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Leah Edwards will head to Western Kentucky with two state titles

She’s won back-to-back Class 4A individual high school state championships at Northwest Guilford, both times outdueling a player hailed by The Charlotte Observer as “America’s best 12th grade golfer.”

She’s a tireless worker, commonly seen during daily practice sessions with a determined smile on her face and a Carolinas Golf Association stocking cap atop her head during cold months on the practice range at The Cardinal by Pete Dye. Before earning her driver license, she made the short trip to the range on her bicycle, crossing busy Fleming Road to get there.

She’s an outstanding student, taking Advanced Placement classes, though limiting her homework load somewhat to allow for her countless hours on the range.

Plus, she’s a genuinely nice young woman of strong Christian faith and character raved about by her coaches and teammates.

So, Power Four Conference coaches in North Carolina and nearby states, how did Leah Edwards get away? None of the Tar Heel State’s ACC members showed any interest in adding her to their teams.

Not that Edwards is upset or ever brings up the topic — she never brought it up during an hour-long conversation — though some area high school coaches do. When asked, Edwards concedes she often hears the question herself.

Maybe her modest 5-foot-3 stature or her medium length off the tee (240-250 yards) didn’t catch their attention, though her results and her short game are elite. More likely, her mostly Carolinas playing background was a bigger reason.

Regardless, Edwards is eagerly awaiting leaving for her full scholarship at Western Kentucky University, which regularly out-punches its better-known, better-financed competitors, and has a roster of players of kindred spirits.

“They’re a team I want to be on,” Edwards said, taking a break from a stocking cap-clad session on the Cardinal range. “They all have similar values to me. They seem like people I could get along with during the time I am there.

“I really believe the Lord wants me to go there.”

Make no mistake, WKU has a strong women’s golf program, even if the athletic department’s wacky mascot “Big Red” draws more television attention than its traditionally strong ConferenceUSA football and basketball programs.

Over the summer, WKU senior Catie Craig won the prestigious North-South Amateur at Pinehurst, knocking off Wake sophomore and local star Macy Pate in the championship match.

No, WKU isn’t exactly in the wilderness either geographically or athletically. The campus is only an hour’s drive from Nashville, Tennessee.

Last spring, the Hilltoppers’ women’s golf team played in the NCAA regionals. This fall, Craig advanced through LPGA Tour Qualifying before declining the enticing opportunity to play in the 34-player Final Stage for 25 exemptions to the 2025 LPGA Tour to maintain her collegiate eligibility.

The current WKU team opened the 2024 fall season with a third-place finish out of 14 teams in a tournament hosted by the Big Ten’s Purdue, a fourth-place finish out of 15 teams at an event hosted by the ACC’s Louisville and a second-place finish among 13 teams at traditional women’s golf power Furman.

Yet, WKU doesn’t carry the local cache enjoyed by UNC, N.C. State, Duke and Wake Forest. Edwards admits she was unaware of WKU until a few years ago.

“Before I started the recruiting process, I had never heard of WKU,” she recalled.

But Edwards noticed the face of WKU coach Adam Gary at several junior events. Gary eventually approached, they talked and Gary offered a visit.

She found out WKU had a modern on-campus practice facility, access to three local courses, including acclaimed The Club at Olde Stone, and a planned new 113,000 business building.

“I met the team and the coaches and got to know WKU,” said Edwards, who plans to major in business but has dreams of perhaps becoming a pilot. “It kind of checked every box.”

Edwards committed to WKU last year. She signed a letter of intent this month during the NCAA’s early signing period.

“I like her focus and her hard-work ethic,” Gary said. “She doesn’t get flustered. I think she’s going to be a rockstar.”

Edwards would seem to have an obvious big-time recruiting resume. The two high school state title victories over Myers Park’s Elizabeth Rudisill, the 2022 Class 4A winner, top the list. Plus, she’s won several other tournaments, including the 2022 Carolinas Golf Association Junior Championship.



She can take it low. Last summer, Edwards shot 66 in the first round of a Peggy Kirk Bell Tour event at Bryan Park’s tough Champions Course layout playing more than 6,000 yards.

Kip Edwards, who introduced Leah to golf, said his daughter is highly motivated for success.

“Her work ethic is off the charts,” he said. “She has a fire burning inside her.”

In the recent state high school championship at Pinehurst No. 6, Edwards shot what may look like two smooth rounds of even-par 70 to win by one stroke.

Actually, she was cruising along in the final round before making a triple-bogey at No. 12 that allowed Rudisill, who opened with 74, move into contention. Leading by only one, she saved par at 17 after driving into a bunker with a deft pitch to a front pin and a clutch 5-foot putt.

In fall 2023 she won her first state high school title by making a 12-foot birdie putt at Pinehurst No. 6 on the first playoff hole.

Edwards clearly can play with the best juniors. Rudisill is currently ranked No. 4 in the rankings on the international American Junior Golf Association tour and signed a scholarship offer with Vanderbilt. A few months ago, Rudisill played on a sponsor’s exemption in an LPGA Tour event at TPC Boston and made the cut.

In 2023, Edwards and Rudisill formed a team and qualified for at the USGA Women’s Four-Ball in Dupont, Washington, but missed the cut for match play.

Though Kip Edwards is an avid golfer, he wasn’t a high-pressure dad when it came to introducing his middle daughter to the game. When Leah was 8, Kip took her to the First Tee of the Triad to teach her about the game.

“He would always try to get to me to go out on the course,” she said.

Father and daughter started playing together at the former Pleasant Ridge Golf Course, a simple, flat layout that was ideal for kids near Piedmont Triad International Airport. She played weekly in the First Tee program.

One day when she was about 11, Kip brought her to Bryan Park to play on a day that a Peggy Kirk Bell Tour event was underway at the facility. They learned about the girls-only tour founded in 2007 by Precision Golf’s Robert Linville and the non-profit Triad Youth Golf Association and joined.

PKBGT offers events at different playing levels with a goal to allow girls to comfortably develop their games. Still, tournament golf was an adjustment. As an eighth grader, she played in her first PKBGT compeition.

“I think after I started playing sone tournaments and getting crushed I really saw I needed to put in the work to get better,” Edwards said.

So Edwards started making regular trips to The Cardinal range. When she played the course, the difficult greens complexes helped her hone her short game and course management skills.

“She’s probably the most-dedicated junior I’ve ever had,” said Cardinal pro Chris Terry, who has seen Edwards help younger players, including her younger sister, Keira, at the club. “The big schools around here who didn’t recruit her are missing out not only a good golfer, but a great person.”

Continuing up the ladder with First Tee and PKBGT, Edwards joined the team at Northwest Guilford as a freshman as the team’s top player.

The Edwards family, which includes mother Regina, eldest daughter Elaina and Keira, joined The Cardinal about five years ago. She said she has often played with friend Ellen Yu, another Greensboro standout, who signed to play next year at UNC. Yu plays out of Sedgefield Country Club, The Cardinal’s sister club with McConnell Golf.

During the past two summers, Edwards’ name emerged, boosted by the state junior title, but perhaps too late to generate a buzz from AJGA officials.

“I feel like over the summer and last summer too, my game has really started to come together and I’ve figured out how to play and how to score,” she said.

She played in four regional AJGA events in 2024, twice finishing in the top 10.

“I have had a little bit of a problem getting into them,” Edwards noted.

In preparation for WKU, Edwards said she plans to play in some amateur women’s events with college players and target some CGA events that provide winners with exemptions into USGA events.

Edwards’ instructor is Kellie Edelblut, who works at Longleaf Golf Academy in Southern Pines. Edelblut played at William & Mary and later mini tours.

Edwards hopes to adds consistency with her iron game. She considers her putting and chipping to be her biggest strengths.

“The bigger fields I get into, the better the experience,” she said. “I just want to be prepared to play. My plan is to try to play in tournaments that I think will best prepare me for playing at WKU. As soon as I get there, I want to make the lineup and travel with the team.”

If there’s a drawback to playing at WKU it’s the distance from home — about 7 1/2 hours by car.

“That was the only thing that I was a little bit worried about,” Edwards said. “I figured if that’s what God wants me to do, that will be all right.”

Branson Golf: Slice of Americana with elite new courses and a variety of family attractions

When Triad golfers plan a golf buddies trip for the spring or fall, many of the same destinations are sure to come up.

Pinehurst and Carolinas coast enclaves from the Outer Banks to Hilton Head Island are no-brainers. Lake Oconee, TPC Sawgrass and Alabama’s Robert Trent Jones Trail are among other easy drive destinations. Wiling to fly and pay top-dollar? The list starts with Pebble Beach, Bandon Dunes and the Wisconsin coast (Kohler) of Lake Michigan.

But what about a family vacation that has elite golf AND many kid-friendly, non-golf attractions — at a moderate, Middle America cost?

Take a look at Branson, Missouri, where Bass Pro Shops founder Johnny Morris has added spectacular golf to a list of attractions including fishing and boating at pristine Table Rock Lake; Silver Dollar City, a world-famous mountain theme park that’s regarded as more authentic than younger, and now-sister property, Dollywood; dinner cruises on two lakes; and dozens of indoor and outdoor facilities in the scenic Ozark Mountains offering country music, comedy and Christian entertainment.

The myriad of activities and shows are bolstered by a downtown entertainment, restaurant and shopping district, Branson Landing, along Lake Taneycomo in charming, hilly downtown Branson. Hundreds of affordable restaurants as well as the requisite tourist venues — Ferris wheel, go-karts, mini golf, zip lines, water slides — are scattered throughout a 10-mile-or-so area.

Branson Landing with fountains along Lake Taneycomo has several restaurants and retailers and is anchored on one end by Bass Pro Shops.

For golfers, Branson has burst upon on the national radar in the past few years.

Morris’ 4,600-acre Big Cedar Lodge Resort, a few miles south of Branson, unveiled Ozarks National, a Bill Coore/Ben Crenshaw layout built along ridges overlooking the countryside, in 2019.

Ozark National offers spectacular holes set along ridges offering panaramic views of the surrounding Branson area.

Payne’s Valley, a tribute to four-time major champion Payne Stewart, an Ozarks native who grew up in Springfield, opened in 2021, in a valley in a layout continuing with a post-round, par-3 19th hole over water to a green framed by a giant limestone cliff wall and waterfalls. The experience concludes with a scenic ride along a winding path inside the limestone wall to the mountaintop clubhouse.

Big Cedar’s other 18-hole golf masterpiece is Buffalo Springs Ridge, a Tom Fazio beautiful layout with undulating terrain winding through scenic rock formations, lakes, creeks and waterfalls.

Not to forget Top of the Rock, a nine-hole Jack Nicklaus design with marvelous views of Table Rock (above photo of the ninth green with Table Rock Lake in the background from the tee) that co-hosted a PGA Tour Champions Legends of Golf event with Buffalo Springs for six years beginning in 2014. For two years beginning with its opening in 2018, Gary Player’s 13-hole Mountaintop design was added to the Champions Tour venue.

The soonest coming attraction is Cliffhangers, an 18-hole par-3 course and pet project of Morris and son John Paul that stretches across 50 acres of cliffs below Mountaintop. Billed by Big Cedar “as the most fun par-3 course in the world,” the course, which will have some holes longer than 200 yards, is expected to open in 2025.

Big Cedar courses also are supported by spectacular, outdoors-themed pro shops and a variety of drinking holes and restaurants. The Top of the Rock clubhouse includes an Ozarks museum, a golf-cart ride through caves and the local countryside, and Arnie’s Barn, a Tex-Mex restaurant inspired by the culinary tastes of Arnold Palmer, who along with Nicklaus, Player and a multitude of NASCAR drivers and other celebrities provide memorabilia inside at Top of the Rock.

Golfers and non-golfers take the Lost Canyon Cave Nature Trail in a golf cart departing from the Top of the Rock clubhouse.

The beautiful landscaping, meticulously groomed grounds and luxurious faciltiies in a casual environment sets Big Cedar apart from other resorts. Plus, who can’t appreciate the free bison dogs given away at on-course snack buildings?

How highly is Big Cedar golf regarded? In its Missouri course rankings (private and public) Golf Digest ranks Ozarks National No. 3, Payne’s Valley No. 7 and Buffalo Ridge Springs No. 8. Though pricey for public golf, The Big Cedar courses, the publication’s top 3 public access courses in the state, are 50 percent or more affordable than the likes of Pebble Beach, Pinehurst, Bandon Dunes and Kohler and TPC Sawgrass.

That’s Big Cedar golf in a nutshell. In season, non-resort guests should expect to pay fees of about $275 to play Payne’s Valley, $215 for Ozarks National, $130 for Top of the Rock and $80 for Mountaintop, a walking-only course. Buffalo Ridge Springs, closed until June 2025 for greens renovations, is priced about the same as Ozarks National.

Resort guests — Big Cedar has 362 different private accommodations, including lodge rooms, golf condos, cottages, cabins and luxury camping — receive a small discount and tee time priority.

But Branson golf is bigger than Big Cedar. Branson Hills, designed by Chuck Smith and PGA Tour player Bobby Clampett is a fantastic layout, ranked as Missouri’s No. 2 public-access course — behind Ozarks National (prior to the opening of Payne’s Valley) — by Golfweek. Branson Hills fees start at $150 in season.

Branson Hills, like the layouts at Big Cedar, is considered one of Missouri’s best courses.

Ledgestone Country Club, an upscale par-71 layout from designer Paul Clark, has fees starting at $85 in season. Pointe Royale, along the banks of Taneycomo, is a 6,300-yard course with in-season rates beginning at $110. Thousand Hills, a par-64 layout, is $94 in season, and Holiday Hills, a par-68 local favorite, has a rack rate of about $60.

Though golf isn’t the preeminent draw to Branson, it’s lure is gaining traction. As evidence, The Social Birdy, an upscale sports bar and restaurant with a golf pro shop and simulators inside, as well as an outdoor facility with a putting course, pickleball courts and bocce, opened in 2024.

Back to the family attractions, which include many of the same (Titanic and Ripley’s museums, etc.) tourist venues as Sevierville and Pigeon Forge.

Silver Dollar City has a large number of rides, including a half dozen roller coasters, train and kids’ rides and a 13-acre water park. Shops offer a variety of handmade crafts. Plus, glassblowers and blacksmiths work on site and interact with guests. Various music shows run each day. The park, comfortably blended into hilly terrain with mature trees feels more like a small town than a garish, especially at night lighted with special displays leading up to Christmas.

Blacksmiths are among the artisan whose work can be watched at Silver Dollar City.

Near Silver Dollar City, Showboat Branson Belle is a multi-level vessel offering dinner cruises two times per day along Table Rock, a clear, 43,000-acre U.S. Army Corps of Engineers lake with limited development along the shoreline. The lake is a regional fishing favorite for catfish, bass and rainbow trout.

Many of Branson’s music shows include comedy. Music facilities, include the 3,000-seat Mansion Theatre and Yakov Smirnoff’s comedy theater. Shepherd of the Hills, a park with rides, outdoor attractions and music shows, is a tribune to the 1941 John Wayne movie of the same name.

Downtown Branson, which sits atop a hill above Branson Landing and Taneycomo, has a variety of quaint shops and eclectic country cafes and retailers, including Dick’s 5 & 10, an old-style general store complete with buckets of individual candies.

The Branson Belle offers two dinner cruises each day on Table Rock Lake.

Perhaps the Midwest outpost for Southern chains, Branson Landing, anchored at one end by a Bass Pro Shop store, has retailers including Mellow Mushroom and Belk. Restaurants are named for Guy Fieri and Paula Deen. Greensboro-based Simply Southern has a store a few miles away at Tanger Outlets Branson.

Big Cedar also plays host to non-golfers, who pay a gate fee to the resort to see the impressive Ancient Ozarks Natural History Museum, take the cave trail and visit several on-property restaurants.

Arnie’s Barn, with nearby views of Top of the Rock course, is open only from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., featuring a variety of fajitas. Mountain Top Grill, overlooking Payne’s Valley, is a popular spot open for breakfast, lunch and dinner with menu ranging from crab cake appetizers, burgers, sandwiches, soups and salads to Wagya steaks, wood-fired salmon and desserts.

The historic Worman House at Big Cedar features a bistro with fining dining upstairs and Harry’s Cocktail Lounge & Bar, a place to enjoy a variety of fine wine, whiskey s, cocktails and cigars, provides an alternative to The Wine Cellar at Top of the Rock.

At Devil’s Pool, guests dine in an intimate stone-line dining room with a hand-wrought metal chandeliers, a 100-year-old mahogany bar and antique furnishings. The glass-walled Osage Restaurant at Top of the Rock is known for its views and popular Sunday brunch.

The Osage Restaurant at Big Cedar’s Top of the Rock offers a rotunda

Off the resort, top restaurants include the Level 2 Steakhouse, a white-tablecloth, traditional steakhouse in the Hilton Branson Convention Center at Branson Landing. A unique option is Keeter Center at College of the Ozarks, where a sophisticated, fine-dining menu boasts a variety of products raised or grown on the college’s farm, operated by students in lieu of tuition. With a variety appetizers, steak, seafood, chicken, pork and pasta entrees, and an extensive dessert menu, Keeter is not a college cafeteria.

The best nightspots in the area for golfers, and perhaps older children, include Tall Tales Bar and Grill, an upscale sports bar next to Angler’s Lodge, a fellow Bass Pro Shops property along U.S. 65.

For decades, Branson’s main arteries, among them U.S. 65 and Missouri 76 (Country Boulevard), have been home to mom-and-pop restaurants and small hotels. Over the last few decades, major restaurant and retail chains have moved in.

Upscale resorts attract guests throughout the year. Those include Branson Westgate Resort with facilities including indoor and outdoor pools, an indoor fitness center, mini golf, a resort store and eatery with a Starbucks, Branson Westgate has a variety of modern cabins and condo buildings with kitchens as well as a main lodge.

Westgate Resort Branson has accommodations including the main lodge in the photo as well as a variety of cabins and condos and a plethora of amenities.

A road trip from the Triad can be made in about 15 hours by vehicle. Flights can be booked with one stop from Piedmont Triad International Airport to Springfield-Branson National Airport. Springfield, home to the original and world’s largest Bass Pro Shops store, is about 15 minutes from the airport and less than an hour north of Branson on U.S. 65.

Want to see the Kansas City Chiefs or St. Louis Cardinals, two of the country’s most popular pro sports franchises? Branson is about 210 miles from Kansas City via U.S. 65, Missouri 13 and Missouri 7; and 250 miles via U.S,. 65 and Interstate 44 (Historic Route 66) from St. Louis.

The typical drive to Branson from the Triad would go through Nashville and St. Louis. The stretch from St. Louis to Springfield on I-44 passes Meramac Caverns, a popular destination known as a Jesse James hideout, for years advertised on faded barns throughout U.S. highways.

New bunkers provide teeth and new pin positions at Maple Chase

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By John Brasier
Publisher

The routing is much the same and most of the greens are in the same places.

But the addition of 32 new grass-faced bunkers and rebuilt greens at Maple Chase Country Club have added teeth and pin positions to the north Winston-Salem club’s layout as well as the capability for much-improved playing conditions and drastically better drainage.

TriadGolf.com had the chance to check out the reopened course on Thursday, less than a week after the layout reopened to members after the multi-million-dollar renovation project, which began in March.

To help avoid stress on new turf, play last weekend was limited to 72-player shotguns on Saturday and Sunday and weekday member play on Wednesday and Friday. On Dec. 3, Allen said the course is expected to return to its normal schedule.

Allen said members, who eagerly anticipated completion of the project, seemed happy with the renovations. December was the original target for reopening. Members will be allowed to bring guests beginning in April, when the club also plans to begin accepting reciprocals, many from  neighboring clubs that provided an outlet for Maple Chase members during the project.

Grassy swales, becoming harder to see as the Bermuda goes dormant due to November weather, on Nos. 3 and 5 will aid drainage next to Mill Creek.

The greens, which had surfaces that had become mostly poa annua over recent years, have new 007XL creeping bent grass but retained many of their dramatic slopes while making enough areas suitable for pin positions.

Prior to the changes, Allen said a few of greens had only two or three areas suitable for pins. Now, they all have several. The only greens not totally bulldozed and rebuilt were Nos. 1, 4, 7 and 14. Plus, architect Bob Moore and his hometown construction firm Landscape Unlimited created drainage routes around the greens.

The view from behind Mill Creek of the No. 3 green. Notice the slopes that route excess water away from the elevated putting surface.

The new bunkers in the fairways — tightened up an otherwise mostly open layout. The bunkers rise above the fairways providing prominent new hazards.

Allen said the new fairway bunkers should make members’ handicaps “travel” better, perhaps two or three when they play on other courses. But he said many bunkers will serve mostly as targets.

“If players use the correct tees, the bunkers shouldn’t really be in play,” Allen said.

Tees were rebuilt, including several new back tees that stretch the layout more than 200 yards to 7,000 yards.

“One of the goals was to be able to attract some of the bigger tournaments,” Allen said.

Carolinas Golf Association officials took data and evaluated the course last week, but Allen hadn’t received the new course and slope ratings as of Thursday.

In 2025, Maple Chase will play host to a Tarheel Youth Golf Association event in June, and the CGA Dogwood State Boys’ Match Play Championship in July.

New raised tees areas were built for new forward “family” tees. The bunkers were built with Capillary Concrete liners to aid drainage.

Drainage, a chronic problem on holes Nos. 2 through 5 along Mill Creek, has been improved by creating routes for water to avoid the greens.

At No. 3, “swales” that look much like a deep creek beds and cross the fairway, are a drainage aid. Though Mill Creek still borders the left side of the short par-4 hole, it no longer must be crossed on the approach. A new green was built in front of bend in the hazard. New swales were also built on the fifth hole.

Attractive new wood bulk heading borders the front of the greens at the par-5 sixth and par-3 15th holes. New tees at Nos. 5 and 17 give each nine one short and one long par-3, a change from four par-3s of similar length. While 15 (pictured above) retained a steep incline to a back tier, badly needed new pin positions were added.

Bunkers were moved closer to the green at No. 17, where a new back tee adds variety to the distance of the course’s four par-3 selections.

At 17, the bunkers in front and behind the vertically shaped target have been moved closer to the green, which is deceptively deep, especially on the left side.

Regrading on the large practice range seen along Germanton Road now allows players to see all their shots land, providing a better gauge to distance.

Allen said Maple Chase, designed by Ellis Maples and opened in 1954 as Pinebrook Country Club, is accepting new membership applications.

TUESDAY TEE OFF: Branson all smiles, so are the golf balls at Bur-Mil Park

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Still unpacking from a glorious golf week in Branson, Missouri …

There might not have been a happier place in the United States than southwest Missouri last week following the elections. In Branson, there were/are far more Trump retail stores — at least a half dozen — than supermarkets. My favorite — “When I die don’t let me vote Democrat” — may have been a shot at the neighboring state of Illinois.

As Branson theater owner and performer Yakov Smirnov might say, “What a country!”

You may know about Silver Dollar City and Branson’s country music theaters, but did you know that three of the top 10 golf courses in Missouri, according to Golf Digest, are in Branson — three on the property at Big Cedar Lodge, the creation of Bass Pro Shops founder Johnny Morris. Golfweek lists Branson as home to the top four in its rankings of the state’s public-access courses.

More on the spectacular golf and attractions in Branson (above photo from Big Cedar’s Top of the Rock clubhouse) in the next week or so. Meanwhile, let’s enjoy what’s so-far been a frost-free fall in the major Triad cities.

Other stories to come at TriadGolf.com include features on 2024 Carolinas PGA Senior Player of the Year Chris Haarlow of Precision Golf School and junior standout and Western Kentucky University recruit Leah Edwards — both Greensboro residents.

Just one complaint about Greensboro golf: The city rec department needs to some new balls for the driving range at Bur-Mil Park, one of the few public ranges still open in the area. I almost swear I had a cut gutta perch in the small bucket I paid $6 for earlier this month. The balls are ridiculously old and beaten up. I skip past the awful greens on the par-3 course until a later date …

A few players with local ties advanced from 13 first stage sites to the second round of Korn Ferry Tour qualifying school, which begins next week at five warm-weather sites.

UNC Greensboro golfer Symon Balbin of Pinehurst and Tanner Bibey of Walnut Cove advanced from Bermuda Run as did podcast star George Bryan IV of Aiken, S.C. Former N.C. State player Christian Salzer was medalist in West Palm Beach, Florida; Ryan Sullivan of Advance snuck in on the cutline in Madison, Mississippi. The final stage begins Dec. 12 in Ponte Verda Beach, Florida.

The top five finishers at Ponte Vedra Beach will earn PGA Tour membership. The next 40 finishers will have early exempt status on Korn Ferry.

Mimi Rhodes of England, who played at Wake Forest, was co-medalist in the 193-player field at the second stage of LPGA Qualifying last month in Venice, Florida, and advanced to next month’s final stage in Mobile, Alabama. The top 25 players, including ties, in the 43-player field, will earn 2025 LPGA Tour membership. Rachel Kuehn of Wake Forest missed by a single stroke and Burlington’s Kayla Smith, who played at North Carolina, was two shots off the cutline.

Pate finishes second in major college tournament

Macy Pate tied for second in the individual race to lead the Wake Forest women’s team to a victory in a strong 11-school field at the Charles Schwab Collegiate in Fort Worth, Texas.

Pate, a sophomore who attended Reagan High, shot 2-under-par 211 in the 54-hole tournament at Ridglea Country Club, two strokes behind Cayetana Fernandez of Texas A&M, which finished second with Southern Methodist third and host Texas Christian fourth.

Pate has finished in the top 22 in each of Wake Forest’s five fall tournaments.

Northwest Guilford’s Edwards wins another Class 4A girls’ title

Leah Edwards of Northwest Guilford successfully defended her Class 4A girls high school state title Tuesday, shooting her second consecutive 70 to win by one stroke at Pinehurst No. 6.

Edwards, who finished at even-par 140 on an approximately 5,300-yard course. Elizabeth Rudisill of Myers Park, the 2022 individual champion, finished second with Emerson Dever of Jordan in third at 144.

Northwest Guilford finished fourth in the team competition. Edwards’ teammate Emery Lewis tied for eighth at 147. Vikings freshman Maia Tussey shot 169.

Rudisill rallied from an opening 74 to pull into a tie with Edwards, but bogeyed the 17th hole. Both players parred 18. Edwards has committed to play next year at Western Kentucky University. Rudisill has committed to play at Vanderbilt University.

Pinecrest repeated as team champion at 23-over 443 (three players per round) with Charlotte Catholic second and Marvin Ridge in third.

Jacksonville’s Sanaa Carter won the 3A individual title at 3-over 147 at Longleaf Golf Club. Gabriella Moorehead of Williams finshed third at 154. South Point won the team title. Southern Alamance finished third to lead Triad teams.

Pine Lake Prep won the Class 1A/2A team title at 107-over 533 at Sapona Club. Landry Hamm of Jackson Day School won the individual title at 15-over 157. East Surry finished fourth in the team race at 557. Emerson Puckett of North Surry finished sixth in the individual race at 167.

TUESDAY TEE OFF: Fobes capitalizes on new age rule to win CGA Women’s Mid-Amateur

Recent UNC Wilmington graduate and East Bend native Mallory Fobes, hopeful of a pro playing career, won the second Carolinas Women’s Mid-Amateur last week at Longleaf Golf Club in Southern Pines.

Fobes (pictured) shot 71 and 77 to finish at 4-over-par 148, beating Courtney Stiles of Pinehurst with a birdie in the first hole of a playoff.

The tournament was Fobes’ first competing as a mid-amateur. Yes, a 23-year-old recent college graduate is now the CGA’s MID-AMATEUR champion.

“It feels so good,” Fobes said. “This being my first mid-amateur event and being the youngest in the field, I know there are some really good players out here, so it felt good to come out with a win.”

Fobes hit a booming drive on the playoff hole, leaving her only a chip to the green to set up the birdie.

“I thought, ‘I’ve been hitting my driver on this hole every time,’ so I decided to hit driver again,’” Fobes told Carolinas Golf Association staff.

Stiles, who graduated from N.C. State in 2004 and played on the Futures Tour for two seasons, is the executive director of First Tee of the Sandhills.

So how and why does a 23-year-old (she played five years in college due to a Covid-19 extension) win a mid-am tournament?

Under advice from the USGA, the CGA changed the eligibility requirements, reducing the minimum age to 22 for players who have completed their college careers. The USGA still requires U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur contestants to be at least 25 to be eligible.

Chris Wolff, the CGA’s senior tournament manager, said lowering the age requirement is intended to encourage former college players to continue their amateur careers. Many young college graduates, working full-time, found it difficult to compete with current college players. So many quit playing competitively, often not returning at 25 for Mid-Amateur play.

Fobes, who started a GoFundMe page to raise money for LPGA Tour qualifying tournament expenses, failed to advance at the First Stage of LPGA Tour Qualifying in August in Rancho, Mirage, California, after shooting 77 in the opening round. Fobes was among several contestants who competed while maintaining their amateur status.

After the tournament, Fobes announced on Instagram that she planned to play on a winter tour in a warm climate.

HAARLOW TOPS CPGA SENIOR STANDINGS

Greensboro’s Chris Haarlow has clinched the Carolinas PGA Senior Player of the Year Award. Haarlow, director and instructor at Precision Golf School, was consistently strong in the CPGA Seniors’ five-tournament schedule, placing in the top 10 of each.

He began with a victory in the season-opening one-day event at Cedarbrook Country Club in Charlotte, and capped the season last month with a second-place finish to Burke Cromer of Prosperity, S.C., in a playoff at the South Carolina Senior Open at Wild Dunes Links on Isle of Palms, S.C.

TUESDAY TEE OFF: Badgett commits to Vols, Peyton visits, High Country faces challenges

(Updates with more infomation on flood damage in the High Country)

Pennson Badgett capped a fantastic 2024 season with a college commitment.

The East Surry High junior gave a verbal commitment to the University of Tennessee last week. The commitment came after a recent visit by Tennessee coach Brennan Webb, who came to see Badgett at Maple Chase Country Club, where Badgett works on his game with instruction Brad Luebchow.

Pennson Badgett burst into the junior golf spotlight last year by winning a high school title and qualifying for the U.S. Junior Amateur.

It was a big day at Maple Chase. By coincidence, former Tennessee football star Peyton Manning was at Maple Chase having lunch with member Clyde Christensen, his former quarterback coach with the Indianapolis Colts. No, Manning wasn’t there to help Webb recruit.

Badgett, who plays out of Pilot Knob Park in Pilot Mountain, saw his recruiting stock rise dramatically this year thanks to three victories on the American Junior Golf Association Tour. Badgett, who led East Surry to a state high school title in 2023, was profiled in Triad Golf magazine’s April 2024 issue.

His ascension began in April when he won the AJGA’s Goldsboro Junior with 5-under-par 211 at Lane Tree Golf Club. In late May, he added a victory at the AJGA’s Adam Scott Junior Championship in Lake Worth, Florida, by three strokes, with an 11-under 205 total.

“He had the opportunity and he took advantage of it,” said Luebchow.

The Adam Scott victory got him a late berth into the AJGA Wyndham Championship two weeks later at Sedgefield, where he tied for fifth in an international field of 72 players.

The early AJGA success made Badgett a well-known recruit.

Padgett’s third AJGA victory came later in June at the RLX Ralph Lauren Junior Classic, a 32-player match play tournament at regular U.S. Open site Bethpage Black in New York.

With his success, Badgett received a berth in the AJGA’s Junior Presidents Cup in Quebec. Badgett was one of the 12 U.S. players who defeated an international team 15-9 in the Sept. 22-24 event. After a tie in fourball and a loss in foursomes (alternate shot), Badgett earned a halve in singles.

GRANDFATHER, ELK RIVER HIT HARD, BOONE REOPENS

Wind and flooding from Hurricane Helene devastated many courses in the N.C. High County. Many are shut down for the year. Some may not be ready to reopen at the start of the spring season.

In Avery County, Grandfather Golf & Country Club and the Elk River Club were among the hardest hit prestigious private clubs. Both lie in valleys along rivers and streams that overflowed onto the courses.

The flooding at Grandfather could be seen on holes running along N.C. 105. At Elk River Club, water from the Elk River covered several of the holes visible along N.C. 194.

Bridges on Nos. 5 and 6 at Grandfather were washed out. Flooding left mud covering one of the final greens.

At Elk River Club, water from the Elk River covered several of the holes visible along N.C. 194. Sources told TriadGolf.com that the course may not be ready to reopen next year.

TriadGolf.com learned that Linville Golf Club, Linville Ridge Country Club and Diamond Creek Club suffered some damage, but are expected to require only minimal renovations to be ready by the spring 2025 season.

Specific information is hard to attain — many of the courses haven’t answered phone calls since the storm. The damage wiped out the final month or so of golf in the region. Most High Country courses typically are closed by early November.

Sugar Mountain Golf Club, a popular par-64 layout open to the public, suffered some serious damage. General manager Tom McAuliffe told TriadGolf.com that two holes will require significant changes due to flooding of creeks that run along the layout.

The biggest change at Sugar Mountain will come at No. 16 a downhill par-4, where a creek overflowed, destroying the green and altering the terrain of the hole.

Playing Golf isn’t the biggest concern in the Banner Elk area. The Sugar Mountain pro shop has been converted into a place where local residents, whose property was damaged or lost, can receive meals. McAuliffe donated much of his shop’s golf apparel to flood victims.

In Watauga County, historic Blowing Rock Country Club reportedly emerged without serious damage. Flooding from the Watauga River overflowed fairways at Hound Ears Country Club.

Boone Golf Club (pictured above), a popular public layout designed by Ellis Maples, had water from creeks overflow much of the course, but was able to reopen gradually during the past week.

Assistant golf pro Art Adams told TriadGolf.com, that Boone reopened with 14 holes on Oct. 12. By this past week, all 18 holes were open, though the par-4 No. 2 was played as a par-3 due to the damage to the grass in the fairway and none of the bunkers were in use.

Moye wins CGA Super Senior title at Forest Oaks

Macon Moye of Southern Pines shot rounds of 65 and 73 to win the Carolinas Golf Association Super Senior Championship, which finished Thursday at Forest Oaks Country Club.

Moye overcame a three-shot deficit to Paul Simson of Raleigh, who shot his second consecutive 70 in the final round. Todd Brown of Winston-Salem tied for fourth at 144. Mike Osborne of Greensboro was sixth at 145.

Lewisville player defends CGA title

Hallie Wilson of Lewisville successfully defended her title Monday at the Carolinas Golf Association’s Jimmy Anderson Girls’ Invitational at Taberna Country Club in New Bern.

Wilson shot consecutive rounds of 1-under-par 71 to tie Victoria Davis of Cary at 142 before winning on the first playoff hole. Wilson rallied from a one-stroke deficit after Sunday’s opening round.