Andrew Price wins the 99th edition of the Crump Cup at Pine Valley

The Crump Cup is the premier mid-amateur tournament in the United States.

Andrew Price won the 99th annual Crump Memorial Tournament at Pine Valley Golf Club in Pine Hill, New Jersey. He defeated Jimmy Ellis of Atlantic Beach, Florida, 2 and 1, on Sunday.

Price, of Lake Bluff, Illinois beat Bradford Tilley of Easton, Connecticut, who was the medalist in stroke play and top seed, in the morning semifinal round, 2 and 1. Price, who posted 4-over 148 in stroke-play qualifying, took down Evan Beck in the first round and then Matt McClean, both by a score of 1 up.

Ellis, who recently was the medalist at the 2024 U.S. Amateur, defeated Stewart Hagestad of Newport Beach, California in the other semifinal match.

Jamie Slonis of Sewell, New Jersey defeated Gene Elliott of Norwalk, Iowa, in 19 holes to win the Senior Crump Cup.

Gregor Orlando defeated Greg Nurse, 1 up, to win the second flight and Taylor Wood beat former Tour pro and reinstated amateur Bobby Wyatt, 4 and 3, in the third flight.

The Crump Cup is the premier mid-amateur tournament in the United States. Pine Valley is ranked second in the latest Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list.

Stewart Hagestad’s September to remember continues with Crump Cup victory

Hagestad added another prestigious trophy to his recent haul.

PINE VALLEY, N.J. – Stewart Hagestad is having a September to remember.

Hagestad added the prestigious Crump Memorial Tournament to his recent haul of trophies Saturday, defeating defending champion Stephen Behr Jr. in a playoff at Pine Valley Golf Club.

Hagestad, 32, was a member of the U.S. side that won the 49th Walker Cup at the Old Course in St. Andrews on Sept. 3. Then he claimed the U.S. Mid-Amateur championship on Sept. 13, at Sleepy Hollow in N.Y., winning the title for a third time, 3 and 2 over Evan Beck.

Stewart Hagestad kisses the Robert T. Jones, Jr. Memorial Trophy after winning the 2023 U.S. Mid-Amateur at Sleepy Hollow Country Club in Scarborough, N.Y. on Friday, Sept. 15, 2023. (Kathryn Riley/USGA)

Hagestad’s Crump Memorial began in dramatic fashion with a hole-in-one at Pine Valley’s famed par-3 10th hole (known as the Devil’s Asshole) as he posted rounds of 71-72 and tied for third in 36-hole stroke-play qualifying. (Beck earned medalist honors with a pair of 68s and a 36-hole total of 4-under 136.) Tropical Storm Ophelia forced the tournament committee to shorten the weekend match play to 18 holes of stroke play to determine the champion.  All non-championship flights were canceled.

Hagestad shot 3-over 73 in difficult conditions at Pine Valley, ranked No. 1 on Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list. He made par at the first hole, the first playoff hole, to secure the win over Behr of Alpharetta, Georgia, and claim the 98th Crump Cup.

Matthew Sughrue of Arlington, Virginia, shot a 1-under 69 to win the Senior Crump Cup. Bob Royak of Alpharetta, Georgia, finished second with a 74.

Here are 10 things you didn’t know about the Crump Cup at Pine Valley

For 100 years, the Crump Cup has been played at Pine Valley, and yet the tournament and the host club remain a mystery to many.

For 100 years, the Crump Cup has been played at Pine Valley, and yet the tournament and the host club remain a mystery to many. The course, despite maintaining its #1 ranking for decades, is unknowable to most, even more so since the tradition of allowing spectators for the Crump Cup final Sunday matches has been suspended.

But for those invited to play in the George A. Crump Memorial Tournament, it is a treasured opportunity to go behind the curtain and experience a place that most will never see, in a tournament with a set of traditions and playing conditions that make it unlike any other event on the amateur schedule. The tournament is September 22-25.

Here are 10 things you might not know about what might be the best tournament in amateur golf:

1. The tournament dinner is held after two rounds of stroke play qualifying are played to determine five match-play brackets (three mid-amateur brackets of 16 players and two senior brackets of 8 players). Since only those in the top flight have a chance at the overall championship, one of the past Crump Cup traditions has been to honor these 16 players by sitting them together at a broad table facing the rest of the players. At this table, Pine Valley flags have been laid out at each place setting, with each player awarded a flag corresponding to his match play seed (e.g., the 3rd seed receives a flag from the 3rd hole) and the next day’s opponents seated next to each other for dinner.

2. There is a 10-hole short course at Pine Valley that is sometimes used for consolation competitions for those who don’t make match play. Eight of the ten holes on the short course are replicas of approach shots on the main course.

3. There are probably fewer eagles made at the Crump Cup than in any other major tournament. The reason? It is almost unheard of to have an eagle putt. There are only two par 5s on the course, both stretching over 600 yards, and both requiring an aerial approach. Two of the par 4s, the 8th and 12th, are at times technically driveable, but the targets are so tiny that it almost never happens. So approach shot hole-outs are pretty much the only way to put two circles on the card.

4. There is no out of bounds at Pine Valley, and all structures on the course are considered through the green. So if a competitor finds his ball behind, in, or on top of one of these structures, he will not get relief. Carlton Forrester found this out at the 2012 Crump Cup, when his second shot on the long par-four 4th found the clubhouse roof, from which he got up-an-down for an all-world par.

5. The practice facility is on the opposite side of the property from the clubhouse, and so warming up before the round requires a scenic car or cart ride of nearly a mile, snaking between the 9th and 5th/6th holes, across the 7th fairway and through the woods. Like many courses built in the early 20th century, Pine Valley did not have a dedicated practice area, and so the club eventually built one (which is, not surprisingly, world-class) where it had the available land.

6. Unlike most other mid-amateur and senior majors, the Crump Cup moves its dates every year. One of the main considerations is avoiding a conflict with the U.S. Mid-Amateur, and so over the last 20 years we’ve seen the tournament start as early as September 9 and conclude as late as October 3.

7. The Rules of Golf as they pertain to bunker rakes do not apply at the Crump Cup, because Pine Valley does not have bunker rakes. So if a player finds himself in one of Pine Valley’s numerous sandy areas, which range from tiny little scrapes to sprawling wastelands, he is in a true hazard from which escape is not guaranteed. This is part of the reason why during the stroke play qualifier, players who have found the infamous “Devil’s A**hole” bunker on the 10th hole have been known to re-tee rather than risk playing a shot from the deep pit and seeing the ball roll back into a footprint or worse.

8. While the way to secure an invitation to the Crump Cup is more nebulous (you don’t ask for one, and there are no applications or open qualifiers; they will find you if they wish to invite you), the way to get un-invited is much more clear-cut. Two consecutive years of missing match play is usually a one-way ticket out of Pine Valley, as is the rarer but not unheard-of display of unbecoming conduct. The Crump Cup is a tournament for gentlemen, and players are on their best behavior on and off the course.

9. Caddies are required during the Crump Cup, and on a course where being 15 feet above or below the hole can be a 2- or 3-shot difference, a Pine Valley caddie is invaluable. A round at the Crump Cup is full of fearsome hazards, tricky reads and strategic decisions (many a player has laid up at the par-3 5th and won the hole), and success is always a team effort.

10. The tournament’s namesake, George Arthur Crump, never made it to opening day. Crump was the visionary behind Pine Valley and put everything he had into designing the course that would become No. 1 in the world. He lived on the property year-round, initially in a tent and later in a bungalow constructed near the present site of the 5th hole. He consulted with some of the great golf course architects of the day, including Harry Colt, George C. Thomas, Walter Travis and A.W. Tillinghast, and the result speaks for itself. But Crump tragically died in 1918, a year before the full 18 holes were completed. The George A. Crump Memorial Tournament was started in his honor in 1922, and 100 years later he was inducted into the New Jersey Golf Hall of Fame.

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Crump Cup: Michael Muehr wins prestigious amateur title again

Michael Muehr claimed the Crump Cup at Pine Valley for the fourth time.

Michael Muehr defeated Stewart Hagestad, 3 and 2, to win the 96th annual Crump Memorial Tournament at exclusive Pine Valley Golf Club in New Jersey.

Muehr, of McLean, Virginia, was the No. 8 seed after shooting 6-over 150 for 36 holes in stroke-play qualifying, but then dominated his opponents to win the prestigious mid-amateur invitational for the fourth time.

Muehr, who won the Crump Cup Open Division in 2008, 2014 and 2019, the last time the competition was held due to COVID-19, beat John Sawin of Pebble Beach, California, 3 and 2, in a morning semifinal match. Hagestad, of Newport Beach, California, and a member of the victorious U.S. Walker Cup team earlier this year, edged Jason Anthony of Fairfield, California, in the other semifinal.

Mike McCoy of Norwalk, Iowa, edged Matthew Sughrue of Arlington, Virginia, 2 and 1, to win the Senior Crump Cup. McCoy became the sixth player to win both the tournament’s Open and Senior divisions.

2021 Crump Cup Brackets

Crump Cup: Michael Muehr-John Sawin; Jason Anthony-Stewart Hagestad to meet in semis at Pine Valley

The semifinal matches are set for the 96th annual George Arthur Crump Memorial Tournament at Pine Valley Golf Club in New Jersey.

Three-time champion Michael Muehr of McLean, Virginia, beat tournament medalist Jeronimo Esteve of Windermere, Florida, in his morning match and Kris Mikkelsen of Atlanta in the afternoon. The 2019 champion will take on 2016 runner-up John Sawin of Pebble Beach, California, in Sunday morning’s semifinal match of the 96th annual George Arthur Crump Memorial Tournament at Pine Valley Golf Club in New Jersey. Jason Anthony of Fairfield, California, will play 2016 U.S. Mid-Amateur Champion Stewart Hagestad of Newport Beach, California, in the final four.

Defending senior champion Gene Elliott of West Des Moines, Iowa, will face his fellow Hawkeye and longtime pal Michael McCoy of Norwalk, Iowa, in a Sunday morning semifinal match of past tournament champions. Michael Kelley of Westerville, Ohio will play against Matthew Sughrue of Arlington, Virginia on the other side of the bracket.

Pine Valley Golf Club, the No. 1-ranked classic course on Golfweek’s Best list, is a private club that traditionally opens its doors on the final day of the competition. However, it will not be open to the public for Sunday’s final match of the 2021 Crump Memorial Tournament.

Here’s the bracket for all flights:

Jeronimo Esteve earns Crump Cup medalist honors at Pine Valley

Jeronimo Esteve earned medalist honors in the top flight of the Crump Cup at famed Pine Valley.

Jeronimo Esteve of Windermere, Florida, shot 71 and earned medalist honors with a 36-hole score of 141 in the Open Division of the 96th annual George Arthur Crump Memorial Tournament at Pine Valley Golf Club in New Jersey. Esteve will face three-time champion Michael Muehr of McLean, Virginia in Saturday morning’s first round of match play. (Scores and draw listed below.)

Defending Senior champion Gene Elliott of West Des Moines, Iowa, and Michael Kelley of Westerville, Ohio, shared Senior medalist honors with a 36-hole total of 145. Elliott, winner of the U.S. and British Senior Amateurs this year, will play Marty West of Rockville, Maryland, and Kelley will take on Bob Kain of Cleveland in first round matches.