GAP champs Mattare, McDermott top #USMidAm Qual. at LlanerchHAVERTOWN, Pa. â Two of this seasonâs Golf Association of Philadelphia Major champions will get a chance to elevate their accolades on a national stage, once again, fully equipped with momentum and a medal.
Middle-Amateur champion Matthew Mattare and BMW Philadelphia Amateur Champion Michael McDermott fired 1-under-par 70s, the lone red figures on the day, giving the accomplished pair a share of medalist honors in a U.S. Mid-Amateur Qualifier at Llanerch Country Club (par 71, 6,770 yards) Monday. Also qualifying was McDermottâs younger brother, Brian, who punched a ticket to the Championship proper in his first attempt while playing on his home track. He, along with Aronimink Golf Clubâs Dan Bernard, Tavistock Country Clubâs Adam Warner, and former Rider University standout Eric LeFante of Florham, Park, N.J., also grabbed spots available on a sizzling summer day. Sean Seese of Huntingdon Valley Country Club outlasted his clubmate Jeff Osberg, the reigning Patterson Cup and Open Champion, on the second playoff hole to secure the seventh and final qualifying spot. Seese converted a two-putt par from 30 feet, while Osberg uncharacteristically three-putted from 12 feet. The U.S. Mid-Amateur will take place Sept. 10-15 at Stonewall, an Association Member Club nestled away in a quaint, remote corner of Chester Country. Lifting the J. Wood Platt Trophy at Merion Golf Club, McDermottâs playing home, is a recent moment that will be hard to top in an amateur career swamped with accolades. Qualifying for what will be his first local USGA championship appearance is the first small step in trying to do so. Making the turn at 1 over wasnât ideal for McDermott after starting on Llanerchâs back nine. He knew that an over-par number wasnât going to be safe. He corrected that quickly, on No. 4 (par 3, 205 yards), with 30-footer for birdie to get back to even. The next par 3 was also kind to McDermott once he stuck his trusty 5-iron to two feet, which pushed him into red figures. âThat was really good. Here I am, sitting at even par, playing what is arguably the hardest hole on the course. To steal one there was huge,â said the 41-year-old McDermott. Just getting into the Mid-Am field for the 10-time GAP Major winner is more important than most would think. McDermott has come up short on both occasions when trying to qualify for a national championship in the area he has dominated for the last decade. Most notably, he missed out on Merionâs 2005 U.S. Amateur in result of a late-qualifying miscue at Llanerch, the club he grew up at. âI have demons [on No. 9.]. I had made 10 previous USGA championships in a row before that â all I had to do was keep it in play and I would have made it to Merion. Then I hit it [out-of-bounds right]. It broke the streak and it broke my heart,â said McDermott, who has played in eight previous U.S. Mid-Amateurs (2001-04, 2007, 2013 and 2015). âI stepped away from the ball there, because I could still hear so many of the members here giving me a hard time about what I did in â05. That was fresh in my mind.â Today wasnât a day for heartbreak. With knowledge where he stood, qualifying-wise, on that evil-spirited tee, McDermott played it âmiles leftâ to the 10th fairway. While he stepped up to hit his second shot, sprinklers rained down on him. It didnât faze him. McDermott placed his approach shot safely on the green and two-putted for par. Demons be gone. Similar to today, the Bryn Mawr, Pa. resident will head to Stonewall with local knowledge to boot. McDermottâs first noteworthy-amateur run came at Stonewall back in 2000, when he reached the BMW Philadelphia Amateur Final. âI hadnât really done anything in a golf tournament before that. Even though I lost in a crazy 38-hole match [to Little Mill Country Clubâs Michael Hyland], I have very fond memories of that place,â he said. âThe locals will have some home-field advantage over the rest of the field there.â Mattare took home his first GAP Major this season in the Middle-Amateur presented by Callaway Golf at Waynesborough Country Club. With todayâs qualification, which he says âis always more stressful than the actual championship itself,â Mattare earned a fourth chance at a national title. Two avoidable bogeys to end the round almost cost Mattare medalist honors. A tough three-putt from the top shelf was the result on No. 8 (par 3, 219 yards). An 18-inch par attempt clipped the edge on No. 9 (par 5, 493 yards), meaning a closing bogey ended what was otherwise a fantastic round. Walking away from it, Mattare was pleased overall with the outcome after earning another national championship invitation from the USGA. âI came out relaxed, and just wanted to be confident. In these qualifiers, you need to tell yourself you belong. You need to tell yourself, âThere are seven spots. You are one of the seven best Mid.-Am. players out here, so go out and prove it.â,â said Mattare, 30, of Jersey City, N.J. Heâs proven it so far, especially on the big stage. In his debut Mid-Amateur appearance, in 2012 at Conway Farms Golf Club (Lake Forest, Ill.), Mattare advanced to the quarterfinals before falling to Canadaâs Garrett Rank, 3&2. An opening-round, 3-under 67 paired with a 2-under-69 in the second round earned medalist honors for stroke-play qualifying in 2013, held at the Country Club of Birmingham. There he went on to fall in the first round of match play to Davis Boland, 2&1. His most recent appearance, in 2014, was his most memorable. Besides the fact that he advanced to the third round for the second time in three years, that playing rendition was held on Mattareâs home track â the same club that his father, Gene, serves as General Manager and Director of Golf. âIâll always have good memories of that one,â said Mattare. âThe brighter the lights, the more fun it is. Once you get there, itâs just great. I always love the crowd and the pressure. Plus, anytime where the ultimate prize is a ticket to Augusta, youâre going to care even that much more.â The best nine of the day belonged to Warner, a Pittsburgh, Pa. transplant who arrived in Philadelphia thanks to the Drexel University golf program. Warner, who played for the Dragons on scholarship from 1997 to 2001, made early noise after making the turn at 4 under on Llanerchâs back nine. âThatâs probably a low for me on a nine, I have to admit,â said the 37-year-old who joined Tavistock two years ago. âWhen I made the turn, I was pretty pumped up and really tried to keep it going, but the first-four stretch is tough here. After those holes, I just had to grind it out from there in. This is a really thinking manâs course, and Iâm happy to have finished where I did.â Two bogeys and a double on Llanerchâs front kept Warner out of red numbers, but not out of his first U.S. Mid-Amateur. Thanks to his local and Drexel ties, heâll make the short trip to Stonewall with a plethora of support. âItâs a great honor for me. Especially with the national championship being a local GAP club, with my family and friends around, Iâm expecting it to be even more special,â said Warner, of Haddon Township, N.J. This was the second and final U.S. Mid-Amateur Qualifier administered by the Golf Association of Philadelpia this season. The first came last week at Philadelphia Cricket Club (Wissahickon) on Aug. 9.
Golf Association of Philadelphia
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