Wednesday
Jul012015

IG Challenge Junior scoring

    27th Illinois Golfer Challenge Junior Golf Championship

    Glenwoodie Golf Course
    Glenwood, Illinois
    Wednesday, July 1, 2015

    Girls 13-to-15 Division
    5,378 yards, par 72

    Jane Mikula, Chicago            52-55–107
    Gianna Miritello, Chicago        53-57–110
    MacKenzie Zions, Chicago        55-57–112
    Emily Gillespie, Oak Park        WD
    Hannah Stubitsch, Chicago        WD

    Girls 16-to-18 Division
    5,378 yards, par 72

    Kelly Barker, Palos Heights        47-44–91
    Elizabeth Stalla, Evergreen Park    42-49–91
     Playoff: Barker 5-6-8, Stalla 5-6-9
    Danielle Collina, Palos Heights    52-55–107
    Anna Suppes, New Lenox        57-54–111
    Hanah Mastandrea, New Lenox    64-58–122
    Sara Sereda, Oak Forest        61-76–137

    Boys 13-to-15 Division
    6,023 yards, par 72

    Christian Snyder, New Lenox        38-38–76
    Jack Dykema, Oak Forest        37-41–78
    Kevin Healy, Evergreen Park        42-42–84
    Bryan Schied, Chicago        44-43–87
    Nathan Stieber, Lemont        45-43–88
    Reid Dahlkamp, Crown Point        44-46–90
    Hayden Henry, Homewood        47-43–90
    Michael Henze, Lemont        49-43–92
    T.J. Goetsch, Frankfort        43-49–92
    John Stillman, Oak Lawn        49-48–97
    Abdul Raoul, Chicago            52-49–101
    Nik Ginter, Crown Point        51-54–105
    Ryan Bonini, Orland Park        52-57–109
    Kyle Matre, Orland Park        54-60–114
    Jalen Carson, Matteson        57-57–114
    Connor Mason, Chicago Heights    62-54–116
    David Wolf, Chicago            64-54–118
    Brandon Beddigs, Park Forest    66-64–130
    Richard Scanland, Homewood    64-67–131
    Kevin Kampwirth, Tinley Park    74-77–151
    Keegan Adamson, Manteno        WD
    John Dillon, Tinley Park        WD

    Boys 16-to-18 Division
    6,023 yards, par 72

    Gehrig Hollatz, Lockport        37-34–71
    Michael Barber, Beecher        36-39–74
    Ryan Dahlkamp, Crown Point    39-39–78
    Ryan Wells, Dyer            40-41–81
    Nicholas Good, Dyer            38-44–82
    Brett Katalnic, Orland Park        40-42–82
    Shane Wright, Alsip            42-42–84
    Michael Stanton, Chicago        42-43–85
    Jake McFarland, Palos Park        43-43–86
    Jimmy Tomaszewski, Homer Glen    44-45–89
    Eric Niewinski, Oak Forest        42-47–89
    Thomas Rodriguez, Monee        47-43–90
    Justin Butler, Frankfort        47-43–90
    Dan Misheck, Oak Forest        47-45–92
    Kyle Kelly, Oak Forest        51-42–93
    Matt Casey, Oak Forest        43-53–96
    Matt Donley, Oak Forest        49-49–98
    Jason White, Mokena            45-53–98
    Travis Denton, Chicago        51-50–101
    David Kavalauskas, Oak Forest    52-51–103
    Michael Donald, Olympia Fields    57-54–111
    Tyler Copak, St. John            WD
    Jimmy Guldan, Tinley Park        WD

Thursday
May142015

Billiter outlasts Brodell for match play title

Writing from Hawthorn Woods, Illinois

Thursday, May 14, 2015

 

Jim Billiter made a splash on his 29th birthday.

Then he won the 64th Illinois PGA Match Play Championship.

With a bogey.

In the final twist of a match with plenty of them, Billiter beat Brian Brodell for the title on the 21st hole – after hitting his tee shot on the par-3 third hole at Kemper Lakes Golf Club into the water.

He accomplished that with a bogey thanks to a saucy pitch shot to about seven feet from the cup, and courtesy of Brodell bouncing his 171-yard 7-iron tee shot over the green and then chunking his chip shot. That left him an even more treacherous par chip, which went 12 feet past the cup.

When Brodell failed to sink the bogey putt, Billiter stepped up and sank his.

Game over. Trophy presented. Winner delighted and dumbfounded.

“When I shanked it in the water, I thought it was over,” Billiter said of his full-out 8-iron. “But as soon as I saw him go long, I knew I had a chance. That’s a really delicate shot. I thought he’d hit it long and two-putt for a four.

“Then he gave me a little luck when he flubbed his first one. I figured we’d both make (four) and go to the next hole.”

Billiter’s 90-yard pitch from the drop area was sublime, and left him about seven feet. He drained it with brio.

“The whole day, I was nervous,” said Billiter, who closed out Prestwick’s Simon Allen 4 and 3 in the morning semifinal. “It’s emotionally taxing. Six rounds in three days, plus I played 36 on Monday (at two courses). It was exhausting.”

Billiter is an assistant at Merit Club in Libertyville. Brodell, 32, is in his first full year at Mistwood Golf Club in Romeoville, after a stint as assistant men’s coach at Purdue following one at Wisconsin. He was sitting at the bar in the Kemper Lakes clubhouse after the match. There’s no truth to the rumor he ordered a boilermaker.

“That was a sad way to end it, and it would have been sad for him to end that way if he shanks it in the water and I (win),” Brodell said. “I had confidence in the chip, all of a sudden I flub-shank it, and the rest is history.”

It was a woulda, shoulda, coulda match – with the regulation 18 played in just 2 hours 40 minutes – from the start. Billiter was 2 up after two holes, but Brodell eagled the fourth hole and squared the match at the fifth.

Brodell led 1 up with a bogey at the eighth when Billiter doubled it – the reverse of the frantic finish – and then bogeyed the ninth, making the match square at the turn even though, with the usual concessions, Brodell had scored even par 36 to Billiter’s 3-over 39.

Brodell sank a 12-footer for birdie on the par-4 12th and remained 1-up until he bogeyed the par-4 16th. Billiter handed the lead back by plunking his tee shot into the water on the par-3 17th. Brodell smacked his tee ball to 15 feet and Billiter gave him the hole after hitting the back fringe with his third.

Billiter’s big tee shot at the last set up a 116-yard second, and he wedged it to eight feet above the hole.

“It was almost easier being down one, because I knew I could just swing hard, and the putt, I knew I could ram it in,” Billiter said.

After Brodell’s longer birdie putt missed, Billiter stepped up and sank his to force extra holes. Along the way, Billiter lipped out three putts that would have won holes. And Brodell was coming close from long range.

“They were all decent putts, so I was OK with that,” Billiter said of his close calls. “I had looks, but I was nervous and my putting was tentative all day.”

Routine pars on the first two holes brought them to the third tee, and the final surprise.

Brodell advanced to the title match with a 19-hole victory over the Glen View Club’s Kyle Bauer.

Billiter collected $4,000 for his effort. Brodell was awarded $2,000, as balm.

– Tim Cronin

Thursday
May142015

Egan, McNair, Sobb elected to Illinois Golf Hall of Fame

Writing from Glenview, Illinois

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

A two-time U.S. Amateur champion, a lifetime professional dedicated to the charitable side of the game, and a seven-time winner of state major championships are the newest inductees to the Illinois Golf Hall of Fame.

H. Chandler Egan, who won the U.S. Amateur in 1904 and 1905 along with a quartet of Western Amateurs, Leon McNair, whose devotion to golf charities and growing the game beginning at Fox Bend Golf Course, and Jim Sobb, a three-time winner of the Illinois PGA Championship and a four time Illinois Match Play champion, were elected as the 2015 class to the Hall of Fame at The Glen Club.

All three inductees easily surpassed the necessary two-thirds vote, 12 of 18, for induction. Egan led with 16 votes, McNair collected 14 votes, and Sobb won 13 votes.

Seven other candidates on the ballot failed to win induction. Their vote totals: Francis Peabody 10, Jerry Rich 10, Gary Hallberg 9, Harry Radix 7, Emil Esposito 3, Phil Kosin 3, William Langford 2. The 18 members of the committee cast 87 of a possible 90 votes. Members could vote for up to five of the 10 candidates on the final ballot,

Profiles of the inductees of the 16th Hall of Fame class, the 80th, 81st and 82nd individuals to be so honored:

 

H. Chandler Egan

 

Raised in Highland Park, H. Chandler Egan is the owner of one of the greatest amateur careers in American golf, Egan won the U.S. Amateur twice (1904-05), the Western Amateur four times (1902-04-05-07), as well as the Intercollegiate individual title in 1902. Runner-up in 1903 Western Amateur, 1904 Olympic Games at Glen Echo, 1909 U.S. Amateur. Jumped into course design after moving to Oregon, including a remodeling of Pebble Beach, improving 16 of the 18 holes in conjunction with Robert Hunter, in 1928, two years after he won the California Amateur on the course. Egan designed 18 courses, including Eugene Country Club. Five-time winner of the Pacific Northwest Amateur.

 

Leon McNair

 

A co-founder of the Illinois PGA Foundation, Leon McNair has been interested as much in the charitable side of the game as the playing side. He was head professional at Fox Bend, a course he helped build working for architect-builder Brent Wadsworth, from its opening in 1967 until his retirement in 2005. He’s a member of the board overseeing the First Tee of Aurora and Fox River Valley, and president of Wadsworth Golf Charities. He was Illinois PGA Section president in 1991-92. As a player, he was part of a Southern Illinois squad that won the 1964 NCAA College Division championship. Former member of the selection committee.

 

Jim Sobb

 

Jim Sobb, a Palatine native and two-time Division II All-America recipient at Western Illinois, has compiled one of the better playing records among current Illinois club professionals. He’s won three Illinois PGA Championships (1995-99-2000), and four Illinois Match Play titles (1990-93-95-2011). In the latter year, he also won the Illinois Senior Match Play, becoming the only player to sweep both match play crowns in the same year. Sobb won the player of the year title in 2000 and has won the senior player of the year title five times since 2007, including last year. He’s played in the Radix Cup 22 times, more than any other professional, and second only to Joel Hirsch’s 23 appearances, with a record of 13-5-4. A two-time winner of Illinois PGA professional of the year (1995-2000), he also collected the Bill Strausbaugh Award for service to his fellow pros in 2012.

This trio can best be described as a class of overachievers. Egan’s amateur playing record was outstanding, and his architectural resume has until now been largely unheralded. McNair has done it all in golf, from construction to running a first-class shop to innovating programs to bring people into the game and keep them there. And Sobb’s been the player you didn’t want to be up against for decades.

The induction ceremony is planned for October, the date yet to be selected.

– Tim Cronin

Thursday
Apr302015

PGA's Haigh: I'll visit Cog Hill

Reporting from Benton Harbor, Michigan

Thursday, April 30, 2015

 It wasn’t exactly on the same level as Nixon saying he’d go to China during the first term of his presidency, but it’s significant, and potentially pivotal, for Chicago-area golf.

Kerry Haigh, who runs the PGA of America’s championship division, confirmed Thursday he plans to visit Cog Hill Golf & Country Club to tour the Dubsdread layout.

Among Haigh’s duties is helping select the sites for the PGA Championship, Senior PGA Championship, and the Ryder Cup, as well as the PGA’s other tournaments, including the club pro championship.

Haigh has never been to Cog Hill.

“I’m hoping to visit shortly, to look and see that facility,” Haigh said after helping unveil a tweak to Harbor Shores, which will host next year’s Senior PGA. “I watched (the Western Open / BMW Championship) every year on television. Katherine (Jemsek) has been in touch recently for me to come and look at it. We’re always very interested to see any wonderful golf course. Cog Hill has that reputation, and I can’t wait to see it.”

The Western Open was played on Dubsdread from 1991 through 2007, and again from 2009 to 2011, the latter years as the renamed BMW Championship. Rees Jones’ 2008 refurbishing of the 1964 Dick Wilson-Joe Lee design received poor reviews from a number of pros, including usually complimentary Steve Stricker, in 2010, and declining crowds in September in comparison to big galleries in July prompted the Western Golf Association and BMW to leave Dubsdread in favor of Conway Farms, an easier course located in Lake Forest rather than Lemont, as its Chicago-area site.

Haigh said “a couple of venues” are communicating with the PGA, and identified Cog Hill and Medinah Country Club. The latter hosted a pair of PGA Championships in 1999 and 2006, and the 2012 Ryder Cup, which featured sellout crowds and 77 corporate hospitality chalets.

“We have a wonderful relationship with the club and the membership and the whole city,” Haigh said. “The community got right behind that event. We continue to hope and talk with the club about opportunities. Who knows where that may end.”

Medinah insiders say the club rejected a low-ball offer for another PGA, the 2016 or 2018 playings, with the PGA of America’s financial offer below the $3 million the club earned for the 2006 playing. Medinah collected about $12 million for hosting the Ryder Cup, some of which was used to renovate the club’s No. 1 course.

– Tim Cronin

Wednesday
Apr222015

Illini chase sixth Big Ten title in seven years

    Writing from Champaign
    Wednesday, April 22, 2015

    Illinois had won five straight Big Ten men’s golf championships entering last year’s conference tournament. The streak ended when Minnesota, unheralded, knocked the Fighting Illini off their lofty perch and into second place, four strokes behind the Golden Gophers.
    This year could see a return to the top for Illinois. The squad was ranked No. 1 nationally for much of the season – it enters the tournament No. 3 – and is coming off a 32-stroke rout of the field at last weekend’s Boilermaker Invitational at Purdue. The Illini finished 35-under, with Louisville the only other team under par.
    Talent is the first reason for the optimism. The Illini are loaded, including senior Brian Campbell and freshman Nick Hardy, both of whom played in last year’s Western Amateur, plus juniors Charlie Danielson, who tied for the individual conference title last year, and Thomas Detry.
    Then there’s freshman Dylan Meyer, the fifth member of the travel squad, a.k.a. the secret weapon. Meyer tied for first in the Illini Invitational at Olympia Fields in the fall, and took third at Purdue. Even better, he’s provided a detailed scouting report to his teammates on the tournament site, Victoria National Golf Club in Newburgh, Ind., near Evansville.
    Meyer hails from Evansville. He’ll be working at the club in the summer. He knows Victoria National, a Tom Fazio design ranked 45th among modern American courses by Golfweek, inside and out.
    “It sits in an old coal mine,” Meyer said at the team’s final practice before leaving for Evansville. “You’ve got to drive your golf ball out there. You’ve got to play it smart, use good course management. It’s a very good course for this team. We know how to plod our ball around and know what it takes to play well at this golf course.”
    His knowledge, Meyer believes, gives the Illini the edge this weekend.
    “It definitely is an advantage there,” Meyer said. “There are some blind shots out there that you don’t really know if you don’t play there. There are some spots where you think, ‘I can push it up on this par 5,’ where you really can’t. You don’t have to hit a lot of drivers on this golf course.”
    The Illini are deep, if the Big Ten’s player of the week award is any indication. Detry and Danielson shared it for their Purdue exploits, where they tied for first individually, while Campbell has won it twice, including the April 8 award. Detry’s scored five awards this season, Danielson two. No player at any other school has won more than once.
    All this success makes head coach Mike Small confident, but not complacent.
    “I think we’re the team to beat, but anybody can win this thing,” Small said. “It’s golf. Look at last year. It was a good wake-up call to us, because we won (NCAA) regionals, beating USC and Cal the next week. Hopefully, it’s still evident.”
    The team’s strength is.
    “We’ve been ranked No. 1 a lot of the year, have three returning All-Americans (Campbell, Danielson and Detry), and two quality freshmen playing well,” Small said. “And our scoring averages are unreal. On paper, it’s pretty good.”
    The only important paper beginning on Friday is the scorecard.

    – Tim Cronin