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Woodard, Bolger Lead Second-Round Winners

At 2007 U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur

Carefree, Ariz. – Stroke-play medalist Dawn Woodard of Franklin, Tenn., and defending champion Meghan Bolger of Haddonfield, N.J., both advanced in Tuesday’s second-round action at the 2007 U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur, being played at the 6,208-yard, par-73 Desert Forest Golf Club.

The 33-year-old Woodard won the first two holes with pars against two-time USGA Senior Women’s Amateur champion Diane Lang, 52, of Jamaica and never trailed en route to a 5-and-3 victory.

It wasn’t the first time Woodard and Lang saw each other on the golf course at the championship – they also played two practice rounds together.

“I definitely knew that I was going to have to play well today,” said Woodard, who is trying to become the first stroke-play medalist to win the title since 2000. “I knew from playing the two practice rounds with her that she wasn’t playing as well as I’ve seen her play before, but I also know she’s been around the block in match play a few times and I knew that even if she wasn’t hitting it well that she would find a way to compete.”

Lang, who won the 2005 and 2006 Senior Women’s Amateurs, was not at her sharpest – she finished three over par with the usual match-play concessions – but was just 1 down after eight holes.

“I was struggling on the front nine but I was holding it together,” said Lang. “I made two bad mistakes on the first two holes and that put me two down, and that was not a good way to start.”

But Woodard took over from there. She won the ninth hole with a birdie and won No. 10 with a par to increase her lead to 3 up, and she closed out Lang with a birdie on the 15th.

“I just tried to still keep my game plan of keeping the ball in play and give myself some chances,” said Woodard. “I hit it left on the fourth and seventh holes, but both of those were just poor second shots. Other than that, I felt like I hit the ball where I needed to, and I felt like my putter really helped me.”

Despite the outcome, Lang wasn’t disappointed.

“I would have needed my A-plus game, and I had my C game,” said Lang. “And you cannot beat Dawn with a C game. The better player won. She hits it so well and so pure.”

Bolger, 29, is trying to become the first repeat winner since Ellen Port won the 1995 and 1996 championships. She played even-par golf en route to a 2-and-1 win over 2001 U.S. Women’s Amateur Public Links runner-up Missy Farr-Kaye, 40, of Scottsdale, Ariz.

Bolger’s third-round opponent will be 2004 USGA Senior Women’s Amateur winner Carolyn Creekmore, 55, of Dallas, Texas, who needed 24 holes to outlast Laura Ladden, 31, of Coatesville, Pa.

The 46-year-old Port, of St. Louis, Mo., who also won the 2000 championship, kept her hopes of a fourth title alive with a 2-and-1 win over 1978 USA Curtis Cupper Noreen Mohler, 53, of Bethlehem, Pa. Port’s next opponent will be Toni Wiesner, 60, of Fort Worth, Texas. Wiesner, who is playing in her 21st Women’s Mid-Amateur, beat 26-year-old Canadian Jill Hardy in 19 holes.

Two other USGA champions were victorious in the second round. Virginia Derby Grimes, 43, of Meridian, Miss., the 1998 U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur champion, earned a 4-and-3 victory over Ann Lahey, 55, of Kentfield, Calif. And Anna Schultz’s hopes of becoming the first to win the USGA Senior Women’s Amateur and the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur in the same year remained alive with a 2-and-1 win over Dana Harrity, 49, of N. Hampton, N.H.

Schultz would become the second golfer this year to win two USGA championships in a season. Colt Knost, who won the U.S. Amateur and U.S. Amateur Public Links in 2007, became the sixth single-season double champion in USGA history.

Kerry Postillion, a two-time U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur runner-up and a member at Desert Forest, advanced with a 4-and-2 win over Sharon Park, 29, of Irvine, Calif. Postillion’s third-round opponent will be 2001 Women’s Mid-Am runner-up Mina Hardin, 47, of Fort Worth, Texas, who earned a 5-and-4 second-round victory over another Desert Forest member, 2006 Women’s Mid-Amateur runner-up Thuhashini Selvaratnam, 31, of Sri Lanka.

The U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur continues with the third round of match play Tuesday afternoon. The quarterfinal and semifinal matches will be played Wednesday and the championship concludes with the 18-hole final on Thursday.

The U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur is one of 13 championships conducted annually by the United States Golf Association each year, 10 of which are strictly for amateurs.

Story written by Beth Murrison of USGA Media Relations. For questions or comments, contact her at bmurrison@usga.org.

Carefree, Ariz. – Results following Tuesday’s second round of match play at the 2007 U.S. Women’s Mid- Amateur Championship at the 6,208-yard, par-73 Desert Forest Golf Club:

Round of 32

Upper Bracket

Dawn Woodard, Franklin, Tenn. (144) def. Diane Lang, Jamaica (160), 5 and 3

Patty Moore, Charlotte, N.C. (156) def. Lecia Alexander, Stafford, Texas (164), 1 up

Meghan Bolger, Haddonfield, N.J. (152) def. Missy Farr-Kaye, Scottsdale, Ariz. (159), 2 and 1

Carolyn Creekmore, Dallas, Texas (158) def. Laura Ladden, Coatesville, Pa. (164) 24 holes

Lisa McGill, Philadelphia, Pa. (160) def. Eva Monisteri, San Mateo, Calif. (166), 2 up

Shirley Trier, Jacksonville Beach, Fla. (163) def. Adrienne Maclean, Verona, N.J. (155), 1 up

Veronique Drouin, Canada (159) def. Mary Jane Hiestand, Naples, Fla. (166), 7 and 5

Anna Schultz, Rockwall, Texas (155) def. Dana Harrity, N Hampton, N.H. (158), 2 and 1

Lower Bracket

Virginia Grimes, Meridian, Miss. (146) def. Ann Lahey, Kentfield, Calif. (160), 4 and 3

Tracy Welch, Boston, Mass. (163) def. Deanne Stolarik, Zion, Ill. (156), 6 and 4

Ellen Port, St Louis, Mo. (161) def. Noreen Mohler, Bethlehem, Pa. (165), 2 and 1

Toni Wiesner, Fort Worth, Texas (154) def. Jill Hardy, Canada (158), 19 holes

Joan Higgins, Glendora, Calif. (161) def. Heidi Stark, Lincoln, Neb. (166), 6 and 4

Leigh Klasse, St Anthony, Minn. (157) def. Ann Pohira, Winter Park, Fla. (156), 19 holes

Kerry Postillion, Burr Ridge, Ill. (159) def. Sharon Park, Irvine, Calif. (152), 4 and 2

Mina Hardin, Ft Worth, Texas (155) def. Thuhashini Selvaratnam, Sri Lanka (158), 5 and 4

Carefree, Ariz. – Pairings for Tuesday’s third round of match play at the 2007 U.S. Women’s Mid- Amateur Championship at the 6,208-yard, par-73 Desert Forest Golf Club:

Round of 16

Upper Bracket

12:45 p.m.         Dawn Woodard, Franklin, Tenn. (144) vs. Patty Moore, Charlotte, N.C. (156)

1:30 p.m.          Meghan Bolger, Haddonfield, N.J. (152) vs. Carolyn Creekmore, Dallas, Texas (158)

1:03 p.m.          Lisa McGill, Philadelphia, Pa. (160) vs. Shirley Trier, Jacksonville Beach, Fla. (163)

1:12 p.m.          Veronique Drouin, Canada (159) vs. Anna Schultz, Rockwall, Texas (155)

Lower Bracket

1:21 p.m.          Virginia Grimes, Meridian, Miss. (146) vs. Tracy Welch, Boston, Mass. (163)

1:57 p.m.          Ellen Port, St Louis, Mo. (161) vs. Toni Wiesner, Fort Worth, Texas (154)

1:39 p.m.          Joan Higgins, Glendora, Calif. (161) vs. Leigh Klasse, St Anthony, Minn. (157)

1:48 p.m.          Kerry Postillion, Burr Ridge, Ill. (159) vs. Mina Hardin, Ft Worth, Texas (155)

 

 

 
Championship Facts

PAR AND YARDAGE – Desert Forest Golf Club will play at 6,209 yards with par of 37-36—73.

WHO CAN PLAY? – The U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur Championship is open to female amateur players who will have reached their 25th birthday on or before Sept. 29, and who have a USGA Handicap Index not exceeding 9.4.

ARCHITECT – Desert Forest, widely considered the first desert-style course ever built, was designed by Robert "Red" Lawrence and opened in 1962. Lawrence carved the course from existing desert landscape, with virtually no soil having been removed or shaped during course construction. There are no fairway bunkers or water hazards on the course.

COURSE RATING AND SLOPE – The USGA Course RatingTM for Desert Forest Golf Club is 76.5; Slope Rating® is 143.

COURSE LAYOUT – The fairways will measure .500" in height. The intermediate rough will measure 1.0 inch with a width approximately 6 feet (with adjustments as needed). Depending on density, the primary rough will stand at approximately 1.75 inches high. The goal is to have the putting greens run 10.5-11 feet on the USGA Stimpmeter.

TICKETS – Admission for all six days of the championship is free of charge. Spectators are invited to walk the fairways behind the players, but no cameras are allowed during the days of competition.

 

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