Barrington,
R.I. – Defending champion Danielle Kang of Westlake Village, Calif., and Moriya
Jutanugarn of Thailand each posted a pair of 1-up semifinal victories Saturday
to advance to Sunday’s 36-hole championship match of the 111th U.S. Women’s
Amateur, being contested at the 6,399-yard, par-71 Rhode Island Country Club.
The
18-year-old Kang, bidding to be the first repeat Women’s Amateur champion since
Kelli Kuehne 15 years ago, and the 17-year-old Jutanugarn, the low amateur at
last month’s U.S. Women’s Open, each won the par-4 18th hole with 4s to close
out their wins.
Kang
defeated 21-year-old Brooke Pancake of Chattanooga, Tenn., while Jutanugarn edged reigning NCAA Division I
individual champion Austin
Ernst, 19, of Seneca, S.C.
With
a win on Sunday, Jutanugarn would be the fourth player from Thailand to claim a USGA title and
would join her 15-year-old sister, Ariya, as a national champion. Only two
other sister combinations have won USGA championships: Harriot and Margaret Curtis, and Hollis Stacy and Martha Leach.
Ariya,
who won the U.S. Girls’ Junior two weeks ago, has served as Moriya’s caddie
since being eliminated in the second round on Thursday.
Thai-born
players Virada
Nirapathpongporn and Aree Song
Wongluekiet won the 2003 U.S. Women’s Amateur and 1999 U.S. Girls’ Junior,
respectively.
Kang,
who plans to turn professional after this championship, is looking to become
the 16th multiple winner of the Women’s Amateur.
Both
finalists managed to survive the semifinals despite physical ailments. Kang
re-aggravated a rib injury that she first suffered in a college event this past
spring. Jutanugarn has been bothered by pain in both wrists, which caused her
to withdraw from the U.S. Girls’ Junior.
It
didn’t seem to affect her golf game. Jutanugarn shot the equivalent of
4-under-par 67, with the usual match-play concessions, including birdies on
five of the first eight holes, which helped her gain an early 3-up advantage
against Ernst, who matched her
opponent with four birdies over the first nine holes and shot a 3-under 68.
“It
was ridiculous,” said Ernst of the
blistering start. “Those first three holes, she just got off to a great start.
I looked at [my caddie] Emily [Tubert]
and said, ‘I am just going to start throwing darts.’ Then I birdie four of the
next five.”
Except
Ernst could only trim the deficit to
two holes after nine holes. A poor drive into the hazard – the ball was
playable in some tall grass – on No. 6 took some of the momentum she had
generated from birdies at the fourth and fifth holes, the latter of which won
the hole.
Ernst’s 5-iron to tap-in range and a missed 4-foot birdie
by Jutanugarn cut the deficit back to 2 down, but Jutanugarn continued to keep
pace. Both players birdied the par-5 eighth; Jutanugarn from 5 feet and Ernst from 2 feet (conceded).
The
status remained that way until Jutanugarn’s drive at No. 13 found the hazard,
costing her the hole. Two holes later, Jutanugarn hit another wayward drive,
this time onto Nayatt Road
to the right of the 15th fairway. Ernst,
a sophomore at Lousiana
State University,
eventually had her 6-foot birdie putt conceded and the match was all square for
the first time.
“I
wondered what happened to me,” said Jutanugarn, the No. 3 seed out of
stroke-play qualifying. “Normally I hit my driver so straight. I think maybe
being tired caused it.”
Ernst had an ideal chance to take her first lead at the
par-3 17th, but said she hit a poor birdie putt from 12 feet.
On
18, the wind caught Ernst’s drive and
sent it into the right rough. A bad lie forced her to lay up well short of the
green, while Jutanugarn’s 6-iron approach stopped 20 feet above the hole. Ernst’s pitch went 6 feet past the hole,
leaving her a delicate par putt. Jutanugarn carefully lagged her birdie try to 3 feet below the hole. And
when Ernst pushed the par attempt,
Jutanugarn finished off the match by holing her short putt.
“I
wanted to two-putt the hole,” said Jutanugarn. “I don’t care if I have to go to
19th hole. It was a really exciting last hole.”
The
Kang-Pancake match didn’t feature as many birdies, but was tight throughout
with no golfer holding more than a 2-up advantage. Pancake, a senior at the University of Alabama, missed an 8-foot par putt to
lose the third hole, then watched Kang hole a slick downhill 11-footer for
birdie to take the fourth.
Pancake,
a first-team All-America in 2010-11, won holes six and nine with pars, and Kang
took No. 8 with a birdie and the par-3 10th with a nice two-putt par from 40 feet.
But
Pancake, who rallied from a 2-down deficit in Friday’s 21-hole quarterfinal win
over Erynne Lee, started to make her move at No. 12
with a conceded birdie-3. Two holes later, she converted a 4-foot downhill
birdie putt to square the match, then took her first lead of the day on No. 15
by holing an 18-footer for birdie.
“It
was a great momentum swing,” said Pancake. “It kind of gave me a pep in my step
going to the 16th tee.”
At
that point, the veteran Kang decided it was time for her to step up. Getting a
good read from Pancake’s 25-foot birdie attempt on the 16th hole, Kang drained
her 20-footer to square the match.
“I
actually had a feeling that I was going to make a birdie,” said Kang, who also
won the North and South Women’s Amateur last month at Pinehurst No. 2 in North Carolina. “I just wasn’t ready to
lose.”
Both
players halved No. 17 with pars, setting the stage for the finish. Kang and
Pancake found the right rough off the tee. Pancake tried to run up her 4-iron
approach but the ball rolled up the hill, took a peek at the green and then
reversed its course back down the slope. Kang also came up a little short with
her 5-iron approach, the ball rolling into rough just right of a greenside
bunker.
Playing
first, Pancake’s chip came up 8
feet short of the hole. Kang followed with her best chip
of the day, to 3 feet.
Pancake’s par putt lost its speed and turned left at the hole. Kang calmly
stroked in her putt for the win.
Kang
was quick to credit local chiropractor Dr. Ellen McNally with a major save. After
re-aggravating the rib injury on the third hole of Friday’s quarterfinal win,
Kang was able to contact McNally through the family hosting her and her father
this week. After Maura
Rogers made several phone calls,
they found McNally, who agreed to meet Kang at her office in East Providence at 9 p.m. and was able to
relieve the tension from Kang’s shoulders and ribs.
Had
she not located a chiropractor, Kang’s mother, a registered acupuncturist, was
prepared to take a red-eye from California to Rhode Island on Friday
night.
“I
could not have played without the adjustment,” said Kang, adding that Rogers’
12-year-old daughter was making heat packs to keep Kang comfortable. “I am
pretty sure I would have lost.”
Kang
planned to re-visit McNally and get a massage on Saturday in preparation for
Sunday’s 36-hole final in what she hopes will be a grand finale to her amateur
career.
“If
I win, I am pretty convinced that I am ready to go [pro],” said Kang. “It would
be three amateur [victories] in a row for me going back to last year’s
[Women’s] Amateur. “
The Women’s Amateur is one of 13 national championships
conducted by the United States Golf Association, of which ten are strictly for
amateurs.
David Shefter is a senior
staff writer with the USGA. E-mail him at dshefter@usga.org.
Barrington, R.I. –
Results following Saturday’s semifinal round of match play at the 2011 U.S.
Women’s Amateur at the 6,399-yard, par-71 Rhode Island Country Club:
Semifinals
Upper Bracket
Danielle Kang, Westlake Village, Calif. (144) def. Brooke Pancake,
Chattanooga, Tenn. (144), 1 up
Lower Bracket
Moriya Jutanugarn, Thailand (137) def. Austin Ernst,
Seneca, S.C.
(142), 1 up
Barrington,
R.I. – Pairing for Sunday’s
36-hole championship final at the 2011 U.S. Women’s Amateur at the 6,399-yard,
par-71 Rhode Island Country Club:
Championship Final
7:30 a.m.
and 12 noon Danielle Kang,
Westlake Village, Calif.
(144) vs. Moriya Jutanugarn,
Thailand (137)