Davis Love III returns to the site of a big win for him to add a short course and a putting course.
Hazeltine National in Chaska, Minnesota, has announced a long-range plan for the club named Vision 2040 that includes in its first stage a new short course, putting course, performance center and more.
The private club announced Wednesday that Love Golf Design, headed by Davis Love III, has broken ground on the 10-hole, par-3 short course that will open in summer of 2025. Love also will design the putting course.
“It’s an exciting time for Hazeltine, and the future is bright,” Love said in an announcement on the club’s website. “We are very excited to see the finished products, and I cannot wait to tee it up out there.”
Hazeltine National’s main 18-hole layout is ranked by Golfweek’s Best as the No. 4 private course in Minnesota, and it ties for No. 77 among all modern courses in the United States. The course was designed by Robert Trent Jones Sr. and opened in 1962, and Jones’ son Rees Jones renovated it in 1991. Love Design also is developing a long-range master plan for the main 18.
Among other top-tier professional and amateur tournaments, the club has hosted two U.S. Opens (1970, won by Tony Jacklin; 1991, Payne Stewart), two PGA Championships (2002, Rich Beem; 2009, Y.E. Yang), two U.S. Women’s Opens (1966, Sandra Spuzich; 1977, Hollis Stacy) and the 2019 KPMG Women’s PGA Championship (Hannah Green).
The KPMG Women’s Championship will return in 2026. The club also hosted the 2016 Ryder Cup won by the American side captained by Love, and the club will again be the site of a Ryder Cup in 2029.
The rising senior at Arizona State is ranked 10th in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, and he had a stellar week in the Land of 10,000 Lakes. Because of his stellar play, he’s not heading back to Tempe empty handed.
Ballester will receive a gold medal plus custody of the Havemeyer Trophy for one year. He’s also exempt into the next 10 U.S. Amateurs, but it’s unlikely he’ll play again since he’s almost done with his college career.
Perhaps the best benefits are the exemptions. Ballester has a spot in the field next year at the U.S. Open at Oakmont and the Open Championship at Royal Portrush. He also has a likely invitation to the Masters, where he’ll join his mentor and idol Sergio Garcia and fellow Spaniard (as well as former Sun Devil) Jon Rahm at Augusta National.
Being an amateur event, Ballester won’t receive money for his victory, but his elevated status as champion of the biggest amateur event in the world could lead to additional NIL deals or sponsorship opportunities.
Ballester is the first player from Spain to win the U.S. Amateur.
CHASKA, Minn. — Josele Ballester is like many Spanish golfers who have grown up idolizing the greats from their country.
On Sunday, Ballester did something none of those before him have been able to accomplish: win the U.S. Amateur.
Ballester, the rising senior at Arizona State, dominated throughout the day then held on late against Noah Kent to capture the Havemeyer Trophy at Hazeltine National Golf Club. Ballester led 4 up with six holes to play, but by the time he was on the 17th tee, his lead was down to 1. However, Ballester found a way to clinch his biggest victory yet, and it’s one that has given him a title no Spanish golfer has ever been able to achieve.
“I think I’m still not conscious of what just happened today,” Ballester said. “Super thankful to have the opportunity to live this moment. We have many great Spaniards, many great legends, and being able to add my name into that history, it’s pretty sweet.”
He’s the fourth winner of the U.S. Amateur from Arizona State, joining Billy Mayfair (1987), Phil Mickelson (1990) and Jeff Quinney (2000).
Ballester’s journey to becoming a U.S. Amateur champion began long before he hoisted the trophy on the 18th green at Hazeltine on Sunday.
When Arizona State coach Matt Thurmond was recruiting the talented youngster, he and Washington coach Alan Murray were watching him when the latter quipped, “It’s just a man amongst boys. He’s just a big silverback gorilla, and all these are little cubs around him.”
It’s a phrase that has stuck with Ballester his entire career at Arizona State. Often overlooked on a talented roster, Ballester has always been the gorilla, an alpha who’s consistency shines through, even if the results didn’t show.
“He actually hasn’t won a college tournament,” Thurmond said, “yet he’s a three-time All-American. If it’s possible to be a top-10 amateur in the world and be under the radar, then he is.”
Ranked No. 10 in the world, Ballester, by ranking, was a heavy favorite against Kent, No. 560 and a rising sophomore at Iowa. However, the crowd at Hazeltine resembled the likes of one from the 2016 Ryder Cup at the same venue rather than a U.S. Amateur championship match.
Kent was a heavy, heavy fan favorite, and his following grew by the day. During the Round of 64, his family, girlfriend and a couple others were his only followers. On Sunday, more than 95 percent, if not more, of the crowd was pulling for Kent.
On Saturday night, after Ballester and Kent had secured their spots in the match, Kent remained at Hazeltine more than two hours after his semifinal victory celebrating his achievement, hanging out with friends and others on the clubhouse’s back patio.
Ballester retreated to his hotel, where he ate some sushi, played ping pong to get rid of his stress and had a phone call with one of his idols: Sergio Garcia.
The two texted throughout the week, but this conversation was more in-depth.
“The most important one was continue to be myself,” Ballester said of the advice Garcia shared. “That was key for today. And the other one was how to deal with the crowd, right? He’s been in that position multiple times, especially on this course, in the Ryder Cup 2016 playing against Phil, one of the best Ryder Cup matches ever. So he told me just stay patient in your game, and the best way to demonstrate to the other fans, it’s with your game.”
Ballester struggled to sleep Saturday night, waking up at 3:30 a.m. Sunday and not being able to fall back asleep. He got a workout in, headed to the course early, and at 6:30 a.m. as the sun rose over a fog-blanketed Hazeltine, Ballester was alone on the practice green, getting in some last-minute prep.
In the morning 18 holes, Ballester calmly took a 4-up lead into the break while Kent struggled with his game. Kent said he retreated to the locker room, where he had to reset.
“I sat in the shower for 20 minutes and kind of let all my thoughts come out, and then called Mr. (John) Harris for a while and called Brett McCabe, my sports psychologist, and called Claude (Harmon III) and kind of got some thoughts and opinions from them,” Kent said. “Mr. Harris just said be creative. So I got up there on the range. I was hitting slices. I was hitting soft shots. I was ripping them. I just wanted to have fun and give it a fight.”
And give it a fight Kent did.
The crowd, which quadrupled in size for the afternoon session, exploded on the first hole when Kent’s chip shot from beyond the hole slammed into the flag then dropped, shrinking his deficit right out of the gate. Ballester blasted a drive on the next hole, hit a brilliant wedge and got his 4-up lead back with a birdie, but Kent again responded, the crowd willing him to a birdie on the par-5 third.
“I knew it was going to be like that from yesterday,” Ballester said of the crowd. “Again, I kind of liked it a little bit. It’s true that, when the other guy is feeling it and he’s kind of grabbing that momentum and you see all the supporters that are going for him, it can be a little depressing. So it’s important to face it with a nice mindset, and I think I did.”
By the turn, Ballester’s lead was 2 up, but it quickly grew to 4 up with seven to go when he won Nos. 10-11. Both players missed birdie looks on the par-4 12th, and harnessing a 4 up lead with six to go, Ballester closed in on history.
But no champion is crowned without facing some adversity. Ballester’s started on the par-3 13th, when his tee shot drifted left and he made bogey.
3 up with five to play.
On the par-4 14th, both players missed the green, Ballester having the better lie from the fairway short than Kent did long. With a short game like Seve Ballesteros all week, it seemed as if Ballester would easily get it up and down.
He didn’t. Kent did. 2 up with four to play, and the pro-Kent crowd was raucous, doing anything it could to will a comeback.
“It was awesome to have them here,” Kent said of the fans, admitting they fueled his late push.
On the par-5 15th, both players made birdie, with Ballester rolling in his putt and giving a strong fist pump as if he was his idol, Garcia, while yelling “Vamos!”
Come the 16th, Kent’s tee shot bounded through the fairway, but from a different tee than players had used all week, Ballester’s tee shot drifted right and got lucky to stay in bounds. He caught a putrid lie. His second shot barely came out, and it trickled into a penalty area, with fans cheering when the ball disappeared into the brush. He was able to find the ball and somehow hit it onto the green for his third, but with Kent having 15 feet for birdie, the lead was down to 1 with two holes to play.
The tees were moved forward on the par-3 17th, making it play closer to 145 yards. Kent’s shot landed on a ridge and rolled away from the front right hole location, and Ballester’s ball landed long and gave him a tricky downhiller.
“That pin, I’m not going to say anything, but it was pretty close to being illegal,” Ballester said. “It was super fast, couldn’t really touch the ball.
Again channeling his inner Sergio, Ballester gently lagged the ball to about 3 feet from the cup and confidently poured in the par putt, giving a subtle fist bump when it dropped. Kent also made par, and the duo marched between the thousands of fans scurrying up and along the 18th fairway.
On the 18th tee, Kent’s tee shot sailed long and into a fairway bunker, leaving the door open for what seemed like the first time in an hour for Ballester to be on offense. It was his chance to show he was a champion, and he capitalized.
Using his Jon Rahm-esque power off the tee, his drive found the center of the fairway, and then he perfectly placed his approach 20 feet from the hole. When Kent’s fairway bunker shot went long and left, Ballester and his caddie embraced walking up the 18th fairway.
“We just looked to each other and say, ‘OK, let’s enjoy this final walk,” Ballester did.
The same youngster that looked like a man amongst boys as a junior proved he was indeed an alpha on the biggest stage Sunday, even when everything was against him.
“The opportunities that are going to open up for him are amazing,” Thurmond said. “But the best part is, no matter what, he’s going to be an 80-year-old man on the southern coast of Spain, and they’re still going to be knowing him as the U.S. Amateur champion.”
Ballester channeled various elements of his Spanish idols in a victorious march around Hazeltine on Sunday.
Now, kids back in Spain will want to follow in the footsteps of the champion from Castellon de la Plana.
There’s no question who a majority of fans will be cheering for Sunday at Hazeltine National Golf Club.
CHASKA, Minn. — There’s no question who a majority of fans will be cheering for Sunday at Hazeltine National Golf Club.
Noah Kent, a 19-year-old rising sophomore at Iowa, has broken out as the darling of the 2024 U.S. Amateur. The 6-foot-5 bomber has plodded his way around Hazeltine six times this week and will do so twice more come Sunday, and playing close to where he plays his college golf, there’s going to be plenty of crowd support.
On Saturday during his 2-up semifinal victory against Jackson Buchanan, dozens of fans donning black and yellow paraded around the grounds, sprinting between fairways and doing whatever they could to give Kent support. A large portion of them were wearing yellow Caitlin Clark shirts, the former Iowa women’s basketball star who has become one of the faces of the sporting world in recent months.
Perhaps it’s fitting Kent goes to the same school Clark did. This week, he has been Clark Kent, the people’s Superman at Hazeltine.
“All the guys in the yellow Caitlin Clark shirts, so a couple uncles, and the rest of them are buddies that I know really well from Iowa,” Kent said.
“Let’s go Hawks” chants have echoed down the fairways and gotten louder as the week has gone on. As Kent played down the 18th hole, what seemed like 1,000 fans encircled him and trapped the group on the green as the match concluded. Kent is powerful, and his presence demands attention, which he has gotten plenty of this week.
The American from Naples, Florida, is no doubt the fan favorite heading into Sunday. But every superhero has a villian, and Sunday, that’s Josele Ballester.
Ballester, who turns 21 on Sunday and is set to begin his senior year at Arizona State in the fall, topped fellow Spaniard Luis Masaveu 3 and 2 on Saturday to advance to the championship match. He will be the first player from Spain to ever play in the U.S. Amateur championship match.
And his cheering section on the ground is going to be much, much smaller.
“It’s even better for yourself. Not like the underdog, but feeling like nobody wants you to win, and you grab that roll,” Ballester said. “Guys, I’m going to show you what it’s all about.
“So maybe if I can get on a roll early in the morning knowing that there are going to be more cheers for him than for me, maybe it can work.”
By world ranking, Ballester is a heavy favorite in Sunday’s 36-hole final. The Spaniard comes in at No. 10 in the world while Kent is 560th. But rankings don’t matter in match play, and Kent has been a machine this week.
Sunday is Kent vs. Ballester, but it’s also Superman vs. Lex Luthor. The fan favorite against the villain.
“I have a couple of friends, really, really close friends, so that’s enough,” Ballester said. “And all the guys back home I know are rooting for me.”
Come Sunday at Hazeltine, there’s bound to be a showdown for the big screen.
CHASKA, Minn. — Luis Masaveu may have to change his future plans.
The 21-year-old amateur from Spain planned to turn pro in October. However, on Friday he topped Brendan Valdes to advance to the 2024 U.S. Amateur semifinals, where he will face his good friend and fellow Spaniard Josele Ballester. A win would mean a chance at amateur lore: an opportunity to lift the Havemeyer Trophy on Sunday at Hazeltine National Golf Club as champion of the biggest amateur event in the world.
Forget Sunday. Just winning a semifinal match is more pressure than playing in the championship match. That’s because of what’s on the line.
The two players who win Saturday at Hazeltine will earn exemptions, one into the 2025 U.S. Open at Oakmont and a likely one into the 2025 Masters, provided they remain an amateur. It’s something all four semifinalists, no matter how much they are focused on winning this week, are thinking about in the back of their mind.
“If I win tomorrow, probably I won’t turn pro because obviously playing the Masters, it’s like different,” Masaveu said, “I mean, it’s a dream. You don’t know if you’re going to play there.”
The major exemptions are something on the mind of players all week long, but never more than Friday night into Saturday morning when the field is down to four.
Players have to sleep on the pressure of Saturday’s semifinals. Not only is there a chance for the biggest victory of their lives, but also a spot in two of golf’s biggest events at any level. Win on Saturday, and Sunday is a breeze.
Sure, the biggest match of the week remains, but the best rewards from playing in the championship are already secured.
“I played this year a major, and it was amazing, but you never know if you’re going to play the Masters again in your life,” Masaveu said. “It’s a moment that you have to take it.”
Some players, like Masaveu, aren’t afraid to talk about what could come. Others, like Noah Kent and Josele Ballester, two of the other semifinalists, are all business.
“No,” Kent, a rising sophomore at Iowa said when asked if he would think ahead overnight. “Sit back, play college football, just take my mind off of it.”
Added Ballester: “Not really. Again, tomorrow is a new day, new match. Hopefully I can pull out my best game. If I don’t, I’ll try to fight as hard as I can.”
Last year’s runner-up is proof just making the championship match is a life-changing experience.
Nick Dunlap, who won the U.S. Amateur last year, has since hoisted a trophy two times on the PGA Tour, including becoming the first amateur in 33 years to win on Tour. But Neal Shipley, the runner-up at Cherry Hills put his exemptions to good use, too.
For Masaveu, Kent, Ballester and Jackson Buchanan, the other semifinalist, Friday night and Saturday morning are bound to be filled with thoughts, from the swing to their matchup to all of the random thoughts that fill someone’s head when they’re trying to pass time.
But whether they admit it or not, there’s a lot on the line come Saturday, and for the two who make it to Sunday, the championship match is bound to be a breeze for their emotions with what they’ve secured for next year, regardless of result.
“I’m more of a chill player and chill thinker, and I try not to get ahead of myself,” Buchanan said. “Obviously the heart rate is up, but I’m not thinking too far ahead.”
CHASKA, Minn. — Luke Clanton’s wild summer is over.
The top-ranked amateur in the world lost Thursday afternoon in a Round of 32 match at the 2024 U.S. Amateur at Hazeltine National Golf Club. Clanton, who came into the week off playing 39 holes Sunday in the PGA Tour’s Wyndham Championship, lost 1 down to Jackson Buchanan, a rising senior at Illinois who’s ranked 17th in the World Amateur Golf Ranking.
“It’s kind of hard to go against one of your good buddies out here,” Clanton said after his match. “No matter which way it would’ve went, it was awesome. Great match.”
Clanton led 1 up with four holes to play, but Buchanan birdied the par-5 15th to tie the match, and a wayward Clanton drive on the signature par-4 16th led to a bogey and a 1-up lead for Buchanan.
Then on 18, Buchanan’s approach missed right while Clanton gave himself a 20-footer for birdie. Buchanan hit a delicate chip shot to a couple feet, and Clanton’s birdie chance slid beneath the hole. Buchanan cleaned up for par, and he’s into the Round of 16, where he will face Tyler Mawhinney Thursday afternoon.
Mawhinney won the Canadian Amateur last week to earn his way into the field at the U.S. Amateur.
As for Clanton, his crazy summer has come to a close. After leading Florida State to a runner-up finish at the NCAA Championship in late May, he proceeded to make the cut in five of six PGA Tour events, recording top-five finishes in three of them, the first amateur to do so on Tour since Jack Nicklaus in 1961. He rose to No. 1 in the world, and he also earned 14 points in the PGA Tour University Accelerated ranking, meaning if he can earn six more, he’ll earn an automatic PGA Tour card.
But his biggest lesson this summer was that golf isn’t everything.
“I think I get a little bit too obsessed with it sometimes,” Clanton said. “I’ve got a great family, great girlfriend, great friends. Golf is just a game. You don’t have to be too hard on yourself all the time. But, you know, it was awesome, dude. This is like, what you train for to be in those positions. So it’s fun.”
As for what’s next, Clanton said he’s looking forward to getting back to Tallahassee and beginning his junior season with Florida State. Last year, Clanton finished as the top-ranked player in the NCAA golf rankings.
Now, he returns to college golf as the best amateur in the world with a whole lot of confidence to build on what has been an incredible 2024.
The USGA accepted a record number of entries for both championships in 2023.
The USGA announced Wednesday qualifying sites for the 124th U.S. Women’s Amateur and U.S. Amateur, to be held at Southern Hills Country Club, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, from Aug. 5-11, and Hazeltine National Golf Club in Chaska, Minnesota, from Aug. 12-18, respectively.
U.S. Amateur local qualifying will be held between June 4 and July 3, with final qualifying between July 15 and July 31. U.S. Women’s Amateur qualifying will be held between June 17 and July 18.
Online entry applications for both championships, as well as the full list of qualifying sites, are available at champ-admin.usga.org. U.S. Amateur entries will close Wednesday, May 29, at 5 p.m. EDT and U.S. Women’s Amateur entries will close Wednesday, June 12, at 5 p.m. EDT.
The USGA accepted a record number of entries for both championships last year. The 2023 U.S. Women’s Amateur at Bel-Air Country Club received 1,679 entries, beating the previous record set in 2021 with 1,650 entries. The 2023 U.S. Amateur at Cherry Hills Country Club received 8,253 entries, breaking the previous mark set in 2022 with 7,749 entries.
The USGA announced significant modifications to its amateur championship qualifying model last year for the first time in more than 20 years. These changes will allow USGA championships to retain their openness while ensuring that high-caliber players are provided with ample opportunity to earn a spot in the field, and that qualifying can be conducted at the highest level among growing entries and field sizes.
The most significant revisions are to the U.S. Amateur, which will move from a one-stage, 36-hole qualifying format to a two-stage qualifying format with 45 18-hole local qualifying sites and 19 18-hole final qualifying sites. Other adjustments included modifications to exemptions.
These modifications will result in a net reduction of 94 qualifying sites, while providing more opportunities for players to earn a spot in a USGA championship through expanded exemptions, state/AGA amateur championships and traditional qualifying.
There are some fantastic venues on the slate for 2024.
Another busy year is on tap for the United States Golf Association in 2024, and several of the organization’s biggest events are headed to the best golf courses in the world.
On the men’s side, Wyndham Clark claimed the U.S. Open title at Los Angeles Country Club in California in 2023. Next year, the best male players in the world will take on historic Pinehurst No. 2 in North Carolina. Martin Kaymer won the last U.S. Open staged at No. 2 (2014).
As for the women, Allisen Corpuz won the first-ever U.S. Women’s Open staged at Pebble Beach Golf Links. In 2024, the ladies are headed to Lancaster Country Club in Pennsylvania.
Here are all 17 of the USGA’s events on the 2024 calendar. And here are all the trophies the USGA hands out at its championships.