Meet the amateurs to make the cut at the 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club

When the week started, more than 10 percent of the field was comprised of amateurs, and that number could’ve been higher.

When the week started, more than 10 percent of the 2023 U.S. Open field was comprised of amateurs, and that number could’ve been higher.

Sure, top-ranked Gordon Sargent is in the field, as well as No. 2 Michael Thorbjornsen and No. 9 Michael Brennan. In total, 19 amateurs teed it up the first two days at Los Angeles Country Club, but most of them are packing their bags after two days on the West Coast.

Only four amateurs earned weekend tee times and will vie for the low-amateur medal, which is awarded during Sunday’s trophy presentation at the conclusion of play.

Here’s a look at the amateurs who made the cut at the 2023 U.S. Open.

2023 Masters: Meet the 7 amateurs teeing it up at Augusta National

The amateur talent is deep.

When it comes to the seven amateurs teeing it up at Augusta National next week, there’s no shortage of star power.

There are numerous USGA champions and an NCAA champ. Winners of prestigious amateur events from around the world. For some, it’s their first time at the famed Masters tournament in what each hopes will be a long stretch of making the trek down Magnolia Lane every April.

The seven ams will compete for the title of low amateur. If they make the 36-hole cut, then they will battle for the Silver Cup. An amateur has never won the Masters, but the tournament has plenty of history involving ams, including the famed Crow’s Nest, the living space on the third floor of the Augusta National clubhouse, and the Monday night Amateur Dinner.

Here’s a look at the seven amateurs competing in the 2023 Masters.

College golf notebook: Vanderbilt, Oklahoma duel at Frederica Cup, Oakland women win in coach’s debut

It has been a busy first week of college golf.

If the first week of college golf is any indication, we’re in for a doozy of a season.

Rose Zhang and Stanford dominated in the Carmel Cup at Pebble Beach. Teammates at Holy Cross recorded albatrosses on the same hole in the same group. In an inaugural event, the Frederica Cup, multiple team scoring records were set and even an NCAA record was broken.

Nevertheless, college teams are back in action across the country for the fall season with plenty of big tournaments slated for the remainder of the calendar year, as well.

Golfweek takes a loop around the country to update you on all the latest news in the college game.

Men

Haskins Award: Preseason watch list for 2022-23 season

Vanderbilt had a season-opening win to remember.

In the Frederica Cup at Frederica Golf Club in St. Simons Island in Georgia, which counted the five best scores from six golfers (as opposed to the normal four-count-five scoring format), top-ranked Vanderbilt blistered the field to the tune of 69 under to record a victory at the inaugural event, winning by three shots against No. 9 Oklahoma. William Moll won the individual title at 19 under, beating teammate Cole Sherwood by one stroke.

There was a weather delay with three holes to play, and the teams were tied at 67 under. Then Vanderbilt pulled away once play began again.

Texas Tech’s Ludvig Aberg, the 2022 Ben Hogan Award winner, finished in third at 17 under, and Oklahoma freshman Jase Summy shot 15 under, along with teammate Drew Goodman and Mississippi State’s Ford Clegg.

Meanwhile, Wright State picked up right back where it left off last season. The Raiders won the Earl Yestingsmeier Invitational, the second straight season Wright State has won the event. Mikkel Mathiesen won the individual title after a playoff.

At the Fighting Irish Classic, Florida came away with the victory but mid major Georgia Southern finished only a stroke behind the Gators. Ben Carr, who finished runner-up at the 2022 U.S. Amateur, finished in solo fourth at 8 under. Teammate Mason Williams was a shot better at 9 under in third.

Colorado’s Dylan McDermott captured the title in a playoff, finishing at 10 under and tied with North Carolina’s David Ford.

Missouri won both the team and individual titles at the Tiger Turning Stone Intercollegiate. The Tigers defended their title from last year with the 11-stroke victory over runner-up, Stetson, and Jack Lundin finished at 13 under to win the individual crown.

Women

ANNIKA Award: Preseason watch list for 2022-23 season

Sarah Burnham got off to a great start in her head coaching career at Oakland.

In her first tournament as coach, Oakland captured the A-Ga-Ming Invitational in Kewadin, Michigan. Oakland won by three strokes over host Central Michigan. Freshman Bridget Boczar tied for first at 4 over but lost in a playoff to Eastern Michigan’s Alyssa DiMarcantonio. Paige Scott finished tied for third at 5 over for Oakland.

Western Kentucky freshman Sydney Hackett earned her first collegiate win in her first start for the Hilltoppers at the USA Intercollegiate at Magnolia Grove Crossing Golf Course in Mobile, Alabama. The freshman fired a school-record 10-under 206 for her 54-hole total, including a final-round 4-under 68, to claim the championship.

It is the first time a Lady Topper has taken home an individual championship since Megan Clarke won the Little Rock Golf Classic in Fall 2018.

Arkansas State won the event at 14 under par, beating South Alabama by five strokes.

On Monday, the ANNIKA Intercollegiate gets underway in Lake Elmo, Minnesota, right outside of St. Paul. The 54-hole event features some of the top women’s college golf teams in the country, including Wake Forest, Oregon and defending champion South Carolina.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

2022 U.S. Amateur: Sam Bennett outlasts Ben Carr to win title at The Ridgewood Country Club

Sam Bennett of Texas got an early lead and never looked back.

Sam Bennett hasn’t been shy about his intentions.

The 22-year-old fifth-year senior at Texas A&M has been boisterous and bombastic all week at the 2022 U.S. Amateur at The Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus, New Jersey. The third-ranked player in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, Bennett, from Madisonville, Texas, has gone through a tumultuous gauntlet to get into Sunday’s championship match, yet he never lacked confidence at any point in any match.

He often called himself the best player in the field throughout the week. He proved it Sunday.

Bennett claimed the 122nd U.S. Amateur championship with a 1-up victory against Ben Carr of Georgia. Bennett trailed only two holes during match play all week, beatings Nos. 8, 9, 10, 13 and 27 in the WAGR before Sunday’s championship match. Carr, who will be a fifth-year senior at Georgia Southern this coming school year, was ranked higher than Bennett’s other five opponents combined (No. 70).

“I have the utmost respect for Ben Carr,” Bennett said. “He wouldn’t go away. After lunch, he started dropping in putts and chips from everywhere. It made me pretty nervous. Luckily, I was able to finish it off with a good iron shot on the last.”

U.S. Amateur: Scoring | Photo gallery

By virtue of making the championship match, both players earned invitations to the 2023 U.S. Open at The Los Angeles Country Club and a likely invitation to the 2023 Masters.

Bennett is the first golfer from Texas since Kelly Kraft in 2011 to win the Havemeyer Trophy. He was 3 up after 18 holes, taking the lead for good on the ninth hole, and he never trailed against Carr.

To begin the afternoon session, Bennett won two of the first three holes before Carr responded, winning consecutive holes to make the deficit 3 down with 12 to play. Carr won the 28th hole, No. 10, to get to 2 down, but Bennett responded and won with a par on the 30th, No. 12, to go back 3 up.

On the next hole, the par-5 13th, both players hit their second shots out of bounds and bogeyed the hole. On the next hole, Bennett missed a par putt that lipped out, making his lead 2 up with 4 to play.

On the 34th hole, the par-4 16th, Bennett’s shot from the fairway ended up short in the rough. Carr, meanwhile, was in the rough and landed his wedge pin high, but his ball trickled to the back of the green. Both players made par, and moved to the par-5 17th. Carr got up and down from a greenside bunker for birdie, and Bennett was unable to make a shorter birdie putt of his own, so they marched to the 18th.

Carr’s tee shot came to rest in the right rough while Bennett found the fairway. Then, Bennett stuck a tight approach to 15 feet while Carr’s ball ran long over the green. His chip shot came out soft, and Bennett nearly made his birdie putt, which clinched the match.

“I’m OK,” Carr said. “Congrats to Sam. He’s an awesome player and a great guy. It’s what you dream of as a kid, but it didn’t work out the way I wanted. I couldn’t have lost to a better competitor.”

[listicle id=778291775]

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

U.S. Amateur: Sam Bennett and Ben Carr advance to championship final at The Ridgewood Country Club

It all comes down to this.

Sam Bennett looked as if he was going to cruise into the finals of the 122nd U.S. Amateur.

The 22-year-old fifth-year senior from Texas A&M was 2 up with five to play in his semifinal match against Dylan Menante at The Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus, New Jersey. Yet on the 17th tee, the match was tied. Menante, a senior at North Carolina, sat in the middle of the fairway while Bennett watched his drive leak right into the trees.

Bennett’s ball came to rest nearly against the trunk of a huge tree. He and his caddie spoke at length about his options, and he opted to hit a high draw that somehow avoided further tree trouble and settled in a fairway bunker. Menante’s 3 wood second shot settled just short of the green.

However, Bennett didn’t let being behind the 8-ball bug him. He flushed his shot out of the bunker and was inside Menante once both players were on the green, and he sank the birdie putt, which ended up being the difference in a 1 up victory to advance to the U.S. Amateur finals on Sunday.

Bennett will face off against Ben Carr, a fifth-year senior at Georgia Southern, in the 36-hole final on Sunday. Carr topped Derek Hitchner, 3 and 2, catching fire on the back nine to advance to the championship match.

Both Bennett and Carr secured spots in the 2023 Masters and 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club by advancing to the final.

Menante, No. 8 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, didn’t challenge Bennett on the final hole. Menante’s tee shot was right and his second shot short of the green in the rough. Bennett, meanwhile, found the fairway and hit a 7-iron to about 15 feet for birdie, giving a vicious club twirl after hitting the shot.

For Bennett, he continues his stellar run. None of his opponents have been ranked lower than No. 27 in the WAGR.

Carr, 22, from Columbus, Georgia, capitalized on a strong back nine. He won three holes in a four-hole stretch, including birdies on the par-5 13th and par-4 14th, to go 3 up. He narrowly missed a short birdie putt on the par-3 15th to clinch victory, but he ended up winning with a par on the next hole.

No. 70 in the WAGR, Carr is looking to become the first current or former Georgia Southern player to win the U.S. Amateur since alum Stewart “Buddy” Alexander captured the 1986 title at Shoal Creek.

There was also an emotional moment for Carr in his post-round interview. He uses a special ball marker to commemorate his father, who died in 2019. But, it went missing.

“On the first tee, I couldn’t find it,” Carr told Smiley Kaufman, who’s working as a reporter for Golf Channel, after the match. “I emptied out my pockets, there was nothing. I emptied out my bag. I couldn’t find it in my bag.”

But then he found it right before clinching his match.

“I’m over my putt on 16, and it’s just in my left pocket,” Carr said. “I don’t know how. I sweat to God, I checked. I check my pocket, I swear to God.”

U.S. Amateur: Scoring | Photo gallery

U.S. Amateur semifinal results

  • No. 36 Sam Bennett (Madisonville, Texas) def. No. 16 Dylan Menante (Carlsbad, California), 1 up
  • No. 34 Ben Carr (Columbus, Georgia) def. No. 59 Derek Hitchner (Minneapolis), 3 and 2

U.S. Amateur final schedule

  • No. 36 Sam Bennett vs. No. 34 Ben Carr, Sunday, 8 a.m.

How to watch

Sunday, August 21
36-hole championship match, Golf Channel: 2–5 p.m. ET

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=01evcfxp4q8949fs1e image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

And then there were four: Meet the semifinalist at 2022 U.S. Amateur

The 2022 U.S Amateur is down to the final four.

After five days of action-packed golf, four players remain at the 2022 U.S. Amateur in Paramus, New Jersey.

The two rounds of stroke play were held at Ridgewood Country Club and Arcola Country Club, but since match play started with the Round of 64, Ridgewood has been the lone host.

Created in 1895, the U.S. Amateur is the oldest of the USGA’s 15 championships. After the marathon Thursday featuring the Rounds of 32 and 16, Friday had four matches

One of the biggest storylines entering the quarterfinals was Nicholas Gross, a 15-year-old from Pennsylvania, who took down the No. 8 seed Luke Potter in the Sweet 16. Gross, however, fell in his Friday match.

U.S. Amateur: Scoring | Photo gallery

U.S. Amateur quarterfinal results

  • No. 16 Dylan Menante (Carlsbad, California) def. No. 56 Nicholas Gross (Downingtown, Pennsylvania), 4 and 3.
  • No. 36 Sam Bennett (Madisonville, Texas) def. No. 21 Stewart Hagestad (Newport Beach, California), 3 and 2.
  • No. 34 Ben Carr (Columbus, Georgia) def. No. 26 Alex Price (Hillsboro, Virginia), 2 and 1
  • No. 59 Derek Hitchner (Minneapolis) def. No. 51 Shea Lague (Jamul, California), 3 and 2.

U.S. Amateur semifinal schedule

  • No. 16 Dylan Menante vs. No. 36 Sam Bennett, Saturday, 2 p.m. ET
  • No. 34 Ben Carr vs. No. 59 Derek Hitchner, Saturday, 2:20 p.m. ET

How to watch

Saturday, August 20
Semifinals, Golf Channel, 3–6 p.m. ET

Sunday, August 21
36-hole championship match, Golf Channel: 2–5 p.m. ET

Ben Carr goes on three-day birdie blitz to win his second Southeastern Amateur title

There’s a reason Ben Carr stars the Southeastern Amateur on his calendar each year. The Georgia Southern senior has won his home event for a second time.

There’s a reason Ben Carr stars the Southeastern Amateur on his calendar each year. Playing at his home course – Country Club of Columbus (Georgia) – Carr showed again on Friday why that is. The soon-to-be senior at Georgia Southern made just one bogey in 54 holes to win his second Southeastern title, becoming the 16th player in the tournament’s 92-year history to do that. (Allen Doyle holds the record of five career victories from 1983 to 1992.)

Carr’s latest title was more a story of steady versus drama. In the summer of 2019, Carr all but wrapped up the title with his third-round 9-under 61, a CC of Columbus record. Asked to recall that round early week, Carr found he could still replay it in his mind easily.

“I remember it very well,” he said. “I guess I remember the entire scorecard now that I think about it.”

Related: Two years ago, the Southeastern Am title set off Ben Carr’s rise

This time, Carr never strayed very far from that number, recording rounds of 64-62-63 that left him at 21 under and once again produced a 10-shot win.

Mississippi State’s Garrett Johnson finished second at 11 under followed by Clemson’s Zack Gordon at 10 under.

Carr made only one bogey the whole week – at the par-3 fifth hole in the second round. It followed four birdies he had made to open. Remarkably, he never recorded a nine-hole score higher than 32.

Like in 2019, Carr had younger brother Sackett on his bag. The two are particularly close and Carr said that his brother’s presence was one thing that made his 2019 that much more special.

Carr will tee it up again at the Western Amateur next month before beginning his senior season at Georgia Southern.

[lawrence-related id=778117928,778056069]

Two years ago, Ben Carr made magic at the Southeastern Amateur to spark an upward progression that hasn’t stopped

A magical round and a 10-shot victory at the 2019 Southeastern Amateur put Ben Carr on a steady upward trajectory.

On Southeastern Amateur week, Ben Carr’s Georgia Southern teammates flood his hometown of Columbus, Georgia. There are so many competing this week – six, counting him – that the Carrs can’t put them all up. But that’s part of what makes the week special for the 20-year-old team captain.

“I definitely star it on the calendar every year,” said Carr, who opened his sixth consecutive Southeastern with a 6-under 64 at Country Club of Columbus to land one off the lead.

Two years ago, Carr gave his people reason to linger. In the third round, he had posted 9-under 61 to set the scoring record at CC of Columbus. Even after holing out for an eagle on the second hole, Carr wasn’t thinking 61 until he reached 7 under on the 14th hole. He birdied No. 18 to beat his low competitive round by three shots.

Scores: Southeastern Amateur

With his brother Sackett, three years younger, on the bag, Carr took an eight-shot lead into the final round. He closed with 68 and ended up winning by 10 shots. It was a colossal breakthrough after a freshman season in which Carr had been the No. 2 scorer on a Georgia Southern team that reached the NCAA Championship for the first time since 2010. Golfstat named the Eagles’ freshman class the best in the country.

“Going into the rest of that summer, it just made me feel like I was a better player than I thought I was beforehand,” Carr said of his Southeastern title. “That’s huge in golf. I think you can ride confidence for months. I think I was able to do that that summer.”

Carr finished in the top 5 in his next three tournaments and qualified for the 2019 U.S. Amateur at Pinehurst. He has won two college events since, and ties those back to the Southeastern, too.

Every one of Carr’s teammates who teed it up in Columbus that week stuck around not for the golf, but for their guy. Carr’s father David, then 52, had passed away three months before the Southeastern Amateur. The win at home was going to be emotional. Carr remembers giving interviews after his 61 and not being able to finish them.

“There were definitely a lot of tears shed after the third round and after the final round,” he said.

David Carr introduced his son to golf at the Country Club of Columbus. Ben has pictures of himself playing there when he was as young as 4 even though his earliest memories begin at 7.

As a kid, his dad drove him to golf tournaments and, before that, coached his baseball and basketball teams. The results didn’t matter so much to his dad as the way you treated people and the way you carried yourself. So while winning at home would certainly have made his dad proud, Carr knows there’s more to it than that.

“I know he was definitely happy that I won but I think he’s a lot more proud of the way I did it and the way I went about … just proud of the way I carry myself,” Carr said. “At least I hope he was just throughout that week since it was fresh on my mind.”

In the weeks after his dad passed, Carr closed ranks with his mom and brother. Georgia Southern head coach Carter Collins watched Ben become a rock for Sackett – calling him after each round of golf. Sackett will be a freshman at the University of Georgia this fall.

“I can’t tell you how good of an older brother he is,” Collins said.

But Ben hours spent working through his grief in Collins’s office, too. Support came from the whole team, particularly senior Steven Fisk, with whom Carr had become especially close.

“I don’t know if I would have handled it as well as I did if not for people like Coach and Steven just being there for me throughout the entire thing,” Carr said.

Carr still played through that spring’s postseason, finishing seventh at the Sun Belt Conference Championship and 33rd in the NCAA Stanford Regional.

Georgia Southern finished 26th as a team at the NCAA Championship, with Fisk finishing runner-up to Matthew Wolff individually. Carr got a front-row seat – this after spending many nights on the road during his freshman year listening to Fisk dissect a round. Carr loved to soak in anything Fisk had to say about golf.

“I can think of five or six specific times (Steven) told me was going to win before the week started and he won,” Carr marveled. “Just being around somebody that has that level of confidence, it kind of transferred over.”

In addition to rooming together, the two practiced together frequently. Collins called Fisk’s influence a trampoline in Carr’s progression as a player. Fisk was a First-Team All-American who won a total of nine times at Georgia Southern. In the 2018-19 college golf season, he brought Georgia Southern to the forefront but the Eagles never really left. Carr is a big reason for that. After winning the Southeastern Amateur, his game kept spiraling upward. He was a captain this past season as a junior and plans two more years on the roster.

“I just don’t want to leave,” he said.

As captain, Carr tries to build up his teammates as much as possible. He’ll try to rally them if the team has played through a particularly tough stretch of tournaments.

“You always hear the phrase pay it forward,” Collins said. “All the mentorship and the leadership he has received from guys before him, he has paid it five times back already. So I’m really excited about what he can do for us from a leadership standpoint.”

Collins sees similarities between Carr and Fisk in the way both are able to compartmentalize success – how they put a situation behind them quickly and ready for the next one.

With Carr’s Southeastern Amateur win, Collins saw the start of a steady progression. Carr proved his talent to himself and to his peers.

“Ben became a lot tougher from that situation, not that he wasn’t tough before,” Collins said. “That really inspired him to be so good to others.”

It’s the thing that mattered most to David Carr.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01es6rjnsp3c84zkm6 player_id=none image=https://golfweek.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]