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Tournament Schedules |
Maine Mixed Championship
The
2010 Maine Mixed Championship will be contested at Val Halla GC in
Championship trophies will be awarded for gross
winners, with an equal number of gross and net payoffs. There will also be a
Couples and Pro Division. In the net division, handicaps will be determined by
the current USGA formula, which allows an average of 60 percent of the lower and
40 percent of the higher handicap. In order to compete in net, players must show
proof of current handicap index. In addition,
one player per team
must have a current membership in either
the MSGA, WMSGA, SMWGA or NEPGA in order to submit an entry application.
MSGA membership purchase may be submitted
with entry.
The entry fee for the Maine Mixed Championship is
$100 per team. Starting times are
by entry application only. Starting
times will be posted on the web site, sent to the newspapers the week prior to
the event, and they’re also available by calling the office.
Anyone interested in sponsoring a hole in this
tournament, please call the MSGA office for more information. Hole sponsorships
$100, and all revenues raised will go to the MSGA Scholarship Fund. Class B&C Championship Final Results Barry Hobert of Bangor Municipal picked a nice time to get hot. Playing at the classic Penobscot Valley Country, Hobert combined a first-round score of 75 yesterday with a solid 77 today to win the B division of the B and C Players Championship by six shots. Jon Hardy of Rockland had the low round of the tournament with a 74 today, good enough for him to move up for a tie for second with Mark Boivin at 158. In the C Division, Greg Murray and Ray Mountain tied for low round at 171, and Murray took home the crystal with a par on the first playoff hole, to Mountain's bogey. Charlie Swett, the defending champ, finished third. Penobscot Valley withstood heavy rains overnight and the course came through in beautiful condition to allow the ball to be played down for the final round, a testament to the course and those who take care of it. Thanks to the Harris Golf family, once again, for hosting this championship for the players. Oakdale's Tom Rowe had the line of the tournament when he exclaimed about Penobscot Valley's beautiful refurbished bunkers, "I was in so much sand, I felt like Lawrence of Arabia." Well said, Tom! For complete hole-by-hole two-round results, click here. 91st Maine Amateur Final Results Thanking his grandfather, who passed away last summer, for introducing him to golf, Ryan Gay graciously accepted the 2010 Maine Amateur Championship trophy Thursday afternoon at the Kebo Valley Club in Bar Harbor. It was his second trophy in three years, as he also won the event at Biddeford-Saco Country Club in 2008. Gay's title was hard-earned over fellow Augusta Country Club member Jason Gall, who had a superb tournament and the tournament's low 18-hole score for the three days with a first-round 67. Gall and Gay spent most of the final day tied before Gall made birdie to take a one-shot lead on 15. But a miscue double bogey on 17 flipped the lead going into the final hole. Gall made a valiant attempt to try to force a playoff, hitting his second shot to about six feet. His birdie putt just lipped out and Gay was able to two-putt for the championship. Ricky Jones of Rockland, playing in the second group, had the only under par round of the day, and spent a great deal of time tied for the lead. His 69 was good enough to tie him for second with Gall, one shot off the lead. Seth Sweet -- the youngest player in two decades to compete in the final group -- finished in a tie for fourth with former MSGA junior standout Matt Greenleaf. See complete scoring results here Notes from the Championship: This year's Maine Amateur Championship was the 91st hosting of the event, which started in 1918. It was not held in 1942 or 1943 because of the Great War... This was the seventh time Kebo Valley Club, Maine's oldest club, has hosted the championship. The first was in 1960, when Jim Veno won his first of two... Thirteen-time Amateur Champ Mark Plummer missed his first event since 1993 with complications from a bleeding ulcer. It was the first time since 1993 that Plummer has missed a championship... There were four former Amateur Champions in the field: two time champs Ron Brown and Ricky Jones, Eric Crouse, who won the event the last time it was held at Kebo in 1998 (in a playoff over Plummer), and Ryan Gay, the 2008 winner... Speaking of Brown, this was the 36th consecutive championship for Portland's Ron Brown, who will now shoot for number 37 at his home club as Portland is hosting the 92nd Amateur next year... Val Halla Municipal Golf Course in Cumberland led Maine clubs with the top number of players in the field with nine, three of whom -- Chad Allen, Scott Sirois and Scott Stone -- made the cut. Augusta was next with eight (including Plummer, who had to withdraw), while Falmouth had seven... There was one father-son combination in the field as Jim McFarlane played along with his two sons, Alex and Reese. Reese was the youngest player in the field at 12, and the third youngest ever in the Amateur... There was one brother combination in the field -- Zack and Seth Sweet. Seth, at 15, is the youngest player in recent history to contend in the final group. Isaac Merrill, Jr. is the reportedly the youngest player ever to have won the event, as he captured his first of four titles in 1924. Sweet's grandfather wasn't even born yet at that time... Kebo Valley has the distinction of being the club with the toughest greens to putt in this championship during the last 15 years. Several players recorded multiple three-, four- and even five-putt greens. Guest chapters for Augusta Pro Emeritus Pete Hatfield's book in progress, "The Proper Grip and Stance for the Fourth Putt"... If the Portland Press Herald's coverage of the tournament was spotty, it's understandable -- the paper's senior golf writer, Tom Chard, was one of the 129 participants in the tournament, and also one of the top 40 to have made the cut. We wonder what the paper will do next year, as by finishing in the top 40, Tom is now exempt for the 2011 championship at Portland. No Q School for Chard... Keith Patterson of Biddeford-Saco Country Club and Eric Crouse of the Woodlands were the only only players from the 1998 Amateur tournament at Kebo who repeated top 10 finishes. In 1998, Crouse won in a playoff with a his score of 217, while Patterson's 222 was good for a tie for fifth place. This year, Patterson bettered his score by one but moved to a tie for eighth. The player he tied with? Crouse... Charlie's Portland Maine Open Final Results Dustin Cone, formerly of Vermont and now from Orlando, FL, was able to hold onto a two-shot lead on the field Wednesday to win the Charlie's Portland Maine Open Championship. He two-putted from about 17 feet on the 18th hole to hold onto a one-stroke victory over Maine native Rob Roylance for the victory. Cone finished at 10-under 134 while Roylance was a shot back at 135. Roylance also now lives in Florida. Cone's victory nets him the winner's check of $10,000 while Roylance will take home $7,500. Making a run at the title, in the second group, was former MSGA intern and Purpoodock assistant Tim Desmarais, who had it to 10-under before faltering on the back nine. Desmarais, playing in his first tournament as a professional and his first as a Maine Chapter of the PGA pro, was tied for third at 137 -- good enough to take home the Maine Chapter trophy. The Davis Richardson Senior Division awarded two titles, one for amateurs and one for professionals. Winning the professional division was Nonesuch River Pro Jim Fairbanks. In the senior division, Augusta's Mark Plummer and Falmouth's Gary Manoogian shared the victor's honors. For complete results, check out the www.charliesportlandmaineopen.com website. | ||||
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