Golf Digest editors picks

Campus Insider Blog

Results for August 2012 Back to Campus Insider Index

Crimson Tide roll to top of men's preseason poll

By Ryan Herrington

Returning NCAA player of the year Justin Thomas and two other All-Americans in Bobby Wyatt and Cory Whitsett for the 2012-13 college season, Alabama claims the No. 1 spot in the Golf World/Nike Golf Division I preseason men's coaches' poll. The Crimson Tide, hard-luck runner's up at last year's NCAA Championship, earned 13 of the 23 available first-place votes. It's the first time the school has been ranked atop the Golf World polls since the close of the 2007-08 season and the first time since the polls were revived in 2001-02 that the team is No. 1 to start the fall.

With the Alabama women's team also being No. 1 in the Golf World/NGCA women's preseason coaches' poll, it marks the second time since Golf World revived the polls in 2001-02 that the same school starts the season atop by the men's and women's polls.

Defending NCAA champion Texas, with eight first-place votes, claimed the No. 2 spot in the ranking. The Longhorns won the national championship last June at Riviera CC, the first time the school had claim college golf's top prize in 40 years.

Pac-12 champion California, an NCAA semifinalist in 2012, earned the third spot. The Golden Bears had four players reach match play at the recent U.S. Amateur Championship, including runner-up Michael Weaver.

Rounding out the top five are UCLA and Washington. The Bruins must replace Patrick Cantlay, the 2011 NCAA player of the year who turned pro this past summer, while the Huskies are led by senior Chris Williams, the No. 1 player in the World Amateur Golf Ranking.

GOLF WORLD/NIKE GOLF DIVISION I MEN'S PRESEASON POLL
Men's D-I preseason 1-10 (460).jpgMen's D-I Preseason 11-21.jpgMen's D-I preseason 21-25.jpg

Read more

Alabama tops women's preseason coaches' poll

By Ryan Herrington

Fresh off its first ever NCAA women's golf title, Alabama enters the 2012-13 season as the No. 1 team in the Golf World/NGCA Division I women's preseason coaches' poll. The Crimson Tide won four times in a year ago and return All-Americans Stephanie Meadow (the Ladies British Amateur champion) and Jennifer Kirby from the squad that claimed the NCAA title for Hall of Fame coach Mic Potter. The team earned 19 of the 27 first-place votes and hold the top spot in the Golf World poll for the first time since March 2011.

UCLA, with six first-place votes, claimed the No. 2 spot in the poll. The Bruins were the top ranked team in every Golf World poll in 2011-12 only to finish in eighth place at the NCAA Championship. Still, the program brings back All-Americans in Lee Lopez, Tiffany Lua and Erynne Lee.

USC, which lost to Alabama by one stroke at nationals, finds itself in the No. 3 spot, followed by Pac-12 foe Arizona State. Rounding out the top five is Duke, led by NCAA player of the year Lindy Duncan.

GOLF WORLD/NGCA DIVISION I WOMEN'S PRESEASON POLL

Women's D-I preseason 1-10 (450).jpgWomen's D-I preseason 11-20.jpg
Women's D-I preseason 21-25.jpg
XXXX
Read more

Weaver holds 2-up lead midway through U.S. Amateur final

By Ryan Herrington

CHERRY HILLS VILLAGE, Colo.—Michael Weaver
didn't get off to the same break-neck start he did during Saturday's semifinal, held a 3-up lead after five holes. But once he got rolling, the 21-year-old redshirt junior at California looked poised as he finished the morning 18 of the 112th U.S. Amateur with a 2-up lead on Steven Fox.

The Fresno, Calif., native bogeyed the first two holes to give Fox, a 21-year-old senior at Chattanooga, a quick 2-up lead. A birdie on the third hole, after hitting his drive over the green on the 328-yard par 4, settled his nerves and gave him the tee. By the fifth hole, he had squared the match.

Weaver then took the lead on the seventh hole with a par, and nearly aced the par-3 eighth, playing at 267 yards. For the morning, he hit nine fairways and 12 greens in regulation, shooting the equivalent of one over par with match play concessions.

Weaver's lead grew to 3 up on the 16th hole, but a bogey on the 17th after hitting his second shot in the water caused him to conceded Fox his birdie on the par-5 hole.

Weaver could have gotten the lead back to 3 up on the 18th, when he stood over a four-foot par putt after Fox had already made bogey on the hole. But he his putt lipped out, the groan from the crowd setting the mood for the break.

After hitting the three of the first four fairways and all four greens in regulation, Fox hit only three more of each the rest of the morning round. He made six bogeys and had just the one conceded birdie on the 17th hole. His ordinarily reliable short game kept him going most of the morning, although he failed to get up and down for par from a greenside bunker on No. 15 and flubbed two chips near the green on the 16th.

Needless to say, both golfers will hope to steady things up when the afternoon round begins at 12:30 p.m. MDT.

Cal's Weaver faces Chattanooga's Fox in U.S. Amateur final

By Ryan Herrington

CHERRY HILLS VILLAGE, Colo.—
If you need more proof that trying to predict the outcome of the U.S. Amateur is a fool's errand, here you go: When Michael Weaver, a redshirt junior at California, faces Steven Fox, a senior at Chattanooga, in the 36-hole final Sunday of the USGA's oldest championship, it will be a showdown between the event's 60th and 63rd seeds.

That's not a reflection in the talent of the two finalists. It's an affirmation of the depth of the amateur game. It may seem like a cliche, but it's also the truth when people say that anybody who advanced to match play had a chance to win.

Even golfers who barely advanced. Both Weaver and Fox shot two-over 143s in stroke-play qualifying, finding themselves among a group of 17 players that had to return to Cherry Hills CC Wednesday morning to determine who would get the final 14 spots in the match-play bracket. Weaver squeaked in with a birdie on the third playoff hole to become Mr. 60. Fox made par on the fourth playoff hole to claim the 63rd ticket.

That was a distance memory when the two played in their Saturday semifinal matches.

Read more

Chattanooga's Fox knocks off World No. 1 at Cherry Hills

By Ryan Herrington

CHERRY HILLS VILLAGE, Colo.—
As Steven Fox prepared to talk to the media Friday afternoon to tell reporters what it felt like to advance to the semifinals of the 112th U.S. Amateur, the 21-year-old from Hendersonville, Tenn., kindly asked if they could hold on for a second. He then proceeded to put his hand in his pocket, take out his cell phone and hand it to his father/caddie, Alan.

"It's on vibrate, but this thing keeps going off," Fox said.

That's what happens when you upset the No. 1 ranked amateur golfer in the world—people want to wish you well. With a 4-and-2 victory over Washington All-American Chris Williams, Fox had pulled off the upset and secured himself a Saturday tee time at Cherry Hills CC.

Congratulatory calls were also in order for Alabama's Justin Thomas and a pair of Cal-Berkeley teammates, Michael Weaver and Brandon Hagy, each of whom held leads at the turn in their quarterfinal matches and never looked back.

Fox's spot in the Final Four may well have been the most unexpected given the nerve-wracking few days the senior at Chattanooga, No. 127 on the World Amateur Golf Ranking starting the week, had already experienced during his visit to the Rocky Mountains.
Read more

Alabama teammates play bittersweet match

By Ryan Herrington

CHERRY HILLS VILLAGE, Colo.—He had just advanced to the quarterfinalist of the 112th Amateur but you wouldn't know it by the way Justin Thomas was carrying himself Thursday afternoon outside the clubhouse at Cherry Hills CC. The 19-year-old Alabama sophomore offered sheepish smiles to well-wishes, not quite sure how he was supposed to react to what had just taken place.

To play another day, the 2012 NCAA player of the year had to send his Crimson Tide teammate, Bobby Wyatt, packing, beating the stroke-play medalist, 1 up, in the marquee third-round match.

"I didn't realize how tough that would be," said Thomas, who will face Australia's Oliver Goss Friday morning. "I was happy but I felt bad for Bobby. I think that says a lot about Alabama golf and our friendship and how close we are as a team."

Read more

Pac-12 playing well at Cherry Hills

By Ryan Herrington

CHERRY HILLS VILLAGE, Colo.—
When the match-play portion of the 112th U.S. Amateur began Wednesday, seven of the 64 golfers hailed for Pac-12 schools. With the championship now down to quarterfinals, the conference still boasts four of the remaining eight competitors.

Washington's Chris Williams and Cheng-Tsung Pan and California's Brandon Hagy and Michael Weaver survived Thursday's double duty, winning their second-round matches in the morning and third-round tilts in the afternoon.


Read more

Comebacks abound in Round 2 at Cherry Hills

By Ryan Herrington

CHERRY HILLS VILLAGE, Colo.—The second round of the 112th U.S. Amateur will be remembered as the morning Yogi Berra would have loved. Nothing was over until it was over at Cherry Hills CC.

Bobby Wyatt found himself 3 down to Matthew Stieger after five holes, but the Alabama junior rallied to square the match after 11 holes. Birdies on the 17 and 18 helped him secure a 2-up victory against his Australian opponent.

Justin Thomas, Wyatt's teammate at Alabama, lost the first two holes in his match against California's Max Homa, a quarterfinalist at the 2010 Amateur, and remained 2 down through seven holes. But then the 2012 NCAA player of the year won the next two holes to square the match at the turn, before winning the 15th, 16th and 17th to claim a 3-and-1 victory and setting up a third-round afternoon tilt against Wyatt.

Australia's Oliver Goss was 3 down after 10 against Michael Miller and 2 down after 15, but won 16 and 17 with birdies and then closed out his turn-around with a birdie on the 20th hole.

LSU's Andrew Presley made four birdies over his last eight holes to overcome a 3-down deficit to Oklahoma State's Talor Gooch and win 1 up.

Patrick Newcomb, a 22-year-old senior at Murray State, was also 3 down after 11 holes against Michael Herbert but extended the match to extra holes and then won with a bogey on the 19th hole.

None of them, though, was the most impressive comeback of the morning. That belonged to California redshirt junior Michael Weaver, who won four of his last six holes to defeat Stanford All-American Patrick Rodgers, 2 up.

Weaver's rally came only after he actually blew a lead of his own. The 21-year-old from Fresno, Calif., started solid, winning the first two holes, but saw Rodgers win four straight holes to take a 3-up lead after 11. While the momentum had changed, Weaver said he felt like he was playing well himself, and that he just needed to hang on and stay confident.

With that, Weaver rolled in a birdie putts on the 13th and 14th to get the deficit to 1 down. He then got up-and-down for par on the par-3 15th to square the match when Rodgers hit his tee shot into a greenside bunker.

The two halved the 16th after Weaver missed a seven-footer for birdie. Weaver's drive on the par-5 17th hit a tree, but bounced into the fairway, giving him a chance at reaching the green in two. That was more than Rodgers could say as his tee shot found a fairway bunker and sat close enough to a lip that he couldn't do anything other than hit a wedge back to the fairway with his second.

Weaver pull out a 4-iron and hit his second shot from 240 yards, the ball stopped 18 feet from the hole. "That was the best shot I've hit all day," Weaver said. "My day and I talked about going for it, even if I hit the ball in the water I could get up and down for par. His shot was no bargain."

Rodgers hit his third to eight feet, but couldn't hole the must make birdie try, letting Weaver's two-putt birdie give him a 1-up lead.

Come the 18th hole, Weaver successfully found the fairway but Rodgers draw off the tree moved too much right to left, rolling into the water and essentially sealing the win for Weaver.

"That was probably the best six holes I've played ever," said an appreciative Weaver afterward, who survived a 17-player-for-14-spot playoff Wednesday morning just to get into match play. "To pull it off, feels great. to be able to do it under the gun like that.

While the additional bragging rights of having a Cal golfer knock out a Stanford foe was nice, Weaver says the real pride came from beating such an accomplished foe.

"He's a very good player, a Walker Cupper and all that," Weaver said. "To win was really good. Hopefully I can keep up my good play in the afternoon."

*****

Weaver's third-round opponent Thursday afternoon is Albin Choi, an N.C. State junior and former Canadian Amateur champion who knocked off reigning NCAA champion Thomas Pieters in their second-round showdown, winning 4 and 3.

Williams survives, Spieth falls in Round 1

By Ryan Herrington

CHERRY HILLS VILLAGE, Colo.—To be successful at the U.S. Amateur, much less win the USGA's oldest championship, requires patience, perseverance and a little bit of luck. The latter is something Chris Williams and Jordan Spieth, the No. 1 and 3 ranked amateur golfers in the world, could have used more of entering Round 1 of match play at venerable Cherry Hills CC.

Williams, a senior at Washington, and Spieth, a sophomore at Texas, easily advanced through stroke-play qualifying Monday and Tuesday. Both played well enough in fact to set up a first-round tilts against one of the survivors of the 17-player-for-14-spot playoff Wednesday morning just to get into match play. Yet instead of greeting a golfer just happy to not be heading to the Denver International Airport on the first tee, the two U.S. Walker Cup team members got all they could handle.

Williams' opponent: Peter Williamson, winner of the North & South Amateur and the Southern Amateur this summer and the eighth-ranked amateur in the world.

Spieth's foe: Thomas Pieters, the reigning NCAA champion and a first-team All-American at Illinois.

By day's end, one "favorite" was moving on and one was going home. Williams defeated Williamson, 3 and 2, while Pieters ousted Spieth, 1 up.


Read more

Lydia Ko, 15, wins U.S. Women's Amateur

By Brendan Mohler

CLEVELAND -- Lydia Ko is this year's U.S. Women's Amateur champion after defeating Jaye Marie Green of Boca Raton 3 and 1 in today's 36-hole final at The Country Club. The 15-year-old New Zealander is the second youngest winner in the 112-year history of the event, next to Kimberly Kim who won in 2006.

"It feels great to live up to the expectations," said Ko, who is the top-ranked amateur in the world and only further asserted her status this week. "There's a lot of pressure on the world's top amateur."

Ko took a 1-up lead to the afternoon round against Green, who struggled to convert several birdie chances in both the morning and afternoon rounds. "Lydia doesn't give you anything," said Green, who heads to Q school this fall. "I knew I had to make a lot of birdies, I just didn't get the putts to fall when I needed."

Golf's all-time biggest phenoms

Ko stretched her lead to 4 up at the turn of the afternoon 18 and closed out the victory with a 17th-hole par, despite stumbling slightly down the stretch. Green, who was 3 down with three holes remaining, birdied the par-5 17th to continue the match, but was unable to make a much-needed birdie on 17 with Ko on the green in regulation.

"I got a little nervous at the end, but some pep talks helped," said Ko, whose mother and caddy helped to keep her calm. "It was a good match. Jaye is a really strong player."

The victory is Ko's first in the United States and comes close to the end of her highly successful summer-long stay here. She reached the semifinals of the US Girls' Junior, earned low-amateur honors at the US Open, and has now claimed the top amateur prize in golf. Ko has an exemption to play in the Canadian Open later this month, after which she'll head to Korea, her birthplace.

Ko plans to keep her amateur status and eventually attend college, wishing to take a different route than her role models Michelle Wie and Lexi Thompson. "There are so many people in New Zealand who go to college overseas, I think that kind of inspired me," said Ko. "There are so many things to learn as an amateur."

The victory boosts Ko's already impressive resume and gives her added confidence going into the Canadian Open, knowing she has beaten the world's best amateurs. She's already won a professional event, but that doesn't diminish the value of her victory this week.

"Winning a professional event is amazing. But to me as an amateur, this tournament is much more meaningful."

The latest on golf digest

Golf Instruction
Get Game Ready
These 14 fixes will put you in mid-season form now.
Golf Equipment: What's In My Bag: Nick Watney
What's In My Bag
Nick Watney
America's Toughest Courses
Rankings
America's Toughest Courses
Swing Sequence: Louis Oosthuizen
Swing Sequences
Louis Oosthuizen
. Close

Thank you for signing up for the newsletter.

You will receive your first newsletter soon.
Subscribe to Golf World
Subscribe today
Golf Equipment: 3Balls.com - New and used golf equipment

Sign-up for Golf Digest's Above The Cut