Carolinas Womens Match Play
Cecily Overbey, a rising N.C. State University junior from High Point, captured the 19th Carolinas Women’s Match Play Championship with a 5-and-3 victory over Maddisen Cox of Easley, S.C.
Overbey rolled in a 60-foot birdie putt on the 14th hole at Bermuda Run’s West Course and followed up with another birdie on the 15th to end the match.
Her toughest match came in the semifinals and it again was a hot putter than helped finish off two-time defending champ Mallory Hetzel of Waynesville. The back-and-forth match turned on the back nine when Overbey erased a 2-hole deficit with wins at the 11th and 14th holes. It remained even until Overbey cashed in a 9-foot birdie chance on No. 18 to claim her first Carolinas Golf Association title.
After qualifying fifth in the medal play portion of the event, Overbey opened match play with a 2-and-1 win over Ann Elizabeth Gore of Lexington, S.C., and followed with a 3-and-1 victory over Carley Cox of China Grove.
Sarah Bae, Overbey’s teammate at N.C. State, was qualifying medalist with 68 while Overbey shot 73. Bae lost on the 19th hole to Kayla Thompson of Whiteville in her first-round match.
Overbey’s summer will continue with the U.S. Women’s Amateur at Rolling Green Golf Club in Springfield, Pa., on Aug. 1-7. She was runner-up in the sectional qualifying event at Sapona Ridge Country Club in Lexington where her 3-under-par 68 tied Anna Redding of Concord for second, two shots behind Nasa Hataoka of Japan.
Men’s North & South Championship
Tim Conover of Holly Springs survived a do-or-die playoff just to make the match play field and then posted a series of stunning victories to capture the 116th Men’s North & South Amateur Championship at Pinehurst No. 2.
Seven players ended 36 holes of medal play at 151 and a playoff was needed to determine which five made the 32-man bracket. Conover survived and secured the 31st seed.
The East Carolina University rising junior opened match play with a 2-and-1 decision over No. 2 seed Tyler McDaniel, then beat Nick Hardy with clutch birdies on the 20th and 21st holes. In the quarterfinals, he won the final hole for a 2-up win over N.C. State recruit Benjamin Shipp.
In the semifinals, he beat William Register, a UNC rising junior from Burlington, by a 3-and-2 count. That set up the championship match with Northwestern rising senior Andrew Whalen. Conover took command early, winning four of the first five holes, and went on to a 4-and-2 decision.
Women’s North & South Championship
Kristen Gillman, who will join the SEC Champion Alabama golf program this fall, added to her crowded trophy case by winning the Women’s North & South Championship at Pinehurst No. 2.
With a U.S. Amateur title in her collection alongside numerous junior titles, Gillman was dominant in the North & South and capped off her week by turning back a future SEC opponent in South Carolina’s Katelyn Dambaugh, a rising senior.
Gillman qualified as the ninth seed, then survived a 1-up first-round match.
There were no close calls after that. She won next two matches by 7-and-6 and 6-and-5 margins and then used three back-nine birdies to close out Dambaugh on the 16th hole for a 3-and-2 win.
N.C. Junior Boys
Grant Powell of Colfax birdied three holes in a row starting at No. 10 to build a 4-up lead and went on to a 3-and-2 victory over Ben Woodruff of Huntersville to capture the 49th N.C. Junior Boys Championship at Wilson Country Club.
Powell played the 18th hole only once in his six matches. He opened with 5-and-3 and 4-and-3 wins before surviving the closest match in his run with a 19th hole, 1-up win over Grant Smith of Charlotte.
He rolled to a 5-and-4 win in the quarterfinals and then posted a 3-and-2 decision in the semifinals. In the final match, Woodruff claimed a pair of 1-up leads on the front nine before Powell got even with a birdie at the fifth. He added another birdie – one of seven on his card – on the par-5 seventh and never trailed again.
Powell, a 2016 graduate of Northwest Guilford, plans to play collegiate golf at Greensboro College.
State Big I Boys Championship
Justin Emmons, who won the North Carolina high school 2-A championship as a Providence Grove junior in May, added an even more prestigious title in July when he won the Trusted Choice Big I state championship.
Playing at Mid Pines Inn at Golf Club July 9-10, Emmons went wire-to-wire for a one-shot win over Connor Armistead. Emmons posted 69-71 while Armistead, a rising senior at Charlotte Christian, shot 72-69.
Emmons, up by three shots going into the final round, built his lead to five when he fired a 3-under-par 33 on the front nine of round two. Armistead, playing in the group just ahead of Emmons, made a spirited rally with birdies on three of his final four holes but fell a shot short.
The top four finishers from the 93-player field all qualified for the national championship Aug. 1-4 at Del Paso Country Club in Sacramento, Calif. The field will include 99 players representing 41 states.
State Big I Girls Championship
Emily Hawkins captured the N.C. Junior girls championship in June and kept her momentum going with another state title in July.
The high school rising junior from Lexington captured the Trusted Choice Big I Championship at Longleaf Golf Club in Southern Pines in early July. She and Riley Smyth of Cary both finished at 146 in the 36-hole tournament but Hawkins took the title when she rolled in a 20-foot birdie putt on the first playoff hole. Both players earned invitations to the national Big I Championship Aug. 1-4 at Del Paso CC in Sacramento, Calif.
Boys North and South
Nicholas Lyerly, who won the North Carolina Amateur in June, came within a couple shots of adding his second big trophy of the summer in July.
Lyerly, a rising senior at East Rowan High, was four shots back of Floridian Alberto Martinez going into the final round of the North & South Boys Championship but fired a 3-under-par 69 to close the gap to two. Lyerly had opened with 74-71. Martinez, meanwhile, was steady with 71-70-71 for a 212 total.
Cooper Sears of Old Hickory, Tenn., tied Lyerly for second at 214 while Michael Childress of Salisbury was one of five players to tie for fourth at 217.