Friday, August 28, 2009

United States Amateur Championship

Only one of top 20 qualifiers makes it

through to the Tulsa quarter-finals

Top seed Tim Jackson made it through to Thursday's play in the United States amateur championship at Tulsa, Oklahoma - a performance of which any 50-year-old can be proud.
Elsewhere, at the end of a long day at Southern Hills Country Club, Steve Zeigler needed to win the 17th and 18th holes just to keep going. And he did.
Zeigler, a junior at Stanford, University, came up with a pair of birdies to extend the match, then finally finished off Dan Woltman from Wisconsin in 22 holes to advance to the quarterfinals.
Zeigler got up and down from a greenside bunker to make birdie at No. 17, then got close enough with his seven-iron approach shot on No. 18 to drill another pressure-packed putt.
"That's what I play for. I've had very, very cool golf experiences and that's easily in the top three. Maybe the best golf experience I've ever had in my life," Zeigler said. "He didn't make a bogey from the eighth hole until the last one and I was two down. To have to make birdies on a course like this just to come back is just about impossible.
Zeigler was three down after seven holes before Woltman bogeyed No. 8. Woltman then ran off 12 straight pars before making bogey at the fourth extra hole -- at the same spot where he'd started pulling away with a birdie the first time through.
Zeigler advances to face Byeong-Hun An of South Korea, who needed two extra holes to beat Mike Van Sickle, the son of Sports Illustrated golf writer Gary Van Sickle.
The other quarter-finals pit fourth-seeded Ben Martin against Arkansas senior David Lingmerth; Oklahoma State sophomore Peter Uihlein against Texas senior Charlie Holland and Fresno State freshman Bhavik Patel against Phillip Mollica, Martin's former teammate at Clemson.
Martin is the only one of the top 20 qualifiers from the stroke-play eliminator to reach the final eight.
Holland beat top seed Tim Jackson by one hole in his first of two rounds on Thursday, and Mollica took out No. 2 seed Mark Anderson by one hole in the round of the last 16 in the afternoon.
Uihlein, whose father, Wally, is the CEO of the company that owns the Titleist brand, advanced with a pair of 2 and 1 victories, against Connor Driscoll of UCLA in the morning and Connor Arendell of Louisville in the afternoon. He is the last of the Oklahoma college players left after former Tulsa golfer Nico Geyger lost 2 and 1 to Martin.
Uihlien finished off Arendell at the 355yd 17th with a 6 iron off the tee that landed at the top of a ridge. With 97 yards left, he hit a wedge within 10 feet of the pin and watched as Arendell tried to chip in from just off the green for a miracle birdie to keep the match going. When his ball kept rolling off the front side of the green, he conceded the match to Uihlein.
Like Zeigler, Uihlein is trying to rally for a spot on the Walker Cup team. Just four months ago, he'd been benched by Oklahoma State coach Mike McGraw and shipped off to an NAIA tournament in Oklahoma City. Since that win at the Gaillardia Intercollegiate, he's been on a roll.
"Where I was six months ago and how I was playing, just to be considered (for the Walker Cup), definitely that's a plus," said Uihlein.

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