Walker Cup: Opening foursomes lineup includes an alternate on both sides

The pairings are out for Saturday morning foursomes at the Walker Cup, and both sides have brought in an alternate.

After a 12-hour delay, pairings are out for the first foursomes session at the Walker Cup. With a stomach bug sweeping both teams – making some players’ status in the matches uncertain – officials bought themselves a little time by delaying the release of pairings to Saturday morning.

Both teams have dipped into their pool of two alternates, with the U.S. bringing in Mac Meissner to pair with Ricky Castillo in the second match out and Great Britain and Ireland using Jake Bolton in the final match.

It’s no surprise to see Alex Fitzpatrick, alongside Barclay Brown, in the GB&I lead-off spot. He was first out in every session two years ago when the matches were played at Royal Liverpool in Hoylake, England, and picked up two points for his team then.

Hammer said Friday afternoon that he didn’t make any requests about the order, but starting off the day suits him.

“I haven’t asked to do anything this go-around, but I do like going out early, kind of setting the tone,” he noted.

Hammer and Hagestad provide anchors on both ends of Saturday’s foursomes for the U.S.. They’d be a good match together, but should also make for a tough matches with their respective partners.

Davis Thompson, a former top-ranked amateur in the world, will play alongside Hammer. Hagestad noted in March that Thompson was probably high on the list of preferable partners for many members of the team.

“I think everyone on the team is going to say Davis,” Hagestad said, “because he’s just such a stud.”

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John Pak, the only other U.S. returner from 2019, is not in the opening lineup, nor is reigning U.S. Amateur champion Tyler Strafaci or Pierceson Coody. The U.S. could also pull in its second alternate, Cooper Dossey, in future matches if needed.

As for GB&I, Benjamin Schmidt, Ben Jones and reigning British Amateur champion Joe Long are absent the foursomes lineup.

Eight singles matches will follow Saturday morning’s foursomes matches.

Morning Foursomes

8:20 a.m. – Alex Fitzpatrick and Barclay Brown, GB&I vs. Cole Hammer and Davis Thompson, USA

8:35 a.m. – Mark Power and John Murphy, GB&I vs. Quade Cummins and Austin Eckroat, USA

8:50 a.m. – Jack Dyer and Matty Lamb, GB&I vs. Mac Meissner and Ricky Castillo, USA

9:05 a.m. – Angus Flanagan and Jake Bolton, GB&I vs. Stewart Hagestad and William Mouw, USA

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COVID-19 ruled out as Walker Cup teams battling stomach issues at Seminole Golf Club

This weekend’s 48th Walker Cup at Seminole Golf Club got off a rocky start.

JUNO BEACH, Florida — This weekend’s 48th Walker Cup at Seminole Golf Club got off a rocky start Friday when the USGA released a statement that said players on both the American and Great Britain-Ireland teams are battling stomach issues.

“Over the past 24 hours, a number of players from both the GB&I and USA Teams have been treated for gastrointestinal issues and are currently under observation by medical professionals at the teams’ hotel,” the statement read.

“All players from both teams have tested negative in their daily screenings and COVID-19 has been ruled out as the cause. The players have adhered to the strict health and safety guidelines established as a code of conduct for the match.

“The health and safety of the players and all involved in the match is our utmost priority and we are closely monitoring the situation. At this time, there is no expectation of a disruption to the timing of the matches of the biennial competition.

“We will provide additional updates if necessary.”

With both 10-members teams affected, it raises the possibility of food poisoning. In any event, it may be tougher for the players that have to play 36 holes daily to have their normal strength.

Under the Walker Cup format, there are four foursome matches Saturday morning, followed by eight singles matches. On Sunday, there are four foursomes matches followed by 10 singles matches.

The USA, which leads 37-9-1 and is the defending champion, needs 13 points to retain the cup. GBI needs 13½ to win the Cup.

PGA: Masters Tournament - First Round
Tyler Strafaci, shown here ar The Masters, is one of the leaders of the American Walker Cup team. (Photo: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports)

TV SCHEDULE
Saturday, Foursomes 10 a.m.-11 a.m. Peacock

Saturday Foursomes, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., Golf Channel

Saturday Foursomes 4:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m., Peacock

Saturday Singles 5:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m., Golf Channel

Sunday, Foursomes 10a.m.-11 a.m., Peacock

Sunday Foursomes 11 a.m.-1 p.m., Golf Channel

Sunday Foursomes 4:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m., Peacock

Sunday Singles 5:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m., Golf Channel

TEAMS

Great Britain-Ireland

Here’s a look at the team, captained by Scotland’s Stuart Wilson:

Barclay Brown (20, Hallamshire, England)

Alex Fitzpatrick (22, Hallamshire, England)

Angus Flanagan (21, St George’s Hill, England)

Ben Jones (21, Northamptonshire County, England)

Matty Lamb (23, Hexham, England)

Joe Long (23, Lansdown, England)

John Murphy (22, Kinsale, Ireland)

Mark Power (20, Kilkenny, Ireland)

Ben Schmidt (18, Rotherham, England)

Sandy Scott (22, Nairn, Scotland)

U.S. Walker Cup team

Here’s a look at the U.S. team, captained by Jupiter resident Nathaniel Crosby Jr.

Tyler Strafaci, 22, Davie, Georgia Tech (alum)

Davis Thompson, 21, St. Simons Island, Ga., Georgia (senior)

Ricky Castillo, 20, Yorba Linda, Calif., Florida (sophomore)

John Pak, 22, Scotch Plains, N.J., Florida State (senior)

Pierceson Coody, 21, Plano, Texas, Texas (junior)

Cole Hammer, 21, Houston, Texas, Texas (junior)

Stewart Hagestad, 29, Newport Beach, Calif., USC (alum)

Quade Cummins, 24, Weatherford, Okla., Oklahoma (senior)

Austin Eckroat, 22, Edmond, Okla., Oklahoma State (senior)

William Mouw, 20, Chino, Calif., Pepperdine (sophomore)

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Nathaniel Crosby brings a deep American squad to Seminole for Walker Cup

Seminole member Nathaniel Crosby has many memories at the iconic South Florida venue. He’s about to add another one.

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JUNO BEACH, Fla. – Nathaniel Crosby has just the squad he wanted this week for a backyard version of the Walker Cup. Crosby, 59 and returning as captain for the U.S. side this week at Seminole Golf Club (where he’s a member), logged many miles in scouting this team. He popped up everywhere from Bandon, Oregon to Miami.

“There weren’t any awkward moments,” he said of the selection process.

No player on the resulting 10-man U.S. team is ranked worse than No. 34 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, with half ranked inside the top 10. Even filling the mid-amateur requirement was a no-brainer – 30-year-old Stewart Hagestad makes it so.

“He would have been on the team whether he was 18 or 60,” Crosby said of Hagestad, who advanced to the quarterfinals at the U.S. Amateur in August.

Given this particular South Florida venue, Crosby was just as much of a no-brainer pick in the captaincy department. He’s the latest in a long line of Walker Cup captains to hold a membership at Seminole, Golfweek’s top-ranked private course in the state of Florida. Crosby knows the place as well as anyone, having first seen the golf course in 1976 when he played four days in a row with George Coleman (club president from 1981 to 1992), his father Bing Crosby and a family friend.

“As a 14-year-old, I shot 76 in a pretty good wind and George Coleman was so impressed with that, he said, ‘I’ll bet you if we play three more times…,’ I said, “I’ll beat that,’” Crosby recalled to Golfweek in May 2020. “And I shot between 75 and 77 the next three days and Coleman won $20 from me.”

When Crosby was an undergraduate at the University of Miami in the early 1980s, he made sure to use each of his allotted 25 rounds per year as a guest at Seminole. He won the first member-guest he played in 1979 as a guest of Doc Hoover, who was a frequent playing partner of Ben Hogan’s and “everyone’s favorite orthopedic in town.”

When Crosby last captained the Americans at Royal Liverpool in Hoylake, England, there was significant personal history, too. Crosby was a member of the U.S. squad that won there in 1983.

“I can’t really say I’m more excited about it because Hoylake was my first and, you know, had the history there but being that I’m at home and down the street, it’s a phenomenal opportunity for me to have a special experience in front of my homies and family,” Crosby said.

2020 Walker Cup
Jack Nicklaus and U.S. Team Captain Nathaniel Crosby chat during a practice round at the 2021 Walker Cup at Seminole Golf Club. (Chris Keane/USGA)

Many golf fans got eyes on the iconic Donald Ross design in May 2020, when Seminole hosted the TaylorMade Driving Relief charitable match between Rory McIlroy, Dustin Johnson, Rickie Fowler and Matthew Wolff.

Hagestad expects the course to show well again this month.

“Depending in the wind and the conditions, it will play differently every day and … obviously changing tee markers and kind of how it’s all playing, they have such a great level on where it is for the day,” he said. “The course knowledge that’s there, just kind of the golf IQ of the membership and the genuine care that they have for it, it’s pretty spectacular.”

Traditionally, the Walker Cup is played in early September, but was moved to May to avoid Florida’s hurricane season. The two-day matches fall squarely in the college golf postseason – with conference championship having just wrapped up and NCAA Regionals set to begin May 17.

Eight of the 10 players on the U.S. team are currently on a college roster. Five of the GB&I players currently play college golf in the U.S.

In the aftermath of the American’s comeback victory to defeat GB&I on home soil in 2019 – the first road win for a U.S. team since 2007 and just the second since 1991 – Crosby referenced foursomes preparation as being a key part of his team’s preparation. Crosby said he got an idea of pairings for this week from a December practice session, and as players came in and out of Seminole in the lead-up to the matches.

2020 Walker Cup
Jack Nicklaus and Stewart Hagestad chat during a practice round at the 2021 Walker Cup at Seminole Golf Club. (Chris Keane/USGA)

Each day begins with four foursomes matches between eight singles matches on Saturday afternoon and 10 on Sunday afternoon. In 2019, the U.S. won four and a half of a possible eight points in foursomes.

That year, Hagestad paired twice with then-17-year-old Akshay Bhatia, the youngest player ever selected to a U.S. Walker Cup team. At Seminole, Hagestad said, it’s important to pair with someone who complements your weaknesses.

“It’s not like we haven’t played it before, I think we’ve just been outplayed,” Hagestad said candidly on the format. “It just comes down to play better.”

The Americans did that, too, in 2019. The two-day matches can go by quickly. There isn’t time to waste.

“In match play, you have to come out swinging, you can’t kind of get into the rhythm of it.”

Let the Cup begin.

How to watch

May 8

Foursomes: Peacock, 10-11 a.m.
Foursomes: Golf Channel, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Singles: Peacock, 4:30-5:30 p.m.
Singles: Golf Channel, 5:30-7:30 p.m.

May 9

Foursomes: Peacock, 10-11 a.m.
Foursomes: Golf Channel, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Singles: Peacock, 4:30-5:30 p.m.
Singles: Golf Channel, 5:30-7:30 p.m.

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Meet the United States and International teams for the 2021 Arnold Palmer Cup

Meet the United States and International teams for the 2021 Arnold Palmer Cup outside Chicago.

Both the United States and International teams for the 2021 Arnold Palmer Cup were announced on Tuesday.

During an episode of Golf Channel’s Golf Today, the 36 players (18 on each team, nine men and nine women) were announced for the annual team competition for college golfers held this year at Rich Harvest Farms outside Chicago, June 11-13, 2021.

Wake Forest’s Emilia Migliaccio becomes the first American to play in four Arnold Palmer Cups, leading a team that consists of three returning players from 2020: Julia Johnson (Ole Miss), Gina Kim (Duke) and Latanna Stone (LSU).

The following players will round out Team USA: Sam Bennett (Texas A&M), Jacob Bridgeman (Clemson), Ricky Castillo (Florida), Pierceson Coody (Texas), Allisen Corpuz (Southern California), Nick Gabrelcik (North Florida), Ryan Hall (South Carolina), Hanna Harrison (Dallas Baptist), Lauren Hartlage (Louisville), Irene Kim (Northwestern), Rachel Kuehn (Wake Forest), Brooke Matthews (Arkansas), Dylan Menante (Pepperdine), William Moll (Vanderbilt), Trevor Norby (Oklahoma Christian), Trent Phillips (Georgia), Brad Reeves (Arizona), Erica Shepherd (Duke), Benjamin Shipp (NC State), and Kate Smith (Nebraska).

The defending champion International squad features players from 14 countries, including seven returners from 2020: Puwit Anupansuebsai (San Diego State/Thailand), Alex Fitzpatrick (Wake Forest/England), Yuxin Lin (Florida/China), Ingrid Lindblad (LSU/Sweden), David Puig (Arizona State/Spain), Paulne Roussin-Bouchard (South Carolina/France) and Emma Spitz (UCLA/Austria).

The rest of the International team: Eugenio Chacarra (Oklahoma State/Spain), Adrien Dumont de Chassart (Illinois/Belgium), Isabella Fierro (Oklahoma State/Mexico), Karen Fredgaard (Houston/Sweden), Allan Hill (Maynooth/Ireland), Bo Jin (Oklahoma State/China), Agathe Laisne (Texas/France), Pontus Nyholm (Campbell/Sweden), Virunpat Olankitkunchai (Maryland/Thailand), Joseph Pagdin (Florida/England), Ana Pelaez Trivino (South Carolina/Spain), Julian Perico (Arkansas/Spain), Emily Price (Kent State/England), Hugo Townsend (Boise State/Sweden), Beatrice Wallin (Florida State/Sweden) and Lauren Walsh (Wake Forest/Ireland).

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Forward Press podcast: Dottie Pepper discusses new book, Julie Williams previews the Walker Cup

On the latest episode of the Forward Press podcast, Dottie Pepper discusses new book and Julie Williams previews the Walker Cup.

Welcome to episode 94 of Forward Press, a weekly podcast from Golfweek.

In this edition of the Forward Press podcast, Golfweek’s David Dusek chats with two-time major winner Dottie Pepper about her new book, “Letters to a Future Champion: My Time with Mr. Pulver.” Julie Williams joins later to preview the upcoming Walker Cup at Seminole Golf Club in Juno Beach, Florida.

As always, you can download the Forward Press podcast and listen on all of your favorite platforms, including: Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Spotify | Castbox | Radio Public.

Did you like what you heard? You can catch up on previous episodes of the Forward Press podcast here.

After Walker Cup, Tyler Strafaci to make pro debut at AT&T Byron Nelson Championship

After playing the Walker Cup, which has long been a goal, Tyler Strafaci will make his pro debut at the AT&T Byron Nelson Championship.

Tyler Strafaci’s heart has been in the Walker Cup before he was even on the Walker Cup team. Strafaci, who won the North & South Amateur and the U.S. Amateur in 2020, did something his talented grandfather, Frank Strafaci, never did. Frank won the U.S. Amateur Public Links in 1935, but never was selected to represent the U.S. in the biennial matches against Great Britain and Ireland.

His grandson will be a key part of the matches at Seminole Golf Club in Juno Beach, Florida, next month. But after that?

Strafaci has revealed a date for his first pro start. The former Georgia Tech player will make his pro debut at the AT&T Byron Nelson Championship.

“Amateur golf will always have a special place in my heart, and I am proud that I was able to continue in my family’s legacy in the amateur game. I am excited to cap my amateur career by representing my country at the 2021 Walker Cup,” Strafaci said. “It has been my long-time goal to become a professional golfer and to chase my dream of being a full-time player on the PGA TOUR. I am thankful to the Salesmanship Club and AT&T for giving me the opportunity to make my first professional start. It is an honor to do so at an event that celebrates the life and legacy of Byron Nelson, especially given Mr. Nelson’s accomplishments on the course as well as everything he achieved as a humanitarian and advocate for the game.”

Strafaci, who will be represented by Fairwhay Management, is also scheduled to play the Charles Schwab Challenge, the Memorial Tournament presented by Nationwide and the U.S. Open in the coming weeks.

So far this spring, Strafaci has played in the Farmers Insurance Open and the Masters, missing the cut in both tournaments.

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U.S. Walker Cup team is set for May matches at Seminole; includes 8 collegians, 3 returners from 2019

The 10-man U.S. Walker Cup team includes nine current college players and three players returning from the victorious 2019 U.S. squad.

With just more than two months until the 2021 Walker Cup match at Seminole Golf Club in Juno Beach, Florida, the U.S. team has taken shape. On Monday, the U.S. Golf Association announced the full 10-man squad that will compete in the first Walker Cup to be held in the spring on U.S. soil.

Davis Thompson, Ricky Castillo and John Pak, as the three highest-ranked Americans in the WAGR, earned their spot on the team after the World Amateur Golf Ranking was updated on Feb.10 to reflect results from the previous weekend’s Jones Cup, a prestigious amateur event at Ocean Forest Golf Club in Sea Island, Georgia. The trio joined reigning U.S. Amateur champion Tyler Strafaci as the first selections to the team.

The remaining six players were later chosen by the USGA’s International Team Selection working group. Those players are Pierceson Coody, Quade Cummins, Austin Eckroat, Stewart Hagestad, Cole Hammer and William Mouw.

College Rankings
Men’s team | Men’s indiv. | Women’s team | Women’s indiv.

Hagestad, Hammer and Pak all return from the 2019 U.S. team that defeated Great Britain & Ireland at Royal Liverpool Golf Club in Hoylake, England. Hagestad, the 2016 U.S. Mid-Am champ, and Strafaci, who did not return to Georgia Tech this spring, are the only non-collegians on the team.

Pak was arguably the man of the matches in 2019, going 3-0-0 (the only player on either team to go undefeated). The Florida State senior, who has since won two college events and finished as low amateur at the 2020 U.S. Open, came to the Walker Cup team in a decidedly different way than he did in 2019 in that he secured his spot early. A year and a half ago, Pak made six starts in a 10-week stretch, hitting all the major amateur events to make his case for inclusion. Ultimately he was one of the final selections, revealed after the end of the 2019 U.S. Amateur.

Castillo, now a sophomore at Florida, and Mouw, a sophomore at Pepperdine, seemed to be in the running for much of the summer of 2019, and likely were among the players who just missed a selection that year. Both were junior golfers then, on the cusp of college golf.

Castillo has spent time as the top-ranked player in the WAGR, but currently checks in at No. 6. He won twice in his abbreviated freshman season and has made the semifinals at the Western Amateur the past two years. Mouw set Pepperdine’s freshman record with five top-10 finishes and came back this fall with a pair of top 10s individually.

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As for Thompson, a Georgia senior who finished runner-up in his Jones Cup title defense last month, a Walker Cup pick has been all but guaranteed as he has maintained his position at or near the top of the WAGR for the past several weeks. He is currently ranked No. 1.

Thompson has won two college titles in the past two years, including the 2019 NCAA Athens Regional title, and was stroke-play medalist at the 2019 Western Amateur. He finished in the top 25 at the 2019 RSM Classic on the PGA Tour.

Cummins is the only fifth-year senior on the squad and is finishing up his career at the University of Oklahoma. He won the 2019 Pacific Coast Amateur and logged top-5 finishes at the 2019 Sunnehanna Amateur and in Western Amateur stroke play that year.

Coody, who is a teammate of Hammer’s at the University of Texas, won the Western Amateur in July 2020. Austin Eckroat, a junior at Oklahoma State, is ranked No. 15 in the WAGR and scored a top-15 finish at the PGA Tour’s Mayakoba Golf Classic in November.

McClure Meissner, a junior at SMU and the reigning Southern Amateur champion, and Garett Reband, another Oklahoma fifth-year senior, are the first and second alternatives, respectively.

Nathaniel Crosby, who in addition to guiding the 2019 victory also played on the winning U.S. team in the 1983 Walker Cup match, will return as captain.

“It is once again a great privilege to serve as the USA captain and to work with a group who represent the best of amateur golf,” said Crosby. “The 10 team members have a notable list of accomplishments on the collegiate, national and international levels. They will represent the United States in the spirit and tradition of the Walker Cup Match.”

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Tyler Strafaci is reaping the spoils of a U.S. Am win at Torrey Pines, but a big dream comes true in May

Tyler Strafaci, the reigning U.S. Amateur champion, is in the transition period between amateur and professional golf.

The last time Tyler Strafaci was in San Diego, he was playing the Junior World Championship – a long-running junior event at Torrey Pines. Strafaci, now 22, wasn’t even a teenager then.

“I remember I walked with my dad out on the South Course after the tournament had finished, and just such a special place,” Strafaci said on the eve of the Farmers Insurance Open, which he’s playing as an amateur. “It’s beautiful. It’s very scenic”

Strafaci has had a lot of memorable walks with his dad Frank this year. A seven-day jaunt around Bandon Dunes in August is ultimately what got him back here. The Strafacis carted home the Havemeyer Trophy that week and as a U.S. Amateur champion, doors began to open.

Strafaci has made PGA Tour starts before. He focused intently on the cut and missed it at the 2018 Valspar Championship and U.S. Open. He was 19 then, and vastly less experienced. He bagged three major amateur titles this summer and has since closed out a career at Georgia Tech. Admittedly, Strafaci feels freed up as the U.S. Amateur champion.

Still, it’s a different arena.

Farmers: Tee times | Fantasy golf rankings | Odds

“Usually I play golf to win and put myself in position on the last day of the tournament to have a good chance to win,” he said. “That’s kind of what I’m going to do this week. I’m sure there’s going to be some growing pains. Winning out here’s going to take a lot better golf than winning in college or amateur golf. So I’m going to learn how to do that and hopefully I can learn how to do that very quickly so I can accomplish the goals.”

There is no formula or guidebook for turning professional. When is the time right? Only the player can say. But Strafaci won’t cross that invisible threshold until after he checks a box very important to his family.

It has been well-documented that Strafaci’s grandfather Frank, also a USGA champion after winning the 1935 U.S. Amateur Public Links, never was selected to play on the U.S. Walker Cup team. But Tyler played his way onto the squad by winning the U.S. Amateur. He’ll remain amateur through the matches May 8-9 at Seminole Golf Club in Juno Beach, Florida. A start in the Masters sits in between here and there.

“I definitely want to be the first Strafaci to play on the Walker Cup and that’s something I’ve wanted to do since I was a little kid,” he said.

Strafaci originally returned to Georgia Tech to take advantage of a fifth year granted after the end of his senior year was wiped out because of COVID. The ACC was not allowed to compete in golf in the fall, and Strafaci decided not to return in the spring.

It was a tough conversation with head coach Bruce Heppler, especially given that teammates Andy Ogletree and Luke Schniederjans were out the door, too. It was a formidable threesome that would have made Georgia Tech a favorite for a postseason run.

“He thought it was best that I would come back,” Strafaci said of Heppler. “He kind of wanted me to be there for the young guys, but at the same time I think he knew I was ready. So I know he was proud of me for the decision I made and I know he’s in my corner. I love the guy to death.”

Strafaci will likely have more Tour exemptions come his way as U.S. Am champ, and also could still tee it up in high-level amateur events to stay sharp. Asked the likelihood that he might show up in an event like the Jones Cup, where many players will make a run at being his Walker Cup teammate, or the Azalea Amateur, which often serves as a tune-up for amateurs playing the Masters, Strafaci didn’t totally rule out the latter.

Strafaci, a native of Davie, Florida, is now based out of Ft. Lauderdale. Arguably the best part of that location is his proximity to Seminole. Strafaci has found himself playing alongside Walker Cup captain Nathaniel Crosby.

“I’ve probably played five rounds there since I finished – since I knew I was playing on the team, so I’ve gotten some good prep,” he said. “It helps that it’s about an hour drive. We have some sort of in and out privileges where I can go there once a week and do some prep work, so I’m going to be ready for that tournament.”

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Cole Hammer takes over at the South Beach International Am, building 4-shot lead with 62

Cole Hammer fired a third-round 62 and now leads the South Beach International Amateur by four shots.

Three days ago, Cole Hammer was 225 miles north of Miami at a practice session with 15 other amateurs who have caught the U.S. Golf Association’s attention for selection to the 2021 Walker Cup team. Hammer, who played on the U.S. team in 2019, has helped his case at the South Beach International Amateur.

Hammer began pulling away at Miami Beach Golf Club on Monday afternoon. He had nine birdies in a 9-under 62 that bumped him to 14 under and the top of the leaderboard. His approach at the par-4 18th gave him a 25-footer for birdie at 61 but Hammer two-putted for par instead.

A third-round 62 was more than enough to do the trick.

Hammer, who has had middling results so far this summer (a missed cut at the U.S. Amateur and U.S. Open among them), opened with rounds of 67-69 at this event. He was seventh entering the third round, trailing co-leaders Frankie Capan and Ben Smith by three shots. Smith had even-par 71 on Monday and managed to gain no ground. Capan lost some with his 73.

Scores: South Beach International Amateur

Behind Hammer, a trio of players are at 10 under, including Kelly Chinn, a Duke commit and the AJGA’s Rolex Player of the Year. Chinn had 64 on Monday, a round that included an eagle at the par-4 eighth.

Coastal Carolina’s Zack Taylor and Frenchman Pierre Viallaneix are also in the mix at 10 under.

For his part, Smith remains within striking distance alongside James Piot, recently named the Golf Association of Michigan player of the year. Both are 8 under and tied for fifth.

William Holcomb V, who was stroke-play medalist earlier this month at the Maridoe Amateur, is among a four-man tie for seventh at 7 under. Holcomb, a fifth-year senior at Sam Houston State, has fired rounds of 69-68-68.

 

Walker Cup selection begins: Here’s when the next three players will be added to the U.S. team

A Walker Cup practice session just wrapped for U.S. team hopefuls, and now there’s a date for three WAGR selections to the team.

Days after a Walker Cup practice session wrapped up at Bay Hill Club in Orlando, Florida, the U.S. Golf Association’s International Team Selection Committee has set a date for the first round of U.S. team selections.

Selection criteria for a portion of the team remains the same for building the 2021 team. That begins with the three highest-ranked American players in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. The cutoff date for those exemptions will fall after the Feb. 10 WAGR update.

The 2021 Walker Cup match will be played earlier than usual, having been moved from its traditional early September date to May 8-9 – just before the NCAA golf postseason begins in earnest. The matches will be played at Seminole Golf Club in Juno Beach, Florida, an ultra-private course that the golf world got a rare glimpse of in May 2020 when it hosted the TaylorMade Driving Relief exhibition match that featured Rickie Fowler, Matthew Wolff, Rory McIlroy and Dustin Johnson.

Related: Check out the 16 players invited to a Walker Cup practice

So far, only one player has played his way onto the 10-man U.S. team. Tyler Strafaci accomplished that with his U.S. Amateur win at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort in Bandon, Oregon, in August.

Nathaniel Crosby returns for his second captaincy after leading the Americans to victory at Royal Liverpool Golf Club in Hoylake, England, in 2019. Crosby attended the Bay Hill practice session last week that included Strafaci and 15 Walker Cup hopefuls.

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