UNLV’s Caden Fioroni, San Jose State’s Antonia Malate win 12th annual Patriot All-America; Arizona’s Chaz Aurilia claims inaugural Thunderbolt

The event honors fallen or severely wounded soldiers in partnership with the Folds of Honor Foundation.

UNLV junior Caden Fioroni and San Jose State grad student Antonia Malate won their respective divisions at the 12th annual Patriot All-America in Arizona on Saturday.

Fioroni finished at 12 under after scores of 67-71-63 at the Wigwam Golf Club in Litchfield Park, Arizona, to beat Oklahoma’s Ben Lorenz by a shot. Colorado State’s Connor Jones and Oklahoma’s Stephen J. Campbell tied for third at 10 under.

Fioroni’s final-round 63 featured birdies on five of his last seven holes, including Nos. 16, 17 ad 18, to tie the men’s division low score. Lorenz had a look for birdie on the 18th hole to force a playoff but his putt came up short.

“I have no words right now, honestly I knew I was really behind today and this is the first time I never thought about my score,” said Fioroni. “I knew I needed to make as many birdies as I could. I was so much in the zone I didn’t realize until after the round that I shot 8 under. I’m kind of in shock right now – I dont know what to say.”

UNLV Caden Fioroni
UNLV’s Caden Fioroni celebrates after winning the 2022 Patriot All-America in Litchfield Park, Arizona. (Photo: Arizona Golf Association)

Meanwhile, Malate earned medalist honors in the women’s division after outlasting ASU’s Grace Summerhays and Emma McMyler of Xavier.

The three golfers finished 54 holes tied at 9 under. Summerhays was knocked out first after parring the first playoff hole, while Malate and Xavier made birdie. On the fourth playoff hole, Malate drained a 20-foot eagle putt to claim the win.

“This is one of my bigger collegiate wins so I’m excited,” said Malate. “[Emma] played really well and made a lot of great putts. She made it hard for me, so I had to make an eagle to win.”

2022 Patriot All-America
Antonia Malate of San Jose State celebrates after winning the 2022 Patriot All-America in Litchfield Park, Arizona. (Photo: Arizona Golf Association)

Arizona senior Chaz Aurilia won the inaugural Thunderbolt at Sterling Grove Golf & Country Club in Surprise, Arizona.

Aurilia also needed extra holes to win. Tied with Fresno State’s Joseph Lloyd at 13 under, Aurilia sank a 20-foot birdie then watched Lloyd’s birdie try from about 18 feet lip out.

“It feels good. I played really well all week,” said Aurilia. “This is the first time they’ve had this event, and it’s a really good event. It’s for a really cool cause, also, so it was a great tournament for me.”

2022 Thunderbolt
Chaz Aurilia won medalist honors at the 2022 Thunderbolt at Sterling Grove Golf & Country Club in Surprise, Arizona. (Photo: Arizona Golf Association)

About the The Patriot All-America

The event honors fallen or severely wounded soldiers in partnership with the Folds of Honor Foundation. At the opening ceremony, golfers receive a golf bag donated by Ping emblazoned with the name and branch of service of a fallen or injured military member whom they shall represent. Participants also receive a card with the soldier’s story so they can be familiar with that soldier, giving many of the top players a unique perspective not only on golf, but on life. At the conclusion of the tournament, the golf bags are shipped to players’ schools and auctioned with all proceeds benefitting the Folds of Honor Foundation. Named after the Air Force P-47 Thunderbolt, the new event was added in 2023 to accommodate players who met the initial eligibility but did not make it into The Patriot.

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Wigwam Red Course in Arizona slated for four-month bunker renovation

Capillary Concrete systems should improve playing conditions in the bunkers of the Phoenix-area Red Course.

Wigwam Golf Club in Litchfield Park, Arizona, will begin a four-month bunker renovation on its Red Course starting on July 5. The layout is scheduled to remain open through the summer as work is completed, and it will be temporarily closed for seasonal overseeding in late September.

The Red is one of three courses at the public-access Wigwam, which operates three courses and a resort just west of Phoenix. Originally named the West Course when it opened in 1974, it was renamed in the late 1980s in honor of two men: the club’s longtime professional, V.O. “Red” Allen, and the course’s architect, Robert “Red” Lawrence. The other two courses at Wigwam, the Gold and the Blue, were designed by Robert Trent Jones Sr.

The bunker work to the Red, set to wrap up in October, will be a collaboration by Pro Turf International and Wigwam ownership group JDM Partners. The 44 fairway and greenside bunkers will be excavated and rebuilt with Capillary Concrete, a system that controls water flow through the base of the sand and minimizes washouts. The course’s current tan sand will be replaced with white sand.

Wigwam did similar work on its Blue Course in 2016 and its Gold Course in 2015.

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Patriot All-America Invitational field elevated with addition of women’s field

“It’s always been a hope and a mission of the tournament to add a women’s field,” said Patriot chairman.

Heading into its 11th year, the Patriot All-American Invitational is elevating its field in a big way.

In July, tournament organizers announced that after 10 years of having only men’s golfers, one of the premier amateur golf tournaments will have a women’s field for the first time at Wigwam Golf Club in Litchfield Park, Arizona, Dec. 28-31.

The interest to get in the field was sky high.

“We filled the women’s field with the first round of invitations. We were ecstatic. And we filled it within a few weeks,” said Sean Scibienski, chairman for the 2021 Patriot All-American.

“It’s always been a hope and a mission of the tournament to add a women’s field but we had to let the tournament season, make sure we knew what we were doing, work with our partners to fundraise enough to do it,” said Scibienski. “This is the first year we pulled the trigger and we’re super excited. We’re starting with a 42-player women’s field. Our hopes are to grow that. We got a top-notch field this year. We’re super excited to have them.”

The Patriot All-America made the announcement in partnership with the Women’s Golf Coaches Association of America.

“The WGCA is excited to partner with The Patriot,” said Angie Ravaioli-Larkin, WGCA President. “This is so special to our organization especially with our involvement and commitment to The Folds of Honor. What a tremendous opportunity to recognize some of the finest players in women’s college golf while honoring those who have paid the ultimate sacrifice.”

While the inaugural field for the women will be 42 golfers, the men’s field will be 84 players once again. The Wigwam resort has three 18-hole layouts which will allow the men and women to play at the same time. The men will compete on the gold course while the women will tackle the blue.

“It works out pretty nicely. They have three golf courses, but two of them kind of weave in amongst each other,” Scibienski said. “Both golf courses are right next to each other, and several holes kind of intertwine between each other so it really makes for it spectacular for spectator’s access to both the women’s field and the men’s field at the same time. It makes it really easy for them.”

Aside for the field size and the different courses, everything else about the experience will be the same for the male and female competitors, including the unique part of the Patriot All-American.

“Each golfer receives and carries a commemorative Ping golf bag that bears the name and branch of a fallen or wounded hero from their hometown or school,” Scibienski said. That’s been a tradition at the event since it started.

“We like to call it the college bowl game of golf. The players are getting swag items in their rooms every day, they get breakfast, lunch and dinner, a VIP tour of Luke Air Force Base.

“We have a F-35 flyover. The keynote speaker this year is Lt. Dan Rooney, the founder of Folds of Honor. Anything that’s not golf tournament, actual playing related, the women are alongside the men doing the exact same stuff.”

The tournament falls in between Christmas and New Year’s Eve, but that’s never been an issue filling the field.

“Who doesn’t want to play golf in Arizona in December?” Scibienski said. But as it turned out, it was much more than that.

“A lot of the men’s golf coaches and men’s golfers went to their women counterparts and said ‘This thing is amazing.’ The kids who come out here love it. We have several kids who try to play it every year they have eligibility. The boys did a great job telling the girls ‘You gotta make it out and play.'”

The West Valley Mavericks, who run the Patriot, style themselves a bit after the Thunderbirds, who are in charge of the Waste Management Phoenix Open, and like the Thunderbirds, the Mavericks are forward thinking and are already looking ahead to 2022 and beyond. That includes making a bigger deal out of the final round ending on December 31.

“It is on our agenda for future plans to basically do our version of the Bird’s Nest [the famous concert venue at TPC Scottsdale], where we roll right from closing ceremonies to a big New Year’s Eve bash at the Wigwam,” he said. “That’s just a future plan that we haven’t pulled the trigger on yet but I wouldn’t be surprised to see it next year or the year after.”

Getting in the Patriot All-America Invitational

The tournament features Ping All-Americans from the previous season in NCAA Divisions I, II and III, NAIA and NJCAA as well as 2021 First Team All-America seniors from the AJGA. The golfers also have to be ranked high enough in the World Amateur Golf Rankings.

Notables in the field

Two of the top 50 golfers in the latest men’s WAGR rankings are in the field: Sam Choi of New Mexico (20) and David Ford of North Carolina (35). Three of the top 50 in the women’s rankings are playing: Oklahoma State’s Caley McGinty (20), Oregon’s Hsin-Yu Lu (41) and San Jose State’s Natasha Andrea Oon (49).

Arizona State is well represented as Mason Anderson, Kiko Coelho, James Leow and Preston Summerhays from the men’s team are in the field, as are Ashley Menne and Calynne Rosholt from the women’s team. Christian Banke and Chase Sienkiewicz from the Arizona Wildcats men’s team as well as Maya Benita and Ya Chun Chang from the UA’s women’s team are in the field. Mason Domecq from Ottawa University Arizona and Siripatsorn Patchana from Grand Canyon University are also playing.

Specator information

Admission is free for all days of competition. The tournament will also be live-streamed on the West Valley Maverick’s youtube channel. There will be cameras on the first tee, as well as the 16th and 18th holes. The 16th hole is a par 3 and the camera there can also capture tee shots from the 11th and 17th hole. The camera on the 18th hole will also be used for the closing ceremony.

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Noah Norton wraps up Patriot All-America title with closing charge

The final hours of Noah Norton’s year were spent climbing the Patriot All-America leaderboard.

The final hours of Noah Norton’s year were spent climbing one final leaderboard. The Georgia Tech junior turned it on once he reached the back nine of the Patriot All-America on Dec. 31. With three birdies from Nos. 10-13, he effectively lifted himself out of the crowd and cleared a path toward a season-ending win at the Wigwam’s Gold Course in Litchfield Park, Arizona.

The Patriot All-America Invitational started in 2011 and features a cross-section of college golf talent from all divisions.

Each golfer in the tournament honors a fallen or severely injured soldier by carrying a bag bearing that person’s name.

PATRIOT ALL-AMERICAN: Leaderboard

It’s a fitting way for the year to end for Norton, a Chico, California, native who advanced through U.S. Open qualifying to tee it up at Pebble Beach in June. A runner-up finish followed two weeks later at the North & South Amateur at Pinehurst No. 2.

His good play throughout the summer season pulled him inside the top 100 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking. After the fall season at Georgia Tech, he is No. 85 in the WAGR.

Norton has worked to improve his game off the tee in the past year, but also to be more collected on the course. Interestingly, he may have a knack for coaching, too. When Georgia Tech teammate Andy Ogletree won the U.S. Amateur in August, Ogletree referenced a putting tip from Norton that had been season-changing.

Georgia Tech, by the way, finished the fall season No. 2 in the Golfweek/Sagarin College Rankings.

At the Wigwam, Norton’s closing 68 was enough to hold off a trio of players in second. Norton reached 7 under for the week, while Mason Overstreet, Jackson Suber and Sam Choi were all at 6 under.

Overstreet, a senior at Arkansas, won this event in 2017.

The two men in fifth included Pepperdine’s Joey Vrzich and Illinois State’s David Perkins.

As a team, Arizona State may have fared the best by placing Mason Anderson solo seventh at 4 under and Blake Wagoner in a tie for 12th at 1 under. A third teammate, Cameron Sisk, finished T-43.

Patriot All-American champions

2018 – Isaiah Jackson, Memphis

2017 – Mason Overstreet, Arkansas

2016 – Cameron Champ, Texas A&M

2015 – Braden Thornberry, Ole Miss

2014 – Kyle Kochevar, Virginia

2013 – Kyle Westmoreland, Air Force

2012 – Sebastian Cappelen, Arkansas

2011 – Cory Whitsett, Alabama