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.

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.”

Preview: Back-to-back Golfweek events bring nation’s best senior amateurs to Palm Desert

When a week-long run of senior amateur golf begins on April 1, the contenders list will be deep.

When a week-long run of senior amateur golf begins at Desert Willow Golf Club in Palm Desert, California, on April 1, the contenders list will be deep.

The Golfweek Senior Division National Championship field of 90 players, ages 55 and older, will compete in one division from one distance over 54 holes. The past two champions of the event, Jerry Gunthorpe and Gary Albrecht, will return, and that only scratches the surface. The field also includes three of the top six players in the current Golfweek Senior Rankings: top-ranked Kevin VandenBerg plus Matt Avril (No. 3) and Steve Maddalena (No. 6).

Desert Willow is a public facility owned by the city of Palm Desert that includes the 18-hole Mountain View layout, where the Golfweek event will be played, as well as another 18 holes, named Firecliff. Both layouts opened in the late 1990s and have been extremely popular among community members. The design team responsible for Desert Willow includes Michael Hurdzan, Dana Fry and former PGA Tour player John Cook, plus local landscape architect Eric Johnson.

Mountain View features more water than Firecliff but also mountain views all around. The entire facility was designed to both highlight the desert landscape on which it sits – starting with the mile-long approach to the resort that allows visitors to acquaint themselves with the landscape — and operate in an environmentally sensitive way.

A year ago, Albrecht, a 66-year-old who had dropped down an age division for this event, needed an extra hole to claim his title. After winning, Albrecht got right back to it, teeing it up a day later in the Golfweek Senior Amateur. Again this year, the Senior Amateur will directly follow the Senior Division National Championship at Willow Creek on April 5-7, but will feature four separate divisions for ages 55-64, 65-69, 70-74 and 75 and over.

The Golfweek Senior Amateur also has the distinction of being one of 10 events at which senior players can earn points toward a spot on the U.S. team in the Concession Cup, a Walker Cup-style match put on by the Amateur Golf Alliance that pits the best mid-amateurs and senior amateurs from the U.S. against those from Europe.

Two-thirds of the field at the Golfweek Senior Division National Championship field will stay in Palm Desert to compete in the Golfweek Senior Amateur. That includes Albrecht, Avril and VandenBerg. Other notable names in the senior division include longtime Louisiana-based amateur Grady Brame, who has appeared in several USGA championships; Craig Hurlbert, a playing captain at the Golfweek Challenge Cup in 2022; and Allen Peake, a former member of the Georgia State House of Representatives who has become the marathon man of senior golf.

Golfweek’s top-ranked super senior Jim Starnes plus defending champion Jeff Burda highlight the 65-69 year-old division.

John Seehausen is back to defend in the Super Legends division.