From farm to tee box: Get to know 2022 Golfweek Challenge Cup Captain Craig Hurlbert

Hurlbert’s incredible 2020 season was capped off by being named Golfweek’s Player of the Year.

Craig Hurlbert spent his summers with his grandfather on his farm in northeast Montana. It was there that he not only was taught the game of golf, but life lessons that have propelled him to the highest places in both business and amateur golf.

Hurlbert’s grandfather, Carl, immigrated from Denmark in 1923. His grandmother, Marie, came over with her family in the early 1900s. They were processed at Ellis Island like so many other European immigrants during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Married in 1930, the couple settled in Montana and in 1940 began what has now become Wheat Wind Farms.

Fast forward 36 years and a 13-year-old Craig picked up a golf club for the first time with his Bapa. The two would play in a league twice a week at Big Muddy Golf Club when Craig helped on the farm in the summer. 

Now defunct, Big Muddy was a nine-hole sand-green golf course where they hayed the fairways twice a year. This is where Hulbert and his grandfather fell in love with the game of golf.

“He wasn’t a great player,” Hulbert told Golfweek. “But there’s nobody that loved the game more than he did…He had such a happy spirit on the golf course. He made it super fun. It wasn’t something that I dreaded to do.”

As he grew older, Hurlbert got better at the game back home in Billings “on real golf courses” where he truly honed his craft. 

After playing collegiately for a year at New Mexico State, Craig left collegiate golf to study finance and business at San Diego State. Soon after, he earned a Masters degree in corporate finance at Long Beach State. From there, Hurlbert launched himself into the business world.

This left a gap in his golf game. Hurlbert didn’t really play competitively until he started knocking the ball around with some elite senior amateurs at his home club, Carlton Woods, in Houston, Texas.

“I was right there with them.” he said. “I started saying to myself ‘jeez, maybe my game can stack up.’”

At the time, Hurlbert was in no man’s land. At 53, he was too old to hang with the mid-ams regularly and too young to play in most senior events. He used the time as an advantage. With about two years to reform his game into competitive shape, Hurlbert was ready to take on the senior amateur circuit.

Upon turning 55 in the summer of 2017, he dipped his toe in the water, playing just a few events. In 2018 and ’19 he played nearly 30 events combined. He was consistent throughout with eight top 10s, a quarterfinals trip to the Golfweek Senior Amater Matchplay and a runner-up finish at the 2019 Golfweek Tournament of Champions. Although successful, Hurlbert wasn’t satisfied. It was in November 2019 that he turned to his wife, Stephanie, for help.

Stephanie played professionally on the then-Symetra Tour for a handful of years and understands what it’s like to play under pressure against some of the best in the world. 

“I came home at the end of ‘19 and said ‘I’m not going to do this anymore if I can’t win,’” Craig recalls telling Stephanie. 

She replied with a simple question: What is happening to you under pressure? The question proved to find the flaws as Craig began to be fully honest with himself about his game when under the gun. He worked tirelessly on short putts and worked his driver from a draw to a fade. 

“I bet I hit a million five-foot putts between November 15th and January 1st,” Hulbert chuckled. “The draw turned into something I couldn’t control under pressure… So I just worked on hitting a baby fade. I literally wore out a driver I hit so many drivers.”

Already a premier ball striker with plenty of distance, Craig set out into the 2020 season with a refreshed mindset and hunger. Combine that with the lessons he learned as a teenager on the farm with his Bapa, Hurlbert was sure to break out.

Teeing it up at the Old Corkscrew Senior to begin his 2020 season, Hurlbert was able to reap what he sowed during the offseason. He not only won his first senior amateur title, but he did so in a playoff against the 2019 Golfweek Player of the Year, Ken Kinkopf.

Proving it wasn’t a fluke, Hurlbert followed the win up with another win the following week and a third-place finish after that. The start of a great season was supplemented with another win at the Golfweek Senior National Matchplay and the Society of Seniors Founders Cup. With just one finish outside the top 15, Hurlbert’s incredible 2020 season was capped off by being named Golfweek’s Player of the Year.

“It was a process of playing and learning what you didn’t do good enough,” he said. “I had to play in 18-20 events for two years to really understand what was going on inside of my body.”

After such an impressive year, Hurlbert took 2021 off to focus on his business ventures. On December 3, 2021, Local Bounti, a company that he co-founded in 2017 and is the CEO of, went public at the New York Stock Exchange.

The company is quite literally centered around his roots.

Local Bounti is an agricultural company that produces sustainable and non-GMO greens year round and is headquartered in Hamilton, Montana, just a few hours west of Billings where Hurlbert grew up.

With lessons that started on the banks of the Big Muddy River in Montana at a nine-hole sand-green golf course, Hurlbert has continued his grandfather’s American dream. 

Armed with his grandfather’s wisdom, a killer golf game and savvy business senses, Hurlbert looks to defend his team’s title at the 2022 Golfweek Senior Challenge Cup. He captained his team to a win over Gene Elliott’s squad in the 2021 Cup. Facing off against Rusty Strawn’s team this year, Hurlbert will be a playing captain as his team looks to repeat.

“Rusty (Strawn) is a dear friend,” said Hurlbert. “When we play in these tournaments, three, four, five of us all go out to dinner for the couple nights that we’re there… I’m really looking forward to the Cup this December and getting the guys back together.”

The 2022 Golfweek Challenge Cup will be played at Jacaranda Golf Club’s East Course in Plantation, Florida, December 14-16. Captains select players via blind draw to add to the drama of such a fun and competitive week.

Registration for the Challenge Cup is still open here.

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Jerry Gunthorpe wins Golfweek Senior Division National Championship

Jerry Gunthorpe tracked down 36-hole leader Jerry Slagle to claim the championship.

The Firecliff Course at Desert Willow Golf Club in Palm Desert, California, played host to an eventful and dramatic Golfweek Senior Division National Championship.

The 54-hole event was graced by some of the best senior amateur golfers in the nation, with one man claiming his title and 1,200 points towards the year-long race for the Golfweek Player of the Year honor.

In the final round, Ovid, Michigan’s, Jerry Gunthorpe tracked down 36-hole leader Jerry Slagle on Tuesday to claim the championship. Behind by three strokes to start the final round, Gunthorpe made easy work of the front nine, carding a 2-under 34.

“Things were clicking,” Gunthorpe told Golfweek. “It started out easy right away.”

Slagle was not as fortunate with double bogeys on Nos. 5 and 8, erasing a birdie on No. 2, for an opening 39.

The five-shot swing put Gunthorpe in the driver’s seat at the turn. He relied on previous experiences on big stages both at the state level in Michigan and the national level as he came up just short to Gene Elliott in the 2021 U.S. Senior Amateur.

“When I have a little bit of adrenaline, that means it matters to me,” Gunthorpe said. “If it doesn’t matter to me, I don’t do as well. When I feel the butterflies, or whatever that feeling is, that means it matters to me.”

Finding his why helped Gunthorpe stave off a late run by Slagle. Sitting at 4 over through 13 holes, Slagle turned on the jets, birdieing three of his last five holes in an attempt to make Gunthorpe feel the pressure. Gunthorpe stayed the course, swapping a birdie and bogey to close out a round of 2-under 70 and the championship.

In an interview following Sunday’s first round, Gunthorpe foreshadowed a bit saying that he always felt like he belonged in competitive senior golf.

“I always knew that I would [belong in competitive golf],” he said. “Every time I’ve competed, I’ve done well. I haven’t competed a lot, but when I have, I’ve been successful I feel.”

Well, to come back against one of the hottest hands of the week, in Slagle while also holding off the rest of the field is a success in anyone’s book.

Gunthorpe is expected to make a big jump in the Golfweek senior amateur rankings from his current spot at No. 37.

Slagle makes the trip back to Southlake, Texas, with much to be happy about as he recorded a tournament-high 16 birdies. Billy Mitchell, the 2021 U.S. Senior Open low-am, took home a solo third-place finish after a 1 over to finish at even par.

Greg Sanders (1 over) of Anthem, Arizona, and Steve McPherson (2 over) of San Jacinto, California, round out the top five.

The next Golfweek Senior amateur event will be a full-field event at the Golfweek Senior Amateur Championship at PGA West in La Quinta, California starting March 31.

Golfweek Player of the Year Classic set to kick off 2022 Player of the Year race

The event will be contested January 16-18 at Tampa Palms Country Club.

The 2022 Golfweek Player of the Year Classic, held at Tampa Palms Country Club in Tampa, Florida, allows both reflection and elite competition.

The event will be contested January 16-18 with the top three players of the 2021 season from each division being honored at a dinner following the first round of play. Gene Elliott will also be presented with his well-deserved lifetime accolade: the Yancy Ford Award.

Featuring three different divisions, the Golfweek POY Classic is a who’s who of senior amateur golf. Elliott, the defending U.S. and British Senior Amateur champion, joins Jerry Gunthorpe, Bob Royak, Allen Peake, 2020 POY Classic champion John Wright, and 2021 Golfweek Senior Player of the Year and defending POY Classic champion, Rusty Strawn, in the senior division.

The super senior division is up for grabs with 2021 champ, Tim Pope not in the field. In the Legends division, it’s Jim Kamis who is welcomed as both the 2021 Player of the Year and defending champion.

Super Legend and St. Augustine, Florida, native Walt Martin is salivating to tee it up in the new year. Last January, Martin began his 2021 campaign by sweeping all of the January events, including the Player of the Year Classic at Lake Jovita. He’ll be itching to run it back this year at Tampa Palms Country Club. Martin earned Super Legend Player of the Year honors thanks in large part to his strong start last January.

Hopes to become the 2022 Golfweek Player of the Year start Sunday morning. The first piece of the coveted puzzle locks into place Tuesday afternoon after four new champions are crowned to kick off the 2022 Player of the Year race.

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Gene Elliott named Golfweek’s 2021 Yancy Ford winner

Thea ward is presented to an individual who has made significant contributions to senior-amateur golf.

The Yancey Ford Award is presented annually by Golfweek to an individual who has made significant contributions to senior-amateur golf. This year it will be presented on January 16, 2022, at Tampa Palms CC following the first round of the Golfweek Player of the Year Classic.

Gene Elliott may just be the most fitting recipient of the award.

The Bettendorf, Iowa, native has created an impact well beyond the Hawkeye state. Gene has competed on the national level his whole career. With both British and U.S. Senior Amateur victories in 2021, Elliott has plenty to be thankful for as the calendar turns to 2022.

However, it’s what Elliott has done off the course that has piqued the interests of the Yancy Ford Award committee. Helping save the Iowa Golf Association (IGA) back in the late 1990s and early 2000s, Elliott has been a big part of what the IGA has become.

“It was kind of a turbulent time,” Elliott told Golfweek. ”I just want[ed] to make golf better.”

Elliott did just that. After a couple of years on various boards for the IGA, Elliott revamped the state match play tournament. The event had been defunct since before he got to the IGA, but after getting other events to better courses and helping rebuild the IGA’s reputation, Elliott got the green light to reassert an event that is held in high regard across most state golf associations.

Revamping the Iowa State Match Play, being a part of the USGA mid-am committee for seven years (1999-2006), and being a part of the IGA’s board of directors for 16 years (2004-2019) helped earn Elliott an Iowa Golf Association Hall of Fame induction in 2012 at the age of 50. 

In his letter nominating Elliott, close friend and 2011 Iowa Golf Hall of Fame inductee, Mike McCoy said, “Gene has conducted himself as a true gentleman throughout his life both on and off the golf course. He has developed friendships throughout the golf world and is universally respected and liked by all.”

Current IGA CEO and executive director Chad Pitts spoke for everyone at the IGA when he told Golfweek that he did not want to see Elliott leave the Board of Directors in 2019. But rules are rules and Elliott exited the IGA’s Board of Directors in 2019 but still plays a role with the association here and there.

As good as his work is off the course, his volunteerism in golf is overshadowed by his playing career as Elliott is the top ranked senior in the World Amateur Golf Rankings and has won twelve of his 27 Iowa majors since turning 50.

Now with a Yancy Ford award to add to the ever-growing Elliott home trophy case, Elliott’s 30+ years of growing the game in the Hawkeye state and around the world, have been formally recognized.

Best of 2021: The year’s top amateur golf stories (including a Heck of a run)

Our partners from AmateurGolf.com offered up their best moments of the year.

(Editor’s note: For the final few days of 2021, we’ve been offering up a snapshot of the top 10 stories from each of Golfweek’s most popular sections, including the likes of travel, the PGA and LPGA tours, instruction and equipment. Here’s what we’ve already counted down. But when it came to the top amateur moments of the year, we brought in our friends from AmateurGolf.com to help with the list. The outstanding site is a partner on the Golfweek/AmateurGolf.com player rankings for men, women, and mid-amateurs.)

After the game shut down along with the world around it in 2020, golf came back with a roar in 2021, with amateurs offering some indelible moments that will surely stand the test of time.

Who will ever forget Megha Ganne’s memorable run at the U.S. Women’s Open at the Olympic Club? Stanford’s Rachel Heck announced her presence on the collegiate scene by winning six consecutive tournaments as a freshman, including the NCAA individual championship. Gene Elliott won senior majors on two continents, Cinderella found her slipper in a castle at the Westchester Country Club while Michael Thorbjornsen and Matt Parziale staged a duel for the ages in the finals of the Massachusetts State Amateur.

Here are the top five moments of the amateur golf year (see the bottom of the list for a link to AmateurGolf.com’s full top 20 moments):

Gene Elliott claims Golfweek Senior Tournament of Champions in a U.S. Senior Am rematch

Gene Elliott and Jerry Gunthorpe duked it out once again at the Golfweek Senior Tournament of Champions.

It may not have been the U.S. Senior Amateur, but it definitely had the star power.

Gene Elliott, 2021 U.S. Senior Amateur champion, and 2021 Senior Am runner up Jerry Gunthorpe duked it out once again at the Golfweek Senior Tournament of Champions at The Forest Country Club Bear Course in Ft. Myer, Florida, on Friday.

A part of the penultimate group, Gunthorpe carded his second 2-under 70 of the tournament. Beginning the day five shots back of Elliott, the Michigan native may have thought he had a chance at finally tracking down his U.S. Senior Am foe.

Unfortunately for Gunthorpe, Elliott had just enough juice to stave off his run.

“I thought I had a one shot lead,” Elliott said about playing the last hole. In actuality, Elliott had a two-shot lead. Thanks to a scoring error by his playing partner, Elliott indulged himself into a bit more pressure than what he really needed to. Forcing a shot he probably wouldn’t have if he knew he had two shots to play with, Elliott thought he needed to get up-and-down from 80 yards.

“I looked at my phone again and I saw that he [Gunthorpe] bogeyed 18… I thought I won by one, but I actually won by two. That’s not a great way to finish a tournament,” Elliott said through a laugh. “I played just well enough to win.”

Gene Elliott poses with the 2021 Golfweek Tournament of Champions trophy. Photo by Ron Gaines/Golfweek

Despite being twice the bridesmaid to Elliott’s bride, Gunthorpe’s second-place finish is nothing to scoff at. Coming from Michigan, Gunthorpe had minimal practice and relied on hitting balls in his upstairs simulator room as his main source of practice.

“The guy is a great player,” Elliott said. “I talked to one of the guys he played with today and he said ‘Wow! I was impressed’ and I said ‘Hell yes he’s good!’… He’s a wonderful guy and a hell of a player. I’m lucky he didn’t finish out the tournament!”

With a tournament total of even par 216, Elliot has now won back-to-back Golfweek Senior Tournament of Champion events and three total since its inception in 2018.

In the Super Senior division, it was Edward Turner who went wire-to-wire despite never having full control of the lead. Sharing the lead following both rounds one and two, Turner pulled away from the field and staved off a late run by Robin Rubrecht, who took second place just one shot off of Turner’s pace of 8 over.

David Bates of Newburgh, Indiana, took home the Legend’s top spot. Tying defending champion Jim Rollefson, the pair went to the par-4 10th to decide a winner. Rollefson dumped a ball in the water while Bates rolled in a par to claim the title over the defending champ.

Super Legend Gil Stenholm maintained his 36-hole lead over North Carolina’s Jack Marin to claim the top spot in the 75-and-over age bracket. Stenholm, a native of Illinois, took claim of the Tournament of Champions with a score of 12 over as previous winners Marin and Charlie Busbee finishing second and third, respectively.

Top-ranked senior Gene Elliott leads Golfweek Senior Tournament of Champions

Top-ranked senior amateur Gene Elliott is back where he is most familiar: atop the leaderboard.

Gene Elliott, the top-ranked senior amateur, is back where he is most familiar: at the top of the leaderboard.

With 18 holes to play at the Golfweek Senior Tournament of Champions at The Forest Country Club Bear Course in Ft. Myers, Florida, Elliott should feel pretty comfortable.

The 59-year-old from Iowa has already had a year for the record books, winning both the U.S. Senior Amateur and the British Senior Amateur. He also has a track record at this event where he has won twice since its inception in 2018.

Elliott began the second round two shots back of co-leaders Dave Bunker and Jerry Gunthorpe, who each began the day at 2 under. Carding birdies on holes Nos. 2, 3, and 4, Elliott made quick work in erasing the deficit. Despite a bogey on the par-4 16th, he did enough to take the top spot heading into Friday’s final round.

Bunker negated any ground made up on the field in the first round with a second-round 75. Having four bogeys on his card, the top-ranked Canadian senior slid from a tie for first to solo second at 1 over. As for Gunthorpe, a trio of back-to-back bogeys throughout the day saw him fall into a tie for sixth at 4 over.

Seven golfers are within five strokes of Elliott heading into Friday’s final round. The two co-leaders from round one find themselves still atop the Super Senior division. Randy King and Edward Turner account for two-thirds of tomorrow’s final pairing as they sit at 5 over with Keith McKelvy.

Defending Legend champion Jim Rollefson leads the pack that will be looking to chase Charley Yandell, who backed up his opening 1-over 73 with yet another to take a commanding four-stroke lead in the Legend division.

Gil Stenholm of Illinois bounced back from a first round 78 with a 1-over 73 on Thursday to go 7 over for the tournament. The 75-year old leads by two over Jack Marin who sits in solo second. Round 1 leader Steve Wilson and defending champion Charlie Busbee lurk at 10 and 11 over respectively.

Four golfers will take home trophies and have bragging rights as a ‘Champion of Champions’ following play on Friday.

Preview: 2021 Golfweek Senior Tournament of Champions

Celebrating its fourth year, the Golfweek Senior Tournament of Champions tees off this week in Florida.

Celebrating its fourth year, the Golfweek Senior Tournament of Champions tees off this week, Dec. 1-3, at The Forest Country Club in Ft. Myers, Florida.

Being the year end finale for the 2021 Golfweek Elite Senior Series, it’s only right for some of the top players over 50 to come out and tee it up one last time this season.

With over 80 players in the field, six are ranked inside the top 25 on the World Amateur Golf Ranking over 50 years old. Among those six? No. 1 senior amateur Gene Elliot, 5th ranked Rusty Strawn, top Canadian and 7th ranked Dave Bunker, No. 8 Michael McCoy, 20th ranked Kevin VandenBerg, and No. 21 Paul Royak.

Elliott holds both the 2021 British and U.S. Senior Amateur trophies while the 2021 U.S. Senior Am runner-up, Jerry Gunthorpe will also be in the field. Elliot, a native Iowan, has held the senior title in this event twice (2018 & 2020) and is looking for back-to-back ownership of the senior division.

Other past champions in the field include Super-Seniors Doug Hopton-Jones (2020), Steve Fox (2019), and Paul Schlachter (2018), 2020 Legends division winner Jim Rollefson and 2020 Super Legend winner Charlie Busbee.

Winners will be crowned on December 3rd and will return home with a nice piece of hardware to accompany their stocking on the mantle.

Past champions

2020 The Forest Country Club (Bear Course)

Senior – Gene Elliott
Super Senior – Doug Hopton-Jones
Legends – Jim Rollefson
Super Legends – Charlie Busbee

2019 PGA National (Palmer Course)

Senior – Rich Buckner
Super Senior – Steve Fox
Legends – Jack Martin

2018 Black Diamond (The Quarry)

Senior – Gene Elliot
Super Senior – Paul Schlachter
Legends – Bill Engel

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Gene Elliott holds off Bob Royak, Team Kinkopf in double win at Golfweek Challenge Cup

Gene Elliott, the top-ranked senior amateur in the game, scored a pair of wins at the Golfweek Challenge Cup at PGA National.

When the playing captain wins the tournament, chances are good his team will, too. That was Gene Elliott’s story on a soggy week at the Golfweek Challenge Cup. Elliott captained his team to a 46-shot victory at PGA National. The event was shortened from 54 to 36 holes because of rain, but Elliott’s path to individual victory took on one extra hole.

The Challenge Cup pitted teams of top seniors captained by Elliott, the No. 1-ranked senior player in the world, and Ken Kinkopf, Golfweek’s 2019 Senior Player of the Year, against each other at PGA National, a PGA Tour venue. The best 10 scores on each man’s team counted toward the total.

At the top of the senior division leaderboard, however, it felt like a match-play tournament. Elliott actually went head-to-head on the final day with a member of his own team, Bob Royak. Elliott had a one-shot lead at the beginning of the day, turned it into a five-shot lead by the fourth hole then watched as it evaporated over the back nine. He fired a 73 to Royak’s 72 and after both men finished at 3 under, Elliott defeated Royak in an extra trip up the 18th hole.

Scores: Golfweek Challenge Cup

“I felt like I had the tournament all day long and then all of a sudden, a bogey and double bogey by me and a birdie by him, and then here we are, it’s a real horse-race,” Elliott said. “He’s a great player, I have a lot of respect for Bob Royak. He’s a wonderful guy.”

The two men already did battle at the Jones Cup in March, with Royak, the defending U.S. Senior Amateur champion, coming out on top of that. Because of that experience, and many others, Elliott knew he couldn’t just walk through the final round with Royak chasing him.

Gene Elliott

After the second round of the Challenge Cup was washed out, players returned to tough, wet conditions. PGA National showed its teeth regardless.

“You have to hit golf shots. There’s no faking it around there,” Elliott said. “Getting to know that course over the last few days, I have a lot of respect for it.”

Royak felt like the wet conditions may have helped him a bit because of his long game.

“I do feel like it favors me,” he said. “I think it favors good ballstrikers, I kind of consider myself a pretty good ballstriker. When the wind is blowing like that you just have to hit it really solid.

“I’m pretty steady and concentrate on hitting the ball flush, solid every time.”

Royak also knows what to expect out of Elliott. He doesn’t often have a bad hole and opponents know he’ll be right at par or better by the end of the round.

While Elliott and Royak played a starring role on the winning team, Team Kinkopf got a big boost from Doug Hanzel, T-4 in the senior division, and Johnny Blank, who won the legend division. Ultimately, it just wasn’t enough.

From here, Elliott and Royak both plan to plan another team event next month: the East West Matches at Maridoe Golf Club in Carrollton, Texas. Royak will play on the East team while Elliott is on the West. The teams are made up of elite senior amateurs, mid-amateurs and four top collegians.

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Gene Elliott leads his team to 33-shot advantage in opening round of Golfweek Challenge Cup

eam Elliott was leading after the first day at PGA National and by 33 shot.

When Gene Elliott was asked to captain a team of top senior amateurs for the Golfweek Senior Challenge Cup, he used his Iowa connections. Elliott, the top-ranked senior in the world, got 10 captain’s picks. He worked the phones to secure commitments.

“I had some Iowa guys and some of them came down and played,” he said. “It kind of got some guys playing that might not have played in this Golfweek event.”

Outside of the Iowa Cup, an in-state event that pits pros against amateurs, Elliott doesn’t have much experience as a captain. Regardless, Team Elliott was leading after the first day at PGA National and by 33 shots. Each team’s score is made up of the low 10 players’ scores on that team.

Leaderboard: Golfweek Challenge Cup

That left Ken Kinkopf, Golfweek’s 2019 Player of the Year, realizing he needed to stir up his squad for a second-round rally when the tournament switched from PGA National’s Champion course to the Fazio course for the second round.

“Narrow that gap tomorrow and close in on those guys on Team Elliott, hope to give it a good comeback tomorrow so that we can make a nice close match on the third,” he said.

Kinkopf doesn’t have much experience in this team format either. There are a handful of senior-amateur powerhouses in the Challenge Cup field, Kinkopf and Elliott among them. That list also includes reigning U.S. Senior Amateur champion Bob Royak and former Senior Am champ Doug Hanzel.

“You just go down the list and you want to make sure you have half the top guys,” Kinkopf said of selecting his team.

Royak went to Elliott’s team while Kinkopf got Hanzel.

Kinkopf, 59, looked at the first-round leaderboard and knew he needed to make up a little ground on his opposing captain. Elliott, 58, fired an opening 68 for the lead in the senior division while Kinkopf posted an uncharacteristic 85.

The Golfweek Challenge Cup medal

Kinkopf has struggled with back pain recently, and has had three back surgeries. He said his back wasn’t the problem in the opening round, but admits that it’s an issue. It hardly seemed to cut into a banner year in 2019 when Kinkopf was winning almost everything.

“Somehow I played well enough last year to become a ranked player,” he said. “I came out of nowhere to win one event and then I won six.”

Because of his play last year, Kinkopf would have been eligible for the U.S. Senior Amateur and the Canadian Senior Amateur in 2020, two of the marquee senior events on the calendar.

As for Elliott, even though he’s miles away from his Des Moines, Iowa, it still feels like a home game because he has a residence near PGA National.

For Elliott, COVID cancellations on the national senior amateur calendar meant more time at home in the Midwest. He played more golf with his wife Dalena at Glen Oaks Country Club in West Des Moines.

“It’s been a funny year and with the U.S. Senior Am and all that stuff getting canceled was just too bad,” Elliott said. “Hopefully we can just take off in 2021 and a lot of the tournaments will happen and they’ll figure this thing out and we can get back to normal senior golf.”

The calendar may look anything but normal, but Elliott’s game – and his position at the top – doesn’t look any different at all.

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