It has taken a while, but we've finally finished the recap of the Southwest Florida Men’s Amateur Championship at Eastwood Golf Course and Fort Myers Country Club
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Rich Lamb getting the final day started |
This was my second time playing the Southwest Florida Men’s
Amateur, and I
can say without hesitation that Rich Lamb (Director of Golf),
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Todd Brown and volunteer man leaderboard |
Todd Brown
(Eastwood Head Professional) and Kari Phenix (Golf Professional) know how to
put on a terrific golf tournament. Of course, the course superintendents and
the other staff members and volunteers had a lot to do with it, but you know
how the folks running the show usually get the credit or blame.
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Kari Phenix at tourney central at Eastwood |
If I weren’t so hardheaded, this might just be the last time
I played a golf tournament. The fact is, though, that I am hardheaded and simply
can’t accept that my days as a good competitor are over. Surely I have one or
two more good competitive efforts left! You couldn’t tell by the final round of
the tournament though.
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My 1st round partners Jerry Dycke and Keith Cramsey |
Day 1 at Eastwood, a course I have considered more difficult
than “The Fort” (as Fort Myers Country Club’s track is affectionately known), I
posted an 83. Although I didn’t feel as though I were playing terrific, I only
missed five fairways, hit almost half the greens, and shot par or better on
more than half the holes. That’s pretty good golf for me, and only a couple
major snafus, two double bogeys and a triple prevented me shooting one of my
best rounds ever.
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Keith rolling one in |
Perhaps playing with Keith Cramsey, one of my playing
partners from last year’s event, was inspirational. Or perhaps it was having my
favorite photographer
riding along with us (yep, Steph was my riding partner).
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Jerry explodes from bunker |
In any event, Keith has a nice game, and I was focused on hanging with him.
After five holes I was five strokes behind Keith, and our playing partner,
Jerry Dycke, was having his struggles sitting nine strokes behind Keith after
five holes. His struggles would continue that day, but he did shoot 10 strokes
better on Day 2. By the time we finished our first nine (10 - 18), I was
within two strokes of Keith, and mounting a charge.
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Knocking in birdie on final hole |
Keith struggled a bit with his
consistency on the second nine, finishing the round with three bogeys, while I pulled
it together and finished with two pars and a birdie. I had closed the early gap
to finish two strokes ahead. Too bad the tournament didn’t end there!
Sitting in a tie for second, just three strokes behind the
flight leader Gus Forkel, and playing with the other two players with whom I
was tied, JD Leland and
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C-Flight runner-up John Burke |
John Burke, I was in the final group and expecting good things at The Fort going
into the final round. After all, I had posted rounds in the low 80s two of the last
three times I played there, one of those scores being an 80 just three days
earlier.
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C- Flight Champ Gus Forkel |
Much to my surprise, on the day that mattered most, I played
the worst round I had played in some time. In fact, it was the second worst
round I had played in my last 14! Perhaps it was because I didn’t get there in
time to get a single putt or practice swing in (what an idiot huh?). Perhaps it
was because early on I knew that JD Leland and I were pretty much outclassed by
Gus and John. Whatever the reasons, I was pretty disappointed with my Day 2 performance.
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JD takes a mighty cut |
By the third hole, it was pretty clear that Gus and John would be fighting it out for Flight C honors, and although Gus had a three-stroke lead on the three of us
coming in, I fully expected John to catch Gus
and claim the flight. Shows how deceiving looks can be. Gus doubled the
first hole and had two other bogeys in the first seven holes, but he also had a
birdie. John had parred five of the first seven and bogeyed the other two.
What about JD and me? Well, I began and ended a mostly
uneventful front nine with double bogeys to post a 44. Not good, but not
horrible for me. A decent back nine and I’d be on track to meet my goal of
playing both rounds in 85 or better. I was six strokes behind the two leaders
now, and a win was pretty much out of reach the way I was playing. But I would
be okay with a good round.
JD had gotten off to a devilish start, after having played
well enough to post his 83 the day before, posting double-bogey sixes on his first
three holes. Every time it seemed like he was about to settle in, disaster
would strike. At the end of the first nine, JD was 13 strokes behind the
leaders. However, you won’t run into a nicer guy on the course, and I’m looking
forward to teeing it up with him again.
Back to the true competition, John’s length off the tee and
impressive short game had me impressed. Gus was not long but consistent off the
tee, and his putting was solid. Nothing sexy about Gus’ game, but this is golf;
you have to get the ball in the hole 18 times, and it doesn’t matter how you look
doing it.
Being long on the golf course is usually good, but sometimes
not so much. The not so much caught up with John. After seven holes, John had cut into Gus’
lead, and was just two strokes back, but going for the long ball off the tee on
holes eight and nine resulted in double bogeys on both holes.
Despite his length off the tee and some
impressive par saves, John was now four strokes back after nine. Ouch! He would bounce back before it was all over though.
Despite my rough start, I was looking forward to a good back
nine when I sunk my par putt on #10, but by the time I had finished the next three
holes, I was absolutely shell-shocked! With apologies to those who have truly
earned it, I felt like I had PTSD after those holes!
I’m not sure I’ve ever posted
back-to-back triples, but I went triple, triple, double on holes 11 -13 and was
in a daze the rest of the way. I had two more pars on the way in, but had
another triple on Hole #16.
Wow! Three triples in nine holes! Definitely don’t remember that
in my golf history as bad as I have been at times. If you see me walking with my
head down and muttering to myself, you’ll know I’m having a flashback. All I had
left at that point is to try to enjoy the drama of John and Gus battling it out
down the stretch.
Gus was looking good to claim Flight C honors. Who wouldn’t
want a four-shot lead coming down the back stretch on Sunday? Oh, but didn’t I say this was golf? John proceeded
to play the next five holes in two over par, while Gus played them in seven over! Just like that, John had taken a one-shot
lead after 14 holes (actually 32 holes counting the day before).
Ah, but as any tournament golfer (or tournament watcher for that matter)
can tell you, it’s a lot different charging from behind than trying to hold a
lead. John finished the final four holes in five over par, while Gus finished
those four holes in three over par to claim our flight by one shot. Once again
the tortoise had bested the hare. Does the hare ever win? Only in the dashes,
and golf is more like a marathon.
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CJ Weber displays his legendary short game |
So major kudos goes out to Gus for slow and steadying his
way to the title. Me? I managed to eke out a tie for fifth. Speaking of kudos,
although he didn’t win his flight, major props have to go to CJ Weber, the Men’s
Tennis Head Coach at FGCU for his performance in his first ever golf
tournament.
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Pretty good looking swing for a rookie |
CJ finished in a tie for 6th overall, but got a tidy sum
for finishing 2nd in the net competition. That net finish means that
after figuring the handicaps of all the players in his flight, CJ did second
best. Pretty spiffy for a guy who started seriously working on his game a few
months ago!
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John Seaman lines up a putt |
And of course, we must give a shout out to all the other
flight winners who managed to hold it together through the two rounds of the
Southwest Florida Men’s Amateur. In the Championship Flight, Charlie West beat
Jake Sherwin in a playoff; Mark Ludden won the A Flight by three shots; Wayne
Donaghy took the B Flight by three shots as well, and Jason Heidig won the D
Flight by a scorching five shots!
Given my shortcomings in the competitive arena, I was
considering giving up competitive golf, but it’s just way too much fun to let
my bruised ego get in the way. I’ll be back at Eastwood and The Fort next year
to give it yet another try. Maybe a few more Fort Myers Golf Club members will
join CJ John Seaman and me as we go for the gusto. Hey, two of the three who
played finished in the top six of their flights. Not bad for an internet club. Thanks to my lovely camera woman for her efforts; thanks to Rich Lamb and his staff for another fun event, and see ya’ll next
year this time.
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