Brewer Cup: Back Brookâs Kosup stuns Lutz for Senior titleBETHLEHEM, Pa. â If you didnât take notice of Bert Kosup after he won a Golf Association of Philadelphia title a year ago, you will now.
| Day Two results | Senior POY standings | Photo gallery | The Ridge at Back Brook member sent shockwaves throughout the Senior circuit when he upended Chip Lutz, 2&1, in the Brewer Cup Final Wednesday at Saucon Valley Country Clubâs Weyhill Course (par 72, 6,496 yards). Kosupâs GAP rĂ©sumĂ© prior included a breakout victory in the 2014 Chapman (Gross). Conversely, Lutz is the Senior Divisionâs gold standard. He is a two-time Brewer Cup champion and five-time reigning GAP Senior Player of the Year. âTo win this event, with Mr. Brewerâs rĂ©sumĂ© behind it and his great tradition of playing, means a lot. Itâs an honor to beat Chip,â an emotional Kosup, 60, of Flemington, N.J., said. âHe was a gentleman all day. I kept waiting for a charge. I hung in there and didnât think about matching shot-for-shot. It worked out well.â âBert played nicely. He made a couple birdies on the back nine that kept him going,â Lutz, 60, of Reading, Pa., said. âI was kind of running out of gas. I got tired coming through the back nine. It wasnât my best golf today. But nonetheless, no excuses. Iâm happy for him.â The Final, with conditions soft due to spurts of heavy rain, contained the makings of a Lutz runaway after the LedgeRock Golf Club member won two of the first three holes. But the burly Kosup, reassured by a few pep talks, quickly showed he wasnât laying down on the tracks. He won the par 5, 516-yard No. 6 by hitting a three-quarter wedge to 13 feet for birdie. An uncharacteristic Lutz three-putt on No. 10 (par 4, 402 yards) squared the contest. Lutz, more to character on the par 4, 386-yard 11th hole, knocked a gap wedge 107 yards to 22 feet and snuck in a birdie on the right edge to move 1-up. Kosup, admittedly awaiting a Lutz charge, made one of his own. He outdrove Lutz, arguably the longest hitter on the Senior circuit, on the par 5, 515-yard 12th hole. With lift, clean and place permitted on Sauconâs soggy surface, Kosup examined his golf ball and elected to equip a 3-wood for his second shot. It landed 20 yards short of the green. Kosup bumped a wedge to six feet for birdie. On the next hole (par 4, 362 yards), he skied a wedge from 90 yards, only to watch it fall a foot short of carrying a ridge in front of the hole location. Kosup, who experienced a similar putt earlier in the week, drained a 25-footer for birdie to seize a 1-up advantage. âIt was a more difficult putt, but I remember that putt breaking at least a foot more than you think when you take a look at it,â Kosup said. âI just played it out to the right and it grabbed the left edge and fell in. At that point, I felt pretty good. Now Iâm thinking, âdonât make a mistake and you should be OK.ââ He did make a mistake â on a hole that fooled Kosup all week. He flew the 15th (par 4, 368 yards) green with an 8-iron from 141 yards, but knew the ensuing chip shot and eked out a crucial halve. Lutz faced opportunities to draw even on a pair of par 3s (Nos. 14 and 16, 170 yards and 145 yards), but couldnât capitalize. âI seemed to be missing the mark a little bit. The tempo was off,â Lutz, who won the Brewer in 2011 and 2014, said. âI kind of attribute it to being a little tired. I was struggling for good birdie looks, and then you get longer putts with speed and line. I hung in there and tried to make the best of it, but in the end, he was better.â Lutz solidified a stunning result by sending a 3-wood into an environmentally sensitive area on No. 17 (par 4, 367 yards). âI just went over it a little bit,â Lutz said. âI get tired real quick and get over top of it. I was hooking the ball a little more than I was used to. That tends to be my bailout. Itâs hard to stop it.â âI was surprised he didnât play it out farther, but he typically plays a little bit of a draw,â Kosup added. âAs far as he hits it, Iâm surprised it didnât carry.â Kosup, under the encouragement of good friend and Saucon Valleyâs own Thomas Bartolacci, Jr., decided to taste GAP competition a year ago. He is now a two-time Senior Major titleholder. âItâs a great feeling. To win this event with all of these great players is just special,â Kosup said.
Semifinals Lutz squeaked past Robin McCool of the host club, 2&1, in a rematch between 2014 finalists. The decisive shoe dropped on the par 3, 145-yard 16th hole, where McCool failed to get up-and-down from long left. Kosup outlasted Chester Valley Golf Clubâs Ed Chylinski in 20 holes. A balky putter down the stretch doomed Chylinski, 65, of West Chester, Pa. He missed an eight-footer for birdie on No. 18 (par 5, 534 yards) and three-putted from 40 feet on No. 1 (par 4, 383 yards), the matchâs 19th hole, after Kosup blocked a drive into the water hazard. Another three-putt on No. 2 (par 3, 159 yards), this time from 35 feet, sealed Chylinskiâs fate. The Brewer Cup, launched in 2008, is named in honor of O. Gordon Brewer Jr., a veteran of 42 USGA Championships and two-time U.S. Senior Amateur Champion (1994, 1996). He also won Golf Association of Philadelphia Amateur titles in 1967 and 1976 as well as the 1997 Senior Amateur Championship, which earned Brewer Player of the Year honors that year. He was inducted into the Golf Association of Philadelphiaâs Hall of Fame in 2011. The Brewer Cup is open to Senior players with a handicap index of 7.0 or less and Super Seniors with an index of 12.0 or less.
Golf Association of Philadelphia
Final
Semifinals
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