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Georgia teenager Hamilton Coleman takes US Junior Amateur title
Georgia teenager Hamilton Coleman takes US Junior Amateur title

New Straits Times

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • New Straits Times

Georgia teenager Hamilton Coleman takes US Junior Amateur title

DALLAS, (Texas): Hamilton Coleman, a 17-year-old from Augusta, Ga., made a birdie putt on the 35th hole Saturday to win the 77th US Junior Amateur Championship in Dallas, 2 and 1, over Minh Nguyen of Vietnam. Coleman held on after taking a 5-up lead after 12 holes. As the players moved down the back nine, Nguyen, 18, couldn't tie the match, and Coleman birdied the par-3 17th for the second time in the final to earn the title in the match-play tournament at Trinity Forest. The two played 35 of the 36 holes on yesterday. The winner was two strokes ahead with one hole to play, negating the need for the 36th hole. "I knew I couldn't ease my way into winning. I had to keep hitting quality shots," Coleman said during the trophy presentation. "It got a little tight there, but I never lost faith. I told my caddie I was nervous but not scared. I was proud of that." Coleman beat Sohan Patel on Friday in the quarterfinals before defeating Luke Colton in the semifinals. Both players will receive exemptions into the US Amateur at Olympic Club in San Francisco in August. Coleman also will receive a berth in the 2026 U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills in Southampton, New York. — REUTERS

Bay Area's Kailer Stone shares U.S. Junior lead; Charlie Woods fails to break 80
Bay Area's Kailer Stone shares U.S. Junior lead; Charlie Woods fails to break 80

NBC Sports

time22-07-2025

  • Sport
  • NBC Sports

Bay Area's Kailer Stone shares U.S. Junior lead; Charlie Woods fails to break 80

Kailer Stone has won back-to-back NCGA Junior Championships, including earlier this month at Lake Merced in San Francisco. The 17-year-old from Alameda, California, is hoping to return to the Bay Area next month for the U.S. Amateur at Olympic Club as the champion of another prestigious junior championship. Stone joined China's Qiyou Wu in shooting 5-under 66, the leading score in Monday's opening round of stroke play at the 77th U.S. Junior Amateur in Dallas. Stone, a Pepperdine commit, carded five birdies and no bogeys at Trinity Forest, which played over two shots tougher than its companion course, Brook Hollow. Mason Howell, the Georgia commit who qualified for the U.S. Open earlier this summer, had the best score at Brook Hollow, a 3-under 67, along with fellow Georgia native Trace Carter. Top-ranked junior Miles Russell shot 67 at Trinity Forest while defending U.S. Junior champion Trevor Gutschewski posted 68 at the former home of the PGA Tour's Byron Nelson event. The player Gutschewski beat in the final last July at Oakland Hills, Tennessee commit Tyler Watts, also shot 68 at Trinity Forest. Other notables currently inside the match-play cutline include reigning U.S. Amateur Four-Ball champion and Vanderbilt commit Tyler Mawhinney (68-TF), North Carolina sophomore and Ukraine's Misha Golod (69-TF), Auburn signee Logan Reilly (71-TF), Vanderbilt commit Luke Colton (71-TF), Clemson signee Jackson Byrd (71-TF), Vanderbilt signee Michael Riebe (71-BH), Oklahoma State signee Henry Guan (71-BH) and Daniil Sokolov (71-TF), who is the first player from Qatar to play in a USGA championship. Among those outside the cut line at the midway point of stroke-play qualifying are Cameron Kuchar (74-TF) and Charlie Woods (81-BH). Both of their dads, Matt and Tiger, were out watching their sons' rounds on Monday. Woods, who missed the cut in last year's U.S. Junior debut, carded birdies on Nos. 18 and 9, but he also had four double bogeys, including three on the back nine, his opening side. He is currently T-242 out of 264 players and nine shots out of what would be a 30-for-8 playoff to get into the Round of 64.

Alabama golfer Nick Gross qualifies for 2025 U.S. Amateur Championship
Alabama golfer Nick Gross qualifies for 2025 U.S. Amateur Championship

Yahoo

time15-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Alabama golfer Nick Gross qualifies for 2025 U.S. Amateur Championship

An Alabama golfer is headed to one of the most prestigious events at his level of the sport. Crimson Tide rising sophomore Nick Gross qualified for the 2025 U.S. Amateur Championship after firing a bogey-free 68 on July 14, the university announced Monday. Advertisement The tournament will be held from August 11-17 at The Olympic Club in San Francisco. REQUIRED READING: Alabama football's best, most promising, most underrated players and more for 2025 | Goodbread The winner of the U.S. Amateur earns, among other things, exemptions to compete in the Masters, U.S. Open and the Open Championship, provided they retain their amateur status. A Downingtown, Pennsylvania native, Gross was the No. 1 ranked player in his class in the World Amateur Golf Rankings. As a freshman, he was one of five Alabama golfers to be named to the starting lineup of every event in which the Tide competed last fall. Advertisement This article originally appeared on The Tuscaloosa News: Alabama Crimson Tide golfer Nick Gross qualifies for US Amateur

Oklahoma State's Ethan Fang wins 2025 British Amateur, punches ticket to 3 majors
Oklahoma State's Ethan Fang wins 2025 British Amateur, punches ticket to 3 majors

USA Today

time21-06-2025

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Oklahoma State's Ethan Fang wins 2025 British Amateur, punches ticket to 3 majors

The moment Ethan Fang made history at The 130th Amateur Championship 🏆 Ethan Fang has added a couple significant trophies to his resume over the last month. The rising junior at Oklahoma State won the 130th British Amateur Championship on Saturday, beating East Tennessee State sophomore Gavin Tiernan 1 up with a clutch birdie on the 36th hole at Royal St. George's. Fang became the first American to win the Amateur since Drew Weaver in 2007, and he's the first Oklahoma State player since Bob Dickson to win the Amateur. Dickson was also the last player to win both the British Amateur and U.S. Amateur in the same year. Fang will have the opportunity to do so in August at Olympic Club in San Francisco. 'It feels great. Still doesn't feel real yet. But I'm sure it'll kick in, and I'll celebrate with my team," Fang said. 'I was hitting it well all day, and I knew if I just stayed in it, some putts would drop, kind of have him work for it, and it ended up working out." With the win, Fang gets an exemption into the 153rd Open at Royal Portrush next month as well as the 2026 Masters and U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills. In addition to the three majors, he earned a spot in the DP World Tour's Betfred British Masters. Fang led 2 up with three holes to play before Tiernan buried consecutive birdie putts to tie the match heading into the 36th hole. That's when Fang, hitting his approach shot first, floated an iron to the front part of the green and watched as it released to about 5 feet left of the flag. Tiernan's approach found the far side of the green, and he nearly jarred the birdie look, but when he didn't make it, Fang bounced back and clinched the match, becoming the 22nd American to win the British Am. Another important milestone for Fang is that he has virtually locked up his spot on the U.S. Walker Cup team, as if there was any doubt for the No. 7 amateur in the world. Last month, he went 2-1 in match play to help the Cowboys win their 12th national championship in school history. Now he has one of the biggest amateur events in the world, and by summer's end will join Jackson Koivun, Ben James and Michael La Sasso donning the red, white and blue at Cypress Point in September.

Watch: Patrick Reed holes out for albatross, only fourth in history of U.S. Open
Watch: Patrick Reed holes out for albatross, only fourth in history of U.S. Open

USA Today

time12-06-2025

  • Sport
  • USA Today

Watch: Patrick Reed holes out for albatross, only fourth in history of U.S. Open

Watch: Patrick Reed holes out for albatross, only fourth in history of U.S. Open 🚨 ALBATROSS ALERT 🚨@PReedGolf with a 2 on a par 5, just the 4th in U.S. Open history! — U.S. Open (@usopengolf) June 12, 2025 Patrick Reed did something Thursday that only three others have ever done in the history of the U.S. Open. Playing his fourth hole during the opening round of the 2025 U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club, Reed hit a 3-wood from 286 yards on the par-5 second hole. His ball landed at the front of the green and took a couple of hops before releasing, and it never left the cup. The ball rolled into the hole, and voila, it was an albatross for Reed. The other three golfers to accomplish the feat are Nick Watney at Olympic Club in 2012, Shaun Micheel at Pebble Beach in 2010 and T.C. Chen at Oakland Hills in 1985. The big bird moved Reed from 1 over to 2 under in the first round and to T-5 on the leaderboard.

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