U.S. Am semis set: Tyler Strafaci advances again on 18, Aman Gupta rallies to meet him

After a bizarre victory that garnered national attention, Tyler Strafaci defeated Stewart Hagestad in the quarterfinals of the U.S. Amateur.

BANDON, Ore. – Tyler Strafaci clinched a victory on the 18th green for the second day in a row.

This time, he was able to celebrate.

After a bizarre victory that garnered national attention on Thursday, Strafaci defeated Stewart Hagestad, 1 up, in the quarterfinals of the U.S. Amateur Friday evening at Bandon Dunes. The Georgia Tech star advanced to face Aman Gupta of Oklahoma State in Saturday’s semifinal.

Strafaci was tied with Segundo Oliva Pinto heading to the 18th hole in the round of 16 when Oliva Pinto’s caddie touched the sand, a rules violation that cost his player the hole and match as Strafaci won, 1 up. Television cameras caught Strafaci’s surprise when he was told the penalty was not just a stroke, but rather a loss of hole before he consoled Oliva Pinto.

“Yesterday, I had a weird feeling leaving the course because that has never happened to me before for something to end that quickly,” said the 22-year old from Davie, Florida. “Today, I told myself that I was going to have to play one of the best rounds I’ve ever played and I think I did that.”


U.S. Amateur: Leaderboard | Photos


The match was tied before Strafaci made a par on the 17th hole to take a 1-up lead. Strafaci left a birdie putt about four feet short on No. 18, but made that putt to halve the hole and win the match.

“It would have been nice to lag that first one up closer, but making that four-footer gives me confidence,” Strafaci said. “If I have that putt tomorrow to win the match, I know I can do it.”

Hagestad, the oldest quarterfinalist at age 29 and competing in his 10th U.S. Amateur, won the first hole before Strafaci won the next hole. Strafaci got up and down from a bunker on the third, fourth and fifth holes to keep the match tied before he knocked his tee shot on the par-three sixth hole to within five feet and made the birdie putt to take his first lead.

Strafaci went 2 up with a birdie on the 13th hole before he bogeyed the next two holes as Hagestad made two pars to tie the match.

“I gave up a two-hole lead, but I had a good mindset and it didn’t bother me at all,” Strafaci said. “Yesterday, I was leaking down the stretch and felt tired, but today I felt really solid.”

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Strafaci will face a familiar foe in Gupta as the two contended at a collegiate tournament in Hawaii during the spring and paired up for a practice round last week.

Gupta was 2 down to 18-year old Michael Thorbjornsen through 10 holes before he won the 11th and tied the match with a birdie on No. 14. Gupta took his first lead with a par on the 15th hole.

“It was a dogfight,” Gupta said. “We were both hitting it good all day but struggling on the greens. When I got it back to even on No. 14, that birdie was huge and gave me the momentum because I had a tough up-and-down on No. 13.”

Gupta went back ahead with a par on the 17th hole and won the match, 1 up, when he and Thornbjornsen each made par on No. 18.

“I started to hit my stride the last six or seven holes,” Gupta said. “I was down one or two, but I knew I was still in it so I gave myself a little kick and off I went.”

SMU’s Charles Osborne will face off against Matthew Sharpstene of Charlotte in the other semifinal.

Osborne appeared to have an easy trip to the semis when he took a 4-up lead through eight holes against Arizona State’s Cameron Sisk. But Sisk won four straight holes to tie the match through 14 before Osborne rebounded to win the 15th and 16th holes.

Osborne cinched the 2-and-1 victory when he and Sisk each parred the 17th hole.

“You are pretty upbeat and excited and then it gets back to even and all that work is gone,” Osborne said. “I am thankful I was able to hold him off. I had some bad lies and hit some poor shots coming in so it was nice to win 15 and 16 to get it back.”

Sharpstene never trailed during a 4-and-2 victory over LSU’s Philip Barbaree.

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Aman Gupta keeps riding U.S. Amateur opportunity, and now with a familiar face on the bag

Aman Gupta, one of the last players into the U.S. Am, has continued to advance through the bracket and now has his college coach on the bag.

Aman Gupta just keeps showing up. The Oklahoma State player is riding out an opportunity this week as one of the last men into the U.S. Amateur field at Bandon Dunes, a bucket-list golf destination along the Oregon coast.

Consider this a condensed version of the headlines: Gupta goes from on-site alternate to Bandon Trails competitive course record-holder with his opening 7-under 64 (alas, a short-lived title after Wilson Furr replaced it 24 hours later with his own 62) to now staring a down a spot in the quarterfinals. He’s one match away.

Gupta brought a new putter to Bandon Dunes, and used it to hole 11 putts on the front nine of Bandon Trails on Monday in his opening 64. He drew two early tee times in stroke play, itself a bit of luck considering how much the wind picked up in the afternoons. But just to be playing brought a sense of relief in itself, as Gupta told media officials on Monday.


U.S. Amateur: Leaderboard | Photos


“Coming out here as first alternate with the craziness going around the world right now, I thought I had a very good chance,” he said, “and Friday afternoon when Robbie Z (of the USGA) called me and told me I was in, that was a huge relief. But I still have a tournament to play, so it was just the same as normal.”

Gupta will be entering his third year at Oklahoma State. Already this summer he has top-15 finishes at the Palmetto Amateur and Southern Amateur.

In match play this week, Gupta got through Van Holmgren, a Florida Gulf Coast transfer, on Wednesday afternoon in 16 holes. He drew Liberty’s Jonathan Yaun in the next round. It made for an interesting match, considering that Yaun was in much the same position as Gupta.

Yaun was another on-site alternate who gained entry just before the tournament started. He’s prone to exceptional hot streaks in match play, and delivered one of those in the Round of 64 when he birdied Nos. 15, 16 and 17 to take out world No. 4 amateur Davis Thompson.

Yaun demonstrated a bit of that against Gupta on Thursday morning, going birdie, eagle, par at Nos. 8-10 to turn the match in his favor.

“I knew that I’m playing good, so I didn’t really change my game plan,” Gupta said of keeping his head on straight. “I didn’t get down on myself. I was like, just keep doing what you’re doing, if you lose, you lose. But if you do what you’re supposed to do, you’re going to make a comeback.”

Gupta ultimately got it back with pars at Nos. 14 and 15, and then it got really entertaining.

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Gupta thought he had hit a terrific shot on the daunting yet reachable par-4 16th, but discovered it had taken a hard kick into a small hole in the ground. From there, Gupta hit “probably the best shot I’ve hit all week” to five feet. He missed his birdie putt, but Yaun, who had hit the green, three-putted for par.

On No. 17, Gupta scrambled for par to match Yaun, and when the two matched birdies at the par-5 18th, it was Gupta moving on.

In Gupta’s case, the man on the bag is absolutely worth noting.

When Cowboy teammate Austin Eckroat failed to qualify for match play, Gupta gained head coach Alan Bratton as a caddie. That’s particularly encouraging news for Gupta, considering that Bratton was on the bag for two of his former players in their U.S. Amateur title runs: Peter Uihlein in 2010 and Viktor Hovland in 2018.

“He’s good at figuring out the number and helping you just commit to what you have because at the end of the day you know what you need to do and you know what you need to hit that shot,” Gupta said. “He does a really good job just keeping yourself stable and giving you some good numbers, and just go play.”

If there’s a putt that needs to go down, Bratton will certainly let his man know.

“He’ll fire you up at certain times, but otherwise he’s pretty even keel,” Gupta said.

He’s going to need both if his U.S. Amateur run is to continue.

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McClure Meissner breezes to top of U.S. Amateur stroke-play leaderboard

McClure Meissner closed with birdies on 14, 16, 17 and 18 to post an 8-under 64 at Bandon Dunes in the first round of stroke play to hold the lead at the 120th U.S. Amateur.

Texas is known for producing great wind players, and two of the three leaders after the first round of stroke-play qualifying for the 120th U.S. Amateur at breezy Bandon Dunes Golf Resort in Oregon are from the Lone Star State.

McClure Meissner of San Antonio finished with a flurry of birdies on Nos. 14, 16, 17 and 18 to post an 8-under 64 Monday at Bandon Dunes to lead the 36-hole stroke-play qualifying. Travis McInroe of McKinney, Texas, shot 65 on Bandon Dunes and was in third place at 7 under. The Baylor junior birdied every other hole on the front nine.

Aman Gupta of Concord, N.C., also opened with a 64 and was 7 under on Bandon Trails, the second course used in qualifying. He did all his damage on the front nine, posting seven birdies and making the turn in 29. He parred all nine holes on the back, and the USGA reported his 64 broke the competitive record on Trails – formerly held by Chris Williams and Kevin Lim – by two shots.

Both Meissner took advantage of their early tee times before afternoon gusts made scoring more difficult.

Gupta, who plays at Oklahoma State, was added to the field after Florida’s Ricky Castillo, who would have been the highest-ranked player in the U.S. Amateur, withdrew, telling GolfChannel.com that he has experienced extreme fatigue leading up to the week. According to the report, Castillo tested negative for COVID-19 twice but wanted to protect the field just in case.

Meissner plays at SMU in Dallas. He won the Southern Amateur in July for the biggest win of his career to date.

Defending champ Andy Ogletree shot a 3-over 74 on Bandon Trails and was T-101 after one day.


Sights and sounds of Day 1 | Leaderboard


The U.S. Amateur features 18 more holes of stroke play Tuesday. The 264-player field will then be cut down to the low 64 (there will be a playoff if needed to determine the final spots among the 64), setting up the match-play portion of the championship.

Match Play will be exclusively on Bandon Dunes on Wednesday through Sunday.

How to watch

Wednesday Aug. 5 (Round of 64 matches): 6-7 p.m., Peacock (streaming); 7-9 p.m., Golf Channel

Thursday, Aug. 6 (Round of 16 matches): 6-7 p.m., Peacock; 7-9 p.m., Golf Channel

Friday, Aug. 7 (Quarterfinals matches): 6-7 p.m., Peacock; 7-9 p.m., Golf Channel

Saturday, Aug. 8 (Semifinal matches): 7-10 p.m., Golf Channel

Sunday, Aug. 9 (Championship match): 7-10 p.m., Golf Channel

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