Saturday
Aug042018

Cole Hammer captures Western Amateur

Writing from Northfield, Illinois

Saturday, August 4, 2018

If Cole Hammer wants to take up another sport, he might consider running the marathon.

If he does, bet on him. Hammer, an 18-year-old perpetual motion machine, played 76 holes in match play on Friday and Saturday, and survived all four matches.

His Western Amateur championship match with Davis Riley at Sunset Ridge Country Club appeared for a time to be a rout. Hammer was 4-up at the turn. Then Riley rallied, cutting the gap to 1-up after his birdie on the par-5 16th, even though he questioned the pin placement.

Riley could get no closer, halving the last two holes to make Hammer the 1-up champion.

Hammer isn’t the youngest to win, nor did he dominate, as two 20-hole wins will attest, but he may have the most complete game at 18 since Tiger Woods. He’s as long as he needs to be, has full and half-wedges at his command, and, most important, rolled in almost every putt he needed to across five days as co-medalist and champion.

“Surreal,” Hammer said. “This is the biggest day in my golf career without question. Nothing even compares. Individually this by far is the biggest tournament I’ve ever won, and to do it here at Sunset Ridge with my mom on the bag, it really means the world.”

Hammer had already been part of the winning team in the U.S. Amateur Four-Ball this spring, but team golf is one thing and doing it yourself is quite another. This one was all his, from his 23-under-par 261 stroke-play total to share the medal to knocking off four straight foes in match play.

“I knew he had game,” said Riley, a 21-year-old entering his senior year at Alabama. “He said he’d admired me since he was 10, and now he just beat me.”

On the first nine, it appeared the feat would be easy. As the mercury climbed to 98 degrees, Riley seemed to be melting away. Hammer won the third hole with a birdie after a wedge to two feet, won the sixth with a birdie after a wedge to a foot, won the seventh with an eagle by draining a cross-green 60-footer, and rolled in a mere 20-footer to win the ninth hole.

“I just kept telling myself I was playing great,” Hammer said.

Four-up at the turn. Riley would have been excused for sneaking into the clubhouse at that point and jumping into a waiting car at the front door, but he saw hope in the middle of the muddle.

“I didn’t really have much doubt,” Riley said of his comeback hopes. “I had faith in what I was doing. I’d played the back as good as anybody all week, so if I stayed patient, I knew I was good enough to make a charge.”

He did. Riley got up and down for par on the par-4 11th while Hammer three-putted from eight feet above the hole, cutting the gap to three holes. Nearly driving the 12th green and chipping to six feet earned him a birdie and second straight hole, narrowing the margin to two holes.

“Me and my caddie were talking all round, we never felt out of it, even 4-down,” Riley said. “After 11, it was ‘Let’s do this.’ I thought the momentum was with me 100 percent.

“I hit some good shots and made some good birdies and gave myself a chance, considering I was 4-down at the turn.”

Hammer called a birdie putt to halve the 13th “a huge momentum putt,” and he used that momentum to win the 14th with a par, but Riley came back with a birdie 2 on the 15th after dropping his tee shot six feet from the cup. It was a two-hole margin again, and only 1-up in Hammer’s favor after Riley’s birdie on No. 16.

That rattled Hammer.

“He buried that 12-footer up the hill and it was not an easy putt,” Hammer said. “I would have been 2-up with two to go. Then he hit a great shot into 17. It was tough to see, but I stepped up and hit a great shot too.”

The match was loaded with great shots, and was clearly tense by the 17th, when short putts that would usually have been conceded were not. Riley had a chance to square the match but couldn’t sink a sliding downhill 10-footer for birdie. Hammer had already missed his 15-foot birdie attempt. Each player made a two-foot knee-knocker to take the match to the last, where both players bounced their flip-wedges off the rock-hard green into the collar, and could only make par. For Hammer, that was enough for the title, the first one he’s won with mom Allison on the bag.

“I’m excited to come back as the defending champion,” Hammer said of 2019, when the Western Am returns to Point O Woods. “It sounds cool.”

Hammer is the sixth Texas Longhorn to win the title, joining Rik Massengale, Ben Crenshaw, Justin Leonard, John Klauk and Beau Hossler. The 76 holes he played in match play tie Leonard (1992) and David Chung (1990) for the most played since the current format began in 1961.

“It’s safe to say I played more golf than anybody this week,” Hammer said. He played 12 more holes than Riley going into the final match. Asked if he wanted to play an emergency nine, Hammer quipped, “Oh my gosh, I’m ready to hit the bed.”

Hammer needed 20 holes to beat Brandon Wu in the morning semifinal, while Riley was a 4 and 2 winner over Tyler Strafaci in the other semifinal.

Hammer was 2-up after 11 holes, but Wu birdied three straight holes to square the match, then rallied again on the 18th by rolling in an 18-footer for birdie after bogeying the par-3 17th.

Hammer won the match with an approach to about four feet on the par-4 second hole after Wu missed the fairway with his tee shot, missed the green with his approach, and was 40 feet from the pin with his third shot. The par-saving putt missed and it was handshake time.

Riley was gunning for his second straight victory in Illinois. He captured the Illini Invitational at Olympia Fields Country Club last year. It’s his fourth Western Am appearance and second Sweet Sixteen appearance, while this was Hammer’s second Western Am and first match-play placing.

Riley couldn’t feel too bad considering how well he played all week. He perked up even more when it was noted that last year’s runner-up, Doc Redman, won the U.S. Amateur a fortnight later.

“That’s a good statistic there,” Riley said.

His next stop? The U.S. Amateur at Pebble Beach.

Hammer will be there as well.

Tim Cronin

Saturday
Aug042018

Hammer, Riley in Western Amateur final

Writing from Northfield, Illinois

Saturday, August 4, 2018

Cole Hammer needed 20 holes for the second straight morning, but he survived again, advancing to Saturday afternoon’s final match in the 116th Western Amateur at Sunset Ridge Country Club.

He’ll play Davis Riley, a 4 and 2 winner over Tyler Strafaci in the other semifinal, at 1:20 p.m.

Hammer, the 18-year-old Houston phenom who’ll start his career at Texas later this month, was 2-up on Brandon Wu after 11 holes,  but Wu birdied three straight holes to square the match, then rallied again on the 18th by rolling in an 18-footer for birdie after bogeying the par-3 17th.

Hammer won the match with an approach to about four feet on the par-4 second hole after Wu missed the fairway with his tee shot, missed the green with his approach, and was 40 feet from the pin with his third shot. The par-saving putt missed and it was handshake time.

Riley is a 21-year-old senior at Alabama who is gunning for his second straight victory in Illinois. He captured the Illini Invitational at Olympia Fields Country Club last year. It’s his fourth Western Am appearance and second Sweet Sixteen appearance, while this is Hammer’s second Western Am and first match-play placing.

Tim Cronin

Friday
Aug032018

Hammer into Western Am semifinals

Flavin ousted in Round of 16

Writing from Northfield, Illinois

Friday, August 3, 2018

“It was a fight,” Cole Hammer said after his 18-hole Western Amateur quarterfinal bout with Spencer Ralston on Friday afternoon at Sunset Ridge Country Club.

Hammer, down two holes with five to play, got off the green canvas of Sunset Ridge’s expertly manicured fairways for a 1 up victory partly via his own game and partly because of a bad break that befell Ralston when he stood 2-up and had belted a drive within 140 yards of the cup on the par-4 14th hole. Hammer was five yards ahead.

Hammer’s drive was on the carpet. Ralston’s sat down in a divot.

“It was an unfortunate break but I still thought I could get a club on it,” Ralston said.

He tried to, but the Georgia junior’s wedge sailed off to the right near a tree, and left him with a bad angle to the green.

“The fairways were getting kinda firm and it came off the hosel a little bit,” Ralston said.

Hammer, conversely, dropped his wedge within eight feet and sank the putt for a birdie, his first of the round, to close within a hole.

“Turning point,” Hammer said, who nonetheless felt for Ralston. “He got so unlucky a couple times today. He tried to get on top of it and it came off the heel a little bit.”

Hammer told his mother and caddie Allison, “Might be an opening,” when he saw Ralston’s ball in the divot. Then he took advantage with the close-in wedge and birdie putt.

“It gave me some momentum,” Hammer said. He would follow up by winning the par-3 15th hole with a par to square the match, take the par-5 16th to go 1-up via a brilliant second shot to about 18 feet for a two-putt birdie, and match Ralston with a bogey on the treacherous par-3 17th and a with par 4 on the 18th, the latter with a baby-soft chip from the rough to within three inches of the cup. Ralston’s bid to square and extend the match, a 12-foot putt, edged the lip on the left side and stayed out.

“I thought it was in,” Ralston said.

Hammer’s 1-up victory advanced him to Saturday’s 8 a.m. semifinal against Brandon Wu, who outlasted John Augenstein in 19 holes. In the other match, it’ll be Tyler Strafaci, the grandson of 1953 Western Amateur medalist Frank Strafaci, against Davis Riley. Strafaci beat Kaiwen Lio, 2 up, while Riley knocked off Hayden Springer 5 and 3.

“We didn’t play great golf for a while, and then, middle of the back nine, we started to play like ourselves,” Hammer said. “The course was firmer and it was windier this afternoon, and the greens were faster, but I think we were a little bit tired after 36 holes yesterday, finishing late, having the dinner that lasted until 9:30 and then getting up this morning. I think that was a little bit of a factor.”

Hammer had gone 2-up with a long two-putt birdie on the par-5 13th, leaving a 60-foot putt 10 feet short but sinking that putt to win the hole after Hammer had driven his tee shot next to the lip of a fairway bunker and had to wedge out.

“I felt didn’t have a whole lot of energy out there on 13,” Hammer said. “Him making birdie sucked some more out of me and I told myself, ‘Man, you cannot do this. You’re still in this. Fight!’ ”

Hammer may be 18, but with a U.S. Open appearance in 2015 and a U.S. Amateur Four-Ball title in his pocket from earlier this year, the Texas-bound teen from Houston has plenty of experience to draw on. And he has the spunky attitude of the former shortstop that he is.

At that point, however, Ralston, a 20-year-old Gainesville, Ga., native, looked and felt in control.

“I was pretty positive there, like, ‘Get on a roll.’ Then I drove it in a divot,” Ralston said. “I think him kind of seeing that before I even hit kinda changed his mindset a little bit.

“It’s a funny game we play.”

It is, but Ralston, whose next stop is the U.S. Amateur at Pebble Beach, enhanced his reputation with excellent play all week.

“It’s one of the best fields in the world in amateur tournaments,” Ralston said. “It kind of proves to yourself you belong. There’s a lot of positives. You can’t hang your head.”

In the morning, Hammer needed 20 holes and scored only even par but advanced to the quarterfinals of the 116th Western Amateur on Friday, beating Davis Shore.

Hammer, the Houston teen who’ll enter Texas later this month, saw Shore square the match with a par on the par-3 17th, but birdied the second extra hole – only his third birdie of the round after 24 in the 72-hole stroke play competition – to advance to Friday afternoon’s quarterfinal match against Ralston.

Ralston knocked off local favorite Patrick Flavin of Highwood 3 and 2 after trailing 2 up at the turn. Ralston strung together four straight birdies beginning at the 10th to take a 1-up lead, then watched Flavin bogey the 14th to take a 2-up edge. Flavin’s three bogeys on the back nine helped seal his fate in his final amateur start. He’ll turn pro for next week’s Illinois Open.

Sam Stevens, whose 51-foot birdie putt Thursday night tied him with Hammer for the stroke-play medal, was run over by 15th-seeded Liu in his match. Liu was 5-under, including the usual concessions, over 14 holes.

The Round of 16 matches:

Cole Hammer d. Davis Shore, 20 holes

Spencer Ralston d. Patrick Flavin, 3 and 2

John Augenstein d. Collin Morikawa, 4 and 2

Brandon Wu d. Kyle Michel, 6 and 5

Kaiwen Liu d. Sam Stevens, 5 and 4

Tyler Strafaci d. Isaac Merry, 1 up

Hayden Springer d. Isaiah Salinda, 2 up

Davis Riley d. Min Woo Lee, 4 and 3

The Quarterfinals:

Hammer d. Ralston, 1 up

Wu d. Augenstein, 19 holes

Strafaci d. Lio, 2 up

Riley d. Springer, 5 and 3

Tim Cronin

Friday
Aug032018

Hammer advances in Western Amateur

Flavin, Stevens bounced in Round of 16 

Writing from Northfield, Illinois

Friday, August 3, 2018

Co-medalist Cole Hammer needed 20 holes and scored only even par but advanced to the quarterfinals of the 116th Western Amateur at Sunset Ridge Country Club on Friday, beating Davis Shore.

Hammer, the Houston teen who’ll enter Texas later this month, saw Shore square the match with a par on the par-3 17th, but birdied the second extra hole – only his third birdie of the round after 24 in the 72-hole stroke play competition – to advance to Friday afternoon’s quarterfinal match against Spencer Ralston of Gainesville, Ga.

Ralston knocked off local favorite Patrick Flavin of Highwood 3 and 2 after trailing 2 up at the turn. Ralston strung together four straight birdies beginning at the 10th to take a 1-up lead, then watched Flavin bogey the 14th to take a 2-up edge. Flavin’s three bogeys on the back nine helped seal his fate in his final amateur start. He’ll turn pro for next week’s Illinois Open.

Sam Stevens, whose 51-foot birdie putt Thursday night tied him with Hammer for the stroke-play medal, was run over by 15th-seeded Kaiwen Liu in his match. Liu was 5-under, including the usual concessions, over 14 holes.

The Round of 16 matches:

Cole Hammer d. Davis Shore, 20 holes

Spencer Ralston d. Patrick Flavin, 3 & 2

John Augenstein d. Collin Morikawa, 4 and 2

Brandon Wu d. Kyle Michel, 6 and 5

Kaiwen Liu d. Sam Stevens, 5 and 4

Tyler Strafaci d. Isaac Merry, 1 up

Hayden Springer d. Isaiah Salinda, 2 up

Davis Riley d. Min Woo Lee, 4 and 3

The Quarterfinal matchups:

Cole Hammer vs. Spencer Ralston

John Augenstein vs. Brandon Wu

Kaiwen Lio vs. Tyler Strafaci

Hayden Springer vs. Davis Riley

Tim Cronin

Thursday
Aug022018

Hammer, Stevens share Western Amateur medal honors

Flavin advances; match-play begins Friday

Writing from Northfield (a.k.a. Birdieville), Illinois

Thursday, August 2, 2018

Here is how you shoot a 61 at Sunset Ridge Country Club: miss your six-foot sliding downhill putt for birdie at the last.

It could have been a 60, the round Cole Hammer punched out on Thursday morning. At 61, 10 under the usually-testing par of 71 for the layout, it was a course record by a stroke anyway and a career low for the Houston, Tex., teen by two strokes.

He’ll call Austin home within a month, when he starts his freshman year at Texas, and might carry a big trophy into the dorm. Hammer birdied 10 of the 18 holes to erase the course’s old mark of 62 and vault into the mid-day lead in the 116th Western Amateur. His total to that point, 19-under-par 194, earned him a two-stroke lead on the field.

By day’s end, Hammer had battered Sunset Ridge four times for 261 strokes, 23-under. That lofty standard, four strokes better than any previous Western Amateur medalist, was his alone for about 15 minutes, until Sam Stevens, just graduated from Oklahoma State, poured in a 51-foot putt from the front of the 18th green for a closing 65 and matching 261.

Perspective: That’s 10 strokes under the mark set by Jim Jamieson in the 1972 Western Open, a cold weekend in the era of persimmon and balata. In other words, when dinosaurs ruled the earth.

Thirteen of the 16 match-play qualifiers – this carnival is only half-over – scored 270 or lower, including Davis Riley, a Mississippi lad who four-putted the last and still made the Sweet Sixteen with three strokes to spare. A high qualifying score score of 11-under 273, a record by three strokes, forced six players into sudden-death for the last spot, won by Davis Shore on the third extra hole with a birdie 3.

The man-to-man battles begin Friday morning among the 16 match-play qualifiers. Expect birdies and eagles.

“I missed a 10-foot uphiller on the first hole this morning, and it was kind of off to the races from there,” Hammer said. “Then I made five birdies in six holes and just kept it going on the back.”

His afternoon 4-under 67 seemed ho-hum compared to the morning, except he birdied four of the last six holes to get there.

Hammer’s a player to conjure with, and not just because he beat the old record. His swing coach is Cameron McCormick – the same guy Jordan Spieth uses – and he played in the 2015 U.S. Open at Chambers Bay as a 15-year-old, where Spieth won. Their practice round there together helped pave the way to Hammer’s becoming a Longhorn.

Not even Spieth made such a splash as Hammer has before college, his performance at 

Sunset Ridge being the latest example.

Stevens was two groups behind Hammer and saw the scoreboards going tilt.

“I was kind of keeping an eye on the leaderboards this afternoon to see what he was doing,” Stevens said. “I saw he was at 21-under with three holes to go, and I was at 21 and made a birdie (on No. 16) and thought I had a pretty good chance to at least tie. Then I got to the 18th green and saw he made two more birdies (for 23-under).”

Stevens called the tying birdie putt a 60-footer.

“I was trying to make it, but I was really just trying to two-putt,” Stevens said. “Finish second at worst. But I hit it a little too hard and it broke right in there. I got away with a few things, had a couple nice bounces and took advantage of the breaks I got.”

Hammer’s made 24 birdies and an eagle, against three bogeys – one in the last 44 holes – and is 16-under in his last 40 holes. Stevens has made 27 birdies and five bogeys. Both have shot 31 on the back nine.

Patrick Flavin, meanwhile, went about his business in stylishly workmanlike fashion, putting up his third straight 67 in the morning round and adding a 66 in the afternoon to easily qualify for the Sweet Sixteen for the first time in four Western Amateur starts.

Perfect timing, as the Miami (Ohio) graduate from Highwood, the lone Illinois player left, is turning pro for next week’s Illinois Open. As the defending champion, he would have made $15,250. This year? “I want the check,” Flavin said.

Flavin missed the cut in defending his Illinois Amateur title in Bloomington, and that taught him something.

“I was having trouble hitting the fairway off the tee,” Flavin said. “This week, I haven’t missed many fairways at all and I’ve been hitting a ton of drivers. There’s definitely a big mental aspect to it. If you’re hitting the ball right and left, it’s hard to step up and make a confident swing. When I missed the cut, I decided if I’m going to miss, I’m going to miss swinging aggressive. I didn’t putt very well (at the Illinois Amateur), but this week I’ve made maybe 100 feet of putts every round, maybe more.

“I’ve learned a ton from last summer,” Flavin said. I had an awesome run and won six of eight tournaments. This year, I’ve been battling my swing. It was tough, but really important for me to battle both ends of the spectrum as I turn pro. I felt I handled the winning very well and did my best at handling the not-winning very well. To come out here when it matters in the biggest amateur tournament means a ton.”

Friday’s Round of 16 matches start at 8 a.m., the afternoon quarterfinals start at about 1 p.m.

Tim Cronin