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Notes
In
1948, the USGA inaugurated the U.S. Junior Amateur Championship
to determine the
best
junior golfer in the United States and also to help junior golfers
learn how to realize the most from the game, win or lose.
The
Junior Amateur was hardly the first junior competition to attract
a national field. The Western Junior had been established in 1914.
In 1946, two more competitions appeared, each with a claim on the
national title. One was sponsored by the U.S. Junior Chamber of
Commerce, the other by the Hearst Newspapers.
The
first Junior Amateur was played at the University of Michigan Golf
Course and drew 495 entries. The starting field of 128 players was
determined by sectional qualifying rounds at 41 sites. Dean Lind
of Rockford, Ill., was the first champion. Lind defeated Ken Venturi,
of San Francisco, a future U.S. Open Champion, in the final.
By
1963, entries had surged to 2,230, a record for the 14th consecutive
year. At the time, there was no handicap limitation for entrants.
That changed in 1964 when a handicap limit of 10 strokes was introduced.
In 1996, the championship attracted a record 3,489 entries. Qualifying
was conducted at 61 sites.
In
1978, the USGA conducted the Junior Amateur over the South Course
of the Wilmington (Del.) Country Club, while the Girls' Junior was
being staged on the North Course. This was the first time the USGA
conducted two national championships simultaneously at the same
golf club.
The
Junior Amateur is among the most difficult of all USGA championships
to win, because of two factors: the age limit and the tremendous
number of fine young players who enter each year. Only one player,
Tiger Woods, of Cypress, Calif., has won the Junior Amateur more
than once, winning in 1991, 1992, and 1993. In fact, only five players
have reached the final twice.
Woods,
who was 15 years, six months, and 28 days old when he won in 1991,
remains the youngest champion.
The
Junior Amateur has another, more dubious, distinction. It is the
only USGA championship for which Jack Nicklaus has been eligible
that he did not win at least once. Nicklaus qualified for the Championship
five times. His best finish came in 1956 when he was a semifinalist.
The
Junior Amateur remains today an educational opportunity as well
as a competitive outlet. Pre-championship players' dinners have
attracted guest speakers such as Francis Ouimet, Arnold Palmer,
and Johnny Miller, all willing to share their knowledge and experience
with young players.
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