Donatoni returns to Super-Senior winner's circle in Chapman (Gross)ABSECON, N.J. – For the first time in 2016, Don Donatoni is back in the winner’s circle – a place that he has called a second home since obtaining Super-Senior eligibility in 2013.
The reigning three-time Super-Senior Player of the Year can now add another reign to his name. White Manor Country Club’s Donatoni claimed the Super-Senior title in the Frank H. Chapman Memorial Cup (Gross) for the second year in a row thanks to a 3-over-par 74 at Galloway National Golf Club (par 71, 6,096 yards). The victory was Donatoni’s third in the Super-Senior Major event. He also took home a Chapman (Gross) Senior title in 2008 at North Hills Country Club. It wasn’t all fun and games for the champion on a day that combined hurricane-like gusts of wind with a challenging track. Donatoni found disarray on the front nine, much like the rest of the 43-player field. The first glimpse of trouble arrived on the bay-hugging No. 2 (par 3, 136 yards). Donatoni punched an 8-iron aimed at a difficult front-right pin, but ended with a dangerous lie off the green left. His first off-balance chip shot rolled back toward his feet. The next attempt went past the hole, and the comebacker for bogey was missed as well. A disheartening double bogey was a disastrous start for the reigning champion. “I knew right there that I had to right the ship,” said Donatoni, 68, of Malvern, Pa. “I told myself I needed to start hitting greens and making putts. Simple as that.” Nos. 3-6 implemented that new plan. Solid ball-striking and par saves came on every one of those holes. A hiccup, however, emerged on No. 8 (par 3, 153 yards) in result of a wayward tee shot that found tree trouble on the right. He managed to salvage bogey there – “a score that could have been much higher” – with his putter. The par-5, 485-yard 9th saw a strong drive, 3-wood and solid wedge ultimately turn in to a three-putt for another bogey. Donatoni sat 4-over through his first nine. Then, in title-hunting fashion, Donatoni flipped a switch on. “After that start, there was no other choice but to get something going on the back. The wind started picking up, and the conditions were not ideal,” he said. “But I ended up posting a great score – one that I was extremely proud of.” With eight pars and a birdie (on the par-4, 337-yard 12th) on the closing nine, Donatoni finished with a score that went mostly unchallenged by an afternoon field that faced winds as high as 40 miles per hour at times. “I felt good about this one. I got off to a bit of a challenging start this year. If someone told me this morning I would post 3 over in these conditions on a very hard golf course, I would have taken it in a second,” said Donatoni, who hasn’t played Galloway in more than 10 years. “The morning wave had less severe conditions. The wind was tricky, but it wasn’t gusting until the back nine for us. I just tried to make par on the back nine.” Making pars, and putts for that matter, hasn’t been an easy task for the champion in 2016. He says he has gone through “four putters, multiples stances and a loss of confidence in his stroke” since the beginning of the season. That quickly changed with a simple look at his son A.J.’s golf bag. “I couldn’t get anything going. I ended up going back to an old Scotty Cameron that was in my son’s bag, which I bought maybe 25 years ago,” he said. “It felt great out there today. The last few rounds I’ve been stroking it much better and my pace is solid again. I’m making those crucial four and five-footers again, which are always crucial. In today’s round I made around six of those little, smelly putts that sometimes get away from you.” Donatoni is hoping his Scotty flatstick won’t get away from him when he sets foot on one of the biggest stages GAP has to offer. Thanks to a Player of the Year exemption, Donatoni will be in the field for the 116th playing of the BMW Philadelphia Amateur on Monday which includes 36-holes of stroke-play qualifying at Merion Golf Club and Philadelphia Country Club. “I’m honored to just be in the field. It might be one of the last times I will tee it up in a [Philadelphia] Amateur Championship,” said Donatoni. “Those days are behind me. I’ll be 50 yards behind everybody, but hopefully my wedges and hybrids will be working. When you’re playing in those, you’re playing against the very best that GAP has to offer. I don’t have any illusions about it – I just want to have fun on two of the best courses out there.” Frank H. Chapman, a Whitemarsh Valley Country Club member, served as the Association’s secretary-treasurer for 23 years. He died on June 7, 1955 at the age of 88. The Gross tournament, now in its 11th year, is held in his honor.
Golf Association of Philadelphia
|