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"Chad" enters national lexicon as
Florida ballot causes Presidential election turmoil
NY Yankees win third consecutive World Series
Dot-com mania comes to an end
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2000
Greg Puga,
29, of Los Angeles, Calif., became the youngest champion in the
20-year history of the U.S. Mid-Amateur with a 3 and 1 victory over
Wayne Raath, 25, of South Africa at the 2000 Championship at The
Homestead's 6.657-yard, par 70 Cascades Course in Hot Springs, Va.
Puga, at 29
years, 10 months and 29 days, is younger than Bill Loeffler, who
won the 1986 championship, and was the youngest previous champion
at 30 years and two months.
"You can't
explain it," Puga, a caddie at Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles,
said of winning the title. "It's like when you hear other athletes
tell you they've won the World Series or the Super Bowl. It's like
you're in a fog. I haven't digested it yet. I'm sure, when I get
home, it'll hit me."
In addition
to exemptions to the 2001 U.S. Mid-Amateur and U.S. Amateur, Puga
won an invitation to the next Master tournament.
Raath, a graduate
assistant golf coach at Florida Southern University where he was
a four-time college All-American, held a 2-up lead after nine holes
of the 18-hole final match.
On the 10th
hole, Puga holed a 10-foot par-saving putt, which he called "the
most important point in the match."
He won the
next two holes to erase Raath's advantage and square the match,
with a five-foot birdie putt on the par-3 11th and a
par on the long and narrow par-4 12th, when Raath hit
his tee shot into a lateral water hazard.
Puga, who hit
9 of 13 fairways and 11 of 17 green, was the equivalent of 2-under
par on his eight holes of the inward nine. In fact, he hit all five
fairways on the back nine and 6 of 8 in greens in regulation.
"It seems like
I owned the back nine all week, except for my match with (defending
champion) Danny Green, " Puga said.
After both
players parred the 13th, Puga won the par-4 14th
and par-3 15th with pars to build a 2-up lead. The par-5
16th was halved with pars and Puga won the par-5 17th
and the championship when Raath three-putted for bogey.
Raath, who
was playing in his first USGA championship, birdied the par-4 7th
and won the 9th with a bogey after Puga flew the green
with his approach shot and overshot the putting surface with his
recovery pitch.
"When I stepped
on the No. 7 tee and hit a great drive and hit my second shot right
at it, I thought, "Now, I've got it,'" Raath said. "After that,
my legs were never in my swing. It kind of started (Wednesday) afternoon
and I didn't quite get it from that time on."
Puga defeated
defending champion Green in the third round and co-medalist Jeff
Wilson in the quarterfinals.
For the first
time in the history of the championship, four players shared medalist
honors at 3-under par 138 - Jeff Wilson of Suisun, Calif., Jim Wilson
of Chico, Calif., Darryl Donovan of Gilroy, Calif., and Dale Fuller
of Raleigh, N.C. The cut came at 6-over par 147 with a 17-man for
14 berths playoff.
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