It will be an all-Midwest 18-hole final match in the 66th U.S. Senior Amateur Championship. Jerry Gunthorpe, of Ovid, Mich., will face Gene Elliott, of West Des Moines, Iowa, on Thursday morning after both won a pair of matches on a glorious Wednesday at the Country Club of Detroit.
Gunthorpe, 58, eliminated Dave Bunker, of Canada, 3 and 1, while Elliott, 59, defeated Craig Davis, of Chula Vista, Calif., 5 and 4, on a breezy day with temperatures in the upper 60s and very little humidity.
The two finalists couldn’t have more contrasting golf résumés.
While Gunthorpe, whose biggest victory to date is the 2004 Horton Smith Invitational at Detroit Golf Club, is a longtime standout in the state of Michigan, he just started playing national events after turning 55 three years ago. This week was only his second USGA championship; he lost in the Round of 64 in the 2019 U.S. Senior Amateur at Old Chatham Golf Club in Durham, N.C.
Gunthorpe has played competitively since age 12, but chose raising his two boys – both Nathan (Michigan State) and Nick (Grand Valley State) are golfers who have qualified for USGA events – and daughter, Casey, a former cheerleader at MSU, over pursuing a national golf schedule.
Meanwhile, Elliott is currently the No. 2 senior golfer in the World Amateur Golf Ranking®/WAGR® behind 2013 U.S. Senior Amateur champion Doug Hanzel. His portfolio includes victories in the prestigious Porter Cup and Terra Cotta Invitational as well as this year’s Senior Amateur Championship conducted by The R&A. He has also won 15 Iowa state titles, including three Iowa Amateurs, and been the medalist in the U.S. Amateur (1999). This is his 36th start in a USGA championship.
When it comes to elite, veteran amateurs – male or female – without a USGA title since World War II, Elliott’s name certainly belongs on that list with the likes of the late Bob Lewis Jr. (three runner-up USGA finishes, 4 USA Walker Cup Teams), Dick Siderowf (2 British Am titles, 5 Walker Cup Teams) and John Grace (2 USGA runners-up, including the 1974 U.S. Amateur) on the men’s side, and Pat Cornett (1 U.S. Women’s Mid-Am runner-up, 4-time USGA semifinalist, 2 Curtis Cups and 66 USGA starts), the late Toni Wiesner (3 U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur runners-up, 50-plus USGA starts) and Brenda Corrie Kuehn (1 U.S. Women’s Mid-Am runner-up, 2 Curtis Cup starts and 45-plus USGA events) on the women’s side.
“This is a special week,” said Elliott, who is looking to join Ed Updegraff (1981) as Iowa natives to win the U.S. Senior Amateur. “We’ve gotten it this far. Just want to keep doing what I’ve been doing.”
If he performs like he did against Davis, when he shot the equivalent of 6 under par over 14 holes (with the usual match-play concessions), he might be holding the trophy on Thursday.
“He saved his best golf for me,” said Davis. “I played with him in the [stroke-play] rounds and he didn't play anywhere near that well. Looks like his game has gotten better each day.”
Gunthorpe might not have the pedigree of his opponent, but he has shown plenty of chops this week in his home state as he vies to become the third player from Michigan to win the U.S. Senior Amateur, after Greg Reynolds, of Grand Blanc, in 2002 at Timuquana Country Club in Jacksonville, Fla., and Tom Draper, of Troy, in 1971 at Sunnybrook Golf Club in Plymouth Meeting, Pa.
He also hopes to continue a marvelous three-week stretch for Michigan following James Piot’s victory in the U.S. Amateur at Oakmont (Pa.) Country Club and the Taylor Little League team that captured the Little League World Series in Williamsport, Pa., on Sunday.
“I’m just looking forward to tomorrow,” said Gunthorpe. “I played with Gene one other time in a Golfweek event last winter. Great guy, good player. I know it's going to be a tight, tough match if I play well. I just need to play well and see what happens.”
Gunthorpe birdied two of his first three holes against Bunker, including a 35-footer on the first hole. When Bunker narrowed the deficit to 1 down, Gunthorpe responded with three consecutive birdies from No. 9, the latter two winning the hole. The two took turns exchanging wins on Nos. 14-17, with Gunthorpe winning the match with a birdie on the par-5 17th.
Elliott’s victory was highlighted by a hole-out for an eagle 3 from 78 yards on the par-5 10th that pushed his lead to 3 up. A winning par on No. 11 and his fourth birdie of the round on the 172-yard, par-3 13th put him 5 up with five to play.
Earlier in the day, Rusty Strawn, of McDonough, Ga., was unable to rally from 2 down with two to play against Gunthorpe, something he did in the Round of 16 on Tuesday to eliminate Jim Lehman. The Georgia Southern graduate missed an 8-foot birdie on No. 17 that would have extended the match.
Local favorite Tom Gieselman, of Commerce Township, Mich., never recovered from losing the first three holes against Elliott. The Oakland Hills member, who had the biggest following this week, missed a 6-footer for birdie on No. 16 that would have tied the match. One hole later, handshakes were exchanged when Elliott birdied No. 17 to close out a 2-and-1 victory in the quarterfinals.
Bunker registered a winning par on the 18th hole to knock out Billy Mitchell, of Atlanta, Ga., 1 up, in the quarterfinals.
What’s Next
The 18-hole championship match will take place at 8:30 a.m. EDT. Spectators are encouraged to attend, and admission is free.
Notable
- The two losing semifinalists received bronze medals as well as a two-year exemption from qualifying for the U.S. Senior Amateur Championship. The 2022 championship is scheduled for The Kittansett Club in Marion, Mass., from Aug. 27-Sept. 1, while the 2023 event will be contested at Martis Camp in Truckee, Calif., Aug. 26-31.
- The two finalists are exempt into the U.S. Mid-Amateur Sept. 25-30 at Sankaty Head Golf Club in Siasconset, Mass., as well as the 2022 U.S. Senior Open at Saucon Valley Country Club in Bethlehem, Pa. (June 23-26) and the 2022 U.S. Amateur at Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus, N.J. (Aug. 15-21).
- Should Jerry Gunthorpe prevail in the championship match, he would be the first native of the state hosting the U.S. Senior Amateur to win the title since Paul Simson in 2012. Simson, who grew up in Summit, N.J., but now resides in Raleigh, N.C., won the second of his two titles at Mountain Ridge Country Club in West Caldwell, N.J. Mike Bell, of Indianapolis, Ind., is the last champion to win in his current home state in 2006 at Victoria National Golf Club in Newburgh, Ind.
- Semifinalist Dave Bunker, of Canada, came two victories shy of becoming the first international champion in U.S. Senior Amateur history. This is the only of the USGA’s 14 annual championships without an international winner.
- Craig Davis was bidding to become the third University of Arizona alum to win a USGA senior title in 2021, following Jim Furyk (U.S. Senior Open) and Annika Sorenstam (U.S. Senior Women’s Open). Last month, Arizona rising junior Vivian Hou lost in the U.S. Women’s Amateur final to Jensen Castle.
- Chip Lutz, the 2015 champion who fell in the quarterfinals to Davis (3 and 2), never played past the 16th hole in any of his four matches. In 11 U.S. Senior Amateur starts, the Reading, Pa., native owns an impressive 28-10 match-play mark and has advanced to six quarterfinals.
Quotable
“I've heard from some Seminole members, a lot of Iowa people. I've never had that many text messages at once. I'm sure there will be more tonight.” – Gene Elliott after advancing to his first final in a USGA competition
“Are you kidding me? I had no idea.” – Jerry Gunthorpe when hearing that he is now exempt into the 2022 U.S. Senior Open and 2022 U.S. Amateur
“It wasn't my best day, unfortunately. The wind came up, the conditions were way different, and I didn't adapt the way I normally do.” – 2015 champion and No. 2 seed Chip Lutz after his 3-and-2 loss to Davis
“If somebody would have asked me if I made it to a quarterfinal when I first started [the championship], I would have taken it because it's a great experience. It made me believe that I belong here, that I can play with these guys, and that's encouraging.” – quarterfinalist Rusty Strawn after being eliminated by Gunthorpe, 2 and 1
“It was a whirlwind. The best part about [the week] was having my family here the whole time. Friends were out here. Probably got a thousand texts. That was the best part of the whole thing, whether I won or not. That was really cool.” – Tom Gieselman on his run to the quarterfinals not far from his Commerce Township residence
David Shefter is a senior staff writer for the USGA. Email him at dshefter@usga.org.
The Social Scene
Congrats to Dave Bunker on a great run at the #USSeniorAm. 👏
— Florida State Golf Association (@fsga) September 1, 2021
The regining #FLSeniorAm champion advanced to the Semifinals at the 66th U.S. Senior Amateur Championship at the Country Club of Detroit. pic.twitter.com/x65xstshbL
Tough one. @LedgeRockGC's @Chip_Lutz falls in the #USSeniorAm Quarters to California's Craig Davis, 3&2.
— GAP Golf (@GAofPhilly) September 1, 2021
Chip, see you in a few weeks at the GAP Senior Amateur!
Ovid's Jerry Gunthorpe advances to the Semifinals at the U.S. Senior Amateur at CC of Detroit. He tees off at 1:30pm against Canada's Dave Bunker. Follow the match at https://t.co/334d4CQe6u or head out to the course to cheer Jerry on!#USSeniorAm pic.twitter.com/K9zFGMLP1v
— GAM (@officialGAM) September 1, 2021