1996
John "Spider" Miller of Bloomington, Ind. won three of the first
six holes and held on the rest of the way to win the U.S. Mid-Amateur
Championship, beating Randy Lewis of Alma, Mich., in the 18-hole
final, 3 and 2.
Miller, a 46-year-old beer wholesaler and father of five who putts
with a long 60-inch putter, became the oldest winner in this 25-and-over
championship's 16 year history. He was three years older than three-time
champion Jay Sigel, who was 43 when he won in 1987. The youngest
winner was 30 years old.
Miller one-putted eight times and was 1 over par for 16 holes
while the 39-year-old Lewis struggled on the greens.
"I hate to brag about my putter," said Miller with a laugh. "If
all these other guys get one then I'll lose my advantage. I'm not
sure I had a three-putt the whole tournament. I putted well all
week, or I would have been long gone."
Miller parred and won the first, and won holes five and six as
well before Lewis rebounded to win holes seven and eight with pars.
But, that was as close as Lewis could get. Miller won the 10th with
a birdie 4 and took the 14th with a par 4 when Lewis three-putted
from 17 feet. His breaking first putt slid four feet by the hole
and he missed coming back.
Miller, who was one of the leading qualifiers after 36 holes of
stroke play at even par 143, four strokes behind the medalist, closed
out the match with a par 5 on the 16th.
Both finalists gained exemptions for the 1997 U.S. Amateur, and
Miller received a chance to play at the 1997 Masters Tournament.
Jerry Courville Jr. of Milford, Conn., fired a 65 in the second
round of stroke play which vaulted him to medalist honors with a
4-under-par 139 (74-65). It was the second lowest round in Mid-Amateur
history. From there, Courville's match-play march lasted until the
third round, where he was defeated by Lewis 2 and 1.
Courville was one of five past champions to advance to match play.
The others were Tim Jackson (1994) of Germantown, Tenn.; Jim Stuart
(1990 and 1991) of Macon, Ga.; Jim Taylor (1989) of Palm Beach Gardens,
Fla.; and Jeff Thomas (1993) of South Plainfield, N.J.
Among the best shots of the championship were two holes-in-one.
One came from Casey Alexander of Massapequa Park, N.Y. during the
first round of stroke play. The other earned former U.S. Amateur
champion Nataniel Crosby of Park City, Utah, a place in the field.
He aced the second playoff hole during his local qualifier to claim
the last berth there.
The USGA accepted a record 4,102 entries for the championship.
For the first time, the championship was televised. ESPN aired two
hours of coverage the last two days, with the final shown live from
12 noon to 2 p.m.