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Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Oakley surges to top of leaderboard heading into final round of Philadelphia PGA Professional Championship

    Zac Oakley, an instructor at Bidermann Golf Club, just missed winning the Philadelphia PGA Professional Championship a year ago in a fairly spectacular 2021 season on the Philadelphia Section PGA circuit.

   Oakley was the winner of the Philadelphia Section’s Rolex Haverford Trust Player of the Year award. He also earned the Section’s Debaufre Trophy for the low scoring average with a 68.93 average that was the lowest in the history of the award.

   Oakley was the runnerup to Sunnybrook Golf Club’s Brett Walker in the 100th Philadelphia PGA Professional Championship at Aronimink Golf Club and Applebrook Golf Club a year ago, which earned him a trip to the PGA Professional Championship in April at the Omni Barton Creek Resort in Austin, Texas.

   Oakley’s tie for sixth place at Omni Barton Creek punched his ticket to the PGA Championship, one of professional golf’s four major championships, at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla. It’s always a career highlight for any club pro to finish among the top 20 at the National Club Pro – the PGA Professional Championship’s old-school moniker – and represent his fellow PGA professionals at the PGA.

   Oakley blitzed the DuPont Country Club layout in suburban Wilmington, Del. with a sparkling, five-birdie, no-bogey 66 Tuesday that gave him a one-shot lead heading into Wednesday’s final round of the 101st Philadelphia PGA Professional Championship.

   Oakley had opened with a 3-under 68 at Concord Country Club, just over the Delaware border from DuPont in Pennsylvania’s Delaware County, you know, Delco. His 66 Tuesday gave Oakley an 8-under 134 total and a one-shot lead heading into Wednesday’s final round back at DuPont, home to the LPGA Championship, rebranded as the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship – a major for the women in either case – from 1994 to 2004.

   Brian Bergstol, the director of instruction at the Shawnee Inn & Golf Resort, had grabbed the lead with an opening round of 5-under 66 at Concord. He added a solid 2-under 69 at DuPont in Tuesday’s second round and was Oakley’s closest pursuer with a 7-under 135 total.

   Oakley started quietly at DuPont Tuesday, making a birdie at the fifth hole and eight pars on the outgoing nine. But he heated up on the incoming nine with birdies at the 10th, 11th, 13th and 16th holes to get it in at 5-under for the day.

   “I hit it really solid today again,” Oakley told the Philadelphia Section PGA website. “I hit a lot of greens and a lot of fairways and today I made some putts, which is good. No bogeys, so that was big.”

   Bergstol’s first 15 holes at DuPont Tuesday featured birdies at the third and 15th holes and 13 pars. The only blemish on Bergstol’s scorecard was a bogey at the 16th hole, but he got that shot back with a birdie at the finishing hole to complete his 2-under round.

   Bergstol also represented the Philadelphia Section with distinction on a national stage last fall when he was the runnerup in the National Car Rental Assistant PGA Professional Championship at the PGA Golf Club in Port St. Lucie, Fla.

   Applebrook head pro Dave McNabb was two shots behind Bergstol in third place after he got it going at Concord with a 4-under 67 in Tuesday’s second round, which, combined with his opening-round 70 at DuPont, left him with a 5-under 137 total.

   Speaking of representing the Philadelphia Section on a national stage, McNabb teed it up in the KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship at the Harbor Shores Resort in Benton Harbor, Mich. in May and in the U.S. Senior Open at Saucon Valley Country Club in Bethlehem in July, both major championships on the PGA Tour Champions.

   McNabb, the reigning two-time winner of the Philadelphia Section’s Robert “Skee” Riegel Senior Player of the Year award, is a past winner of the Philadelphia PGA Professional Championship in 2015.

   A couple of other past champions, John Pillar, the director of golf at the Country Club at Woodloch Springs, and Terry Hatch of Royal Oaks Golf Course, were among a group of five players tied for fourth place at 2-under 140.

   Pillar registered a 4-under 67 at DuPont in Tuesday’s second round after opening with a 2-over 73 at Concord Monday. Hatch matched par with a 71 Tuesday at Concord after opening with a 2-under 69 at DuPont. Like McNabb, Pillar and Hatch are part of a very talented stable of senior players in the Philadelphia Section.

   Another of the Section’s senior standouts, Hugo Mazzalupi of Linfield National Golf Club, was also in the group at 2-under as he added a 2-under 69 at DuPont Tuesday to the opening round of even-par 71 he carded at Concord Monday.

   Would love to see Braden Shattuck, the head of instruction at Rolling Green Golf Club, get a chance to play in next spring’s PGA Professional Championship at the Twin Warriors and Santa Ana Pueblo courses in Santa Ana Pueblo, N.M. I covered the guy in a previous life at the Delaware County Daily Times when he finished in a tie for 14th place in the PIAA Championship at the Heritage Hills Golf Resort in York County as a senior at Sun Valley in 2011.

   Shattuck saved his round by making birdies on the last three holes at Concord, a course he is very familiar with, to match par with a 71 and join the group at 2-under. Shattuck, who owns two Rolex Haverford Trust Player of the Year points tournament wins in 2022, had opened with a 2-under 69 Monday at DuPont Monday.

   The top 11 finishers following Wednesday’s final round will punch their ticket to New Mexico for next spring’s National Club Pro. As part of the group tied for fourth place, Shattuck is in very good position to do just that.

   Rounding out the group tied for fourth place was another of the Philadelphia Section’s talented young players, Sandy Run Country Club assistant pro Trevor Bensel, who fired a 4-under 67 at Concord Tuesday after opening with a 2-over 73 at DuPont.

   A couple of three-time Philadelphia PGA Professional Championship winners and two more of the Philadelphia Section’s senior standouts, Rich Steinmetz of Spring Ford Country Club and Terry Hertzog, a Philadelphia PGA entry, were among a group of five players tied for ninth place at 1-under 141.

   Steinmetz, who captured the Philadelphia Senior PGA Professional Championship as a senior “rookie” earlier this summer at Medford Village Country Club, matched par with a 71 at Concord in Tuesday’s second round after opening with a 1-under 70 at DuPont.

   Hertzog carded a 1-under 70 in Tuesday’s second round at Concord after matching par in Monday’s opening round with a 71 at DuPont.

   Another past champion, 2018 Philadelphia PGA Professional Championship winner Billy Stewart, an instructor at the Union League Liberty Hill course, was also in the group at 1-under. Stewart registered a 1-over 72 at DuPont Tuesday after opening with a 2-under 69 at Concord.

   Michael Little of Makefield Putters posted a solid 3-under 68 at DuPont in Tuesday’s second round after opening with a 2-over 73 at Concord as he also joined the group at 141.

   Got a chance to visit Little at the headquarters of Makefield Putters in Bensalem recently as he fitted Joe Burkhardt, the publisher of Tri-State Golfer, for one of the company’s new putters that are all the rage. I was working on an article for Burkhardt’s publication, which should be out soon, if it isn’t already.

   Little, a two-time Player of the Year in the Philadelphia Section, feels like his company’s putter is making him a better player.

   Rounding out the group at 1-under was Chester Valley Golf Club’s Nick Iacono, who carded a 1-over 72 at Concord in Tuesday’s second round after opening with a 2-under 69 at DuPont.

   The Philadelphia PGA Professional Championship is presented by Cadillac, Club Car and Rolex and supported by Titleist, FootJoy, Nike Callaway, TaylorMade Golf, Golf Channel, the PGA Tour, Precise Yardage Books, SCNS Sports Foods, Ship Sticks and Visit Delco, Pa.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday, August 30, 2022

Bergstol grabs two-shot lead after opening round of Philadelphia PGA Professional Championship

    Brian Bergstol, the director of instruction at the Shawnee Inn & Golf Resort, always seems to be playing his best golf at this point in the season, when the stakes are the highest on the Philadelphia Section PGA circuit.

   Bergstol, coming off a victory in the 46th Pro-Am for Wishes Championship a couple of weeks ago at Penn Oaks Golf Club, was at it again in Monday’s opening round of the 101st Philadelphia PGA Professional Championship as he carded a sparkling 5-under-par 66 at Concord Country Club to grab the lead following the opening round.

   Bergstol will play his second round Tuesday just across the Delaware state line at DuPont Country Club with the final round of the 54-hole stroke-play event scheduled for Wednesday.

   And the stakes are high. In addition to playing for one of the biggest purses on the Philadelphia Section schedule, the top 11 finishers in the Section championship will advance to the PGA Professional Championship next spring at the Twin Warriors and Santa Ana Pueblo courses in Santa Ana Pueblo, N.M.

   The top 20 finishers in the National Club Pro – the event’s old-school moniker – advance to the PGA Championship, one of professional golf’s four major championships, which tees off May 18, 2023 at Oak Hill Golf Club, the classic major championship venue in Rochester, N.Y.

   You need to look no further than Bergstol’s closest pursuer, Bidermann Golf Club instructor Zac Oakley, the Philadelphia Section’s reigning Rolex Haverford Trust Player of the Year, to understand the possibilities.

   Oakley was the runnerup in the 100th playing of the Philadelphia PGA Professional Championship, which was played at Aronimink Golf Club and Applebrook Golf Club a year ago. Oakley then finished in a tie for sixth place in the PGA Professional Championship in the spring of this  year at the Omni Barton Creek Resort in Austin, Texas and earned himself a trip to the PGA Championship at Southern Hills Cou8ntry Club in Tulsa, Okla.

   Oakley opened with a solid 3-under 68 at Concord that left him two shots behind Bergstol in second place.

   Bergstol made a splash on the PGA of America’s national scene as he finished in second place in last fall’s National Car Rental Assistant PGA Professional Championship at the PGA Golf Club in Port St. Lucie, Fla.

   Bergstol got off to a great start Monday, touring the outgoing nine at Concord in 3-under 32 with birdies at the third, fifth and sixth holes.

   A birdie at the 10th hole got Bergstol to 4-under before a bogey at 12 dropped him back to 3-under. Birdies at the 15th and 16th holes got Bergstol to 5-under. He dropped a shot with a bogey at the 17th hole, but Bergstol made a birdie at Concord’s gettable par-5 finishing hole to end up at 5-under.

   “I played really solid,” Bergstol told the Philadelphia Section PGA website. “Overall, it was a really good round, although I still missed three putts inside eight feet. I hit it super and hit a lot of greens and a lot of fairways and took care of business on the par-5s.”

   Braden Shattuck, the head of instruction at Rolling Green Golf Club, headed a group of six players tied for third place, a shot behind Oakley at 2-under.

   Shattuck’s victory in the Doylestown Open at the end of July was his second Rolex Haverford Trust Player of the Year points win in 2022. Since then, Shattuck finished in a tie for fourth place in the Philadelphia Players Championship at Lookaway Golf Club, took third place in the Pennsylvania Open at the Longue Vue Club near Pittsburgh, and finished in third place in the Pro-Am for Wishes at Penn Oaks.

   In the middle of all that, Shattuck showed up for the one-day Partner-Pro at Stonewall and, rumor has it, threw a 4-under 66 at the Old Course to take the low-pro prize.

   Shattuck opened with a 69 Monday at DuPont, site of the LPGA Championship – rebranded as the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship, but a major championship for the women in either case – from 1994 to 2004.

   Shattuck figures to be tough in his second round Tuesday at Concord. He knows the course well, having spent a lot of time there being mentored by head pro Mike Moses while learning the ins and outs of being a club professional.

   A couple of past winners of this championship, Terry Hatch of Royal Oaks Golf Course and Billy Stewart, an instructor at the Union League’s Liberty Hill Course, are also in the group at 2-under.

   Hatch, winner of the Section championship in 2003, matched Shattuck’s 69 at DuPont, while Stewart recorded his 69 at Concord, where he won the Philadelphia PGA Professional Championship in 2018.

   Rounding out the group at 2-under were Michael Rushin of Bear Trap Dunes and Nick Iacono of Chester Valley Golf Club, each of whom carded a 69 at DuPont, and Green Valley Country Club head pro John Cooper, whose 69 was recorded at Concord.

   Alex Knoll, an instructor at Glen Brook Golf Club and a guy with a pretty good record in this championship, headed a group of seven more players locked in a tie for ninth place at 1-under.

   Knoll, who has back-to-back titles in the Philadelphia PGA Professional Championship in 2019 and 2020 on his resume, opened with a 70 at DuPont. Knoll lost in a playoff to Bergstol in the Pro-Am for Wishes Championship at Penn Oaks.

   Two of the most decorated members of the Philadelphia Section’s talented stable of senior standouts, Spring Ford Country Club head pro Rich Steinmetz and Applebrook Golf Club head pro Dave McNabb, are also in the group at 1-under, both having teed it up at DuPont in Monday’s opening round.

   Steinmetz captured the Philadelphia Senior PGA Professional Championship as a senior “rookie” earlier this summer at Medford Village Country Club and also owns a Rolex Haverford Trust points win in the GALV Lehigh Valley Open at Brookside Country Club in Macungie. Steinmetz is a three-time winner of the Philadelphia PGA Professional Championship.

   McNabb, the Section’s two-time reigning Robert “Skee” Riegel Senior Player of the Year, spent his spring and early summer rubbing shoulders with the top senior players in the world as he earned spots in the field at two major championships on the PGA Tour Champions schedule, the KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship at the Harbor Shores Resort in Benton Harbor, Mich. and the U.S. Senior Open, a home game at Saucon Valley Country Club in Bethlehem.

   Rounding out the large group at 1-under were Brenden Mitchell, a colleague of Oakley’s at Bidermann, Bryce Young of the Bayside Resort Golf Club and Jeff  Fick of Moselem Springs Golf Club, all of whom posted a 70 at Concord, and Pine Valley Golf Club’s Chad Ferguson, who carded a 70 at DuPont.

   The Philadelphia PGA Professional Championship is presented by Cadillac, Club Car and Rolex and supported by Titleist, FootJoy, Nike Callaway, TaylorMade Golf, Golf Channel, the PGA Tour, Precise Yardage Books, SCNS Sports Foods, Ship Sticks and Visit Delco, Pa.