Collin Morikawa after 2015 Trans-Mississippi title
(Photo courtesy of Trans-Miss Golf Association)
SAN FRANCISCO, CA (July 11, 2016) -- One of the
most
storied clubs in America will play host to the 113th
Trans-Mississippi Amateur Championship when the
elite
144-player field heads to The Olympic Club from July
12-14.
This year’s Trans-Miss Championship features
the
strongest field in recent memory. Twenty-three of
the
world’s top-ranked amateurs, according to the World
Amateur Golf Rankings, will compete on the iconic
Lake
Course at The Olympic Club. That decorated group of
23
inside the WAGR’s top 200 includes Stanford’s
Maverick
McNealy, the newly minted No. 1 amateur in the
world
after Jon Rahm turned professional last month.
“The Lake Course is one of my favorites in the
area,
if not my favorite,” said McNealy, the 2015 NCAA
Player
of Year who grew up about 30 minutes away from
The
Olympic Club. “It’s one of the best driving courses in
the
world. I love that it’s a local event. That’s
huge.”
The format for the Trans-Miss Championship is
72
holes of stroke play over three days. After the first
two
days, there will be a 36-hole cut. Players with the 54
lowest scores (including ties) advance to the final
day,
in which 36 holes will be played to comprise the third
and fourth rounds. The field also includes 10 players
in
the WAGR Top 100 and 14 in the top 150.
“We’re excited to take the Trans-Miss Amateur
Championship to a historic venue like the Lake
Course
at The Olympic Club,” said Cameron Crawford,
Tournament Director of the Trans-Miss Championship.
“Numerous national championships have been
decided
on those hallowed grounds. It’ll be an exciting and
memorable challenge for the talented field of
amateurs
in our event.”
The Olympic Club has played host to five U.S.
Opens, including the 1955 affair that saw an
unheralded
Jack Fleck defeat Ben Hogan in an 18-hole playoff
that
is considered one of the great upsets in sports
history.
Most recently, Webb Simpson won the 2012 U.S.
Open
at The Olympic Club when he held off Jim Furyk and
Graeme McDowell among others. The Lake Course
also
was the site of the Billy Casper’s 1966 U.S. Open
victory, the one in which Arnold Palmer surrendered
a
seven-shot lead with nine holes to play. Scott
Simpson
and Lee Janzen also won U.S. Opens at The Olympic
Club in 1987 and ’98, respectively.
The club additionally has hosted three U.S.
Amateurs, two PGA Tour Championships, the 2004
U.S.
Junior Amateur and last year’s inaugural U.S. Four-
Ball
Championship. It recently was awarded the 2021
U.S.
Women’s Open. In 1958 at The Olympic Club, Charles
Coe won the second of his two U.S. Amateurs. Coe,
a
four-time Trans-Miss Amateur Champion between the
years 1947-56, is considered one of the greatest
amateurs of all time. He never turned professional
and
holds or held nearly every amateur record at the
Masters, including 15 made cuts, three top-10
finishes
and six eagles.
Nathaniel Crosby, son of the celebrated singer
and
actor Bing Crosby, won the 1981 U.S. Amateur at
The
Olympic Club.
Tucked between Lake Merced and the Pacific
Ocean, The Olympic Club boasts two 18-hole courses
–
the Ocean Course is the other – and an adjoining
par-
3
course called the Cliffs. They’re all part of a bigger
club
by the same name. Located near Union Square in
downtown San Francisco, The Olympic Club is the
oldest
athletic club in the country. Founded in 1860, the
club
has more than 5,000 members who compete in 19
sports from water polo and snowboarding to
basketball,
tennis and, of course, golf.
“Our philosophy of hosting amateur
championships
all comes from our athletic club downtown,” said
Chris
Stein, The Olympic Club’s Head Golf Professional
since
1999. “Over the years, we’ve always wanted to
foster
amateur athletics. The U.S. Open became an
opportunity for us, too, but we’ve always put an
emphasis on amateur events.”
With the two major bodies of water close by, it’s
a
bit ironic that there are no water hazards on the
Lake
Course. There is a lateral hazard left of the 13th,
14th
and 15th holes. There’s only one fairway bunker on
the
course; it’s on the par-4 sixth hole. Ranked inside
Golf
Magazine’s Top 100 and one of Golfweek’s Top 100
“Best Classic Courses,” the Lake Course features
bentgrass greens and fairways with rye, bent and
poa
annua grasses. The course was designed in 1927 by
then-superintendent Sam Whiting.
Interestingly, current superintendent Troy
Flanagan
is a former Trans-Miss Golf Association scholarship
recipient. Trans-Miss Golf Association Directors Bob
Ireland and Mark Mance are members of The
Olympic
Club, both of whom will be involved among fellow
Directors in this year’s championship.
The Lake Course’s defense comes in the form of
towering Monterey pines and cypress trees – nearly
40,000 of them – as well as narrow fairways, thick
rough and sharp doglegs. The severe undulation
throughout the course produces copious uphill,
downhill
and side-hill lies. There’s also the weather to
consider.
“We are seaside, so there’s cooler weather even
though it’s July,” Stein said. “You could get some fog,
which makes for heavy air. The ball isn’t going to
travel
as far. You always have to take about a half-club
more.
You also have to take a look at your lie in the
fairway.
We have a lot of undulation, and the slopes out there
can cause havoc.”
McNealy said he’s played the Lake Course 10 or
15
times. He said playing a home game will be an
advantage for him in many respects. Sleeping in his
own bed is a big one, as are playing in his normal
time
zone and the familiarity he has with the golf course,
types of grasses and weather. McNealy’s love affair
with
the Lake Course began many years ago, and said
there’s not one weak hole on the property.
“I think they’re all great holes,” said McNealy,
who
has won 10 events in his first three years at
Stanford.
He’s one collegiate victory behind the school record
shared by Tiger Woods and Patrick Rodgers. “If you
see
someone getting out of the first six holes at even
par,
they’re going to be in great shape. The first six holes
are brutal. You have to control the shape of your
shots,
the trajectory and how it lands, too. That’s why it’s
such
a great driving course.”
Collin Morikawa of La Cañada Flintridge, Calif.,
won
the 112th Trans-Miss Championship by seven shots
with
a final score of 18-under-par 262 at Flint Hills
National
in Andover, Kan. A sophomore at California-Berkeley,
Morikawa will defend his title at The Olympic Club.
He
rides into the Trans-Miss Championship on heavy
wave
of momentum. After a three-shot victory in mid-June
at
the Sunnehanna Amateur, he took runner-up honors
at
the Web.com Tour’s Air Capital Classic in Wichita,
Kan.
Morikawa scored the Web.com Tour event exemption
by
virtue of his victory at the 112th Trans-Miss
Championship.
Morikawa, 19, drained a 35-foot birdie putt on
the
72nd hole to post 17-under par and advanced to a
three-man playoff at Crestview CC. He ultimately
lost
on
the second playoff hole to Ollie Schniederjans.
Morikawa
almost joined Russell Henley (2011), Harris English
(2011) and Daniel Summerhays (2007) as the only
amateurs to win a Web.com Tour event.
The Trans-Miss Championship is one of three
annual championships conducted by the Trans-Miss
Golf
Association. In May, Tommy Brennan from Louisiana
won the Trans-Miss Senior Championship at Houston
Country Club. The Trans-Miss Four-Ball Championship
is
set to be contested Sept. 26-29 at Forest Highlands
in
Flagstaff, Ariz.
ABOUT THE
Trans-Miss Championship
The Trans-Miss is one of the oldest and
most storied golf tournaments in the United
States.
For 106 years the championship
was played in a match play format.
Past champions include Jack Nicklaus (1958
and 1959), Charles Coe (1947, 1949, 1952 and
1956), Deane Beman (1960), George Archer
(1963), Ben Crenshaw (1972), Gary Koch
(1973), Bob Tway (1978), Mark Brooks (1978)
and other professional tour notables. In
1987 the championship was changed to a mid-
amateur age requirement, and a senior division
was also added. Starting in 2010, the Trans-
Mississippi Championship, returned to its roots
as an
open amateur tournament, and immediately
established itself as a "must-play" among
top collegiate and mid-am players, while
changing to
a 72-hole stroke play format. The field size
starts at
144 players from Trans-
Mississippi Golf Association member clubs (or
players receiving a special invitation from the
Championship Committee). After 36 holes, a cut
is
made to the low 54 and ties who play the final
two
rounds.
View Complete Tournament Information