Amateur 20

Amateur 20




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Amateur 20

U.S. Amateur: Sam Bennett and Ben Carr advance to championship final at The Ridgewood Country Club

Ben Carr hits from a green side bunker at the 2022 U.S. Amateur at The Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus, New Jersey. (Grant Halverson/USGA)
Sam Bennett looked as if he was going to cruise into the finals of the 122nd U.S. Amateur.
The 22-year-old fifth-year senior from Texas A&M was 2 up with five to play in his semifinal match against Dylan Menante at The Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus, New Jersey. Yet on the 17th tee, the match was tied. Menante, a senior at North Carolina, sat in the middle of the fairway while Bennett watched his drive leak right into the trees.
Bennett’s ball came to rest nearly against the trunk of a huge tree. He and his caddie spoke at length about his options, and he opted to hit a high draw that somehow avoided further tree trouble and settled in a fairway bunker. Menante’s 3 wood second shot settled just short of the green.
However, Bennett didn’t let being behind the 8-ball bug him. He flushed his shot out of the bunker and was inside Menante once both players were on the green, and he sank the birdie putt, which ended up being the difference in a 1 up victory to advance to the U.S. Amateur finals on Sunday.
Bennett will face off against Ben Carr, a fifth-year senior at Georgia Southern, in the 36-hole final on Sunday. Carr topped Derek Hitchner, 3 and 2, catching fire on the back nine to advance to the championship match.
Both Bennett and Carr secured spots in the 2023 Masters and 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club by advancing to the final.
Menante, No. 8 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, didn’t challenge Bennett on the final hole. Menante’s tee shot was right and his second shot short of the green in the rough. Bennett, meanwhile, found the fairway and hit a 7-iron to about 15 feet for birdie, giving a vicious club twirl after hitting the shot.
For Bennett, he continues his stellar run. None of his opponents have been ranked lower than No. 27 in the WAGR.
Carr, 22, from Columbus, Georgia, capitalized on a strong back nine. He won three holes in a four-hole stretch, including birdies on the par-5 13th and par-4 14th, to go 3 up. He narrowly missed a short birdie putt on the par-3 15th to clinch victory, but he ended up winning with a par on the next hole.
No. 70 in the WAGR, Carr is looking to become the first current or former Georgia Southern player to win the U.S. Amateur since alum Stewart “Buddy” Alexander captured the 1986 title at Shoal Creek.
There was also an emotional moment for Carr in his post-round interview. He uses a special ball marker to commemorate his father, who died in 2019. But, it went missing.
“On the first tee, I couldn’t find it,” Carr told Smiley Kaufman, who’s working as a reporter for Golf Channel, after the match. “I emptied out my pockets, there was nothing. I emptied out my bag. I couldn’t find it in my bag.”
But then he found it right before clinching his match.
“I’m over my putt on 16, and it’s just in my left pocket,” Carr said. “I don’t know how. I sweat to God, I checked. I check my pocket, I swear to God.”
Sunday, August 21
36-hole championship match, Golf Channel: 2–5 p.m. ET
It came down to a scorecard playoff.
Nakajima has held the No. 1 amateur ranking for a record 83 weeks.
The Golfweek Junior Tournament Series is now in its 23nd year. All events in the Series are nationally ranked by Golfweek/Sagarin and the Junior Golf Scoreboard. The Golfweek International Junior Invitational is the flagship event of the Series and annually attracts one of the top fields in junior golf. Entry is based solely on (1) invitation, (2) submitted and approved application, (3) finishing top 10 in qualifying Golfweek Junior Series tournament, (4) finishing in the top 5 in a state junior championship. Other potential entrants are encouraged to submit a playing resume for consideration by the tournament committee. 










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The Ridgewood Country Club , Paramus, N.J.
Arcola Country Club , Paramus, N.J.
Bennett Backs Up Bravado to Claim U.S. Amateur Title
Sam Bennett proclaimed early in the week that he was the man to beat at the 122nd U..S. Amateur, and the Texas A&M standout backed it up at The Ridgewood C.C.
Bennett Holds Off Carr to Win 122nd U.S. Amateur at Ridgewood
Texan Sam Bennett capped off a remarkable week at The Ridgewood C.C. by holding off Ben Carr, 1 up, in Sunday's 36-hole final of the 122nd U.S. Amateur Championship.
122nd U.S. Amateur: Scenes From Sunday's Final at Ridgewood
Bennett to Face Carr in 36-Hole Final at The Ridgewood C.C.
Texan Sam Bennett, the No. 3 amateur in the world, will face Georgian Ben Carr in Sunday's 36-hole final of the 122nd U.S. Amateur at The Ridgewood Country Club.
Pate’s Place in Golf Lore Spurred by Ridgewood Success
Jerry Pate enjoyed a fruitful professional career that included winning the 1976 U.S. Open, but his biggest title came in the 1974 U.S. Amateur at The Ridgewood C.C.
Highly Ranked Bennett, Menante Headline Final 4 at Ridgewood
World No. 3 Sam Bennett, No. 8 Dylan Menante, Ben Carr and Derek Hitchner reached the semifinals of the 122nd U.S. Amateur on Friday at The Ridgewood Country Club.
122nd U.S. Amateur: Friday's Quarterfinals Scenes From Ridgewood

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Oldham and Rochdale based amateur radio blog

This is my interpretation of the 20-meter band frequencies. I thought this would be of interest to readers. Other than the military, amateur radio operators are the only users of the radio spectrum that are permitted to change frequency. This means that as licensed amateur radio operators, we do not have to restrict ourselves to stipulated channels. Having said that, the 20-meter band covers a wide range of frequencies and many applications for amateur radio in the band involve automated equipment such as repeaters, satellites, and beacons. For these reasons it has become general practice to specify frequencies as if they were channels.
Specifying band frequencies does not distract from the enjoyment of working on the 20-meter band. It basically means that you will now know where to listen for other users. It also means that when you transmit, you are less likely to interfere with other users that cannot change frequency, such as repeaters, satellites, and beacons. Here is my interpretation of the 20-meter band frequencies.
To see all band frequencies as published by the RSGB, follow this link:- https://rsgb.services/public/bandplans/html/rsgb_band_plan_2020.htm
Amateur radio is a popular technical hobby and volunteer public service. As a licensed amateur radio operator, you are permitted to transmit and receive radio signals on frequency bands allocated for use by amateur radio amateurs. Amateur radio operators use these designated bands of radio frequencies for non-commercial exchange of messages, wireless experimentation, self-training, and emergency communications. A 1910 announcement by the then HM Postmaster General licensed “experimental wireless”, which still uniquely gives radio amateurs the ability to innovate without commercial or statutory controls even in the closely regulated environment of the 21st century. Amateur radio is the only hobby governed by international treaty.
Amateur radio operators use the amateur radio bands for a variety of purposes:
There is no better way to explore the fascinating world of radio communications than by becoming a radio amateur.
2-meter band frequencies 30th December 2020 In "Frequencies"
10-meter band frequencies 29th December 2020 In "Frequencies"
70-centimeter band frequencies 31st December 2020 In "Frequencies"
14,040 kHz Islands On The Air IOTA CW
14,055 kHz QRS (slow telegraphy) Centre of Activity.
14,058 kHz and down frequency FISTS CW Club centre of activity.
14,060 kHz QRP CW centre of activity.
14,0956 kHz dial freq
14,0970-14,0972 kHz transmit freq
for WSPR
automatically controlled data stations (unattended)
IBP - reserved exclusively for beacons
14,100 kHz NCDXF/IARU International Beacon Project https://www.ncdxf.org/beacon/
All modes - automatically controlled data stations (unattended)
All modes - SSB contest preferred segment
14,130kHz - digital voice centre of activity
14,195+- 5 kHz Priority for Dxpeditions
14,230 kHz - Image Centre of Activity.
14,285 kHz - QRP Centre of Activity
14,300 kHz Global Emergency Centre of Activity

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