Experience tops youth – but just barely – as Stewart Hagestad advances at U.S. Amateur

[ad_1]

BANDON, Ore. – Stewart Hagestad is in the final year of his 20s. He’s played in 20 USGA championships, half of them U.S. Amateurs, and qualified for each of the past three U.S. Opens. He won the U.S. Mid-Amateur in 2016, took low-amateur honors the following spring at the Masters and has been on two winning Walker Cup teams.

Oh, and he had just shot 66 some 15 hours earlier.

Most 18-year-olds playing in their first U.S. Amateur would be understandably intimidated drawing the decorated mid-amateur in match play.

“I don’t want this in any way to come off as arrogant, but if I at 18 years of age played a two-time Walker Cupper that had played in a few majors, I’d be terrified,” Hagestad said. “I’d be 3 down on the first tee.”

And after one drive – a quick hook off the first tee box Wednesday at Bandon Dunes – Argentina’s Abel Gallegos appeared to be in for a long day. However, the powerful teenager quickly went off script, fighting back for an opening par, birdieing the next hole and building a 2-up lead through 11 holes.

For much of the day, Gallegos, the reigning Latin America Amateur champion, played well beyond his years, matching Hagestad shot for shot down the stretch. With Gallegos clinging to a 1-up lead and needing to get up and down at the par-5 13th to halve, he stuck a wedge close. When Hagestad hit a beautiful cut to 20 feet at the difficult par-3 15th, Gallegos put one inside of him.

“He just wouldn’t go away,” said Hagestad, who was taken down in last year’s first round by another teenager, Maxwell Moldovan. “But I wasn’t too stressed out. I knew that I had to execute and to continue hitting good shots. … I’m not going to pull the Brooks Koepka experience card, but I’m more comfortable now than I maybe would have been in years prior.”

Eventually, experience got the better of youth. After Gallegos left himself a 10-footer up the hill from just off the green at the penultimate hole, Hagestad, with the wind blowing hard off the left, stuffed his approach from just inside 120 yards and headed to the par-5 finishing hole tied.

Hagestad then yanked his tee ball into a poor lie in the left rough, but the kid couldn’t catch a break. Gallegos’ drive ran too far and into an even worse lie in the rough just in front of the right cluster of fairways bunkers. He got free relief from a sprinkler head and was able drop his ball in the fairway, leaving him about 250 yards into the wind.

The confident teen pulled out a long-iron and the ball came out low – too low.

“No!” Gallegos screamed.

It hit the lip of the bunker in front of him, ricocheted up into the air and ended up some 40 yards ahead in another thick lie. From there, he hacked one down the fairway, failed to wedge his fifth shot close and eventually conceded a short birdie putt to Hagestad.

“I won’t swear, but it sucks,” Hagestad said. “Like you’ve been there before. I’ve been in the playoff. I’ve had matches where I felt like I played great and lost or was leading the whole way or whatever. I’ve obviously been on the opposite side of it. But to be where he is, at 18 years old, like in the U.S. Am … he’s only going to continue to get better. It sucks in the moment. It’s terrible, and it’s a total bummer. I feel for him as an older person. But he’s only going to get better from it.”

While Gallegos is going home, Hagestad will be the only one of five mid-amateurs in match play to advance to Thursday morning’s Round of 32, where he’ll face Oregon State’s Spencer Tibbits, who has tons of experience around this layout.

After his win, Hagestad planned to get some lunch, practice a little and relax, much like the rest of these young kids here this week. Except he also has some emails to send. Hagestad is supposed to have mandatory orientation for his M.B.A. program at USC on Wednesday, and, well, he has a bit of a conflict.

There are disadvantages of getting older.



[ad_2]

Source: GolfChannel

Related Posts

LPGA debuting its own behind-the-scenes documentary

Bryson DeChambeau on Dude Perfect video: ‘Times are changing’

Bryson DeChambeau on Dude Perfect – AUGUSTA, Ga. – Count Bryson DeChambeau among those who was surprised Augusta National green-lit the now viral Dude Perfect video. “Everybody was,” DeChambeau said…

Read more
LPGA debuting its own behind-the-scenes documentary

Brooks Koepka has inkling of what Tiger Woods faces in return at Augusta National

Brooks Koepka – AUGUSTA, Ga. – Brooks Koepka at least has some semblance of an idea of what Tiger Woods is facing this week at Augusta National. Last year, it…

Read more
LPGA debuting its own behind-the-scenes documentary

Fred Couples happy to be getting Tiger Woods texts again at Masters

[ad_1] AUGUSTA, Ga. – Fred Couples has become a regular practice round partner of Tiger Woods at the Masters, but as this year’s tournament approached he didn’t expect to hear…

Read more
LPGA debuting its own behind-the-scenes documentary

Collin Morikawa much better at making golf history than recalling it

[ad_1] Collin Morikawa wants to make history. Remembering it, however, is a different story. Morikawa won two majors, the PGA Championship and The Open, prior to turning 25. He’s the…

Read more
LPGA debuting its own behind-the-scenes documentary

Watch: Masters tweets video of Tiger Woods’ Sunday practice round

[ad_1] Tiger Woods arrived at Augusta National on Sunday afternoon after tweeting that competing in the 86th Masters Tournament would be a “game-time decision.” Woods, around 3:20 p.m. ET, warmed up…

Read more
LPGA debuting its own behind-the-scenes documentary

Drive, Chip and Putt recap: Bubba Watson fan Autumn Solesbee among winners

[ad_1] AUGUSTA, Ga. – Waiting for Autumn Solesbee under the iconic oak tree behind Augusta National’s clubhouse was Bubba Watson. As a former Masters champion, Watson has become a regular…

Read more

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *