afternoon, but made noise immediately with four birdies in the first five holes, then three more beginning at the par-4 13th hole. His only bogey was on the 16th, but he made up for that with a birdie at the last, achieved via a drive 20 yards past the cart path crossover, an approach from the left rough that ended up on the back collar of the 589-yard finishing hole, a putt to about five feet, and an uphill conversion for the eighth birdie of the day.

“That was a good up-and-down for birdie,” Boyle said. “I had a mental lapse on 16 but wanted to brush that back, and I finished up in style.”

Since winning the Illinois Open as an amateur in 2015, Cooke has graduated from North Carolina State, turned pro, and gained partial status on the European Tour.

“I’ve played twice in Australia and once in Kenya,” said Cooke.

Neither country is in Europe, which suggests the tour should consider a name change, but Cooke, a native of Bolingbrook, was right at home at Ridgemoor Country Club on Monday.

“Kind of frustrating, but I’m definitely not upset with it,” Cooke said of his eight-birdie, three-bogey round. “I think 67’s pretty good at this course. It’s a little different style than The Glen Club. You’ve got to hit a lot of the trickier golf shots here, but the greens are awesome and I made quite a few putts.”

Cooke opened on the back nine as if he’d obliterate the course record of 62, set by Ben Hogan in 1942 and subsequently matched by then-member Bob Zender. He birdied Nos. 10, 11 and 12, and after a bogey on the par-3 13th, birdied the next two holes and the par-3 18th to go out in 5-under 31. But an even-par inward half brought him back to earth.

“I made a few really good putts where you’re just trying to cozy them up there and they fell in,” Cooke said. “I made one on No. 9, a 15-20-footer I had to play up the slope and back down.”

He made it to save par. Cooke, like most of the field, had never seen Ridgemoor until a practice round. That was an eye-opener.

“You’ve got to make sure you pick the right spots,” Cooke said. “There’s definitely worse sides of the holes to be on than others. There are slopes on the greens you definitely don’t want to mess yourself up on.”

If Cooke keeps up the good work, he could collect the $20,000 first prize from the purse of $120,000. Both are records. In his case, the money would pay for the honeymoon, as Cooke is getting married on Saturday, and the check here will go farther than the $2,165 he’s earned on the European circuit in his few starts.

Nineteen of the 265 players finished under par, with 33 at par or better.

Reiger’s presence at 3-under was as unexpected as Boyle’s. A 34-year-old assistant at the East Bank Club, Reiger’s played on every continent but Antarctica, plus won the 2014 Bermuda Open. He counted the 75-foot par-saving putt on his fourth hole of the day “a round-saver."

“Any time you can get those and keep going with momentum, it’s a big deal,” Reiger said.

Immediately behind Regier, Kelly and Pecorella are a sevensome including amateurs Tommy Kuhl, Jack Mortell and Jack Vercautren and pros Frank Hohenadel, Brandon Holtz, Michael Schachner and Josh Bousman.

Kuhl, whose 70 came at Ridgemoor, was coming off an appearance in the Western Amateur at Point O’Woods near Benton Harbor, Mich., and saw similarities in the two courses that helped his game.

“Some of the tee shots are very similar to the Point,” Kuhl said. “I’d say the Point is a little tighter. These greens are a little better. But they’re similar, which is a nice transition coming from that tournament to here.”

Another similarity was the set-up. While Kuhl didn’t make match play and the Sweet Sixteen, there are few easy cup placements at Point O’Woods. The same was true of the setup at Ridgemoor.

“The pins were really, really hard today,” Kuhl said. “I wasn’t expecting that coming in. They were tucked. I just tried to play smart all day.”

He did so, avoiding bogey until his last hole, the par-4 ninth, a 422-yard quiz.

“That was kind of unfortunate, but I played really solid golf, birdied (three of the four) the par-5s,” Cooke said of his day, best termed defensive golf. “I’d say so. You don’t want to get too far ahead of yourself and start firing at pins. There’s no reason. You know everyone’s going to be struggling to get the ball close, so par’s a good score.”

Of the others, Holtz, from downstate Bloomington, is the biggest threat based on the last two years. He finished second last year and tied for second, and was the low professional, in 2017. Not bad for a full-time football helmet salesman.

The better-known players in the field played Ridgemoor on Monday and will tackle The Glen Club on Tuesday, with survivors – the top 50 and ties – advancing to Wednesday’s payday. Monday’s Glen Clubbers will play Ridgemoor on the morrow.

“It’s out there,” said 2017 winner Patrick Flavin of scoring on the George O’Neil-William Langford layout. Flavin opened at 1-over 73 and felt as if he was in reverse playing with Cooke.

Around the Open

Surprise score of the day: Dakun Chang’s 10-over 82 at Ridgemoor, which included a trio of double bogeys by the current Illinois PGA Section champion. … Amateur Dominic Leli posted the day’s high score, an 18-over 90 at The Glen Club which featured a 12 on the par-5 18th. … Amateur Benny Mulhearn was the low member of that family, firing a 77 at The Glen Club. Brother Zach and pop Danny matched 83s at Ridgemoor.

Tim Cronin

 

Monday
Aug052019

Course mixture highlighted in Illinois Open

Writing from Chicago, Illinois

Monday, August 5, 2019

The brawny layout of The Glen Club and the tight fairways of Ridgemoor Country Club are the two puzzles a field of 264 will have to solve in the 70th Illinois Open, which opens a three-day run this morning.

Seven past champions, including four-timer winner Mike Small, are in the field. Vince India, last year’s winner at The Glen Club and Rolling Green, is absent due to commitments on the Korn Ferry Tour, but those on hand will have their hands full with the treacherous greens of Ridgemoor, which is rarely in the spotlight, and The Glen Club, where the state championship has been anchored in recent years.

The spotlight was brightest on Ridgemoor in 1942, when the U.S. Open was canceled because of World War II and the Chicago Open, a tour stop, was morphed into the Hale America National Open with the cooperation of the USGA and PGA of America. Ben Hogan, the Chicago Open’s defending champion, won the title and fired a 62 in the process, a score matched since only by Bob Zender. Given the heavy USGA influence – the group ran the tournament inside the ropes, and Hogan was awarded the medal that would have gone to the U.S. Open champion – Hogan considered it his fifth U.S. Open, winning the other four subsequently. The USGA did not.

Head pro Nick Pease notes the most challenging part of the course are the fifth through ninth holes, as well as the three par-3s of the four that feature water fronting the greens, but Pease must be an arrow-straight hitter. An excursion last week discovered several holes with single-file fairways, and one, the par-4 12th, a severe dogleg right, that brought to mind the long-gone 18th hole on Medinah’s No. 3 course. It’s tree-lined with almost no way to cut the corner.

The field will play one of their first two rounds on each course, with the survivors meeting at The Glen Club on Wednesday to settle the issue. At that point, it wouldn’t be a surprise to see the leaders include 2017 champion Patrick Flavin, 2016 winner Carlos Sainz Jr., and 2015 winner David Cooke, the three past winners on hand since the two-course was instituted in 2015.

Flavin, Nick Hardy and Tim “Tee-K” Kelly are among the younger set who are on or chasing tour berths, but have this week open and thus can give the Illinois Open a whirl.

Since 1999, the winner has always been either an aspiring tour pro, an amateur, or Small, the longtime head coach of Illinois’ men’s team. The last pure club professional to win was Todd Tremaglio, a Chicago Golf Club assistant who beat then-amateur D.A. Points in a playoff in 1999.

The total purse should be in the vicinity of $90,000 to $100,000, based on the last few years. India received $19,004 for his triumph last year.

Tim Cronin

 

Saturday
Aug032019

Mid-amateur Rank, an NHL referee, captures Western Amateur

Writing from Millburg, Michigan

Saturday, August 3, 2019

Some stories are just too good. This is one of them.

Garrett Rank was the only player in the 117th Western Amateur’s Sweet Sixteen who didn’t use a caddie. As a 31-year-old with, as he calls it, “the best job in the world,” that of National Hockey League referee, he could afford a looper. But his father, his biggest fan, died five years ago.

“I saw a lot of mums and dads caddying for their sons out here this week,” Rank said. “Ultimately, secretly, I pushed my bag around in my dad’s honor, and felt like he was out there with me every step of the way.”

His age indicates he’s a mid-amateur. The Western Amateur was once speckled with mid-ams in the field and advancing to match play, but Rank was the first player 25-plus to crash the Sweet Sixteen since Nathan Smith, then 30, in 2009. He lost in the second round.

Rank’s employment hints at Canadian roots, and sure enough, he’s from Elmira, Ontario. Canadians in the championship match are almost as rare as snow in August.

On top of all that, Rank is a cancer survivor. Diagnosed with testicular cancer during his sophomore year at the University of Waterloo, he had to drop the hockey half of his hockey-and-golf scholarship.

Once cleared of cancer and graduated, he enrolled in referee camp and quickly worked his way up to the NHL. And summer since 2012, when he lost to the aforementioned Smith in the final of the U.S. Mid-Amateur at Conway Farms Golf Club, and thus missed a trip to the Masters, has meant serious golf, almost always played against players younger than him.

“That’s what’s driven me in golf for the last seven years,” Rank said. “And this is pretty much the Masters of amateur golf. I’ve been playing in this high-level stuff for seven or eight years and it’s gotten me into some cool situations.”

You know where this is leading, of course. Rank not only made the Western Amateur’s vaunted Sweet Sixteen, he won the championship, scoring a 3 and 2 victory over recent Ohio State graduate Daniel Wetterich at Point O’Woods Golf and Country Club.

Within days, Rank's name will be engraved on the George Thorne Trophy, the same one featuring Chick Evans, Jack Nicklaus, Phil Mickelson and Tiger Woods, to fill out just one notable foursome. Oh, and Danny Green, the last mid-amateur to win. He was 40 when he won in 1997.

It’s too good, but it’s true. Rank trailed in all four of his matches, but rallied each time. He rolled in long birdie and par putts to win holes, birdie putts to halve holes, and generally out-gritted his opponents every step of the way. Not the longest hitter, he was more accurate than them, and at the Point, where quick greens put a premium on well-struck approaches, the fairway is the place to be.

In the final, Rank hit seven of 13 fairways across 16 holes. Wetterich hit four fairways. Rank only hit 11 greens to Wetterich’s nine, but even some of his misses were calculated. For instance, going long with his scrambling third shot on the par-4 14th, where the cup was placed in a precarious spot on the back left of the massive false-fronted green. After a stylish chip, he missed a four-footer for par, but was able to match Wetterich for bogey after his miss for par. That kept Rank 1-up.

Wetterich won the fourth and fifth holes with birdies after a sloppy start and was 1 up, but lost the next two holes to a par and a birdie, then saw Rank drop an 8-foot birdie putt on top of his 16-foot deuce on the par-3 eighth.

That was big for Rank, and his tee shot to six feet from an impossible pin position on the par-3 ninth was bigger.

“I hit one of the best shots of the week to that back left flag,” Rank said with a grin. “That was a pretty stout shot.”

Wetterich conceded him the birdie putt and a 2 up lead at the turn after three-putting from 40 feet above on the ridge to the right, missing his second putt from eight feet.

Wetterich sank an 18-foot birdie putt on the 10th green to pull within a hole, but his putter cooled and the duo halved the next three holes, which went in Rank’s favor. When Rank dropped a 10-footer on the 14th for his fifth birdie of the match to return to 2 up, Wetterich was up against it playing this hockey player-turned-referee.

“The secret to this week was coming from a very ultra-competitive family,” Rank said. “I imagined I was playing my brother every match out there. He thinks he’s better at golf than I am, so I was just trying to kick everybody’s face in, because that’s what I’d want to do to him if we were playing.”

Thus, his door-sealing approach to five feet on the par-4 15th for his sixth birdie of the match – he was the equivalent of 4-under over 16 holes, including the usual concessions – that moved him to dormie 3. Wetterich needed to win every hole the rest of the way, and when he could only match Rank’s par on the par-4 16th, it was time for golf’s version of hockey’s handshake line.

Rank advanced to the title match by beating hot-tempered David Laskin of Elk Grove, Calif., 2 and 1 in the semifinal. Wetterich knocked off Ricky Castillo of Yorba Linda, Calif., 3 and 2, in part by scoring an eagle out of a greenside bunker on the par-5 13th hole.

While Rank, now the leading mid-amateur in North America, insists he’ll keep his day job while remaining an amateur, Wetterich will play in the U.S. Amateur, then go to PGA Tour qualifying and likely turn pro immediately after. It’s a matter of when, not if.

“I know I have little more work to dial some things in and be more consistent, but I don’t think I’m really far off,” Wetterich said. “I feel I can do some really special stuff."

Rank will keep trying to beat up on the kids coming up.

“I find a lot of motivation with the success we (mid-amateurs) have in the different events,” Rank said. “We truly, honestly get a kick of rolling up to the first tee and the young kids going, ‘Who’s this old guy we’re going to spank today?’ Then we usually do a pretty good job of shocking them.”

Saturday was the payoff.

“I know how cool this is in amateur golf,” Rank said. “It hasn’t sunk in. I’m sure I’ll be even more proud than I am right now. But I’m so honored, so thrilled to win this tournament. I’ve had a lot of close calls in big events. To finally break through is huge.”

Around the Point

Rank is the second Canadian to win the Western Amateur, following Jim Nelford in 1977. He was ready for the grind, having played three straight 36-hole days a fortnight ago between a tournament and U.S. Amateur qualifying. … Rank is waiting on a possible exemption into the U.S. Amateur, which could be his last tournament before NHL officials training camp opens on Sept. 9.  He also has the Canadian Mid-Amateur on his card. … Both players will receive exemptions into next year’s Evans Scholars Invitational at The Glen Club. That will give Wetterich a chance to make a check, but Rank may be busy that weekend, as it comes in the middle of the Stanley Cup playoffs. … A gallery of about 300 attended the title match, and while that wasn’t close to the thousands that roamed the Point in the 1970s and early 1990s, it was a knowledgable crowd that got a kick out of someone closer to their age than that of their children winning the venerable title. … The vibe from the membership favors a return visit, the friendship with the WGA rekindled after 11 years away. … Rank’s acceptance speech was an eloquent as they come, a departure from the short “thank you” speeches that younger players begin and end with. … Next year’s Western Am is at Crooked Stick Golf Club in Carmel, Ind., where Rory McIlroy and Dustin Johnson won the WGA’s BMW Championship in 2012 and 2016, respectively. It returns to the immediate Chicago area in 2021, the Glen View Club hosting. 

Tim Cronin

 

Wednesday
Jul312019

Hammer thrown for loss in Western Am

Writing from Millburg, Michigan

Wednesday, July 31, 2019

It was easy to tell how much missing the 36-hole cut in the Western Amateur meant to Cole Hammer.

The defending champion sank, his knees almost touching the tender turf of Point O’Woods Golf and Country Club’s ninth green, when his downhill-sidehill sliding 35-foot putt came within an inch of tumbling into the cup late on a perfect Wednesday afternoon.

He needed that deuce on the formidable 192-yard hole to advance to Thursday’s 36-hole dash for the Sweet Sixteen. Instead, his par 3 for 1-under-par 69 settled him at 1-over 141 for the first two qualifying rounds, one more than the maximum needed.

Last year, at 18 and about to enter Texas, he was the co-medalist, then went to the 18th hole or beyond en route to capturing this most testing championship format in golf, professional or amateur.

This year, at 19, it was hats off and handshakes with playing partners Chan An Yu and Isaiah Salinda, a signed scorecard, a longing look across the green at the scoreboard to see how close he’d come while his dutiful caddie mom packed up his Texas-logoed bag and carried it to the parking lot.

But he already knew. He had fought his way back from an opening 72 – par for this classic Robert Trent Jones design normally but 2-over in championship configuration – to get back to even for the first 31 holes thanks to birdies on the Point’s third and fourth holes, his 12th and 13th of the day.

After a par on No. 5 came a wild swing on the sixth tee, an off-line shot that landed well in the rough and led to a bogey on what is now the Point’s No. 1 handicap hole. The killer bogey, as it turned out.

That dropped him back to 1-over, and with the cut line holding steady, a birdie was needed down the stretch. Last year at Sunset Ridge, a good but short member-friendly course in Chicago’s north suburbs, birdies were plentiful. You could pick up a bushel on any given nine.

Not at the Point, where length doesn’t mean anything. Western Golf Association officials didn’t want extra-long rough, and decided the greens shouldn’t be faster than 12.5 on the Stimpmeter – slower than they were the last time the Western Am visited in 2008. But the course has stood the test after 36 holes, with 64 the low single-round score and the 6-under 134 totals of Daniel Wetterich and David Laskin the best aggregate numbers.

Hammer could vouch for the difficulty. He parred the seventh and eighth, and was a half-club long at the ninth, his shot sailing right over the flagstick. Two putts later, it was back on Interstate 94 for the next stop on the amateur circuit.

The Point was long when it opened in 1958 but, at 7,071 yards, is nearly a pitch and putt course today. Take, for instance, the 14th hole, a narrow ribbon of a par-4. It was once a driver-wedge into the prevailing southwest wind and thus at least a bit of a challenge at 360 yards. Today, the kids bash their drives over the tree overhanging the fairway and are within 30 yards of the green. Smack it in the middle of the fairway, and you can putt from there.

So why aren’t the scores silly low, given the quality of the field and the worthiness of the prize at stake? It is likely the greens, which undulate like an angry ocean and are a challenge whether fast or slow. The ninth, which Hammer nearly birdied, is an excellent example. It features a slope from right to left that begins gradually, then tilts more severely, then almost flattens out – but not quite. Throw in late-afternoon shadows and the presence of a chasm in front of the green from which there is no escape, and nobody has an easy putt. His line was almost along the edge where the slope lessens, which made the assignment easier, but not easy.

Chick Evans, the legendary amateur who won this title eight times and is the friend of caddie-scholars everywhere, called the course “the peerless Point” shortly after it opened. It hosted the Western Amateur 40 times, including every year from 1971 to 2008, before declining revenue – the place was packed when everyone from Tom Weiskopf to Ben Crenshaw to Curtis Strange to Phil Mickelson to Tiger Woods was lifting the George Thorne Trophy – caused club brass and the WGA to call a halt to the annual visit.

A new clubhouse and new blood within the club, plus the realization that the publicity could attract more members, has brought the parties back together. The Western Amateur at the Point is championship golf in a comfortable setting, a mix that is not often seen in this day of corporate crush. Next year, when Cole Hammer is 20, the Western Am will be played at Crooked Stick Golf Club in Carmel, Ind., twice the site of the BMW Championship (nee Western Open), as well as a PGA Championship and a U.S. Women’s Open. It’ll surely come back to the Point again in a few years – many members volunteered as spotters and scorers – but Cole Hammer will be a professional by then, playing for millions along with glory and able to buy anything. Anything except the putt he really needed through the light and shadows of a perfect Wednesday afternoon to join the 53 others who will play on Friday.

Around the Point

Nobody from the Illinois contingent made the cup. Varun Chopra scored 142 and missed by two, Tommy Kuhl of Morton was at 143, Jeff Doty of Carmel was at 144, Wisconsin standout Jordan Hahn of Spring Grove scored 145, and Andrew Price of Lake Bluff and Trent Wallace of Joliet totaled 146. Brendan O’Reilly of Hinsdale was high man among Illinoisans at 148. … Match play on Friday features the Sweet Sixteen in the morning and the quarterfinals in the afternoon, with the semifinals and championship match on Saturday. … There’s no online telecast of match play this year, as there was at Sunset Ridge, but WSJM-AM (1400) in nearby St. Joseph plans to revive the radio broadcast of the Western Amateur. It’s also available as wsjmsports.com.

Tim Cronin

 

Saturday
Jul202019

Shipley ship-shape in Women's Western Final

Writing from Long Grove, Illinois

Saturday, July 20, 2019

A big-time championship isn’t usually decided on the eighth hole of the final match, but it felt that way Saturday afternoon when Sarah Shipley rolled in a 21-foot uphill birdie putt for a 3-up lead on Antonio Matte at Royal Melbourne Country Club with the Women’s Western Amateur title on the line.

Shipley, the fifth seed, hammered the putt home after third-seeded Matte had missed from about 35 feet on the par-3.

She increased the margin to 4-up by winning the ninth hole with a par, and kept the pressure on by halving the 12th and 13th with par-saving putts of 12 and 15 feet.

“There were a couple breaks I got,” said Shipley, who thought the putts were closer to 30 feet. Pressure creates odd visions at times, but she saw the center of the cup clearly all the way.

“Those were a little stressful, but I got the job done,” Shipley said. “I was feeling really confident, just trying to get out ahead early.”

The 119th championship match ended on the green of the par-5 15th hole. Shipley hit her third shot to four feet below the hole, and after Matte missed her birdie opportunity from about 12 feet, conceded the birdie to Shipley and shook her hand, setting the margin at 5 and 3.

Shipley adds her name to a glittering century-plus list of champions, including Ariya Jutanugarn, Stacy Lewis and Nancy Lopez. After the award ceremony, Shipley studied the trophy and the names on it carefully.

“It means a lot,” Shipley said. “It was a really tough competition. It was never easy at all. I had to grind the whole time. It tested my mental and physical game with all the heat.

“It makes me feel good about my game but also shows I can improve it more.”

Shipley hit most of the fairways and greens she looked at in the final two matches and made the requisite par-saving putts, along with the birdies. If there’s room for improvement, only a perfectionist could find it.

Entering her senior year at Kentucky, 21-year-old Shipley didn’t give Matte, a 16-year-old from Santiago, Chile, a chance, winning the first two holes with birdies to take command. From then on, the heat was on Matte even more than the heat index of 108 beating down on the players and the gallery.

“She played very well this afternoon with me,” Matte said. “She’s a nice champion.”

Shipley advanced via a 2 and 1 semifinal victory over Maria Bohorquez of Colombia, going 2-up on the 13th hole with a par and halving the next four holes, while Matte beat Brooke Tyree of Sulphur, La., 4 and 3 in the other semifinal.

“I made a few important putts in the morning,” Matte said. “This afternoon, I missed a few birdies.”

Next year’s Women’s Western Am is slated for Prestwick Country Club on the south edge of south suburban Frankfort.

Tim Cronin