A pair of past U.S. Senior Amateur champions are set for a final-round showdown at Golfweek PNW Senior Amateur

One round remains at Wine Valley Golf Club.

One round remains at the Golfweek Pacific Northwest Senior Amateur and a pair of past U.S. Senior Amateur champions are right where you might expect them to be: at the top of the leaderboard. Doug Hanzel and Dave Ryan are likely to figure heavily into the final 18 holes at Wine Valley Golf Club in Walla Walla, Washington.

Hanzel leads the Senior division of the Golfweek PNW Amateur after taking full advantage of “moving day” with a 4-under 68. That left him at 5 under for the tournament, and two shots ahead of Ryan and Jon Valuck, who are tied for second. Hanzel had a clean card with four birdies and no bogeys while Ryan bogeyed. Nos. 3 and 6.

Valuck had the lead after the first round and for most of the day on Wednesday, especially after playing his first 11 holes in 3 under. But a bogey at the par-3 14th and a double bogey at the par-5 18th hurt, dropping him into the tie with Ryan.

Scores: Golfweek Pacific Northwest Senior Amateur

Hanzel, of Savannah, Georgia, won his U.S. Senior Amateur title in 2013 but came close to winning another one in 2022 before falling to Rusty Strawn in the championship match. Ryan, of Taylorville, Illinois, prevailed in 2016 over Matthew Sughrue when the championship was played in nearby St. Louis.

Dave Ryan at the 2010 USGA Senior Amateur.

Interestingly, there’s another U.S. Senior Amateur contender in the field in Pat O’Donnell, who had the first-round lead in the Super Senior division but now trails leader Fran Matthias by a shot. O’Donnell, an Oregon native who was inducted in the Pacific Northwest Golf Association Hall of Fame in 2022, backed up an opening 67 with a 75 on Wednesday to fall a shot behind Matthias, of Nampa, Idaho.

O’Donnell lost to Hanzel in the 2013 U.S. Amateur final.

Michael Jonson of Sammamish, Washington, grew his lead from one shot to nine shots in the Legends division. With rounds of 71-69, he is 4 under and leads Greg Tatham and Dan Parkinson, who are both at 5 over.

The Super Legends division lead belongs to Greg Mokler of Timnath, Colorado, who is 5 over after rounds of 75-74. Stephen Wilson of Solana Beach, California, is next at 14 over.

Pat O’Donnell, a PNGA Hall of Famer, is right at home atop Golfweek PNW Senior leaderboard

O’Donnell is a born and bred Pacific Northwesterner.

There’s a lot to be said for keeping it simple. That’s the first part of Pat O’Donnell’s golf mantra, and the second half is something he lived by on Tuesday in the opening round of the Golfweek Pacific Northwest Championship: Keep it in the fairway.

O’Donnell, 70, doesn’t stray much from the middle of the golf course. He knows he hit all 18 greens in an opening 5-under 67 at Wine Valley Golf Club in Walla Walla, Washington, and couldn’t remember missing any fairways.

“I’m not long but I’m not short,” O’Donnell said when asked to describe the strength of his game. He thinks his driving may be better now than it ever has been.

Scores: Golfweek PNW Senior Championship

O’Donnell is a born and bred Pacific Northwesterner and has the benefit this week of knowing the nuances of Wine Valley. The Happy Valley, Oregon, resident is not a regular on the national senior circuit, but his good friend Jim Pliska, owner of Wine Valley and a competitor in the tournament’s senior division, talked him into teeing it up at this week’s Golfweek event.

On Tuesday, O’Donnell’s 67 was not only good enough for the Super Senior division lead, it was the lowest score of any competitor in all four divisions (including Senior, Legends and Super Legends). O’Donnell is actually playing up despite the fact that he qualifies for the Legends division (for ages 70-74), but he leads Fran Matthias of Nampa, Idaho, by three shots.

“I don’t know where I belong in this thing,” he joked.

O’Donnell made five birdies in his first round, including an easy birdie at the par-4 17th after sticking his approach from 115 yards. He made another tap-in birdie on the par-5 closing hole.

He also made eagle on the par-5 third after reaching the green with a driver and a 6-iron – despite that being a hole he doesn’t normally go for – and then dropping a 35-foot putt.

“I had a good day plus it’s different than when I normally play here because usually it’s in April, which is cold and windy. This is warm and breezy,” he said. “The golf course is such a good golf course too, and it’s in good shape. The greens are holding which makes it particularly easier if it does get windy.”

One of the most challenging parts of Wine Valley is its enormous greens, but O’Donnell has a leg up here from experience.

“By playing here in the past, you kind of knows the dos and don’ts of the greens but you’re still not going to get a straight putt,” he said. “There’s always a break to them.”

In the Pacific Northwest, O’Donnell has a lot of this savvy. He took up the game at 10 years old at Columbia Edgewater Golf Club in Portland.

“They just put me to work out there because I was just irritating as a little kid,” he said. “They put me to work picking up range balls. Did that all the way through high school. Worked in the shop, ran the shop, turned pro for about three and a half years then decided, better get a real job.”

Before turning pro, O’Donnell qualified for the 1972 U.S. Amateur. Despite his short stint as a professional, O’Donnell never went to Q-School. He began work at the Boeing facility in Portland early in 1979 and retired in 2015.

During that time, O’Donnell drifted away from the game, taking nearly a decade off of competition, but returned shortly before turning 50. He has since qualified for the U.S. Senior Open three times and played nine U.S. Senior Amateurs, including the 2023 championship at Martis Camp in Truckee, California.

O’Donnell’s proudest moment competing in USGA events came in 2013, when, as an unheralded senior amateur, he played his way to the final match against Doug Hanzel (O’Donnell lost to Hanzel, 3 and 2).

“You can’t beat that when you go in with no expectations and you’re kind of a, ‘Who’s this guy?’” he said.

O’Donnell was still working at the Boeing plant then – a good-sized facility, he said, with nearly 1,500 people on the day shift.

“I swear half of them were tuned in on the internet watching that match,” he said. “It was really neat when I got back to work.”

O’Donnell may not frequent national senior events like the Golfweek circuit, but in this part of the country, he’s well-known. He was inducted into the Pacific Northwest Golf Association Hall of Fame in 2022 after compiling a jaw-dropping amateur resume that includes 11 Oregon Senior Men’s Stroke Play titles and six Oregon Senior Amateur titles. He has been named the Oregon Golf Association Men’s Player of the Year four times and the PNGA Senior Men’s Player of the Year three times.

At this point in his competitive career, O’Donnell mainly competes in Oregon Golf Association events – and mostly those designated for seniors after marveling at how far “the kids” now hit it. He’ll still try to get into the U.S. Senior Amateur, and plays a qualifier for this year’s tournament next week.

“The USGA stuff is all a bonus for me,” he said before joking, “I’m getting toward the end of the line.”

Jon Valuck of Scottsdale, Arizona had a 3-under 69 to lead the Senior division. Rick Corkill of Vancouver, Washington, and Greg Chianello of Portland, Oregon, are tied for second at 2 under. Hanzel, the 2013 U.S. Senior Amateur champion, is tied for fourth with three other players at 1 under.

Michael Johnson of Sammamish, Washington, leads the Legends division at 1 under and Greg Mokler of Timnath, Colorado, is atop the Super Legends division at 3 over.

Golfweek Pacific Northwest Senior Championship headed to Wine Valley GC on the heels of PNGA Men’s Amateur

Days after the best college players clear out of Wine Valley Golf Club in Walla Walla, Washington, the top seniors move in.

Days after the best college players clear out of Wine Valley Golf Club in Walla Walla, Washington, the top seniors move in. Tyler Sweet, Director of Golf at Wine Valley, praises the golf course’s versatility, and that will be particularly apparent in the two-week stretch encompassing the Pacific Northwest Golf Association Men’s Amateur and the Golfweek Pacific Northwest Senior Amateur.

“It’s such a great layout,” Sweet said of the golf course. “You can do so many different things with it.”

Wine Valley, which opened in 2009, has twice before hosted the PNGA Amateur, a top-50 event in the World Amateur Golf Ranking (based on strength of field) that is filled with Division I college players. The course also frequently hosts U.S. Golf Association qualifiers and Washington state amateur and open championships.

On July 16-18, Wine Valley will host the Golfweek Pacific Northwest Senior Amateur for the third time. Players will compete across four divisions: Senior (age 55-64), Super Senior (Age 65-69), Legends (age 70-74) and Super Legends (age 75 and over).

Wine Valley is a Dan Hixson design nestled into the Blue Mountains in Central Washington. It is ranked No. 3 in the state of Washington on the Golfweek’s Best Public Courses list and also appears on the Golfweek’s Best Top 200 Modern Courses list.

Sweet goes back to the panoramic mountain views.

“They did not move much dirt to build this golf course,” he said. “You’ve got rolling hills through there, it used to be farm fields – whether it was hay fields or alfalfa fields. Just a rolling golf course. It’s just so natural that people just want to come play.”

Picturesque though it may be, Wine Valley has teeth, and players generally feel them around the greens. The course features exceptionally large greens – some as deep as 40 to 50 yards from front to back – which can mean a several club difference depending on hole location (of which there are many). Sweet calls the greenside bunkering rugged and natural and notes that “if you short-side yourself in a bunker, you’re really going to have to work to make par.”

A strong Senior division field includes Kevin VandenBerg of Syracuse, New York, who claimed last year’s Golfweek Senior Player of the Year honors. Jack Larkin, the No. 3-ranked senior in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, is also in the field. So is Doug Hanzel, also among the top 10 seniors in the WAGR and winner of the 2013 U.S. Senior Amateur.

The Senior division also includes Jim Pliska, owner of Wine Valley Golf Club. Pliska, who also owns Emerald Valley Golf Club in Creswell, Oregon, has built his career in the golf business while also keeping his game sharp. Pliska played for the University of Oregon in the 1970s, and continues to compete in Oregon Golf Association events. He won the OGA Tournament of Champions in 1986,1988 and 2000.

Jim Starnes, the top-ranked player in Golfweek’s Super Senior Rankings, highlights the Super Senior field. Starnes, of Ft. Myers, Florida, won the Florida Azalea Senior earlier in the year and tied for second at the Golfweek Senior Amateur at Desert Willow in Palm Desert, California.

Golfweek top-25 player Dan Parkinson of Lehi, Utah, is among the Legends field.

Stevie Cannady prevails at Golfweek Super Senior National Championship for a senior golf milestone

Stevie Cannady’s first national senior victory had a redemptive element.

Stevie Cannady’s first national senior victory had a redemptive element. For much of the back nine at the Golfweek Super Senior, Legends and Super Legends National Championship, it looked like Cannady would easily bag the Super Senior title.

Then came the double bogey at No. 17, and his three-shot lead shrunk to one.

“After making double bogey I got a little nervous,” Cannady admitted.

Cannady had been trying to play to the front of the green at the Golf Club of Georgia’s par-3 17th but pull-hooked his tee shot into the pond there. When he stepped up the 18th tee, he refound his confidence. Playing with his three closest pursuers, Cannady put his approach inside 20 feet, the closest to the hole in the group, and left himself an easy one-and-a-half footer for par.

Scores: Golfweek Super Senior, Legends and Super Legends National Championship

“I’ve had seconds and I’ve had thirds and I’ve never won, so this is the first,” Cannady said of finally scoring a title. Shortly after the victory, as he drove from Alpharetta back home to Pooler, Georgia, near Savannah, he looked forward to sharing the news with his local golf buddies.

Cannady had consistent rounds of 73-72-70 for a 1-under 54-hole total. That left him one ahead of Todd Brown and two ahead of Chris Hall on a tight leaderboard.

Cannady turned 65 in early January, making 2024 his first year in the super senior division. Given that change of division, he decided to ramp up his schedule a little. It had been a few years since he had played much on the senior circuit as work – Cannady owns a logistics company that specializes in trucking, warehousing and some commercial real estate – prevented him for teeing it up very many weeks.

Before arriving at the Golf Club of Georgia, his best finish of 2024 had been a top 5 at the Lowcountry Senior Invitational in May.

It was the one that got away.

“I was one off the lead there and made a double bogey on 16, which cost me that tournament,” he said. “Didn’t know it at the time but the guy that won it actually double-bogeyed 17 and then bogeyed 18. If I had just parred the 16th hole, I would have won outright.”

Originally, Cannady was scheduled to play in a U.S. Senior Amateur qualifier early week, but decided not to play that round so that he could get a look at the Golf Club of Georgia, a course he hadn’t seen in 30 years.

“I definitely needed the practice round to refamiliarize myself,” he said. “It’s a fabulous facility, beautiful layout around the lakes and everything, in phenomenal good shape, too.”

On his very last driver swing of that practice-round day, Cannady cracked his driver head, which sent him to closest PGA Tour Superstore to find a replacement before the tournament started. Cannady ended up putting a new TaylorMade in the bag. He could fade or hook his old, familiar driver on demand, but found himself fighting a bit of a fade bias with the new club.

“I kind of had to play a little left to right all week,” he said. “Hit a few straight ones but most of them were fades, going left to right.”

In a final-round 70, his best score of the week, Cannady hit 86% of fairways and 89% of greens. He had 30 putts and aside from the double on No. 17, nothing but pars and four birdies – which all came on the front nine and helped him leapfrog first- and second-round leader Emile Vaughan, who ended up fourth after a final-round 75.

The momentum from Cannady’s Super Senior National Championship win could translate into something bigger down the road – the opportunities are certainly there this summer and fall. Cannady ticked off a solid tournament schedule coming up, which includes Society of Senior events at Turning Stone Resort in New York and Pumpkin Ridge in Oregon, as well as the Golfweek Senior National Match Play at Tot Hill Farm in Asheboro, North Carolina, and the North & South Senior Amateur at Pinehurst (North Carolina) Resort.

In the Legends division, Neil Spitalny of Chattanooga, Tennessee, clipped Charley Yandell by a shot as Yandell, who had led for much of the day, double-bogeyed the closing par 5. Spitalny put together a tidy final-round 70 which included three birdies and a single bogey at No. 16. He finished at 3 over for the tournament.

Phil Pavoni tied Yandell at 4 over for runner-up honors in the division.

Don Kuehn of Kansas City, Missouri, won the Super Legends division after rounds of 77-71-73 left him at 5 over for the tournament. Notably, Kuehn, who is in the Kansas City Golf Hall of Fame, claimed the 49th victory of his senior career. He has the distinction of having won the Kansas Senior Slam, which includes the Senior Amateur, Senior Four-Ball and Senior Match Play titles and “The Railer” Stroke Play Championship, and has done much to promote the game in his hometown.

Jim DuBois beats his age by double digits at Golfweek Super Legends National Championship

In senior golf, sometimes the most mind-blowing numbers are not the ones logged in the boxes of a scorecard. Case in point: Jim DuBois.

In senior golf, sometimes the most mind-blowing numbers are not the ones logged in the boxes of a scorecard. Case in point: Jim DuBois.

Score was only half the story for DuBois in the second round of the Golfweek Super Senior, Legends and Super Legends National Championship. At 82 years old, DuBois, a Coral Springs, Florida, resident, is competing in the Super Legends division. In Wednesday’s second round, DuBois climbed into third place when he logged a score 12 shots better than his age. His 2-under 70 at the Golf Club of Georgia in Alpharetta included six birdies and catapulted him up the leaderboard after an opening 79.

Scores: Golfweek Super Senior, Legend and Super Legend National Championship

DuBois, at 5 over the for the tournament, trails Don Kuehn and James Saivar, who are tied for the lead in the division for players age 75 and over. Both men are 4 over, with Kuehn having also made up considerable ground on Wednesday with a second-round 71.

The round of the day at the Golf Club of Georgia belonged to Chris Hall in the Super Senior division. Hall’s 3-under 69 included nine consecutive pars on the front nine, an eagle on the par-4 10th, birdies at Nos. 13 and 16 and a sole bogey on the par-5 18th. It left him at 1 over for the tournament and one off the lead.

Emile Vaughan continues to set the pace in the Super Senior division at even par. He made up considerable ground with 33 on the back nine in the first round but struggled on that side on Wednesday. After a birdie at No. 10, he played the next eight holes in 3 over on his way to a second-round 73.

Stevie Cannady is also at 1 over in that division and tied for second with Hall. Todd Brown is 2 over in fourth while Mark Burden, with back-to-back rounds of 74, rounds out the top 5.

Marcus Beck, Golfweek’s Super Senior Player of the Year in 2023, lurks at 8 over.

In the Legends division, Charley Yandell broke free of a three-man tie for the lead after the first round. His second-round 74 left him one shot ahead of Phil Pavoni entering the final round.

Golfweek Super Senior National Championship: Mark Burden’s golf life spans ACC’s golden era to golf dad to senior circuit drop-in

Local Mark Burden shot up the leaderboard in the first round of the Golfweek Super Senior, Legends and Super Legends National Championship.

Mark Burden’s bag of “it’s a small world” golf stories includes some doozies. Part of it might be that Burden has a better eye for detail than most – a better recall, a more sincere appreciation, certainly a deeper knowledge of the game (especially at the amateur level) – but the stories are still tremendous.

Once a small-town Midwestern kid, then an ACC golfer and now a Northwestern Mutual financial adviser who can drop into a national senior amateur event seemingly effortlessly, Burden has touched all parts of golf, from competitor to golf dad. And he still reveres the game, albeit from his corner of the world – i.e., the Atlanta metro.

At 67, Burden is unlikely to log many miles or hotel nights for senior golf, but when it comes near his Atlanta home, Burden is in the mix. He skipped the practice round at Golf Club of Georgia in Alpharetta before the Golfweek Super Senior, Legends & Super Legends National Championship, but in Tuesday’s first round, he birdied his first three holes. He was still 3 under after 12 and leading the Super Senior division.

“I was concentrating really well,” Burden said. “I was in it and I was thinking and I wasn’t overthinking.”

Scores: Golfweek Super Senior, Legends and Super Legends National Championship

Burden thinks he lost that thought process on the 13th tee, where he proceeded to dunk his tee shot in the water, hit the next one long and miss a 4-footer for double bogey. He followed up the triple with two more bogeys and ended his day with 2-over 74, two shots behind division leader Emile Vaughan.

“I’m an interloper on this senior circuit,” Burden joked, noting his lack of national starts.

Find Burden in Georgia State Golf Association events – he made the match-play bracket at the Super Senior Match Play in April – or anything else in the greater metro area, like next week’s Crabapple Senior Invitational, a four-ball event at Capital City Club’s Crabapple Course.

“It’s like studying for a test,” he said of trying to keep his game sharp while still devoting energy to work and other parts of his life. “You’re trying to figure out how much time you can devote to not only this but other things and it be as efficient as possible.”

Burden’s roots are in Clinton, Iowa, a city of 25,000 people on the Iowa-Illinois border. He learned to play with his dad and older brother, Joe, who went on to a standout career at the University of Illinois as the younger Burden watched closely. Mark, six years Joe’s junior, was an Iowa State Junior Amateur champion himself, and winning the Iowa State Junior PGA qualified him for the Junior World Championship in San Diego. He roomed with Rick Smith, now a nationally recognized instructor, and met future college teammate Mike Forgash.

In 1975, Mark Burden landed on the roster at Duke. He played four years, was captain for two, and won’t ever forget the experience – particularly his first college start, when he warmed up between a couple of Wake Forest stalwarts, Jay Haas and Curtis Strange.

“It was a great experience,” Burden said of those years. “I struggled with my game, but it was probably the best thing that ever happened to me because you come back and fall in love with it again.”

Post-Duke, Burden, who had graduated with a degree in history, began working for Northwestern Mutual. Searching for something other than daily-fee golf, Burden fell in with a group of other young professionals and joined East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta. The course opened to walk-and-carry players at 2 p.m., for a reduced rate, so Burden and his crew would be waiting on the first tee by 1:59.

“I really got my game back there playing, it was so much fun,” he said. “I also had to kind of understand what golf is really all about and kind of put it in perspective.”

The 1980s and ‘90s were like a second wind in Burden’s golf life. “You sober up from that whole, ‘I’ve got to shoot 68 every time,’” he said, but he also scored a breakthrough at the hands of instructor Mike Adams. A few small tips clicked and Burden “started ripping it.”

The glory days of that era, pre-family life, included a trip to the 1986 U.S. Mid-Amateur, where Burden match play.

“To play really good golf, you have to be in balance,” Burden said. “What I mean by that is if you have a family, you have to be dedicated to them, you have to be grinding at the office so then golf can complement those things. You really appreciate it.”

Burden’s two sons, Quinn and Owen, were both college athletes. Quinn ran track at Georgia while Owen played four years of college golf at Furman from 2018 to 2022. Golf-dad life suited Burden so well that it moves him to tears to talk about it.

Mark Burden, right, with son Owen after Owen's recent hole-in-one (his third) in Cashiers, North Carolina. (Photo submitted)
Mark Burden, right, with son Owen after Owen’s recent hole-in-one (his third) in Cashiers, North Carolina. (Photo submitted)

In terms of this upcoming generation of players, he brags equally about Owen – who went on to earn a Master’s degree from Vanderbilt, pass his CPA exam and get a job with Ernst and Young in Charlotte, North Carolina – and Owen’s teammates and junior golf contemporaries. Burden knows all their stats and whereabouts.

He heaps praise on the junior program at Cherokee Town and Country Club in Atlanta, where Owen and his friends were welcomed into the game. Mark remains a member at Cherokee and has won the club’s senior championship eight times.

On a national scale, Burden qualified for the U.S. Senior Amateur in 2013 and 2015, making match play both times. Those are just two more chapters in Burden’s long and colorful history in a game that has shaped his life profoundly.

“The game is so special to me,” he said. “It took me from small-town Iowa to here so to me, it’s just the greatest game. It’s the best fraternity you would ever get the chance to join.”

Trent Gregory wins Golfweek Senior National in a quick playoff, and he’s just getting started

Trent Gregory is just settling into the senior amateur life. Having been retired from the software business for two years, the 57-year-old is finding his groove in the game.

Trent Gregory is just settling into the senior amateur life. Having been retired from the software business for two years, the 57-year-old is finding his groove in the game – and finding the secret to something that has long held him back in golf: the mental game.

“I think it’s more mental than anything,” Gregory said of his two tournament victories in the past seven weeks. “I certainly don’t hit the ball as well as I used to, but my ability to take advantage of the moment instead of thinking about ‘what ifs’ has made a huge difference.”

On Wednesday, Gregory defeated Michael Arasin on the first extra hole to win the Golfweek Senior National at Grandover Resort in Greensboro, North Carolina, just 75 miles west of Gregory’s home in Wake Forest, North Carolina. After both men finished at 5 over, they went back to the 18th hole, a par 5 with water down the left and in front of the green. Gregory won with a two-putt birdie.

Scores: Golfweek Senior National

In January, Gregory lost the Heron Creek Senior in a playoff, so as far as he can remember, his senior playoff record stands at 1-1. He won the Estero Senior Amateur in May before continuing on in the senior amateur circuit – a world he’s just figuring out now that he’s two years into his post-work life.

Gregory played college golf for Methodist University in the 1980s, an NCAA Division III school in Fayetteville, North Carolina, that recently won its 14th national title in program history. Back when he was on the roster, Gregory joked, Methodist played a Division I schedule.

After college, Gregory turned professional and moved south, working as an assistant club professional at the Golf Club of Miami while also playing mini-tour golf for roughly three years.

“Back then there wasn’t a whole lot of money in it and I didn’t have a whole lot of money to back me,” he said of his decision to eventually trade golf for software. “It’s worked out for the best.”

Gregory found out earlier in the week that he had secured an invitation to play the British Senior Amateur for the first time. That tournament takes place July 9-12 at Saunton Golf Club in Braunton, England. He’s also scheduled to qualify for the U.S. Senior Amateur (though the British Senior overlaps the qualifier for which he’s currently registered).

It seems Gregory has found his second life in golf, and he credits much of that to a renewed mindset that perhaps is only possible later in life.

“I wish I had the mental strength when I was younger that I do now,” he said. “I think part of it is just realizing – my friend gave me some of the greatest advice – it’s just golf. When you’re younger, sometimes it’s the end of the world. But I’m still pretty competitive and my main competition is myself.”

In the super senior division, second-round leader Stephen Fox of Pinehurst, North Carolina, held on for a four-shot victory. He finished an impressive 4 under par with Dub Huckabee in second at even par. Marcus Beck was the next-closest player at 10 over.

Jim Gallagher of Charlotte, North Carolina, edged Charley Yandell in the legend division by one shot, finishing at 4 over.

George Owens of Suffolk, Virginia, won the super legend title by a single shot also, finishing at 14 over and one ahead of Johnny Blank.

Golfweek Senior National: Stephen Fox is out front at Grandover

So far at the Golfweek Senior National at Grandover Resort in Greensboro, nobody can catch Stephen Fox.

As the U.S. Open returns to Pinehurst Resort this week, it’s fitting for a man from Pinehurst, North Carolina, to be leading a senior amateur event roughly 75 miles north up Interstate 73. So far at the Golfweek Senior National at Grandover Resort in Greensboro, nobody can catch Stephen Fox.

Fox, already a winner this year at the season-opening Gateway Senior Invitational, is 3 under through 36 holes at Grandover and has a three-shot lead in the super senior division. Fox opened the tournament with a 3-under 69 that included seven birdies and came back with an even-par round of 72 on Tuesday.

Fox, unsurprisingly, has a strong history in the North & South Senior Amateur played at Pinehurst. He finished in the top 5 the past two years and won the event in 2019 and 2020. The 2019 North and South title was part of an impressive year that included other victories at the SOS Dale Morey, Ralph Bogart Tournament and the Golfweek Senior Tournament of Champions.

Score: Golfweek Senior National

Dub Huckabee of Midland, Texas, is even par and Fox’s closest pursuer in the age division. Defending champion Bob Edens of Columbia, South Carolina, is tied for eighth.

In the senior division, another North Carolina player leads. Trent Gregory of Wake Forest is 2 over, but closely followed by Michael Arasin and Brett Allen, both at 4 over. Kevin VandenBerg, the New Yorker who won Golfweek’s Senior Player of the Year at the end of 2023 is fourth at 5 over.

Charley Yandell of Cashiers, North Carolina, leads the legend division at 3 over and Johnny Blank of Frostburg, Maryland, is 9 over and at the top of the super legend division.

Team Ohio claims U.S. Senior Challenge title; team member Jeff Mallette top senior

It’s the first time Ohio has won the event since claiming back-to-back titles in 1993 and ’94.

Jim Durr is a consistent presence at the U.S. Senior Challenge, and this year the Ohioan captained his state team to the title at Kingsmill Resort in Williamsburg, Virginia. It’s the first time Ohio has won the event since claiming back-to-back titles in 1993 and ’94.

The men from Ohio grabbed the lead in the first round of the four-man team event and never gave it up. Playing the final two rounds in a four-count-three format similar to college golf, Ohio counted two rounds of even-par 71 (both in the first round) and nothing higher than 76. The men posted a 54-hole score of 13 over.

Ohio got considerable help from Jeff Mallette, who finished 54 holes at 5 over, which was good for the individual title in the senior division. Mallette, 60, has appeared in several U.S. Golf Association championships throughout his career, playing in the U.S. Mid-Amateur as recently as 2019 and making it to the final 16 on the U.S. Senior Amateur bracket in 2023.

Scores: U.S. Senior Challenge

On the team leaderboard, the biggest threat to Ohio’s title came from Team Arkansas, captained by Bev Hargraves, who led his state team to victory in this competition in 2019.

Hargraves contributed a final-round 72 for the team, a scored matched by teammate Bob Baker. Richard Simpson added 78. Ultimately, Arkansas finished at 18 over, five shots behind Ohio.

Individually, Hargraves finished tied for second with Dan Pouliot in the legend division. Both were 4 over and one shot behind winner Brad Mosing.

Crispin Fuentes, a member of the third-place Texas team, won the super senior division with a 7-over total that included an opening 69. The super legend title went to Gary Jeffreys, Fuentes’ Texas teammate, who finished 12 over.

Bob Edens, retired mental coach, brings back deep love of the game for title defense at Golfweek Senior National

All his experience helping others perform their best mentally has left Bob Edens with a good bit of perspective when it comes to his own game.

A lot of doors have opened for Bob Edens in the name of research. Edens, a sports psychologist, always felt he needed to understand the sport in order to properly coach a student. Through the years, that led the 68-year-old through some interesting experiences, from sailing to dressage (a form of competitive horse riding), but the one that really stuck was golf.

Edens had grown up a competitive soccer player. He was a midfielder on the club team at Presbyterian College in Clinton, South Carolina (which would later become the first varsity team). But Edens, who had gone on to get his master’s degree from Western Carolina and a doctorate in exercise and sports science (with a focus in sports psychology and pedagogy) from North Carolina-Greensboro, had developed friendships with a few college golf coaches in the region, including current College of Charleston women’s golf coach Jamie Futrell, who formerly coached at Charleston Southern.

When he was asked to work with college golfers, he knew there was a piece missing.

“I had played locally at my club in their events, championship events, or whatever we had there,” said Edens, who had also started out his working life as a soccer coach. “I said you know, in order for me to understand what these young ladies are going through, I need to go play in a big event.”

Edens’ first tournament experience was the Myrtle Beach World Golf Amateur, a 72-hole net championship where thousands of players compete over 50 Myrtle Beach-area golf courses.

“I was like whoa, this is a lot of fun, and I like competing,” he said. “So that kind of gave me the push.”

Edens, who is now largely retired from coaching, speaks about his work with players practically. Asked how long the process normally takes, he notes it’s personal.

“It depends on the player, sometimes it lasts for a long time,” Edens said. “I’m still in touch with some of the players I’ve worked with twentysomething years ago, maybe even close to 30, but not much.

“It’s not about the number of sessions, it’s really about the quality of the session. Can you get to the root of the problem and then find solutions that they can, step by step, get to the next point and solve their issue? That’s really all it’s about.”

Edens remembers one of his first students, who traveled with her team as a freshman and was about to play her first collegiate tournament. By the time she arrived, she was scared to tee off, and Edens got a call from her coach. Edens drove down for a chat and attempted to reframe things.

“She ends up leading after the first round and then ends up winning the tournament,” he said. “It was pretty cool.”

All his experience helping others perform their best mentally has left Edens with a good bit of perspective when it comes to his own game.

“I just like competing. I think competition makes you a better player. It’s going to expose your flaws, it’s going to bring out the good and the bad in everybody,” he said. “Literally I just play, if I win that’s great, I’m going to do my best to win. If I don’t, hey, did I play my best? And then congratulations to the guy who won.”

Edens was in his late 30s when he took up golf, a game he always thought moved too slowly when he was a kid obsessed with soccer. He heard about the North & South Senior Amateur in Pinehurst, North Carolina, by word of mouth when he was in his mid-50s and thought it sounded fun, albeit being “big league.”

But once Edens competed in that, he saw just how extensive the senior schedule was. He competed roughly 15 times a year but doesn’t have any big-picture goals at this stage, at least in terms of player-of-the-year honors or winning big events. Edens largely competes close to home.

This isn’t something Edens, who plays out of Forest Lake Golf Club in Columbia, South Carolina, ever dreamed of doing in his retirement, but said it’s the people he meets at each tournament that keep him coming back to tee it up again and again.

This week at the Golfweek Senior National at Grandover Resort, in Greensboro, North Carolina, Edens will defend his super senior title – something he’d forgotten about in the lead-up to the event.

“That was last year so I can’t do anything about that except yeah, that was a pretty good accomplishment, so can you repeat?” he said. “Let’s go give it all we got and see if we can make some putts and hit some good shots.”