Schupak: Remembering Eddie Merrins, The Little Pro

The Little Pro, by way of Merion, always had a cure for the common swing.

Word that Eddie Merrins had died on Thanksgiving Eve hit me like a cold bucket of water as I gathered in the kitchen with family and monitored the making of the next day’s feast.

Merrins, who died at 91 in Los Angeles, was one of golf’s most respected professionals, a championship-winning coach at UCLA, a beloved figure and an institution at Bel-Air Country Club. In recent years, as pro emeritus, he could still be found there impeccably dressed in a coat and tie and white-knit tam o’shanter, ready to impart his wisdom to another golfer desperate for help.

I had the privilege of writing a story for the 2013 U.S. Open preview issue on the 5-foot-7 Merrins, affectionately known as The Little Pro, and it was the start of a beautiful friendship. Without fail, he’d seek me out at every Masters, U.S. Open and PGA Championship he attended – add me to the list who received an impromptu lesson from Merrins, who advised me to start my swing in New York, flow through Chicago on the way to Los Angeles. I’d be called to the front desk of the media center at the Masters or come back to my desk and find a note that I could come to find him setting up shop on the range. One year, I dressed to the nines in a tuxedo for the Ben Hogan Award as his guest at the ceremony held annually on the Monday of the PGA Tour stop at Colonial. He’d often welcome me to Bel-Air for a get-together when I was in town for Riviera, including one time when he walked all 18 as I played.

We last spoke on June 9 and I could tell his health had deteriorated and his son, Michael, who was often by his side during his travels, complained that he wasn’t getting the care he needed. We made plans to meet up at the U.S. Open but it never came to be. Little Pro kept his word and made it to the course for the final round but I was out on the sixth tee watching Rory McIlroy play. Ten minutes later, I texted him and his son that I’d be back at the media center shortly but we never connected. Regrets, I have a few.

After getting home from the holidays, I dug up my copy from that Merion story and I’m borrowing liberally from it here because it tells the story about how for more than five decades, Merrins gave lessons to everyone from Bing Crosby to Arnold Palmer to Celine Dion and Rickie Fowler to a fellow groomsman at a wedding as the bride walked down the aisle.

“He said he was having a problem with his balance,” Merrins recalled. “What was I supposed to do?”

The man was born to teach, or so he discovered at Merion Golf Club, where he competed in the 1971 Open, and more importantly, the place his life as a teaching pro took shape.

“The discoveries I made there are still the bedrock of my teaching philosophy today,” he said in 2013.

How he arrived at Merion is a story in itself. At 24, Merrins turned pro on the eve of the Lake Charles (Louisiana) Invitational in April 1957, and cashed a check for $250. Next he qualified for the U.S. Open at Inverness Golf Club. Off Merrins went to Ohio to pursue the life of a touring pro. Or so he thought, until one night, prior to the U.S. Open, when he bellied up to the hotel bar and the direction of his life was altered.

Tommy Bolt and Walter Hagen delivered a rookie indoctrination he’d never forget, but it was another conversation with Ed Carter, who ran the PGA Tour at the time, that would shape his future. Carter informed the diminutive Merrins that Merion was seeking an assistant pro whose primary responsibility would be to play with the members. As Merrins put it, “I was looking for a job to support my habit, which was golf.”

Intrigued by the opportunity, Merrins dashed off to Philadelphia for an interview after missing the cut. There he met Francis Sullivan, the former state district attorney and personal attorney for Ben Hogan, who became a surrogate father to Merrins and later godfather to his son, Michael. Sullivan served on the board that hired Merrins on the spot.

So did Jacques Houdry, who coined Merrins’s nickname, “The Little Pro.” Houdry served as best man when Merrins wed Lisa, his bride of more than 50 years in a 1961 ceremony held in New York City. Need more evidence that the Merion members adopted him as one of their own? Consider this: “We had our wedding reception at the old Park Lane Hotel and a whole train carload of people from Merion came along,” Merrins remembered.

From 1957 until 1960, he played regularly with Guy Bates, the club champion, Andrew Davis, who once recorded 10 threes in a row at Merion, and A. Ross Crane, a Philadelphia dentist who told Merrins he might not be the best in town but he was the most expensive. He never charged Merrins a cent.

Architecturally, Merrins called Merion the finest golf course he’d ever seen.

“It’s a masterpiece,” he said. “I remember the two reigning architects of the day were Robert Trent Jones Sr. and Dick Wilson and both of them would walk around Merion all the time just to get ideas, to get visions to use in their design work.”

Merion shaped Merrins into the pro he would become. He had a passion for the game but not a love and respect for it until he spent time there, he said.

Merrins had turned pro to play the game. But at Merion, Merrins was required to teach and discovered he was a teacher at heart. His exploration of the swing happened on Merion’s lesson tee. It’s where he formed the basis for his instructional book and (later video) titled, “Swing the Handle.”

Merrins spent the winter of 1959 under the guidance of Claude Harmon at Thunderbird Golf Club, then left Merion in 1960 to become the head professional at Rockaway Hunt Club in Cedarhurst, New York, where he replaced Dave Marr.

Merrins was living the life of “an itinerant preacher.” He quit the Tour in 1962 to take the head pro job at Bel-Air, and so began a life of service.

“Being a pro golfer means caring about yourself,” Merrins said. “It seemed like a selfish existence to me. I wanted to do more.”

So Merrins spent a lifetime spreading the gospel of golf, even when it meant demonstrating the top of the backswing with an umbrella in an airport, adjusting a grip during an earthquake, or fixing a groomsman’s balance at the altar. The Little Pro, by way of Merion, always had a cure for the common swing.

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Unflappable Megan Schofill wins 123rd U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air

Schofill was steady all day during the 36-hole final in Los Angeles.

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LOS ANGELES — Billy Schofill is superstitious by trade. So it’s no surprise to hear Megan Schofill, his daughter, also is.

That’s why since it wasn’t broken, there was no point in trying to fix it.

Schofill, 22 from Monticello, Florida, was succeeding in the U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club, so Billy didn’t want to risk it and possibly jinx his daughter. So he resorted to staying at home and stressing while watching his daughter compete for her biggest title in her career on TV.

Only Billy knows what his reaction was like when she won.

Schofill was unflappable Sunday in the canyons of Bel-Air, topping fellow Floridian Latanna Stone 4 and 3 to win the 123rd U.S. Women’s Amateur. Schofill, who’s set to begin her fifth year at Auburn this coming week, took the lead for good in the 36-hole final on the 15th hole of the morning session during a stretch of three consecutive holes she won to hold a 3 up lead heading into the break. 

“I’m definitely still in shock,” Schofill said on the 15th green, where moments earlier Stone missed a par putt to halve the hole. “What an honor. This golf course was unreal. If you would have asked me coming into this week that I was going to be the champion, I would have said I got a long way to go, but you know, it just shows all the hard work has paid off and I really need to be proud of myself and just build on this.”

U.S. Women’s Amateur: Photos

Schofill and Stone, who’s set to begin her fifth year at LSU this fall, are good friends, so it wasn’t a surprise to see them chatting each other up during their walk Sunday up and down the hills of Bel-Air. 

Not until the back nine did the conversations become quiet.

Schofill led 4 up with nine holes to play, and Stone had numerous opportunities to shrink the gap, but a cold putter in the afternoon session took away any chance to dig into the lead.

Stone missed short putts on the ninth hole and 11th hole. Opportunities were there for her to claw her way back closer, but nothing fell. Earlier in the week, Stone was 5 down thru seven before winning in 20 holes, so Schofill knew no lead was safe.

“We never allowed ourselves to think about winning,” Schofill’s caddie and boyfriend, C.J. Easley, said. “It was just one shot at a time, one hole at a time. Even when we got four up with 10 to go, I just asked her to give me 10 more good holes. Give me nine more good holes. Latanna is a really good player, and she’s going to make a run. We just have to do one shot at a time.

“I don’t even have the words to describe it. It’s just super cool from my perspective to see her accomplish this. I was glad to be along for the ride.”

On Saturday night, Schofill admitted she was antsy. When her and Easley’s food didn’t arrive at 7:20 p.m. and instead came 20 minutes later, it set her off. Not as much as when Easley’s alarm went off at 4 a.m.

“I was like, ‘I’m not going back to sleep now,’” Schofill said. 

A sunny day turned cloudy and cool as the players marched down the back nine. Schofill’s worst shot of the championship came on the par-5 14th, when her tee shot sailed right and landed on mulch covering the side of the canyon. She found the ball, but with an awkward stance could only manage to get it to the rough. She ended up losing the hole. 

On the next hole, the clinching one, she wasn’t going to let the tee shot go right, but she smashed a drive up the left side. Then she capitalized, hitting her iron to about 5 feet. Stone left her second short and in the rough. After Stone’s pitch shot ran past the hole, Schofill barely missed her birdie chance, but Stone was unable to knock in the par and conceded the match.

2023 U.S. Women's Amateur
Megan Schofill kisses the Robert Cox Trophy on the iconic hole ten bridge after winning the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles, Calif. on Sunday, Aug. 13, 2023. (James Gilbert/USGA)

“The disappointments you have in the game make you want to feel those big moments that much more,” Auburn women’s golf coach Melissa Luellen said. “She’s had a couple of SEC Championships where she has been runner-up twice. For someone that has worked so hard and so talented, she hadn’t won that big tournament yet.

“This is huge. This is a game changer for someone who wins the U.S. Women’s Amateur.”

Luellen was at Bel-Air earlier in the week and told her players if they advanced to the championship match, she would be back. After a late flight from Atlanta to Los Angeles on Saturday, she was back to support Schofill for every hole Sunday.

However, being as superstitious as she is, Schofill said if she had a poor start, Luellen would have to leave. Instead, Luellen watched her team leader become the first Auburn Tiger to win a U.S. Women’s Amateur.

Schofill was emotional during the trophy ceremony, thanking her parents and Easley for their support. Earlier in the week, she said how well Easley and her worked together and how the comfortable partnership pushed her.

2023 U.S. Women's Amateur
Megan Schofill hugs her boyfriend and caddie CJ Easley after winning the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles, Calif. on Sunday, Aug. 13, 2023. (James Gilbert/USGA)

“I just felt like with him on the bag, I really don’t think without him any of this would have happened this week,” Schofill said.

It all came to fruition on the 15th green, when she hoisted the Robert Cox Trophy toward the overcast skies as tears streamed from her face. Schofill was the 123rd U.S. Women’s Amateur champion, and she finally had that elusive big title.

She’s the princess of Bel-Air.

Latanna Stone, Megan Schofill advance to U.S. Women’s Amateur championship match

The championship match is set.

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LOS ANGELES — Latanna Stone and Megan Schofill are good friends.

The two have competed against each other for four years in the Southeastern Conference, Stone playing for LSU and Schofill for Auburn. The Tigers, though from different litters, will battle for supremacy Sunday in the canyons of Bel-Air.

Stone and Schofill will play for the Robert Cox Trophy on Sunday, as the duo advanced to the championship match of the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur on Saturday at Bel-Air Country Club. What has been a stellar week in LA comes to a close with 36 holes Sunday, but one of the fifth-year golfers hailing from Florida will be a United States Golf Association champion by day’s end.

U.S. Women’s Amateur: Photos

It is the sixth U.S. Women’s Amateur appearance for both players.

Here’s what you need to know from the semifinals of the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur.

Megan Schofill making special run at U.S. Women’s Amateur with boyfriend on bag

The first time C.J. Easley caddied for Megan Schofill, it didn’t go so well.

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LOS ANGELES — The first time C.J. Easley caddied for Megan Schofill, it didn’t go so well.

Safe to say the second time is working out better.

Schofill, a fifth-year at Auburn, is one of the semifinalists at the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club. The highest-seeded player remaining in the field, Schofill took down the highest-ranked player in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, Anna Davis, to move into Saturday’s semifinal.

And having Easley, who’s set to begin his fifth year at Ole Miss this fall, on the bag has made the moment that much more memorable for Schofill.

“I didn’t putt very well in the first tournament he caddied for me,” Schofill said. “I think I was 3 over after three rounds.

“This week, he has done a phenomenal job.”

U.S. Women’s Amateur: Photos

A caddie can be an under-appreciated aspect of how well a golfer plays. In the case of Schofill, she has someone who helps keep her relaxed when tensions are high and makes strolling the rolling hills of Bel-Air a bit easier.

“I feel like it’s really hard to get a caddie you absolutely love,” Schofill said. “For me, if I have a bad hole we can talk about something else. We don’t have to harp on the bad shots. He does a great job of staying calm, which is super helpful because I can be an anxious person and he’s even keel in all aspects of his life.”

2023 U.S. Women's Amateur
Megan Schofill watches from the hole 17 green with her caddie during the quarterfinals of the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles, Calif. on Friday, Aug. 11, 2023. (James Gilbert/USGA)

Schofill will take on Michigan fifth-year Hailey Borja at 1:50 p.m. ET (10:50 a.m. local) in the second semifinal, the winner advancing to take on the winner between Rachel Heck, a senior at Stanford, and Latanna Stone, a fifth-year at LSU.

Borja has her mom on the bag this week. Heck has her dad. The homely connections are paying off in Los Angeles.

Schofill said Easley’s best moment this week came when she completely misread a putt, but he stepped in and corrected the aim point, and she drilled it. There have also been some silly moments, like bumping into each other on the green and Schofill blaming him on her poor shots.

But there’s no one else she’s rather have by her side as she tees off starting the biggest match of her life Saturday morning.

“It has been great to have him on the bag and have my best friend with me this week,” Schofill said.

Rachel Heck, Latanna Stone highlight 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur semifinalists

Here’s everything you need to know from the quarterfinals of the U.S. Women’s Amateur.

LOS ANGELES — When the name Stephen Ames comes up, it usually resonates with a not-so-good memory.

Tiger Woods beat Ames 9 and 8 in match play back in 2006, one of the biggest margins of victory in the game’s history. The term has been used when someone has a big victory in match play since.

And, well, there was a Stephen Ames situation Friday at the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club.

Quarterfinal matches teed off Friday afternoon, and among them was a dominant victory and a handful of tight matches. Among the semifinalists remains plenty of star power, including a past NCAA champion.

U.S. Women’s Amateur: Photos

Here’s everything you need to know from the quarterfinals of the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur.

Meet the quarterfinalists at the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air

The 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur is down to eight.

LOS ANGELES — After a grueling Thursday at Bel-Air Country Club, the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur is down to eight vying for the Robert Cox Trophy.

After Thursday morning’s Round of 32, winners were back on the course in the afternoon battling in the Round of 16, and eight golfers punched their ticket into the quarterfinals, which begin Friday.

Although the top-five finishers from stroke play were gone by Thursday afternoon, there was no shortage of stars battling it out in Los Angeles, and a few of them advanced to the quarterfinals. Among those include a past United States Golf Association champion, an Augusta National Women’s Amateur winner and an NCAA individual champ.

However, there are numerous others looking for their breakout performance just down the road from Hollywood.

U.S. Women’s Amateur: Photos

Here’s a look at all eight quarterfinalists at the U.S. Women’s Amateur, as well as Friday matchups and TV information.

This par 3 at Bel-Air Country Club could determine U.S. Women’s Amateur champion

“We don’t get many par 3s that are 210-215 and uphill.”

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LOS ANGELES — There’s the 12th at Augusta National. The 17th at TPC Sawgrass. The seventh at Pebble Beach.

All iconic par 3s for a variety of reasons. There’s plenty of other famous short holes across the United States.

Yet, the par-3 10th at Bel-Air Country Club is making a name for itself this week at the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur.

The hole measures 205 yards. That doesn’t tell the whole story. It plays about 15 yards uphill. And the tee shot goes from next to the clubhouse, over a canyon to a green nestled between hills that make it seem like an amphitheater. There’s also the famous swinging bridge on the left that takes players from the tee box to the green.

U.S. Women’s Amateur: Photos

“It’s really unique,” Gianna Clemente, the third seed who advanced to the Round of 32, said. “We don’t get many par 3s that are 210-215 and uphill.”

The hole has been widely talked about all week during the U.S. Women’s Amateur, and for good reason. For the first two days of stroke play, golfers faced the daunting shot one of the days as their opening shot. From the tee box, the target looks tiny compared to the canyon below and bridge on the left.

The hole almost didn’t even happen. It came about when Bel-Air lost some land to neighboring UCLA, and the canyon crossing allowed the course to use some neighboring land to build its back nine. There’s an elevator to get players to the tee box, and the bridge helps players get across to the green.

In the first two rounds, the hole averaged 3.31 and 3.38 strokes. Neither day was it the hardest hole at Bel-Air, even if it’s the most visually intimidating.

“I think people are probably a little overwhelmed when they step on the tee,” said Caroline Canales, who plays collegiately at UCLA and has played the hole roughly 100 times. “I’ve missed the green way more than I’ve hit the green. It’s just a daunting hole.”

2023 U.S. Women's Amateur
Megan Meng hits her tee shot on hole ten during stroke play playoffs at the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles, Calif. on Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2023. (James Gilbert/USGA)

Although the terrain around the green all slopes toward the putting surface, thick rough is there to hold balls up before coming down the hill. That can lead to tricky chip shots and an easy opportunity to make a bogey.

On Wednesday morning, there was a 10-for-9 playoff for the final match play spots, and golfers played the par-3 10th to begin. Eight of the 10 made par or better, including one birdie. There were also two bogeys.

Come Sunday, it’s likely the 10th hole will be pivotal down the stretch. Par is a good score, but even that may be enough to gain a shot on your opponent. There’s a good chance players who can conquer the difficult hole will find a way to be victorious the remainder of the week.

“It’s a good hole,” said medalist and top-seed Briana Chacon. “It’s hard to make birdies, but I’m happy if I’m walking away with a par.”

Teenager knocking out past champ highlights U.S. Women’s Amateur Round of 64

There was no shortage of excitement at Bel-Air on Wednesday.

LOS ANGELES — The drama and intensity picked up in a big way Wednesday at Bel-Air Country Club.

The 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur moved to match play, and the day started early with a 10-for-9 playoff. It took only two holes to get the bracket set, and then match play was underway.

Players got a little bit of everything from the weather Wednesday. Early-morning clouds gave way to plenty of midday sun with some afternoon showers, as well. However, that rain didn’t damper any of the excitement from the Round of 64 in match play, with plenty of matches going to extra holes and upsets across the board.

U.S. Women’s Amateur: Photos

Kiara Romero, the 12th seed who three weeks ago won the U.S. Girls’ Junior, is one of the big names heading home early after falling to Thienna Huyhn. However, only two of the top 10 seeds were knocked out, and plenty of stars remain in Hollywood.

Here’s everything you need to know from the Round of 64 at the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur, including best Round of 32 matchups and TV information for Thursday.

U.S. Women’s Amateur match play bracket set after 10-for-9 playoff

It’s time for match play.

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LOS ANGELES — Olivia Duan conversed with her caddie for nearly a minute while lining up her putt.

The Princeton commit was in a terrible position only five minutes before, seemingly needing a miracle to happen. And she got it.

Duan lined up, smacked the ball and watched it roll into the hole before giving a huge fist pump. After a bogey on the first playoff hole Wednesday morning at Bel-Air Country Club, Duan made par on the second, the par-4 11th, to advance as the 64th seed in match play at the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur.

Duan was one of 10 players who went to a playoff for the final nine match-play spots Wednesday morning in a cloudy Los Angeles. Players began on the par-3 10th, the 205-yard behemoth over a canyon. Eight of the 10 made par or better, leaving Duan and Texas rising sophomore Angela Heo fighting for the final spot.

U.S. Women’s Amateur: Photos

They moved on to the 11th, a downhill tee shot with water running along the left of the hole. Duan’s ball was on a severe downslope in the rough while Heo was in the middle of the fairway. All Duan could do was put her ball into the left greenside bunker. Heo found the green.

Duan got out of the bunker, leaving herself about seven feet for par. Meanwhile, Heo’s birdie putt raced past the hole and outside of Duan’s marker. Duan had to move her mark for Heo to attempt her par putt, which she missed.

Duan stalked Heo’s ball as it left her putter and raced past the hole. Then she conversed with her caddie, stepped up and knocked hers in.

The Round of 64 gets underway at 9 a.m. PT (12 p.m. ET) Wednesday. Duan will face Oregon fifth-year Briana Chacon, who set a record Tuesday en route to winning medalist honors in stroke play.

One match was decided before play began Wednesday, however. Rin Yoshida, the 24th seed, advanced to the Round of 32 without hitting a shot. Her opponent, Lauren Miller, had to withdraw Wednesday morning because of an illness.

To see the entire bracket, click here.

Briana Chacon claims medalist honors at U.S. Women’s Amateur in record fashion

Briana Chacon rewrote the record books.

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LOS ANGELES — Briana Chacon did something Tuesday morning that no golfer in the history of the U.S. Women’s Amateur has ever accomplished.

She finished stroke play at 9-under 131, a gross scoring record in the championship. In the 122 editions of the event before this year, no golfer has ever shot better than 133 in the 36-hole stroke-play format. During the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club, Chacon rewrote the record books.

Chacon, a fifth-year player at Oregon, will be the top seed in match play, which begins Wednesday morning. Ole Miss fifth-year Andrea Lignell had a chance to tie Chacon with a par on the 18th hole, but she made double bogey after hitting her tee shot in a fairway bunker. Lignell was 7 under before the blunder, but she carded a 5-under 65 on Tuesday.

“I didn’t really play in too many events this summer,” Chacon said of her prep for the U.S. Women’s Am. “But I worked really hard on my putting the past few months. That’s always been my missing piece. I got a coach, worked really hard and it paid off.”

U.S. Women’s Amateur: Photos

Chacon shot 5-under 65 on Tuesday morning to follow up with her opening 4-under 66 Monday, when she shared the lead with fellow Californian Caroline Canales, who is playing a true home game this week. Canales, who tied for fifth in stroke play at 4-under 136, plays collegiately at UCLA.

“I think the greens are faster than normal,” said Canales, who mentioned she plays the course about twice a week during the season. “I didn’t expect them to be this fast. On the flip side, I do think they’ve cut the rough a bit, which evens it out.”

Lignell will be No. 2 seed come match play, but her and Chacon will have to wait to see their opponents.

2023 U.S. Women's Amateur
Briana Chacon shares a laugh with her caddie Greg Puga after hitting her tee shot on hole 18 during the second round of the 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles, Calif. on Tuesday, Aug. 8, 2023. (James Gilbert/USGA)

Come Wednesday morning, there will be a 10-for-9 playoff for the final match play spots. Charlotte Cantonis birdied her final hole, meaning 65 players were inside the cut line and forcing a playoff.

The playoff will begin at 7 a.m. Wednesday on No. 10, the 205-yard par-3 over a canyon. The scoring average on the hole this week is 3.35.

Gianna Clemente, who won the Junior PGA Championship last week in Arkansas, continued her strong play with a 5-under 65 performance Tuesday afternoon, giving her the third seed for match play. At last month’s U.S. Girls’ Junior, Clemente was the 18th seed and made the semifinals, losing to eventual champion Kiara Romero, an incoming freshman at Oregon.

Clemente said she’s not worried about burning out with her recent busy stretch and is looking forward to match play.

“I love playing competitive golf and never get sick of it,” Clemente said. “I knew I had a busy schedule coming into the summer, but it has been really fun to travel to a lot of new places, and I’ve got a lot of golf left in me.”

Romero and Clemente were paired together the first two rounds, with Romero also making match play after shooting 2-under 138. 2021 U.S. Women’s Amateur champion Jensen Castle, a fifth-year at Kentucky, will be a part of the playoff.