Wednesday
Aug032022

Perkins holds off Chopra for Illinois Open title

Writing from Naperville, Illinois

Wednesday, August 3, 2022

When David Perkins got to his ball in the rough behind the par-5 17th hole at windblown White Eagle Golf Club, it wasn’t a pretty sight.

“The lie wasn’t horrible, but grass was going three different ways,” Perkins said.

At that second, Perkins led the 73rd Illinois Open by a stroke over a crowd, including Daniel Hudson and Ethan Farnam, who had finished. He needed to get down in no worse than par.

Earlier, he’d been faced with a similar lie behind the 11th green, and had salvaged par with a deft chip from a tossed salad of a lie to within a foot on a green sloping away from him. Now he had to do so again, and on his first shot following a delay for a quick-moving lightning storm which had doused the course. He was 30 yards from the cup.

Perkins played the shot deftly, to within a few feet, and sank the putt for a crucial birdie en route to his first victory as a professional.

“I was so short-sided … the rain could have helped me up, could have been a blessing,” Perkins said. “I had (the wedge) pretty wide open, and at the last second, I closed it up a bit for safety. It came out perfect. It was an awkward lie. I was a guess. I knew if I left it short, I’m going to make this tournament really close, and if I didn’t, I’m going to make par at the worst. That shot was huge.”

His par on the 18th earned him a 2-under-par 70, a total of 6-under 210, a stroke ahead of runner-up Varun Chopra of Champaign, who birdied the last two holes for 70 and 211.

It also earned Perkins $23,168. The East Peorian is the first downstate player to win the Illinois Open since Brad Benjamin of Rockford captured the 2009 edition.

“Technically, it doesn’t get you any (tour) status, but confidence, belief, those aspects of being a professional – that’s what it’s about,” Perkins said. “It gives me confidence going into Q school, no matter what level, Korn Ferry, PGA, whatever I’m doing.”

Perkins’ scholarly chipping showed that great touch combined with steely nerve can win the day.

“It just played hard every day, so it was keeping myself in it, knowing if I kept missing in the right spots and hitting golf shots, I could be in it,” Perkins said. “I knew I wasn’t going to be hitting every green.”

When he didn’t, he generally made the play that saved par on a tough test.

Low amateur Marcus Smith Jr. of Rockford was also in the mix, tied with Perkins at 5-under after the 13th, where Perkins’ poor tee shot led to a bogey while Smith, fighting through a sore finger on his right hand, drilled his approach within eight feet and sank the birdie putt for the tie.

“I could see (the leader board), but that’s one thing I’ve been trying to work on, seeing the score and not letting it effect me, because at the end of the day, I can’t do anything about his score,” Smith said. “But I definitely took a look at it."

Smith’s 1-under 71 featured five birdies and two double-bogeys, one of which was on the par-4 16th, which put Perkins in front for good. Eliminate one of the doubles and he and Perkins are in a playoff.

“Like I said from the beginning, it was mental-mental-mental,” Smith said. “Staying positive, because I knew it was going to get difficult. It’s the final round and you want to put some pressure on the leader, but at the same time, you want to be smart.

“I couldn’t be happier about the way I played. It’s a tough loss, because I was right there, but that’s three rounds under par, and my sixth round in as many days (including the Rockford city championship) and all six are par or better. So I’ve had a good week.”

While the final group was jousting with each other, Hudson, a 27-year-old Chicagoan, was racing into a tie for third with a course-record-tying 7-under 65. His bogey-free circuit brought the erstwhile Kansas Jayhawk to 4-under 212, matching Ethan Farnam and Smith, improving his position 23 places from Tuesday.

Hudson, a frequent player of always-windy Chicago Highlands when he’s not on the mini-tours, opened on White Eagle’s back nine in 3-under 33. Then, “I wanted to see how low I could go,” he said of his final nine. “I didn’t make a putt the first two days. When I made by first two birdies early in the round, I got my confidence back.”

Birdies on Nos. 2, 3, 4 and 6 followed, and got him to one off the lead when Perkins, Gannon and Smith shared it. Then Perkins birdied No. 17 to knock the 4-unders from contention.

Around White Eagle

There isn’t a senior division, but Roy Biancalana, 62, tied for seventh place at 2-under 214, a remarkable performance. Biancalana was first in Illinois Open contention in 1985, when he tied for second behind Gary Pinns. Biancalana won the title in 1987, won again in 2001 after leaving golf to become a minister, and tied for 14th last year, after coming back from a stint as a life coach. An example of what perseverance, weight training and winter workouts will do to keep one’s self sharp, he earned $3,725. … Perkins’ victory was his second in a state major. He also won the 2019 CDGA Championship, an amateur match-play affair. … The record purse totaled $120,122, with more than 90 percent coming from entry fees. … The field averaged 74.15 strokes in the final round. … Drew Shepherd, a first-round co-leader, closed with a flourish, eagling the par-4 18th for 1-under 71 and 1-under 215. … Next year’s Illinois Open is at Flossmoor Golf Club.

Tim Cronin

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