Reading Country Club’s Chase Yenser outlasted Oakmont
Country Club’s Carson Kittsley in a thrilling stretch duel to become the first
repeat winner of the Pennsylvania Golf Association’s Junior Boys’ Championship
in 30 years Tuesday at Hershey Country Club’s East Course.
Kittsley, back-to-back winner of the PIAA Class AAA
Championship and with still a year to go at Fox Chapel, put a nose in front
when he opened Tuesday afternoon’s final round with an eagle at Hershey East’s
par-5 opening hole and added birdies at five and six.
But Yenser, who wrapped up an outstanding scholastic career
at Daniel Boone by finishing in fourth place in last fall’s Class AAA state
tournament behind Kittsley at Penn State, made four birdies in a stretch of 12
holes while Kittsley faltered ever so slightly.
Yenser closed with a 3-under-par 68 that gave him a 54-hole
total of 11-under 202, one shot better than Kittsley, who closed with a 2-under
69 and a 10-under 203 total in the 83rd edition of the Pennsylvania
Junior Boys’ Championship.
Yenser became the first player to repeat as the Pennsylvania
Junior Boys champion since Jon Rusk, the current general manager at LuLu
Country Club, achieved the feat in 1995 and ’96.
The victory earned Yenser a ticket to the U.S. Junior
Amateur, which will be something of a home game for Yenser as it tees off July
20 at Saucon Valley Country Club in Bethlehem.
There was no such drama in the 63rd edition of
the PAGA’s Junior Girls’ Championship at Lebanon Country Club as Wildwood Golf
Club’s Alyssa Zhang, a third-place finisher in the PIAA Class AA Championship
in each of her first two years at Shady Side Academy, ran away with a 12-shot
victory with a fairly spectacular 12-under 204 total.
The dominating win at Lebanon punched Zhang’s ticket to the
U.S. Girls’ Junior Amateur Championship, which tees off July 13 at Old Chatham
Golf Club in Durham, N.C.
Dick’s Sporting Goods is the title sponsor for all of the
PAGA championships.
Yenser had a share of the lead at Hershey East following a
sizzling 6-under 65 in Monday’s opening round.
It looked like he might turn it into a runaway in Tuesday
morning’s second round as he made birdies at the first, seventh, 10th,
12th and 14th holes to get it to 11-under for the
tournament.
But Yenser, who will join the program at Big 12 power Baylor
later this summer, stalled a little at the end of the round with bogeys at the
15th, 16th and 18th holes that left him with a
2-under 69 and at 8-under going into Tuesday afternoon’s final round.
Kittsley, who had opened with a 4-under 67, started to make
his move in Tuesday morning’s second round as he made birdies at first, sixth,
seventh and 12th holes to get it to 8-under for the tournament.
Kittlsley dropped a shot with his lone bogey of the round at
the 13th hole, but a birdie at 17 gave him another 4-under 67 and
left him tied with Yenser at 8-under going into Tuesday afternoon’s final
round.
Kittsley was 12-under for the tournament following his
opening burst in the final round that included that eagle at the first hole.
But he stumbled with a bogey at the seventh hole and a
costly double bogey at eight that dropped him back to 9-under.
Back-to-back birdies at the 16th and 17th
holes got Kittsley within a shot of Yenser, but Kittsley closed with a bogey at
the finishing hole.
Yenser made birdies at the sixth, 10th, and 12th holes and a critical birdie at 17, to get to 12-under for the
tournament. That gave him the luxury of making a bogey at the last while
Kittsley was doing the same.
Yenser had taken the first step toward a possible appearance
in the U.S. Amateur, which tees off Aug. 10 at Merion Golf Club’s historic East
Course, when he earned co-medalist honors in a GAP-administered local U.S. Am
qualifier last week with a 2-under 68 in his first look at Huntingdon Valley
Country Club.
Radley Run Country Club’s Charlie Barrickman, who closed out
an outstanding scholastic career at Unionville with a third-place finish behind
Kittsley in the Class AAA state tournament last fall, elbowed his way into the
picture with two really strong rounds Tuesday.
Barrickman, who led the Longhorns to the PIAA Class AAA team
crown at Penn State, had matched par in the opening round with a 71. But he
signed for a 4-under 67 in Tuesday morning’s second round and tallied a
sizzling 5-under 66, the best round of the day, in the final round to finish a
shot behind Kittsley in third place with a 9-under 204 total.
Barrickman, the Golf Association of Philadelphia’s Junior
Player of the Year in 2025, will join the program at Bucknell later this
summer.
Out Door Country Club’s Callahan Harrell was another five
shots behind Barrickman in fourth place as he registered a pair of 2-under 69s
in Tuesday’s double round to finish with a 4-under 209 total.
Harrell, who had matched par in Monday’s opening round with 71,
will join the program at Charleston Southern later this summer.
Wouldn’t be a state Junior Boys if a phenom didn’t show up
and Niko Ameredes of The Club at Nevillewood, headed a trio of players tied for
fifth place at 2-under 211.
The kid is a Class of 2031 competitor, which means he’s
still more than a year away from playing high school golf. Ameredes had opened
with a 1-over 72 Monday, but got it going in Tuesday morning’s second round
with a 4-under 67 before closing with another 72.
Ameredes was joined at 2-under by the home course’s Carson
Hummer, who wrapped up his scholastic career at Hershey High with a trip to the
PIAA Class AAA Championship last fall, and Dane Mohap, who finished in a tie
for ninth place in the state Class AAA tournament with Nazareth last fall.
Hummer, who had opened with a 1-under 70 Monday, posted a
solid 3-under 68 in Tuesday morning’s second round before closing with a 2-over
73. Hummer will join the program at West Chester later this summer.
Mohap, who also opened with a 2-under 70, recorded a solid
2-under 69 in Tuesday morning’s second round before closing with a 1-over 72.
Union League Golf Club Torresdale’s Logan Cassidy, a
District One Class AAA qualifier as a junior at Holy Ghost Prep last fall, and
Lebanon Country Club’s Benjamin Allwein, who finished in a tie for seventh
place in the PIAA Class AA Championship as a freshman at Annville-Cleona last
fall, shared eighth place, each landing on 1-under 212.
Cassidy, who had opened with a 2-under 69, struggled a
little in Tuesday morning’s second round with a 3-over 74 before bouncing back
with another 69 in the final round.
Allwein carded a second straight 1-under 70 in Tuesday
morning’s second round before closing with a 1-over 72.
Rounding out the top 10 at Hershey East was Overbrook Golf
Club’s Freddy Hartmann, who helped Episcopal Academy claim the Inter-Ac League
Championship as a junior with the Churchmen last fall, as he finished alone in
10th place with an even-par 213 total.
Hartmann had matched par in the opening round with a 71 and
added a 1-over 72 in Tuesday morning’s second round before closing with a
1-under 70.
Hartmann’s Episcopal teammate, Liam Crowley, playing out of
Aronimink Golf Club, finished among a trio of players tied for 12th
place with a 2-over 215 total.
Crowley, winner of the Bert Linton Invitational for the
Inter-Ac’s individual championship as a junior last fall at The 1912 Club, had
opened with a 1-over 72, but got it going with a 4-under 67 in Tuesday
morning’s second round before closing with a 6-over 76.
Merion Golf Club’s Brad McDermott, who capped his scholastic
career at Radnor with a second trip to the PIAA Class AAA Championship last
fall, had shared the lead with Yenser on the strength of a 6-under 65 in
Monday’s opening round and was still very much in the hunt when he matched par in
Tuesday morning’s second round with a 71.
McDermott struggled in the final round with an 81 that left
him in the group tied for 18th place at 4-over 217.
McDermott will join Barrickman in a freshman class with a
distinct District One flavor at Bucknell later this summer.
Zhang took a one-shot lead into Tuesday morning’s second
round, but proceeded to put the tournament away with a flawless tour of the
Lebanon layout.
Zhang made a birdie at the first hole and then eagled the
par-5 second. After making a birdie at the ninth hole, Zhang parred out on the
incoming nine for a bogey-free 4-under 68 that gave her a commanding six-shot
lead going into the final round.
There wasn’t much letup in the final round as Zhang jumped
out of the gate with birdies at the second, third and sixth holes before
finally making her first bogey of the day at seven.
Zhang made a birdie at the eighth hole and a bogey at 12
before making her second eagle of the day at the par-4 13th. A bogey
at the finishing hole gave Zhang a final round of 3-under 69 and a 12-under
total.
Centre Hills Country Club’s Maddie Koshko, who wrapped up
her outstanding scholastic career at the Saint Joseph Catholic Academy in
Boalsburg by claiming a second straight PIAA Class AA crown last fall, and
Cobblestone Creek Country Club’s Myra Toomer, a talented youngster from
Newtown, finished in a tie for second place, each ending up 12 shots behind
Zhang with an even-par 216 total.
Koshko, who will be staying home and joining the program at
Penn State later this summer, had trailed Zhang by only a shot following an
opening round of 4-under 68, added a 1-over 73 in Tuesday morning’s second
round before closing with a 3-over 75.
The 14-year-old Toomer also opened with a 3-under 68 and was
only a shot behind Zhang. Toomer matched Koshko’s splits during Tuesday’s
double round, posting a 1-over 73 in the morning and a 3-over 75 in the
afternoon to join Koshko in the tie for second place at even-par.
Nice rally by Kayley Roberts, who wrapped up her scholastic
career at Phoenixville last fall with a runaway victory in the District One
Class AAA Championship and a runnerup finish in the PIAA Class AAA
Championship.
As Roberts wraps up her junior career, she bounced back from
an opening round of 6-over 78 by matching par in Tuesday morning’s second round
with a 72 and closing with a sparkling 3-under 69 that left her three shots
behind Koshko and Tomer in fourth place with a 3-over 219 total.
Roberts will join her older sister Kate at Delaware later
this summer. Kayley Roberts and Kate Roberts qualified for the match-play
bracket in the U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball Championship at the Daniel Island
Club in Charleston, S.C. in April, falling in the opening round of match play.
Really nice showing by Rolling Green Golf Club’s Nicolette
Bottos, who helped Conestoga capture the PIAA Class AAA team crown as a
sophomore with the Pioneers last fall.
Bottos recorded a second straight 2-over 74 in Tuesday
morning’s second round before matching par in the final round with a 72 that
left her a shot behind Kayley Roberts in fifth place with a 4-over 220 total.
Overbrook’s Kiersten Bodge, a senior at Notre Dame who
captured the Inter-Ac League’s individual crown at Sandy Run Country Club in
May, finished a shot behind Bottos in sixth place with a 5-over 221 total.
Bodge, who plans to join Koshko at Penn State at the end of
next summer, registered a second straight even-par 72 in Tuesday morning’s
second round before struggling a little in a final round of 5-over 77.
Regents’ Glen Country Club’s Bryn Krosse finished a shot
behind Bodge in seventh place with a 6-over 222. Krosse tallied a second
straight 4-over 76 in Tuesday morning’s second round before closing with a
solid 2-under 70.
Krosse, a Class of 2030 entry, is the latest in a long line
of Krosses and she just might be the best of them all. I’m guessing she’ll
follow her older siblings and play at Dallastown.
Penn Oaks Golf Club’s Hannah Webb, who capped her junior
season at Archmere Academy with a runnerup finish in the Delaware
Interscholastic Athletic Association (DIAA) Championship at Baywood Greens in
late May, finished a shot behind Krosse in eighth place with a 7-over 223
total.
Webb had opened with a 3-over 75 and carded a pair of 2-over
74s in Tuesday’s double round.
Conestoga Country Club’s Piper Smith, who capped her senior
season at Warwick by finishing in third place in the PIAA Class AAA
Championship last fall, and Foxchase Golf Club’s Makenna Heckman, a Class AAA
state tournament qualifier as a sophomore at Ephrata, rounded out the top 10 as
they finished in a tie for ninth place, each ending up with an 8-over 224
total.
After opening with a 2-over 74, Smith carded a 76 in Tuesday
morning’s second round before closing with a book-end 74. Heckman struggled in
an opening round of 6-over 78, but flashed her talent with a 4-under 68 in
Tuesday morning’s second round before closing with another 78.
West Shore Country Club’s Cora Hirz, who capped her
scholastic career by finishing in fourth place in the PIAA Class AA
Championship as a senior at Fairview last fall, finished three shots behind
Smith and Heckman in 11th place with an 11-over 227 total.
After opening with a 2-over 74, Hirz registered a 5-over 77
in Tuesday morning’s second round before closing with a 76.
Rolling Green’s Alaina Carson, the defending champion who has
qualified for the PIAA Class AAA Championship in each of her first two seasons
at Cardinal O’Hara, shared 12th place with Nemacolin Country Club’s
Mya Morgan, who repeated as the PIAA Class AAA champion as a senior at
Elizabeth Forward last fall, as they each landed on 13-over 229.
Carson, who was coming off a victory in a two-day
Philadelphia Section PGA Junior Tour stop at Penn State (which I will round up
eventually) June 18th and 19th, had opened with a 6-over
78 and added a 76 in Tuesday morning’s second round before closing with a 75,
her best round of the tournament.
Morgan had opened with a 2-over 74, but struggled a little in
Tuesday’s double round with a 77 in the morning and a 78 in the afternoon.