It would almost be enough to just say what happened
Saturday, that Michael McDermott won the BMW Philadelphia Amateur title for the
third time at age 41 over one of his best friends, Jeff Osberg, on his home
course, Merion Golf Club’s historic East, one of the most treasured layouts in
the world.
It would almost be enough to just say that McDermott won the
scheduled 36-hole final on the 36th hole, 1-up, halving the hole
with a par on a day when halved holes were the exception rather than the rule.
But that wouldn’t quite say enough about where McDermott
fits as the time line of the Philadelphia amateur golfer stretches past this
116th playing of the Golf Association of Philadelphia’s Amateur
Championship.
McDermott talked freely when he had his name inscribed on
the J. Wood Platt Trophy for the second time after a victory over Alexander
Hicks at one of his other home course, Aronimink Golf Club, three years ago
about how he had followed the example of players like Chris Lange and David
Brookerson.
That unbroken line stretches back to Jay Sigel and Buddy
Marucci to William Hyndman III, whose name appears on the GAP Player of the
Year award that McDermott has won five times.
You can follow it back to Woody Platt himself if you keep going.
And now McDermott is the mentor to guys like last year’s
Philly Amateur finalists Cole Berman and Michael Davis and to Patterson Cup
winner Chris Crawford, who capably represented Philadelphia golf in the U.S.
Open at Oakmont Country Club this week.
Of course, the mentoring thing isn’t quite as effective if
you’ve lost too much off your fastball and McDermott continues to prove that he
can play at a high level, especially on the classic courses in this area on
which par is still a very good score.
McDermott, a Haverford High and Saint Joseph’s product, and
Osberg, an Owen J. Roberts and Guilford College (N.C.) product, met in the
second round of the Philly Amateur a year ago at Llanerch Country Club, a
course both know well. They made birdies in bunches and McDermott claimed a
2-up decision.
But both longed to do it again, but for 36 holes in the
final. And what better stage than the 6,697-yard, par-70 Hugh Wilson design in the
Ardmore section of Haverford Township that has been the site of five U.S.
Opens, most recently Justin Rose’s 2013 triumph? It was the first time the
Philly Amateur returned to Merion in 62 years and Philly golf fans got the
final they wanted on the golf course they wanted to see it on.
Frequent updates were being sought in this Stonewall looper’s
group Saturday afternoon. Even if they were playing golf elsewhere, the
Philadelphia golfer wanted to know what was going in this match.
What they saw, even from afar, were wild momentum swings,
right to the very end when the 31-year-old Osberg, playing out of Huntingdon
Valley Country Club, seemed to seize control of the match by winning the 31st
hole (Merion’s classic little par-3 13th) with a birdie and the 32nd
hole with a par to take a 2-up lead with four holes to play.
Of course, Osberg would never make the mistake of
underestimating his partner in the recent U.S. Amateur Four-Ball Championship,
especially in match play.
And McDermott showed his resilience by making a winning
birdie on the 33rd hole that ignited a string of three straight wins
that brought McDermott to the 18th tee with a 1-up lead. McDermott
won the 34th (Merion’s quarry 16th), and the 35th
(Merion’s treacherous par-3 17th) with pars, but par is a good score
on both of those holes.
As it is on Merion’s last, where Ben Hogan needed a par to
force a playoff in the 1950 Open, where Rose drilled a 4-iron for a par that
secured the 2013 Open. And McDermott got the par he needed to win the match.
It all started early Saturday morning quietly enough with
the combatants halving the first four holes. Then the fireworks began.
McDermott won the fifth with a birdie, the sixth with a par
and the seventh with a birdie to go 3-up. Osberg, who won the 2014 Philly
Amateur title at White Manor Country Club, shrugged and won eight with a birdie,
nine with a bogey and 11 with a birdie to get the match all square.
McDermott won the 12th with a par, Osberg
answered with a birdie at 13. McDermott won 14 with a par, 15 with a birdie and
16 with a par to take a 3-up lead into the lunch break. After halving the first
four holes, only three others were halved in the first 18 holes.
Osberg quickly fought his way back into the match, winning
the 22nd and 23rd holes with pars, to cut the deficit to
one hole. McDermott won the 24th with a par to go 2-up.
Osberg won the 25th with a birdie, the 27th
with a par and the 29th hole – for you history buffs, that’s the 11th,
where Bobby Jones completed the Grand Slam in 1930 by winning the U.S. Amateur –
with a birdie to go 1-up.
McDermott got it all square by taking the 30th
with a par, but then Osberg unleashed those back-to-back wins to set the stage
for McDermott’s late run to victory.
In many ways it was the perfect ending to a close-to-perfect
week on the perfect golf course. And the weather? As perfect as weather can be.
It was McDermott’s 10th victory in a GAP major,
quite an accomplishment. But the really
good news is that the Philadelphia amateur golfer -- as gracious in defeat as
he is in victory, a tenacious competitor, always representative of his home
base when on the road -- will continue on its unbroken line because Michael
McDermott is setting the example that the next generation can’t help but want
to emulate.
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