Hunter Logan birdies final hole to win 94th Southeastern Amateur

Hunter Logan was clutch.

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Hunter Logan didn’t play as well Saturday as he did the first two rounds, but he was clutch when it mattered.

Logan, who plays collegiately at Mississippi State, shot 3-over 73 in the final round but held on to win the 94th Southeastern Amateur on Saturday at the Country Club of Columbus in Georgia. He finished at 11-under 199, one shot clear of Troy’s Brantley Scott and two in front of North Texas’ Tucker Allen and South Carolina’s Rafe Reynolds.

Fred Haskins created the Southeastern Amateur in 1922, when he was the head professional at the course. Since then, it became and remains one of the premier amateur events in the country. The Haskins Award is named after him, which is considered the Heisman of college golf.

Logan started the Southeastern Amateur with a 6-under 64 and followed it up with an 8-under 62 to sit at 14 under after 36 holes. However, Logan held on Saturday, carding only one birdie on the final hole to win the title. He had only one bogey before the final round.

Scott shot 68 in the final round, but he bogeyed the 18th to finish at 10 under. Allen was in the final group and got to 11 under par at the turn, but four bogeys on the back nine were too much to overcome.

With the win, Logan takes home the Jordan-Martin Trophy.

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.

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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.

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Georgia Tech’s Connor Howe chips-in on final hole to win Southeastern Amateur

Georgia Tech’s Connor Howe chipped-in on his final hole to win the Southeastern Amateur by one stroke.

Connor Howe thought he only needed a par on the 18th hole to win the 91st Southeastern Amateur.

His driver off the tee found the left rough — no problem — leaving 100 yards to the green. His wedge went a little long, leaving a chip with about 10 feet of green to work with, slightly uphill with a nice lie.

The chip was perfect. We’re talking in-the-hole-for-birdie perfect, and it needed to be. If Howe had made par like he planned, he would have found himself in a playoff.

Coming out of 74-minute weather delay, Kentucky’s Alex Goff made birdie on No. 18 to tie the lead at 10 under. Howe’s hole-out gave him a one-shot win at 11 under after rounds of 67-65-67 at Country Club of Columbus in Georgia.

Leaderboard: Southeastern Amateur

Goff, a rising sophomore for the Wildcats, finished took solo second at 10 under. Georgia Southern’s Ben Carr (-9), Georgia’s Will Chandler (-8) and Furman’s Keller Harper (-7) round out the top five. Coastal Carolina’s States Fort finished sixth at 6 under, with four players T-7 at 5 under: Austin Fulton (Mississippi State), Jordan Doull (Columbus State), Colin Bowles (Georgia Southern) and Bryce Lewis (Tennessee).

“I knew (Goff) was at 9 under with one to go, but I didn’t now he birdied the last. I thought he made par. It kind of just worked out,” said Howe, who’s not one to normally check leaderboards. “I drove it pretty well this week, hitting fairways allows you to attack pins and I’ve been working on my wedges a lot this summer. There’s only two par 5’s out here so you need to hit wedges close, make a few putts and I was able to do that.”

More: Preston Summerhays leads at Sunnehanna Amateur

It’s rare for players to play so consistently well in a tournament debut. Three rounds in the 60s is no joke, especially at an event like the Southeastern. But Howe liked Country Club of Columbus’ layout during the practice round and thought it fit his eye and game pretty well.

Georgia Tech’s Connor Howe after wining the 91st Southeastern Amateur. (Photo: Brian Stubbs)

“My twin brother actually played in the Southeastern last year, so I was able to talk to him and take advantage of that,” added Howe.

Howe and his Ramblin’ Wreck from Georgia Tech teammates have been forces to be reckoned with in amateur tournaments over the last year. Andy Ogletree won last year’s U.S. Amateur at Pinehurst. Tyler Strafaci also won at Pinehurst, two weeks ago at the esteemed North & South Amateur. Last week Strafaci won the Palmetto Amateur, while Luke Schniederjans recently won the Georgia Amateur.

“Having to beat guys who are really good players so you can go to events makes you tougher and forces you to get better and work on the areas you need to,” Howe said of the weekly competition during the season. “When you actually get out on the course, it makes it easier to compete.”

As for what’s next, Howe isn’t sure whether he wants to go out on top this summer or find another event and take advantage of his championship-level form before returning to school this fall.

Regardless if he plays again or not, he’s taking some hardware back to Atlanta.