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Australian
Nick Flanagan Wins 2003 U.S. Amateur
Oakmont,
Pa. -- Nick Flanagan, 19, became the first Australian in 100 years
and first foreign-born player in 32 years to win the 2003 U.S. Amateur
Championship at historic Oakmont Country Club Sunday.
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| Nick
Flanagan will have a little more luggage to take back home to
Australia, that being the Havemeyer Trophy. (John Mummert/USGA) |
The
compact Aussie defeated USA Walker Cup team member Casey Wittenberg,
18, of Memphis, Tenn., in 37 holes, to match Walter Travis as an
Australian winner. Flanagan, from Eleebana in New South Wales, won
the Havemeyer Trophy 100 years after Travis claimed the last of
his three championships in 1903.
To
be here this quickly and doing it in such a great tournament is
unbelievable,” said Flanagan, who is the second-youngest champion
to Tiger Woods, who was 18 when he won in 1994. “I was lucky
I had my short game this week because my long game was struggling.
He
continued: “I really didn’t think I would be able to
beat him today and, luckily, I might have got him on a half-off
day. And, it kind of worked in my favor.”
The
winner of the 2003 Tasmanian Open in February, Flanagan has been
in the United States playing tournament golf since June. During
his stay, he won the Pacific Northwest Amateur and qualified for
the U.S. Amateur in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Flanagan,
who received congratulatory calls from Australian professional Greg
Norman over the weekend, grabbed a 1-up lead on the 9th hole and
held it for 27 more.
He
increased the advantage to 4-up after the morning 18. However, in
the afternoon round, Wittenberg erased the deficit and squared the
match with winning pars on the 33rd and 36th holes.
On
the 37th hole, the 10th at Oakmont, Flanagan won with a par after
Wittenberg drove into the fairway rough and could not recover. He
becames the seventh foreign-born winner and first since Canadian
Gary Cowan won at Wilmington (Del). Country Club in 1971.
"I
never played in any kind of atmosphere like that before,”
Flanagan said of the 37th hole. “There were thousands of people
out there. You’re in a playoff for the most prestigious amateur
tournament in the world. If I ever feel that much pressure again,
I’ll be very surprised.”
Flanagan,
who had to birdie the 36th hole of stroke play to advance to a 14-man
playoff for match play Tuesday, did not begin playing golf until
six years ago when he watched Tiger Woods win the 1997 Masters.
The
club, north of Pittsburgh, has hosted seven U.S. Opens and five
U.S. Amateurs since opening in 1903.
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| After
changing his attire for the second 18 holes, Casey Wittenberg
erased Flanagan's 4-up lead at the break. (John Mummert/USGA) |
In
the first all-teenager final since the championship returned to
an all-match play format in 1973, both players struggled early with
the hard and fast fairways and slick putting surfaces at Oakmont
and did not make a birdie until Flanagan knotched a 4 on the par
5 12th.
Wittenberg,
who will attend Oklahoma State in the fall, won the Terra Cotta
Invitational, the Southern Amateur and Porter Cup this year.
The
champion receives a gold medal and custody of a replica of the Havemeyer
Trophy for the ensuing year. The runner-up receives a silver medal.
The champion and runner-up also receive exemptions from qualifying
for the 2004 U.S. Open and are historically extended invitations
to the Masters, if they maintain their amateur status. The champion
also receives an exemption from the 2004 British Open.
In
the semifinals, Wittenberg defeated Lee Williams, 21, of Alexander
City, Ala., 5 and 4. Flanagan outlasted David Oh, 22, of Cerritos,
Calif., 1 up.
The
U.S. Amateur is the oldest of 13 national championship conducted
annually by the United States Golf Association, 10 of which are
strictly for amateurs.
Final
Result
Oakmont,
Pa. – Result for Sunday’s 36-hole championship final
round of match play at the U.S. Amateur Championship, being played
at the par 70, 7,171-yard Oakmont Country Club:
Nick
Flanagan, Australia (55) def. Casey Wittenberg, Memphis, Tenn. (29),
37 holes
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