Amateur Teen 2021

Amateur Teen 2021




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Kaitlyn Schroeder poses with the trophy after winning the First Coast Women’s Amateur Championship on Friday, June 25, at Sawgrass Country Club. With her is her dad, Scott Schroeder, who is the men’s golf coach at the University of North Florida.
The champions from the First Coast Women’s Amateur Championship pose with their trophies Friday, June 25, at Sawgrass Country Club. They are Nancy Smith, Super-Senior champion; Kaitlyn Schroeder, Amateur champion; and Kim Keyer-Scott, Senior champion.
Golfers hit shots in front of the new clubhouse at Sawgrass Country Club.
Posted Thursday, July 1, 2021 12:00 am
Kaitlyn Schroeder of Jacksonville broke out of a five-way first-round tie last Friday and wound up running away with the First Coast Women’s Amateur by five shots at Sawgrass Country Club.
The 16-year-old opened with a 1-over-par 73 on Thursday and found herself in a pack that included Atlantic Coast High School graduate Ramya Meenakshisundaram and Nease High graduate Marissa Cardenas, as well as Maria Beatriz Arizaga and 15-year-old McKenzee Sullivan of St. Petersburg.
 When Schroeder putted out on the 18th hole for a 72 and 145 total, she was the new First Coast Women’s Amateur champion, with Sarah Edwards (75-75–150) and Ailsa Clark (76-74–150) sharing runner-up honors.
 Finishing fourth was Meenakshisundaram (73-78–151). Arizaga (73-79–152) rounded out the top five.
 Brooks Rehabilitation was the tournament’s presenting sponsor for the sixth year in a row.
 For the fifth year in a row, the Amateur was an official event on the Jacksonville Area Golf Association tournament schedule, with JAGA playing a supporting role in the operation and promotion of the championship.
 On a typically windy day over the challenging Sawgrass East/West nines, Schroeder slid backwards in the early going, bogeying holes 4, 5 and 7. The home-schooled daughter of University of North Florida men’s golf coach Scott Schroeder kicked things into gear from there with a bounce-back birdie at No. 8. It was followed by two more at Nos. 11 and 15 and pars on the other eight. 
 “This is my hometown,” Schroeder said. “It’s a great feeling to win this tournament. Then to win it at Sawgrass is really special. It was tough … the wind was swirling, and this course is never easy.”
Cardenas, who attends the University of South Florida, finished in ninth place, shooting 73-82–155.
The two-time Florida Junior Girls (ages 13-15) champion’s busy summer of golf continues in the coming weeks with the AJGA Polo Junior Classic at Liberty National in New Jersey, AJGA Wyndham Cup, U.S. Girls’ Junior, the Junior PGA and a match-play tournament on her schedule.
In the Senior division, Kim Keyer-Scott of Estero (77-74–151) took home the title after parring her last eight holes. Scott was named the 2020 FSGA Women’s Senior Player of the Year and has continued her strong play into 2021, winning the FSGA Women’s Senior Amateur
Championship at St. Johns Golf & Country Club in April and finishing runner-up at the Women’s Southern Golf Association (WSGA) Mid-Amateur Championship in early June. Lin Culver of Palm Coast (76-76–152) finished a shot back. Past champions Tama Caldabaugh (77-78–155) and Therese Quinn (76-79–155) tied for third.
 Nancy Smith of Venice (81-80–161) won the Super-Senior division by eight shots over Shirley Budden (81-88–169). Smith has an impressive competitive golf resume that includes four North-South Senior Championship titles, three Women’s Southern Golf Association Senior Championship titles and three Women’s Eastern Golf Association Senior Championship titles.
 “The 2021 First Coast Women’s Amateur was an incredible showcase of the strength of women’s golf in Northeast Florida,” said Susie Fonde, 2021 FCWA Committee chair. “We are so appreciative of the team and membership at Sawgrass Country Club for serving as our host course, our presenting sponsor Brooks Rehabilitation for its continued partnership, all of our incredible competitors and, last but not least, the team of volunteers and community members who helped make the 2021 FCWA possible. We look forward to continuing to grow this championship for many years to come while promoting and elevating women’s golf in our area.”
 The First Coast Women’s Amateur committee also announced that charitable donations would be made to three local organizations, the Moore-Myers Children’s Fund, the North Florida Junior Golf Foundation and the JAGA Scholarship Trust. “Eagle” participants from the Moore-Myers Children’s Fund came to Sawgrass Country Club to watch the final round and meet with participants and the champion.
 Complete tournament results are available at fcwa2021.golfgenius.com.
NOTE: Reporting by Garry Smits of the Florida Times-Union was used to produce this recap.
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The 2021 European Amateur Team Championship took place 6–10 July at PGA Catalunya in Spain. It was the 38th men's golf European Amateur Team Championship.[1] The event was originally intended to be played at Vasatorp Golf Club in Sweden but was moved because of travel restriction concerns.[1]
Qualification round: 36 holes stroke play
Knock-out match-play
Host nation Spain led the opening 36-hole stroke-play competition with a 17-under-par score of 693, four strokes ahead of Sweden with defending champion team Germany in third place a further four stroke behind.
There was no official award for the lowest individual score, but individual leader was Eugenio López-Chacarra, Spain, with a 9-under-par score of 133, one stroke ahead of Pontus Nyholm, Sweden and Jean de Wouters d'Oplinter, Belgium.
Each team consisted of six players. On the first two days each player played 18 holes of stroke play each day. The lowest five scores from each team’s six players counted to the team total each day.[2]
The eight best teams formed flight A, in knock-out match-play over the following three days. The teams were seeded based on their positions after the stroke play. The first placed team were drawn to play the quarter final against the eight placed team, the second against the seventh, the third against the sixth and the fourth against the fifth. Teams were allowed to use six players during the team matches, selecting four of them in the two morning foursome games and five players in to the afternoon single games. Teams knocked out after the quarter finals played one foursome game and four single games in each of their remaining matches. Extra holes were played in games that were all square after 18 holes. However, if the result of the team match was already decided, games were declared halved.[3]
The teams outside the top eight in the stroke-play stage formed flight B, also played knock-out match-play, but with one foursome game and four single games in each match, to decide their final positions.
13 national teams contested the event. England, Scotland and Wales did not compete.[1]
Christoph Bleier, Luca Denk, Maximilian Lechner, Lukas Pany, Namu Sarmini, Maximilian Steinlechner
Liam Bentein, Matthis Besard, Jean de Wouters d'Oplinter, Adrien Dumont de Chassart, James Meyer de Beco, Max Peerbooms
Christoffer Bring, Hamish William Brown, Sebastian Friedrichsen, August Thor Høst, Frederik Kjettrup, Søren Broholt Lind
Clément Charmasson, Tom Gueant, Paul Margolis, Nicolas Muller, Julien Sale, Tom Vaillant
Nick Bachem, Jannik De Bruyn, Wolfgang Glawe, Marc Hammer, Matthias Schmid, Timo Vahlenkamp
Hlynur Bergsson, Sverrir Haraldsson, Aron Snær Júlíusson, Kristófer Karl Karlsson, Hákon Örn Magnússon, Dagbjartur Sigurbrandsson
Marc Boucher, Hugh Foley, Matthew Mcclean, Robert Moran, Mark Power, Caolan Rafferty
Pietro Bovari, Riccardo Bregoli, Davide Buchi, Filippo Celli, Gregorio De Leo, Giovanni Manzoni
Dario Antonisse, Bob Geurts, Jerry Ji, Benjamin Reuter, Kiet Van Der Weele, Nordin Van Tilburg
Vasco Alves, Pedro Clare, Daniel Costa, Pedro Cruz Silva, Pedro Lencart, Joâo Pinto
Alvaro Hernández Cabezuela, Eugenio López-Chacarra, Luis Masaveu, Joel Moscatel, Álvaro Mueller-Baumgart, David Puig
Ludvig Åberg, Gustav Andersson, David Nyfjäll, Pontus Nyholm, Hugo Townsend, Adam Wallin
Loïc Ettlin, Robert Foley, Nicola Gerhardsen, Mauro Gilardi, Cédric Gugler, Ronan Kleu
* Note: In the event of a tie the order was determined by the best total of the two non-counting scores of the two rounds.
^ a b c "Preview: European Amateur Team Championship". European Golf Association. 4 July 2021. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
^ a b "Day 1 summary European Amateur Team Championships". European Golf Association. 6 July 2021. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
^ "Lag-EM så funkar det" [The European Amateur Team Championship, how it works] (in Swedish). Swedish Golf Federation. 6 July 2021. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
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