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1997

Nancy Fitzgerald

Nancy Fitzgerald, 54, of Carmel, Ind., defeated Toni Wiesner, 50, of Fort Worth, Texas, 1 up, to win the 1997 USGA Senior Women's Amateur at the 5,721-yard Yeamans Hall Club in Charleston, S.C.

"It has not sunk in, but this is a dream that has been fulfilled," said Fitzgerald through tears shortly after winning her first national championship.

A winner of the 1997 Canadian Senior Women's Amateur, Fitzgerald closed the match on the par-5, 447-yard 18th hole when Wiesner left her approach shot short of the green and then failed to make a 15-foot putt for par.

"When she hit her shot short, all I thought was that I needed to leave my first putt below the hole," said Fitzgerald, who then made a 3-foot second putt on the final green for par and the win.

"There was such relief when that final putt went in. It felt like a 50-footer," she added. "I didn't want to go another hole with Toni."

Wiesner, who never led in the final, squared the match at the par-4, 321-yard 17th. Fitzgerald had just hit a 4-iron to within inches at the par-3, 154-yard 16th for birdie and a 1-up lead.

"It was the shot of the century for me," admitted Fitzgerald. "Even after losing the 17th hole, I didn't care. My adrenaline was going and I just wanted to get it done. And we did."

"I couldn't believe I chunked that 9 iron," said Wiesner of her shot that all but decided the match at the final hole. "All I had to do was hit it on the green and we were going extra holes."

Fitzgerald was 2 up heading to the 5th hole, after making consecutive birdies on nos. 3 and 4, until Wiesner sank a 15-foot putt for par on the par-4, 344-yard 8th to bring the match to within one. That standing remained unchanged until Fitzgerald three-putted from 20-feet at the par-3, 163-yard 13th to send the match back to all square.

"I didn't lose, we all won," said Wiesner, a life-time amateur who did not start playing golf until she was 23 years old. "She just played better today."

"I'm humbled," admitted Fitzgerald. "I never knew if I would win." A mother of four, Fitzgerald lost in an 18-hole playoff to two-time winner Marlene Streit in the 1994 playing of this championship for women age 50 or older. The pair had been dead-even as they approached the final hole.

"I was frustrated and angry," remembered Fitzgerald when asked of Streit's birdie at the 18th hole that day for the win. "After that, I put too much pressure on myself to win. I think that is why this is so hard to believe."

Over three hundred spectators followed Saturday's final match.

"The gallery really made it a national championship," said Fitzgerald. "It was awesome."

 
Championship Facts

COURSE ARCHITECT – John Fought, an Oregonian who won the 1977 U.S. Amateur, made revisions to the Meadows course in 1999. The redesign resembles great American courses from the 1920s and 30s with its use of directional and fore-bunkers. The original Meadows Course opened in 1969.

COURSE SETUP – The USGA Course Rating/Slope Rating® for Sunriver's Meadow Course during the USGA Senior Women's Amateur Championship is: 74.4/141.

Heights of grass:
Teeing ground – .275"
Fairways and driving range tee -- .450-.475"
Collars around greens – .300", approximately 30 inches wide, or one mower width
Putting greens – no height prescribed; speed: 10-10 ½ feet on the Stimpmeter.
Primary rough – 2-2 ½ "
Intermediate rough – 1 ¼", approximately 6' wide or one mower width

WHO CAN ENTER -- Open to female amateur golfers who will have reached their 50th birthday on or before Sept. 1, 2007, and have USGA Handicap Indexes not exceeding 18.4.

 

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