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If Gayle Borthwick doesn't remember this trip to Broadmoor
Golf Club, something is terribly wrong.
As Gayle Hitchens, then 17, she competed in the 1961 U.S.
Girls' Junior at Broadmoor, but when asked during the USGA
Senior Women's Amateur, played at the same club the second
week of September, for her memories of that week, she drew
a blank. And it wasn't as though she played miserably; she
was one stroke off the medalist's score and advanced to the
round of 16.
Her latest trip to Broadmoor G.C., for the stroke-play swan
song of the Senior Women's Amateur, should be engraved in
her memory for some time, if not forever. The 52-year-old
retired grade school teacher from Mississauga, Ontario, Canada,
took the lead during the second round and survived a stumble
midway through the final 18 to win the title, giving her women's
senior titles both north and south of the 49th parallel.
Borthwick finished with a third round 78 and a 54-hole score
of 10-over-par 226, one stroke better than compatriot Marlene
Streit and Karen Oldham of Silver Lake, Ohio, and two ahead
of Tish Preuss of Colorado Springs, Colo., the 1991 winner.
"This was something I'd always wished for but never thought
I could achieve," said Borthwick, a Canadian champion a the
junior, amateur, mid-amateur and senior levels. "I've played
well all summer but there's been a little clink in the armor
in that several times I've led after the first two or three
days and then something's happened on the last day. I hung
in there and I guess I'm proud of that."
It appeared for much of the final round that the outcome
would be a foregone conclusion as Borthwick, who began the
day three strokes clear of Preuss, twice opened four-stroke
leads. When the leaders hit the turn and headed for the stretch
run, however, no one could force a decisive move. Borthwick
made two double bogeys, one at the eighth and another at the
11th, Preuss bogeyed the ninth and 10th and Oldham bogeyed
three of five holes starting at the 11th.
When Borthwick bogeyed the par-5 13th, chipping to within
three feet but missing the putt, she and Oldham found themselves
sharing the lead. Moments later, Oldham returned the favor
with a bogey at the par-5 15th to fall one back and give Borthwick
the lead for good.
Streit was steady throughout the day, fashioning two bogeys
against one birdie through the first 16 holes to trail by
one. But a so-so chip at the 17th left her a six-foot putt
for par, which she missed, and her last chance, a 10-footer
for birdie at the last hole, stayed inches left of the cup.
"She's a great player," Streit said of Borthwick, the '93
and '94 Canadian Senior Women's Amateur champion. "She's a
strong player, and I'm not surprised at all."
Preuss, who played with Borthwick in the final round, stayed
within shouting distance for most of the round, but she was
0-for-3 on sand saves, and a wicked 6-iron at the 10th, which
led to the first of back-to-back bogeys, hurt as well. "That
put me in jail," she noted, "and if I hit it anywhere else
I have a chance to get up and down."
Thus Borthwick will go into the record books as the final
stroke-play champion at the USGA Senior Women's Amateur. After
35 years of 54 holes stroke play, the only format the championship
has ever known, it will fall into line with most of the USGA's
other amateur championships starting in 1997 at Yeamans Hall
Club in Charleston, S.C., when two days of stroke play will
yield a 64-player, matchplay draw.
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