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Sunday, August 20, 2017

Cowgill, Marrollo team up to capture title in The Deeg Sezna



   The Deeg Sezna, the Golf Association of Philadelphia’s nod to the importance of mentoring – in golf and in life – was rained out a couple of weeks ago and it was raining again when the rescheduled event was played Tuesday at Blue Bell Country Club.
   But that didn’t prevent the pair of Bruce Cowgill, the 49-year-old golf chairman at Whitford Country Club, and 19-year-old clubmate Nicky Marrollo from matching par with a 71 at the 6,319-yard, par-71 Blue Bell layout in the select drive/alternate shot competition to capture the title.
Cowgill and Marrollo got off to a great start when Marrollo bombed his drive on the 331-yard opening hole just 40 yards from the hole. Cowgill knocked his approach to 14 feet and Marrollo converted the birdie try.
   After a bogey at the eighth, the pair was able to make the turn at 1-under with a birdie at the par-5 ninth. Morrollo’s 5-iron second shot left Cowgill with 100 yards to the pin and he wedged the approach to two feet.
   A double bogey at the 11th left them at 1-over,  but they had one more birdie in their bags at the par-5 17th. Cowgill’s second shot finished in a greenside bunker and Marrollo blasted it to two feet for an easy tap-in.
   “Some of the guys at (Whitford) refer to him as my ‘country club dad,’ so it’ll be fun to bring this trophy back with us,” Marrollo told the GAP website.
   Deeg Sezna, a recent Vanderbilt graduate with a degree in economics, was on the sixth day of his new job on the 104th floor of the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001 when the terrorists struck. Davis Sezna Sr., in conjunction with the  Golf Association of Philadelphia, started the tournament to memorialize his son and to celebrate the relationship between the older generation and its younger counterparts in much the same way that Deeg, an avid golfer, mentored his younger brothers Teddy and Willy.
   The rainout of the original date this year forced some teams to drop out, the golf schedule at this time of the year being crowded as it is. But this is an event whose meaning transcends golf and was in no way diminished by a little rainy weather.
   Four teams shared second place at 1-over 72, including the Huntingdon Valley Country Club pair of Sean Seese, a former Saint Joseph’s standout, and Brett McGrath, Brett Pickon of Commonwealth National and D.J. Pinciotti, Daniel Pinciotti Jr. of Huntingdon Valley and Ryan Borrmann and Buddy Hansen IV of host Blue Bell and Jules Quinones.
   The mentoring relationship can be older sibling to younger sibling as it was with Deeg and his younger brothers. Or it can simply be an adult taking an interest in a fledgling golfer. Or it can be coach and player.
   That would be the case for the team that finished alone in sixth at 2-over 73 in The Deeg Sezna.
Last fall, Episcopal Academy head coach Doug Borgerson of Huntingdon Valley Country Club watched his only senior, Matt Marino, drop a birdie putt on the final hole at Gulph Mills Golf Club in the final mini-tournament of the season to give the Churchmen a one-shot edge on The Haverford School and their first Inter-Ac League title since 1999.
   Kevin Kelly, who captained the Philadelphia Cricket Club to the BMW Team Match championship, joined with Luke Marvin to capture the Junior-Junior title as they put together a 2-over 73.
   The Spring-Ford Country Club duo of George Steinmetz and Lucas Steinmetz was the runnerup with a 76.
   Owen Brown and Kelly Brown of Coatesville Country Club captured the Mixed championship with a 5-over 76.
   Whitemarsh Valley Country Club’s Peter Oppenheimer and Casey Oppenheimer, the Philadelphia Section PGA Junior Tour’s girls 16-to-18 Player of the Year in 2016, took second with a 78.




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