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  • It’s About Time! OB Sports Leads the Way With EXPRESS LANE Tee Times

    It’s About Time! OB Sports Leads the Way With EXPRESS LANE Tee Times

    From the Arizona Golf Authority AZGA Golf News Desk

    Scottsdale AZ – We’ve all heard one of the main reasons people aren’t playing golf is because it takes too long. If you are an avid player, chances are you’ve experienced slow play. You know, the group that takes 10 minutes to look for a lost ball, the player who takes 5 practice swings before each shot or the chap that checks out his putt from every angle on the course before hitting it 3 feet short.

    It’s all a part of that “good walk spoiled”.

    Cheer up, avid players, because we’re happy to report the experts at OB Sports have come to the rescue and now guarantees rounds of golf in under 4-hours at several of their OB Sports-managed golf courses.

    Express Lane Tee Times, introduced at Angel Park in Las Vegas last February, has been expanded to include the Sedona Golf Resort and Eagle Mountain Golf Club in Arizona.

    The Express Lane Tee Times program guarantees your round will be completed in less than 4 hours, 3:45 to be exact.

    “We began the program as a way to speed up pace of play and to differentiate Angel Park from other courses in Las Vegas,” said Kris Strauss, OB Sports VP of Marketing. “We weren’t sure how it would be received, but found out quickly there are a lot of players who want to get out for an early morning tee time and be home in time to take their kids to soccer or baseball.”

    As part of the Express Lane Tee Time plan, the first tee times of the day are reserved specifically for players who agree to play in their round in 3:45. When a player calls to reserve one of those tee times, they are told they must agree to play in the allotted time. When they arrive at the golf course, each player must sign an agreement committing to the pace of play. If a group falls behind, they are warned to speed up play. If that doesn’t happen, they are moved up a hole or to the back of the Express Lane Tee Times, allowing those on-pace to play through and complete their rounds on time.

    “I think the key to the success of the program is that we communicate it loud and often,” stated Strauss. “We tell then when tee times are booked, we remind them in the Pro shop, have them sign the agreement and remind them again on the first tee. So no one can be surprised if our course marshal tells them to pick up the pace.”

    Sedona Golf Resort announced this week they will dedicate the first six tee times each day to the Express Lane program. Eagle Mountain Golf Club in Fountain Hills has also converted the first four tee times on the weekend to Express Lane Tee Time. Plans call for additional courses to add the program to their tee sheets in coming months. As they do, we’ll let you know.

    So, if you are a fan of the concept of a quick round, you how have two courses in Arizona to will cater to your needs. We applaud OB Sports for this innovative idea and thank them for implementing Express Lane Tee Times in Arizona.

    Read the Arizona Golf Authority AZGA Golf Course Buzz for Sedona Golf Resort and Eagle Mountain Golf Club, they’re both great plays.

  • Antigua Providing U.S. Solheim Cup Uniforms

    From the Arizona Golf Authority AZGA Golf News Desk

    The Solheim Cup matches at Kileen Castle in Dublin, Ireland begin September 23rd and the Antigua design team is busy making sure the U.S. team’s uniforms are just right.

    “Designing uniforms for multiple days and multiple rounds of competition with Ireland’s unique weather as an added variable has been a tremendous challenge”, said Danielle Dellios, Senior Designer at the Antigua Group.

    “We have created a beautiful range of coordinates, distinctly separate for each round, including the early practice rounds. Each are reflective of the traditional palette of the U.S. in very tasteful golf fashion styling with contemporary accents and each piece has incorporated our trademark performance functionality. We are excited to present the uniforms to the members of the United States team and we look forward to our team bringing back the Solheim Cup.”

    The U.S. team uniforms (shirts, sweaters, jackets and bottoms) will be available for purchase from selected golf shops and golf retailers starting September 26th and will be available at the event itself through the official Solheim Cup retail partners.

    About The Solheim Cup

    The Solheim Cup is named in honor of Karsten Solheim, and his family, the makers of PING golf equipment and is the most prestigious international team event in women’s professional golf.

    It is a biennial, trans-Atlantic team match-play competition featuring the best U.S.-born players from the LPGA and the best European-born players from the LET. The U.S. Team leads the competition, 8-3, and has never lost on home soil.

    The 2011 Solheim Cup will and be played at Killeen Castle in County Meath, Ireland, this year. In addition to founding sponsor PING, Global Partners of The Solheim Cup include AIB Group and Rolex. For more information, log on to www.SolheimCup.com.

    Antigua products can also be found online at shop.antigua.com

  • All Sports 2011 Fall Charity Tournament Sept. 24th

    All Sports 2011 Fall Charity Tournament Sept. 24th

    From the Arizona Golf Authority AZGA News Desk

    Mesa, AZ – Our friend at All Sports Arizona will host their 2011 Fall Charity Golf Tournament on Saturday, September 24, 2011 at Red Mountain Ranch Country Club.

    Participants will not only experience a beautiful golf course, but they will help All Sports Arizona continue their quest to provide affordable, educational recreational activities in a safe and inviting environment.

    Here is what your entry fee includes:

    • 18-hole round Saturday, 9/24 at Red Mountain Ranch Country Club

    • 1pm shotgun start

    • Putting, long drive and closest to the pin contests

    • Lunch buffet

    • Tee bag of goodies

    There will also be a silent auction for sports memorabilia and other items as well as a raffle.

    As an added incentive, if you bring a playing partner, and sign-up prior to August 15th, you will receive a free round of golf at Red Mountain Ranch to be used later in the year.

    Entries fee are $65/player; $260/foursome if paid prior to September 4th. If you wait until the last minute, it will cost $10 per player more. Entry deadline is September 14, 2011.

    If this sounds like a good plan for you, click on www.allsportsaz.com for more details and to register for the tournament.

    Then, visit the Arizona Golf Authority Golf Course Directory and read the AZGA Golf Course Buzz for Red Mountain Ranch; it’s a great test in a lovely setting, and one of the very few Pete Dye designs in Arizona. Have fun and play well.

  • Antigua’s Sean Gregg Talks Golf Fashion Trends

    Antigua’s Sean Gregg Talks Golf Fashion Trends

    From the Arizona Golf Authority AZGA News Desk

    Sean Gregg

    It’s the dog days of summer in Arizona right now. Temperatures and humidity are at that uncomfortable stage, meaning you do all your chores early and hibernate in the afternoon. It’s hard to think about wearing long sleeves and jackets, but for Sean Gregg, Antigua’s head designer, that’s exactly what’s been on his mind for the past several months as he and his team developed the Antigua Fall Collection.

    Sean, Antigua’s head designer, was kind enough to share the inside skinny on what we’ll see in golf shops very soon. So, we thought we’d share that information with you.

    AZGA: What’s the latest inside info on golf apparel these days?

    Gregg: Golf apparel has reached the status of fashion, meaning color as a trend evolves seasonally. Traditional color palettes are perceived as almost “conformist,” thus fashion palettes are now often styled into most of the golf brand collections, tending to focus on the hot colors of the season.

    But there are a couple of current trends in men’s golf apparel that seem to be holding ground and are probably more specific to golf apparel. One hot trend is layering. Gone are the days when you consider an outerwear piece for the start of the round and remove it at the turn.

    The focus now is on developing product from the base layer up. Lightweight base layers such as the Antigua style Hero developed as a micro-fleeced back jersey mock can stand alone or can be worn under a performance polo such as Exceed, or with a mid-weight pull-over performance fleece style such as Succeed, or under a water and wind resistant wind shirt found in our Resilient and Highland lines.

    The new mentality from the tour player to the weekend golfer is that they want to be comfortable at any point during play and they look for layering options that correspond with the fluctuations in weather that occur especially during golf ’season’.

    AZGA: Is layering just a trend or here to stay?

    Gregg: We believe layering, for both men and women, is less a passing fad and more a staple in golf apparel as a function of the sport and a necessity of its competition.

    We see fit and function as synonymous and our development focuses on each individual layer. As an analogy, the introduction of performance synthetics in competitive swimming donned by athletes performed so effectively that the full body suit has been banned from professional swimming competition dramatizing the genuine effects of focused performance product development. And though we’d like to think that our fabrics can be that effective, we appreciate the dissimilarity in functionality, but equally appreciate the importance of taking the direction of development seriously to improve a golfers performance through the right garment choice.

    AZGA: So, color palettes and layering are important, what other trends will we see in the coming year?

    Gregg: The second biggest and more current trend is in apparel fabrics and specs. Like the evolutions in technology on the hard goods side, apparel companies are focusing on improving playing performance. We’ve developed lighter and lighter fabrics to perform faster with regard to wicking speed, while being less restrictive during release. The Desert Dry Xtra-Lite (D2XL) fabrics are a prime example of this new trend.

    Another trend – narrowing specs – is based on the same dynamic. The need to pull your shirt sleeve up before set up has been eliminated from our performance collections by focusing on minor adjustments to specific core fit anatomy. We haven’t made smaller garments, we’ve made better performing garments while leaving areas like the torso spec intact. And as we grade up in size, we cease the “taper in” fit. This fit can be comfortably modified for medium and large sizes, but has disadvantages in the XL and larger sizes. As the population has grown in stature, we’ve look to be accommodating in our offering to cater to that evolution.

    AZGA: What are the new colors for the Antigua Fall 2011 line?

    Gregg: As the performance apparel category took hold in golf, it was inundated with derivatives of the activewear market with regard to the use of both color and fabric blocking. As the shift solidified and the trends diversified, there was a lack of newness coming into the performance apparel markets when it came to brands that specialized in side-line apparel and dabbled in golf wear.

    Taking our cue from the fashion market and less from the collegiate market our focus was to be golf wear specific. We developed and have updated color palettes in what we coined ’contemporary performance’. We transitioned from the warm natural earth hues in our 2010 collections and to a rich jewel palette for our 2011 performance lines. We believe this distinction in both our brand and our product shows our intent to cater to the genuine golfer with our genuine golf apparel, both esthetically and functionally.

    AZGA: What goes into developing a new line of golf apparel?

    Gregg: While we’d like to think we have all the right answers, we know there is a distinct correlation between the involvement in our product R & D and the acceptance by the consumer, especially with regard to technical details and features that demonstrate focus on both form and function. We talk to consumers about their likes and dislikes and we do a lot of testing before we launch any line. Through this collaboration of R&D and the consumer, we are able to create products that look good, feel great and meet our performance standards.

    AZGA: What’s your favorite item in the fall ’11 line?

    Gregg: I’d have to give the nod to our Hero line, it’s one of the most comfortable performance fabrics we’ve developed. It’s light enough to be worn on its own in mildly cool temperatures, yet warm enough to hold out the unwanted elements. It’s only been part of the collection for a short time, but based on its popularity in accommodating layering needs we’re expanding into additional base layers such as ribs and textures. I personally love the duality of the base layers. And we’re finding our customers agree. They are buying and pairing a polo with a base layer one-for-one in milder weather.

    To check out all Antigua products, go to shop.antigua.com.

    Visit the Arizona Golf Authority Golf Course Directory at www.arizonagolfauthority.com/coursedirectory/ for the inside story on every golf course in Arizona.

  • Osborn Scrapes and Scrambles to Win the Arizona Amateur Championship

    Osborn Scrapes and Scrambles to Win the Arizona Amateur Championship

    Huff’s Stuff Arizona Golf Blog – Arizona Golf Authority

    Match play is one of golf’s most fickle and funny games. Just when a player thinks he’s got it all figured out, the mano y mano format jumps up and bites him like a sleeping dog.

    That lesson straight out of the school of hard knocks was reaffirmed Saturday in the final match of the 87th Arizona Amateur Championship. After being on cruise control for the better part of five days at the Country Club at DC Ranch, Scottsdale’s Bowen Osborn and Michael Wog had some teeth marks to show for their final 18 holes.

    When the scraping and scrambling finally subsided, it was Osborn who came though it in the best shape for a 1-up win over Wog. Both players had been on a birdie/ eagle barrage earlier in the week, but on this hot summer morning neither managed to break par despite the match going the full 18 holes.

    “It wasn’t pretty, but I guess I did enough to get it done,’’ said the 31-year-old Osborn, who broke a seven-year trend of college-age players (22 or younger) winning this major championship sponsored by the Arizona Golf Association.

    “I got off to a good start, but it was pretty squirrelly after that. Probably just a lot of golf for the week, and I think we both got a little tired at the end.’’

    Wog, at 29, and a veteran of AGA tournament play for the past eight years, was a little more demonstrative about his only bad round in the eight he had played over the past six days.

    “I played like crap,’’ said Wog, using another noun in place of “crap.’’

    “I gave him four holes (Nos. 6, 14, 15 and 17) and you just can’t do that at this stage of the game. This was probably my worst round of the week. I guess you do that sometimes in match play – play bad at the wrong time.’’

    While neither of the finalists were happy with their results, it was a very tight match as 1-up was as big a lead as either player was able to establish. For those counting, Osborn had that 1-up advantage for eight holes (Nos. 1,2,3, 6, 7, 15, 17 and 18), Wog wrestled it away for three holes (Nos. 11-13) and the match was all-square for seven holes.

    The tipping point came at the par-5 17th, where Wog hit his approach shot barely over the green and then chunked his chip, which led to his fourth bogey (or worse) of the day. That put Osborn dormie with that ever-familiar 1-up lead, and when Wog’s drive at the 18th caught the lip of a bunker and rolled back into the sand, both players halved the hole with a par, Osborn rolling in the winner from six feet despite the putt being a downhill slider.

    “Yeah, really (the putt) you want there,’’ Osborn deadpanned. “But I’d be lying if I didn’t say I was nervous every round. You just play through it.’’

    Actually, both players had a little competitive rust coming into this tournament. Osborn, the No. 4 seed whose claims to fame came in 2002, when he won both the Patriot League individual championship while he was at Lehigh and the Minnesota Amateur in his home state, hadn’t played at this level in almost seven years. Wog, the No. 6 seed who stepped away from the game last year to help his father through some tough times in his home state of Washington, also had just come back recently from a thumb injury that kept him away from the course for several months.

    “I play tons of golf with my buddies, but nothing like this. I was shaking before every match,’’ conceded Osborn, whose card included just one birdie and one bogey (or worse) and a whole lot of pars.

    Both players came through their opposite brackets with relative ease until they squared off in the championship. The end result was especially hard for Wog to swallow as he had never trailed in a match all week until the very first hole on Saturday, when Osborn punched an 8-iron from 176 yards to eight feet and made the birdie.

    “That’s what I’d been doing to the other guy all week,’’ Wog said of being 1-down. “But it was early, and I really wasn’t worried because I knew we had a long way to go.’’

    As for the chunk at 17, Wog just shook his head in disbelief. “I had a little piece of grass behind the ball, caught it thin and almost T.C. Chen-ed it,’’ he said of the infamous shot and subsequent two-stroke penalty incurred by Chen for his ball hitting his clubface twice during a chip shot at the 1984 U.S. Open at Oakland Hills.

    Despite his regrets, Wog did manage to put the week in perspective, saying it was “a lot of fun’’ and “there’s always next year.’’

    “I can’t say enough about the way we were treated at DC Ranch and how great of condition the golf course was in for this championship,’’ said the introspective Wog, a waiter who works at Eddie V’s in the Scottsdale Quarter.

    Osborn, an easygoing guy who is in charge of corporate development for Shotzoom, a Scottsdale company that makes apps for iPhones and iPads, most notably the GolfShot:Golf GPS, was equally as appreciative.

    “(The staff at DC Ranch) made us all feel like it was our home for the week, and that was really a nice touch,’’ he said of the private club in Scottsdale that is run by general manager Paul Skelton and director of golf Dick Hyland.

    It was an amazing effort by DC Ranch gang, as all 144 players were each given a locker and a private parking space with their names on them, as well as some incredible service, and food and drink.

    The final touch included a champagne salute to a tournament well done, as the champion and runner-up toasted each others success, a rare moment that only seems to happen in the game of golf.

  • AZ Amateur Final Round Pits A Waiter Against A Weekend Warrior

    AZ Amateur Final Round Pits A Waiter Against A Weekend Warrior

    Huff’s Stuff Arizona Golf Blog – Arizona Golf Authority

    A waiter from Scottsdale, Michael Wog, will meet a “weekend warrior’’ from the same city, Bowen Osborn, in Saturday’s championship match of the 87th Arizona Amateur at the Country Club at DC Ranch.

    It marks the first time in eight years that a college-age player will not win this major championship sponsored by the Arizona Golf Association.

    “I guess all that’s left is just a couple of us older guys,’’ observed Wog, who is 29 to Osborn’s 31 years of age.

    “I don’t know much about (Osborn), but I do know that I’ve been lucky enough not to be down in any of my matches yet. So I’ll just do what I’ve been doing, try to make smart shots that don’t get me in trouble.’’

    Wog, the No. 6 seed, would have to be considered the favorite, especially since Osborn, a high-tech salesman for golf-GPS applications maker Shotzoom, doesn’t get to play that often.

    “I’m a weekend warrior who, maybe, gets to play once or twice a week and occasionally hit some balls,’’ said Osborn, who is competing in his first Arizona Amateur.

    “I haven’t played much competitively lately, but it’s nice to be back into it. I was a little concerned with my short game, but it’s been pretty good so far and I’ve been hitting it well.’’

    But Osborn, the No. 4 seed, has had plenty of experience with it all on the line. He was the 2002 Patriot League individual champ when he played college golf for Lehigh, and he also captured the 2002 Minnesota Amateur in his home state.

    Osborn never was in any real trouble Friday during his 1-up victory over Scottsdale’s David Lowe and a 3-and-2 decision over Scottsdale’s Adam Walicki, a former pro who was the No. 1 seed.

    About the most difficult thing for Osborn was recalling his morning match with Lowe, a former Brophy Prep standout who is headed for Arizona State in two weeks.

    “(Lowe’s) a good player and we just kind of went back and forth, nobody being more than 1-up through (the first 13 holes),’’ said Osborn, who won the 14th and 15th holes to go 3-up before Lowe came roaring back at the 16th and 17th.

    “Specific details are hard to remember. I mean, each hole is like its own little match, and every little hole is important, so you’re just in there grinding away and it’s hard to remember.’’

    Osborn was more in control – and cognizant – in his match with Walicki, where he went up for good with a birdie at the ninth hole, a par to win the 10th, and the shot of the day at the 11th, where a 4-iron from 236 yards settled 3 inches from the cup for a kick-in eagle. That put him 3-up, and in his own words: “It really wasn’t very pretty after that, as we halved a lot of holes with ugly pars and bogeys.’’

    In Walicki’s defense, he might have been a little worn down after a very tough match he won, 1-up, in the morning over Arizona State’s Jin Song. And it already had been a long week for Walicki, who ended up playing 105 holes in five straight days – or 21 holes a day.

    Wog, who was the 2009 AGA player of the year but has never advanced beyond the quarterfinals of this tournament, would seem to be the more seasoned player. He’s been working hard on his game for eight years pretty much full-time with the exception of last year, when he helped his father back home in Washington get through some tough times.

    “I’ve been playing really good,’’ he said after his three birdies without a bogey spelled out a 4-and-3 win over Scottsdale’s Marc Watkins, the son of noted instructor Scott Watkins.

    “I didn’t have much going, but I made a lot of pars and really didn’t make any real big mistakes. Several holes also turned out to be pivotal in that it could have gone either way.’’

    Such as the eighth hole, where Wog chipped in for birdie and Watkins ended up missing his attempt from eight feet. Or the 11th hole, where both players came up short of the green, and Wog chunked his chip while Watkins hit it close for a “gimme’’ birdie.

    “I ended up running in my (birdie) putt from 20 feet and that was kind of crucial to get that halve there,’’ said Wog, who ended up winning the 13th and 14th holes with pars to ice the match.

    Wog also was pretty much on cruise control against Juan Fernandez in his morning match, disposing of the former Scottsdale Community College standout, 3 and 1. Like is sometimes the case in match play, Wog got a little help from Fernandez, as the Mexico City native couldn’t overcome four bogeys and a double with a lone birdie.

    “This would be really special if I could somehow win this,’’ said Wog, who normally works five or six nights a week at Eddie V’s in the Scottsdale Quarter.

    The championship match starts bright and early at 7:30 a.m. It should be interesting, as neither player knows the other’s game. They had their first encounter as both were leaving the course late Friday afternoon.

    “Have fun tomorrow,’’ Wog told the weekend warrior.

    “We will,’’ Osborn countered.

    That was the extent of the conversation.

    For the full scoreboard, click here.

  • Lowe, Walicki and Sardina Advance in Arizona Amateur

    Lowe, Walicki and Sardina Advance in Arizona Amateur

    Huff’s Stuff AZGA Arizona Golf Blog – Arizona Golf Authority

    The last time Jin Song went this far into the Arizona Amateur’s bracket of 64 players, he was just like his future teammate, David Lowe – an 18-year-old fresh out of high school kid just two weeks away from going to Arizona State.

    But here it is three years later, and there’s Song again in the quarterfinals of this major championship sponsored by the Arizona Golf Association. And there’s Lowe, too, trying to do his best imitation of Song, who won the 2008 AZ Am.

    “Yeah, it feels a little different this time around,’’ said Song after winning two tough matches on Thursday at the Country Club at DC Ranch, the toughest being a 2-and-1 win over veteran Chris Kessler of Scottsdale.

    “I was just a kid when I won at Troon Country Club and I’m a little older now and, hopefully, a better player. But the one thing that stays the same is that, when you get past the first round, everybody’s playing good so you’ve got to be at your best.’’

    That’s where Lowe is right now, as the Scottsdale teenager took down his two opponents with relative ease on a hot, muggy day.

    “Actually both of my matches were against solid players, but thankfully my lag putting was spectacular and I didn’t beat myself,’’ said Lowe, an 18-year-old who played for Brophy Prep and already is wearing Sun Devil garb.

    Asked what his secret has been this week, Lowe showed why he’ll be living in the Barrett Honors College dorm this season, although he gave all the credit to his dad, Allen, who doubles as his caddie.

    “My dad and I kind of talked about it, and in match play you want to make the other guy beat you; don’t beat yourself. And that’s kind of what I’ve been able to do, play solid, don’t make bogeys, and make the other guy beat me.’’

    Because they are in the same bracket, it’s possible that Song and Lowe could meet in the semifinals after a third ASU freshman, Austin Quick, was eliminated. That would be just fine with Lowe, although. . . .

    “A win is never that great over a teammate,’’ he said. “At the same time, this would be a great tournament to win and maybe get some momentum going into college.’’

    Certainly it would be a big bonus for his new coach, as ASU’s Tim Mickelson has been a more than casual spectator at the Amateur throughout the week.

    But if you’re looking for the inside favorite, don’t look past veteran Michael Wog, who was the AGA’s player of the year in 2009 and would like nothing more than to add the Amateur to his resume after coming close on several occasions.

    “So I’m the old guy, ‘the veteran,’ ‘’ chuckled the 29-year-old Scottsdale resident, who pulled off a brilliant, 2-and-1 win over Quick, to play another day.

    “I guess I just keep sneakin’ them out, huh? Well, they’ve all been really tough, and (Quick) was the toughest. He’s a very good, solid player. I mean, most kids his age can’t hit a fade the way he does, and he hits it with total control.’’

    How good is Quick? In his morning match, when he eliminated the sensational Peter Kyo Won Koo of Chandler, the 15-year-old who earlier this year captured the Arizona State Stroke Play Championship, Quick shot 28 on the front nine with five birdies and an eagle from the fairway at No. 9. That led to possibly the best quote of the week, and it came from Koo.

    Asked how he played, Koo shrugged his shoulders: “Well, I was two-under and 5-down after nine holes. And believe it or not, that was with him making a bogey (at No. 2).’’

    But that’s match play, said No. 1 seed Adam Walicki, a former pro from Scottsdale who got his amateur status back last year.

    “At this stage, you can’t just play well, you have to play great,’’ said Walicki, who just slipped past another former pro, Mark Bellhorn, 1-up, to reach his next big challenge — Song.

    “I mean I had to eagle the 17th hole just to win my second match, and that just got me back to even par after playing my first match 3 or 4 under.’’

    Asked if being the No. 1 seed was a boon or a bane, Walicki shook his head and laughed.

    “I don’t think when you get to this part of the tournament you’re really going to intimidate anybody by being the No. 1 seed,’’ he reasoned. “The only way I’m going to get an easy match is if somebody falls out of bed and gets hurt.’’

    Yes, you just never know what each day will bring in mano y mano, or who will be the next big thing. Like little Zachary Sardina of Goodyear, the No. 63 seed who is alive and kicking after holding off AGA points leader Camron Howell, 1-up.

    “I’m hanging in there,’’ said the 18-year-old Sardina, who is on his way to Scottsdale Community College this fall. “I think I’m handling adversity really well.’’

    Asked if he’s surprised he’s made it this far, Sardina kept it real: “Honestly, I am. I knew I had some potential, but to pull it off, well, yeah, it’s surprising.’’

  • Sardina Upsets #2 Seed in Arizona Amateur Championship

    Sardina Upsets #2 Seed in Arizona Amateur Championship

    Huff’s Stuff AZGA Arizona Golf Blog – Arizona Golf Authority

    Zachary Sardina, an 18-year-old from Goodyear, was well aware of the challenge he faced Wednesday as the No. 63 seed in the 64-player bracket of the Arizona Amateur. After all, he was pitted against Sierra Vista’s Colin McCarty, the No. 2 seed and a very good player headed to Southern Illinois-Edwardsville this fall.

    Then came the 18th hole at the Country Club at DC Ranch, with the match surprisingly all-square and both players putting for birdie – Sardina from 20 feet with McCarty just inside of him.

    “I knew I was the underdog, but I was just trying to stay patient, hang in there and overcome my mistakes while hoping he might make a couple (of mistakes),’’ said Sardina, who didn’t take up golf until he was a sophomore at Millennium High School.

    “When my putt went in for birdie, I was so excited that I did my little Tiger Woods fist pump. But I still wasn’t convinced I’d won the match because I kind of thought he might make his putt, too. When it didn’t go in, I was actually kind of shocked.’’

    Sardina’s 1-up “shocker’’ over McCarty, who also is 18 years old, was the biggest upset posted among the 32 matches that unfolded in Round 1. Not only does it show the depth of this major championship sponsored by the Arizona Golf Association, it also revealed a rising talent in Sardina, who will play golf for Scottsdale Community College this fall.

    “I’ve had a lot of runner-up finishes in junior golf but never a win, so this was a big step for me,’’ said Sardina, who was 2-down after three holes, evened the match after nine holes, trailed 2-down after 14 holes only to rally back and win the 15th and 17th holes with pars.

    The other top seed in this event, No. 1 Adam Walicki, easily moved past his opponent Steven Ortiz, 4 and 3. Walicki, a stockbroker from Scottsdale, was medalist with a 7-under-par aggregate to earn the top spot.

    In the day’s longest match, Chandler’s Peter Kyo Won Koo upended Grand Canyon University sophomore Alec Dahlquist in 23 holes. Koo, a 15-year-old who earlier in the year captured the Arizona State Stroke Championship, was 3-up after 15 holes, lost the last three holes and then prevailed on the fifth extra hole.

    The shot of the day went to Mesa’s Robbie Kernagis, who made a hole-in-one from 174 yards at No. 5 that proved pivotal in his 2-and-1 win over the University of Arizona’s Tom Conran.

    The most impressive victory of the opening round, in terms of score, was Juan Fernandez’s 7-and-6 drubbing of Matt McClure. Fernandez, who was the No. 1 player for Scottsdale Community College the past two seasons, never trailed in the match.

    “I played pretty good and he didn’t play so well; it was a combination of both,’’ said Fernandez, 21, whose four birdies and lone bogey were good enough.

    “He gave me one at the third hole, where he four-putted, then I was 2-up after six, won the seventh with a par, and birdied (Nos.) 8, 9 and 10 to go 6-up. I made a par at the 12th to win the match. I think the real key for me is I haven’t had a three-putt since Monday, so I’ve been able to figure out the speed of these greens.’’

    Fernandez, who is from Mexico City but spent over half of his life in Spain, said he had wanted to play for either Arizona State or Washington this fall but couldn’t get a scholarship. So after the Arizona Amateur, he plans to turn pro.

    “If I could win this, that would be a great good-bye to amateur golf,’’ he said.

    Among the other notables to advance, all three Arizona State players – No. 9 Jin Song, No. 21 David Lowe and No. 43 Austin Quick – advanced. Song and Lowe each won, 3 and 2, while Quick squeaked out a 2-and-1 win.

    Among the veterans (translated: not kids) who made the match play, Tucson’s Patrick Geare emerged from a hard-fought, 2-and-1 win over Mesa’s Steve Dallas; Phoenix’s Jeff Johnson ousted Paul Welle of Scottsdale, 2 and 1; and AGA points leader Camron Howell of Queen Creek beat Anthem’s Gary Quinn, 4 and 2.

    The 87th Arizona Amateur continues Thursday with two rounds of play before getting down to the quarterfinals and semifinals on Friday. The championship match is set for Saturday at 7:30 a.m.

  • Walicki Leads Arizona Amateur Match Play Championship

    Walicki Leads Arizona Amateur Match Play Championship

    Huff’s Stuff AZGA Arizona Golf Blog – Arizona Golf Authority

    In recent times the Arizona Amateur has been ruled by college players, with the past seven champions falling into that age-group category.

    This year’s version is so heavy with collegians that even a coach from a major university showed up for the first two rounds of qualifying at the Country Club at DC Ranch. Yes, Tim Mickelson, the new guy at Arizona State who just moved into his office on Tuesday, has been “a very interested spectator.’’

    “It’s been great to have the opportunity to watch a few of my future ASU players and all of this young talent,’’ said Mickelson, the former University of San Diego coach who just got the Sun Devils’ job last month.

    “I’ve been pleasantly surprised the way Jin Song is playing in this tournament along with several of my incoming freshmen. And if they keep going like they’re going, I plan to show up later in the week, too.’’

    For the moment, Scottsdale’s Adam Walicki, a former pro who got his amateur status back just last year, is the No. 1 seed for the match play portion of this major championship, which starts Wednesday and concludes Saturday morning. Walicki, who played college golf for Michigan State and the University of Detroit, shot rounds of 66-67 to finish all alone at 7-under par.

    “I guess with all these kids, I’m now officially the old fart in all of this,’’ quipped the 31-year-old stockbroker, whose only bad swing in Round 2 cost him a double bogey that he offset with five birdies.

    Asked if he liked match play, Walicki, who played on the Gateway Tour in 2005, never missed a beat.

    “No, and I have the record to back me up on that. But I’m willing to take a different approach if that’s what it takes. Most people I know who have had success in that format ignored their opponent and played the course, and I guess that’s what I’ll try to do when we get going tomorrow.’’

    Being a wily veteran, Walicki knows that he’ll have to go through a bunch of kids if he’s going to make Saturday’s championship match. That list starts with Colin McCarty, an 18-year-old from Sierra Vista who is bound for Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville. McCarty was at 6 under following a 66.

    In a group tied for third place at 5 under were Juan Fernandez, the No. 1 player at Scottsdale Community College the past two years who also shot 66, and Nevada Reno’s Andrew Augustyniak, a sophomore who soon will turn pro as evidenced by his day’s best score of 65.

    Song, who Mickelson alluded to, is in a group at 4 under after following his opening 65 with a 71. Other Sun Devils to make the match play included two freshman from Scottsdale — David Lowe (even par, 72) and Austin Quick (3 over, 70). A fourth incoming freshman from Scottsdale, Cameron Palmer, was 3 over for the tournament with nine holes to play before self-destructing with a 42 on his last nine holes.

    The Sun Devils weren’t the only team that earned spots in the match-play bracket of 64 players. Two out of five Wildcats entered here also advanced, including Tom Conran (2 under, 68) and Dylan Kornberg (1 over, 70).

    Other notables in the match play included Scottsdale’s Michael Wog, the 2009 AGA Player of the Year, who was tied for third at 5 under after a 69; Phoenix’s Paul Welle, the 2008 AGA Player of the Year with a 73 that left him 1 over; and Peter Kyo Won Koo, the 15-year-old from Chandler who earlier this year captured the Arizona State Stroke Play title and was 4 over after a 73.

    It took an aggregate of 5 over to make the match-play bracket, with nine players going after seven spots. The final four days of the 87th Arizona Amateur include 32 matches on Wednesday, two rounds on Thursday, the quarterfinals and semifinals on Friday with the championship set for a 7:30 a.m. start on Saturday.

    Click Huff’s Stuff Golf Blog at the Arizona Golf Authority and check out Bill Huffman’s complete golf articles archive.