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1982

Jay Sigel

Jay Sigel, 38, of Berwyn, Pennsylvania, became the oldest Amateur Champion since 1964, winning at The Country Club, in Brookline, Massachusetts. William C. Campbell won the Amateur Championship in 1964 at the age of 41. Ironically, Campbell was the referee in the morning round of the final match. Sigel competed in his first Amateur Championship in 1962. He won in his 16th attempt, defeating David Tolley, 22, of Roanoke, Virginia, 8 and 7, in the 36-hole final match.

Despite some uncharacteristically sloppy play on the first nine of the morning round, Sigel took a five-hole advantage into the afternoon round. He built the lead to seven holes before Tolley mounted a small comeback, winning the fifth and sixth holes to narrow the margin to five. But Sigel rolled in a birdie putt of 40 feet on the seventh to open a six hole advantage. He won the match on the 11th hole when Tolley conceded a short par putt.

Nathaniel Crosby, of Hillsborough, California, the 1981 Champion, qualified easily for match play with a 149 total, but lost to Tom Pernice, Jr., of Kansas City, Missouri, on the 19th hole of the first round. Pernice birdied both the 18th and 19th holes. Robert Stanger, Jr., of Durham, North Carolina, and Bob Lewis, Jr., of Warren, Ohio, shared medalist at 141, one under par. Stanger was eliminated in the third round by Jim Hallet, of South Yarmouth, Massachusetts, 2 and 1, while Sigel defeated Lewis, 3 and 2, in the first round.

All 282 starters played one round each at The Country Club and the Charles River Country Club. Sixty-three players qualified with a score of 151 or better, while the 64th qualifier, Mark Brooks, of Ft. Worth, Texas, survived a 12-man playoff for the final spot after posting a 152. Jess Sweetser, who won the 1922 Amateur Championship at The Country Club, was the featured speaker at the players' dinner. Roger Brown, of Ponca City, Oklahoma, recorded the lone hole-in-one of the Championship, on the 237-yard 11th hole at Charles River. He failed to qualify for match play, however. The USGA accepted 3,685 entries, short of the record 4,008 for the 1980 Championship.

 
Championship Facts

U.S. Amateur

PAR AND YARDAGE – The Lakeside Course at The Olympic Club will play at 6,948 yards and par 35-35—70. The Ocean Course at The Olympic Club, which will be used for the first two days of stroke play only, will play at 6,786 yards and par 35-35—70.

THE OLYMPIC CLUB – Sam Whiting, a former English professor at the University of California at Berkley, designed the Lakeside Course, which opened in 1927. Whiting also supervised construction on the Ocean Course. Following completion of the jobs, Whiting stayed on as golf course superintendent until 1954. Tom Weiskopf worked on the recently completed re-design of the Ocean Course.

TICKETS AVAILABLE – Tickets can be purchased online at www.ticketmaster.com or www.ticketweb.com. Daily tickets are $15 and a weekly pass is $60. Other ticket options are also available. Children 12 and under are admitted free if accompanied by a paying adult.

COURSE SETUP – The Lakeside Course at the Olympic Club will be set for green speeds of approximately 11 feet, 6 inches on the Stimpmeter. The primary rough will be grown to 4 inches, with a strip of intermediate rough cut to 1½ inches in height. Poa annua grass covers the greens. The fairways are a rye and poa annual grass combination. The roughs also have a bit of bluegrass mixed in.

USGA SLOPE RATING® AND COURSE RATING™ – The Lakeside Course at the Olympic Club will carry a USGA Course Rating™ of 74.8 and a USGA Slope Rating® of 143. The Ocean Course will carry a USGA Course Rating™ of 74.0 and a USGA Slope Rating® of 136. An "average" Slope Rating in the U.S. is about 113.

TOTAL ENTRIES – The USGA accepted 7,398 entries for the 2007 U.S. Amateur. The most entries ever received for an Amateur championship was 7,920 in 1999 when the U.S. Amateur was played at Pebble Beach (Calif.) Golf Links.

WHO CAN ENTER – The U.S. Amateur Championship is open to amateur golfers who have a USGA Handicap Index not exceeding 2.4.

 

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