Eastern Michigan Athletics

Final-Round 66 Delivers First eGolf Tour Title for Marty Jeppesen
6/21/2013 5:50:00 PM | Men's Golf
Release Courtesy of the eGolf Professional Tour
Morganton, NC – Former EMU golfer Marty Jeppesen entered Friday's final round of the inaugural Mimosa Hills Open tied for the lead, and looking to add a first career eGolf Tour title to his resume. The affable Midwesterner delivered in flawless fashion, carding a bogey-free 66 in Friday's final round to post 14-under par for the week, good for the third 2013 win in his own household, as well as the event's $15,000 first-place prize.
The Mimosa Hills Open was the 13th of 24 scheduled events on the 2013 eGolf Tour schedule, and was contested this week at Mimosa Hills Country Club in Morganton, NC.
Jeppesen opened his week with rounds of 64-66—130 to earn a share of the 36-hole lead at 10-under par, tied with tour rookie Tyler McCumber of Ponte Vedra Beach, FL.
Paired with one another in the day's final threesome, it looked to be a potential two-horse race early on, as McCumber – who finished a standout career at the University of Florida just three weeks ago – birdied the short par-4 second to vault to 11-under and one clear of Jeppesen early in the round.
“I pared the first two holes easily, then made a 15-footer for par on the third, birdied No. 4, and made another 15-footer for par on No. 5,” said Jeppesen, 25. “That's when I kind of knew it might be my day.”
Jeppesen's clutch putting early in the round coincided with back-to-back bogeys by McCumber on Nos. 5 and 6, moving the former Gator back down to 9-under par for the week.
Sensing an opportunity to strike, Jeppesen did just that, hitting his tee shot on the par-3 sixth to 10 feet for a second birdie, then posting a birdie on the par-5 seventh to jump to 13-under par overall. Suddenly, the long-hitting Michigan native was in possession of a three-shot cushion with 12 holes to play.
What he didn't know, however, was that recent U.S. Open participant Harold Varner III of Gastonia, NC was making a final-round charge, recording birdies on Nos. 6, 8, 10 and 11 to move to 5-under for the day and 12-under total.
Pars on Nos. 8 and 9 brought Jeppesen to the dogleg-left par-4 10th, where he finally took a look at the leaderboard.
“Once I saw the leaderboard on 10, I knew I had to keep trying, had to keep making birdies,” he said. “I saw what Harold and Ryan (Armour) were doing, and I immediately missed about a 3-foot birdie putt. That was all nerves, I guess.”
Playing two groups ahead, Varner joined Jeppesen atop the leaderboard with a two-putt birdie on the par-5 14th, reaching 13-under for the tournament.
On the very next hole, Varner – one of the more popular players on the eGolf Tour – posted his first and only bogey of the day, dropping back down to 12-under par.
Varner's hiccup provided the cushion Jeppesen needed coming down the stretch. An indifferent chip on 14 left him 6 feet for birdie on a reachable par-5, but he converted it to move up to 14-under overall.
At the scenic par-3 17th, Varner threw his name back in the proverbial championship hat, recording his seventh birdie of the round to jump back to 13-under par – at the time just one shot back of Jeppesen's lead.
The classic Donald Ross layout at Mimosa Hills is the veritable definition of throwback, with a number of holes running parallel to each other on a smallish piece of property – similar to Merion Golf Club, site of last week's national open.
From the green of the par-4 16th, Jeppesen could look 80 yards to his left and see the idyllic 18th green and simplistic clubhouse at Mimosa Hills, with Varner on the former, staring down 6 feet for birdie to move back into a tie at 14-under par.
Looking to capitalize on a week of good publicity at the U.S. Open, Varner badly wanted his first professional win, but watched in shock as the downhill putt caught the right lip of the cup and spun out.
“When I was on 16 green, I looked down the hill and saw Harold's birdie putt on 18,” said Jeppesen. “I knew after he missed that he was in at 13-under, and that three more pars would get it done.”
Varner's final-round 64 delivered a 13-under 197 total, but was too little, too late.
Solid pars by Jeppesen on 16 and 17 brought him to the tee of the downhill, dogleg-right closing hole, where the former Eastern Michigan University star hit “one of the best drives of my life” – roughly 325 yards off the tee, and center cut.
A gap wedge from 108 yards found the center of the green, approximately 20 feet from the back-right hole location. From there, Jeppesen rolled his birdie try up to a comfortable 2 inches from the hole, and quickly tapped in the winning par to wrap up a final-round 66 and a 14-under 196 total.
“I wasn't going to mark, I was ready to knock that par putt in,” Jeppesen joked after the round.
The $15,000 payday pushed Jeppesen's 2013 tally to $29,052, good for 10th on the tour's money list. More importantly, the win affirmed Jeppesen's belief in himself and his game.
“I needed to let it come to me. I had been forcing it a lot, and this week I finally just let it happen,” he said. “The money is great, but I needed to know I could do it. My fiancé said I needed to win today for myself only, and I did.”
Jeppesen's win, a popular one given the number of players congratulating him afterwards, brought a third 2013 victory to the house he shares with fellow eGolf Tour players Cam Burke and T.J. Howe.
In April, Burke picked up his first tour win at the Founders Club Classic, while Howe picked up win No. 1 two weeks later at the Forest Oaks Classic. Jeppesen, who at the time had three top-15 finishes on the year, was the odd man out, regardless of the fact he had been playing just as well as the guys down the hall.
“It's an unbelievable feeling to finally join my roommates. You never want to be that lone guy who doesn't win,” he said. “It really turns my year around.”
Following his second-round 66, Jeppesen best summed up his friendships with Burke and Howe, alluding to the fact that they constantly push each other to improve.
“It's pretty cool living with a couple of guys who are good golfers. We all know how each other are playing, and we can tell each other what to change sometimes,” he said. “It's competitive every time we play, but it's also nice to have guys to compete against in the house who are also such great friends.”
Set to tie the knot on August 30th of this year, Jeppesen quickly answered when asked if the tour's version of the Three Musketeers was going to evaporate, post wedding.
“Nope, we're all staying together,” he proclaimed. “We're one big happy family in that house.”
Varner, noticeably disappointed in himself after the round, earned solo-second-place honors with his 13-under total, picking up $9,000 for the week. The finish moved him up to No. 8 on the tour's money list with just over $30,000 in season-long earnings.
The finish marked the second runner-up of Varner's 2013 campaign on the eGolf Tour – his second year as a professional after finishing a standout career at East Carolina University in May of 2012.
At the Founders Club Classic, where Burke picked up the first house win, Varner bogeyed the final hole in brutal weather conditions to lose by one shot, as Burke got up-and-down for bogey on the last to pull out the victory.
Varner, however, sits poised to win sooner rather than later, after entering the professional ranks as one of the state's top amateurs last year. Varner, whose introduction to the game came in the inaugural years of The First Tee program, won the 2011 North Carolina Amateur, becoming the first African-American in the tournament's 52-year history to win the title. He also won the 2011 North Carolina Amateur Match Play title, becoming the first player in history to claim both amateur titles in the same summer.
Tanner Ervin of Mt. Pleasant, SC finished in solo-third place at 11-under par with rounds of 66-66-67—199. He earned $6,640 for his efforts.
The former Clemson Tiger golfer has had a breakthrough season this year, earning his first career eGolf Tour win at last month's Columbia Open. All told, Ervin now has three top-10 finishes on the year and a workmanlike five top-20 finishes in his last six starts. The 29-year-old has now posted nine of his last 16 rounds on the eGolf Tour at 67 or better, dating back to a final-round 65 at the Irish Creek Classic in March.
McCumber, Chris Parra of Dallas, TX and former PGA TOUR member Ryan Armour of Jupiter, FL finished tied for fourth at 10-under 200, with each player earning $4,000 on the week.
McCumber, the son of 10-time PGA TOUR winner Mark McCumber, birdied 14 and 15 to re-enter the final-round equation at 12-under par, but double-bogeyed the 16th to drop to even on the day, where he eventually finished for a closing 70.
After opening his week with a 5-under 65 on Wednesday, McCumber kept his foot on the proverbial gas, backing it up with yet another 65 in the second round to reach 10-under 130.
The two-year team captain at Florida was a two-time “All America” selection, finishing T2 at the 2012 NCAA Championship, held a historic Riviera Country Club. His 73.27 lifetime scoring average in Gainesville placed him 14th all-time in the program's storied history.
Special thanks goes to Mimosa Hills director of golf Dan Dobson, head golf professional Jimmy Pierce, and their staff for coordinating this event and hosting the tour and our players for the week. Thank you to Mimosa Hills golf course superintendent Dan Winters and his crew for their work in presenting a fantastic golf course for the week. Last but not least, thank you to the members of Mimosa Hills for allowing the tour access to the club's facilities for the week.
The tour will take two weeks off before returning to action on July 10-13, 2013 for the ninth annual Southern Open, to be contested at The Club at Irish Creek in Kannapolis, NC.
Mimosa Hills Open - Mimosa Hills Country Club
Par 70; 6,748 yards
Final Round Results
1. Martin Jeppesen, Saline, MI, $15,000.00, *64-66-66-196 -14
2. Harold Varner III, Gastonia, NC, $9,000.00, *67-66-64-197 -13
3. Tanner Ervin, Mt. Pleasant, SC, $6,640.00, *66-66-67-199 -11
4. Chris Parra, Dallas, TX, $4,000.00, *65-68-67-200 -10
4. Ryan Armour, Jupiter, FL, $4,000.00, *67-65-68-200 -10
4. Tyler McCumber, Ponte Vedra Beach, FL, $4,000.00, *65-65-70-200 -10
7. Tarik Can, Manhasset, NY, $2,625.00, *68-68-65-201 -9
7. Taylor Floyd, Forsyth, GA, $2,625.00, *68-65-68-201 -9
9. Kevin McLister, Leesburg, VA, $2,050.00, *66-69-67-202 -8
9. James White, Acworth, GA, $2,050.00, *68-68-66-202 -8
9. Matthew Harmon, Grand Rapids, MI, $2,050.00, *69-66-67-202 -8
12. Ricky McDonald, Shoreline, WA, $1,630.00, *69-66-68-203 -7
12. Henry Zaytoun, Raleigh, NC, $1,630.00, *67-69-67-203 -7
12. Jack Fields, Southern Pines, NC, $1,630.00, *68-66-69-203 -7
12. Damian Telles, The Dalles, OR, $1,630.00, *70-67-66-203 -7
12. Brad Hopfinger, Lake Forest, IL, $1,630.00, *65-66-72-203 -7
17. Chip Lynn, Lillington, NC, $1,375.00, *68-68-68-204 -6
17. Reed Darsie, Chapel Hill, NC, $1,375.00, *66-67-71-204 -6
17. Marshall Pickett, Charlotte, NC, $1,375.00, *66-68-70-204 -6
17. Jonathan Fricke, Covington, GA, $1,375.00, *70-67-67-204 -6
21. Barrett Kelpin, Kalamazoo, MI, $1,175.00, *69-66-70-205 -5
21. Mikel Martinson, Lubbock, TX, $1,175.00, *66-68-71-205 -5
21. Paul Woodbury, Lake City, SC, $1,175.00, *65-70-70-205 -5
21. Jonas Enander Hedin, Charlotte, NC, $1,175.00, *67-70-68-205 -5
21. Kevin O'Connell, Cary, NC, $1,175.00, *64-69-72-205 -5
21. Lanto Griffin, Blacksburg, VA, $1,175.00, *67-70-68-205 -5
27. Bruce Woodall, Yanceyville, NC, $1,080.00, *68-67-71-206 -4
27. Jake Scott, Strongsville, OH, $1,080.00, *70-67-69-206 -4
27. Chris Gallagher, Charlotte, NC, $1,080.00, *72-66-68-206 -4
30. James Sacheck, Fort Worth, TX, $1,000.00, *64-71-72-207 -3
30. Matt Short, Hudson, NC, $1,000.00, *69-67-71-207 -3
30. George Bryan IV, Chapin, SC, $1,000.00, *65-68-74-207 -3
30. Garland Green, Tazewell, VA, $1,000.00, *67-70-70-207 -3
30. Matt Eschenburg, The Woodlands, TX, $1,000.00, *70-68-69-207 -3
35. Adam Webb, Ridgeway, VA, $940.00, *68-70-70-208 -2
35. Eric Shriver, Durham, NC, $940.00, *69-69-70-208 -2
35. Crawford Reeves, Greer, SC, $940.00, *65-73-70-208 -2
38. Donnie Baucom, Orangevale, CA, $910.00, *68-68-73-209 -1
38. Daniel Stanley, Spartanburg, SC, $910.00, *72-65-72-209 -1
38. Michael Shrader, Midlothian, VA, $910.00, *67-70-72-209 -1
41. Jurrian Van der Vaart, Netherlands, $890.00, *67-70-73-210 E
42. Chris McCartin, Raleigh, NC, $870.00, *67-68-76-211 +1
42. Daniel Zimmerman, Middleton, WI, $870.00, *63-73-75-211 +1
42. Ethan Tracy, Charlotte, NC, $870.00, *69-69-73-211 +1
45. Sam Beach, Glen Allen, VA, $850.00, *69-69-74-212 +2
Morganton, NC – Former EMU golfer Marty Jeppesen entered Friday's final round of the inaugural Mimosa Hills Open tied for the lead, and looking to add a first career eGolf Tour title to his resume. The affable Midwesterner delivered in flawless fashion, carding a bogey-free 66 in Friday's final round to post 14-under par for the week, good for the third 2013 win in his own household, as well as the event's $15,000 first-place prize.
The Mimosa Hills Open was the 13th of 24 scheduled events on the 2013 eGolf Tour schedule, and was contested this week at Mimosa Hills Country Club in Morganton, NC.
Jeppesen opened his week with rounds of 64-66—130 to earn a share of the 36-hole lead at 10-under par, tied with tour rookie Tyler McCumber of Ponte Vedra Beach, FL.
Paired with one another in the day's final threesome, it looked to be a potential two-horse race early on, as McCumber – who finished a standout career at the University of Florida just three weeks ago – birdied the short par-4 second to vault to 11-under and one clear of Jeppesen early in the round.
“I pared the first two holes easily, then made a 15-footer for par on the third, birdied No. 4, and made another 15-footer for par on No. 5,” said Jeppesen, 25. “That's when I kind of knew it might be my day.”
Jeppesen's clutch putting early in the round coincided with back-to-back bogeys by McCumber on Nos. 5 and 6, moving the former Gator back down to 9-under par for the week.
Sensing an opportunity to strike, Jeppesen did just that, hitting his tee shot on the par-3 sixth to 10 feet for a second birdie, then posting a birdie on the par-5 seventh to jump to 13-under par overall. Suddenly, the long-hitting Michigan native was in possession of a three-shot cushion with 12 holes to play.
What he didn't know, however, was that recent U.S. Open participant Harold Varner III of Gastonia, NC was making a final-round charge, recording birdies on Nos. 6, 8, 10 and 11 to move to 5-under for the day and 12-under total.
Pars on Nos. 8 and 9 brought Jeppesen to the dogleg-left par-4 10th, where he finally took a look at the leaderboard.
“Once I saw the leaderboard on 10, I knew I had to keep trying, had to keep making birdies,” he said. “I saw what Harold and Ryan (Armour) were doing, and I immediately missed about a 3-foot birdie putt. That was all nerves, I guess.”
Playing two groups ahead, Varner joined Jeppesen atop the leaderboard with a two-putt birdie on the par-5 14th, reaching 13-under for the tournament.
On the very next hole, Varner – one of the more popular players on the eGolf Tour – posted his first and only bogey of the day, dropping back down to 12-under par.
Varner's hiccup provided the cushion Jeppesen needed coming down the stretch. An indifferent chip on 14 left him 6 feet for birdie on a reachable par-5, but he converted it to move up to 14-under overall.
At the scenic par-3 17th, Varner threw his name back in the proverbial championship hat, recording his seventh birdie of the round to jump back to 13-under par – at the time just one shot back of Jeppesen's lead.
The classic Donald Ross layout at Mimosa Hills is the veritable definition of throwback, with a number of holes running parallel to each other on a smallish piece of property – similar to Merion Golf Club, site of last week's national open.
From the green of the par-4 16th, Jeppesen could look 80 yards to his left and see the idyllic 18th green and simplistic clubhouse at Mimosa Hills, with Varner on the former, staring down 6 feet for birdie to move back into a tie at 14-under par.
Looking to capitalize on a week of good publicity at the U.S. Open, Varner badly wanted his first professional win, but watched in shock as the downhill putt caught the right lip of the cup and spun out.
“When I was on 16 green, I looked down the hill and saw Harold's birdie putt on 18,” said Jeppesen. “I knew after he missed that he was in at 13-under, and that three more pars would get it done.”
Varner's final-round 64 delivered a 13-under 197 total, but was too little, too late.
Solid pars by Jeppesen on 16 and 17 brought him to the tee of the downhill, dogleg-right closing hole, where the former Eastern Michigan University star hit “one of the best drives of my life” – roughly 325 yards off the tee, and center cut.
A gap wedge from 108 yards found the center of the green, approximately 20 feet from the back-right hole location. From there, Jeppesen rolled his birdie try up to a comfortable 2 inches from the hole, and quickly tapped in the winning par to wrap up a final-round 66 and a 14-under 196 total.
“I wasn't going to mark, I was ready to knock that par putt in,” Jeppesen joked after the round.
The $15,000 payday pushed Jeppesen's 2013 tally to $29,052, good for 10th on the tour's money list. More importantly, the win affirmed Jeppesen's belief in himself and his game.
“I needed to let it come to me. I had been forcing it a lot, and this week I finally just let it happen,” he said. “The money is great, but I needed to know I could do it. My fiancé said I needed to win today for myself only, and I did.”
Jeppesen's win, a popular one given the number of players congratulating him afterwards, brought a third 2013 victory to the house he shares with fellow eGolf Tour players Cam Burke and T.J. Howe.
In April, Burke picked up his first tour win at the Founders Club Classic, while Howe picked up win No. 1 two weeks later at the Forest Oaks Classic. Jeppesen, who at the time had three top-15 finishes on the year, was the odd man out, regardless of the fact he had been playing just as well as the guys down the hall.
“It's an unbelievable feeling to finally join my roommates. You never want to be that lone guy who doesn't win,” he said. “It really turns my year around.”
Following his second-round 66, Jeppesen best summed up his friendships with Burke and Howe, alluding to the fact that they constantly push each other to improve.
“It's pretty cool living with a couple of guys who are good golfers. We all know how each other are playing, and we can tell each other what to change sometimes,” he said. “It's competitive every time we play, but it's also nice to have guys to compete against in the house who are also such great friends.”
Set to tie the knot on August 30th of this year, Jeppesen quickly answered when asked if the tour's version of the Three Musketeers was going to evaporate, post wedding.
“Nope, we're all staying together,” he proclaimed. “We're one big happy family in that house.”
Varner, noticeably disappointed in himself after the round, earned solo-second-place honors with his 13-under total, picking up $9,000 for the week. The finish moved him up to No. 8 on the tour's money list with just over $30,000 in season-long earnings.
The finish marked the second runner-up of Varner's 2013 campaign on the eGolf Tour – his second year as a professional after finishing a standout career at East Carolina University in May of 2012.
At the Founders Club Classic, where Burke picked up the first house win, Varner bogeyed the final hole in brutal weather conditions to lose by one shot, as Burke got up-and-down for bogey on the last to pull out the victory.
Varner, however, sits poised to win sooner rather than later, after entering the professional ranks as one of the state's top amateurs last year. Varner, whose introduction to the game came in the inaugural years of The First Tee program, won the 2011 North Carolina Amateur, becoming the first African-American in the tournament's 52-year history to win the title. He also won the 2011 North Carolina Amateur Match Play title, becoming the first player in history to claim both amateur titles in the same summer.
Tanner Ervin of Mt. Pleasant, SC finished in solo-third place at 11-under par with rounds of 66-66-67—199. He earned $6,640 for his efforts.
The former Clemson Tiger golfer has had a breakthrough season this year, earning his first career eGolf Tour win at last month's Columbia Open. All told, Ervin now has three top-10 finishes on the year and a workmanlike five top-20 finishes in his last six starts. The 29-year-old has now posted nine of his last 16 rounds on the eGolf Tour at 67 or better, dating back to a final-round 65 at the Irish Creek Classic in March.
McCumber, Chris Parra of Dallas, TX and former PGA TOUR member Ryan Armour of Jupiter, FL finished tied for fourth at 10-under 200, with each player earning $4,000 on the week.
McCumber, the son of 10-time PGA TOUR winner Mark McCumber, birdied 14 and 15 to re-enter the final-round equation at 12-under par, but double-bogeyed the 16th to drop to even on the day, where he eventually finished for a closing 70.
After opening his week with a 5-under 65 on Wednesday, McCumber kept his foot on the proverbial gas, backing it up with yet another 65 in the second round to reach 10-under 130.
The two-year team captain at Florida was a two-time “All America” selection, finishing T2 at the 2012 NCAA Championship, held a historic Riviera Country Club. His 73.27 lifetime scoring average in Gainesville placed him 14th all-time in the program's storied history.
Special thanks goes to Mimosa Hills director of golf Dan Dobson, head golf professional Jimmy Pierce, and their staff for coordinating this event and hosting the tour and our players for the week. Thank you to Mimosa Hills golf course superintendent Dan Winters and his crew for their work in presenting a fantastic golf course for the week. Last but not least, thank you to the members of Mimosa Hills for allowing the tour access to the club's facilities for the week.
The tour will take two weeks off before returning to action on July 10-13, 2013 for the ninth annual Southern Open, to be contested at The Club at Irish Creek in Kannapolis, NC.
Mimosa Hills Open - Mimosa Hills Country Club
Par 70; 6,748 yards
Final Round Results
1. Martin Jeppesen, Saline, MI, $15,000.00, *64-66-66-196 -14
2. Harold Varner III, Gastonia, NC, $9,000.00, *67-66-64-197 -13
3. Tanner Ervin, Mt. Pleasant, SC, $6,640.00, *66-66-67-199 -11
4. Chris Parra, Dallas, TX, $4,000.00, *65-68-67-200 -10
4. Ryan Armour, Jupiter, FL, $4,000.00, *67-65-68-200 -10
4. Tyler McCumber, Ponte Vedra Beach, FL, $4,000.00, *65-65-70-200 -10
7. Tarik Can, Manhasset, NY, $2,625.00, *68-68-65-201 -9
7. Taylor Floyd, Forsyth, GA, $2,625.00, *68-65-68-201 -9
9. Kevin McLister, Leesburg, VA, $2,050.00, *66-69-67-202 -8
9. James White, Acworth, GA, $2,050.00, *68-68-66-202 -8
9. Matthew Harmon, Grand Rapids, MI, $2,050.00, *69-66-67-202 -8
12. Ricky McDonald, Shoreline, WA, $1,630.00, *69-66-68-203 -7
12. Henry Zaytoun, Raleigh, NC, $1,630.00, *67-69-67-203 -7
12. Jack Fields, Southern Pines, NC, $1,630.00, *68-66-69-203 -7
12. Damian Telles, The Dalles, OR, $1,630.00, *70-67-66-203 -7
12. Brad Hopfinger, Lake Forest, IL, $1,630.00, *65-66-72-203 -7
17. Chip Lynn, Lillington, NC, $1,375.00, *68-68-68-204 -6
17. Reed Darsie, Chapel Hill, NC, $1,375.00, *66-67-71-204 -6
17. Marshall Pickett, Charlotte, NC, $1,375.00, *66-68-70-204 -6
17. Jonathan Fricke, Covington, GA, $1,375.00, *70-67-67-204 -6
21. Barrett Kelpin, Kalamazoo, MI, $1,175.00, *69-66-70-205 -5
21. Mikel Martinson, Lubbock, TX, $1,175.00, *66-68-71-205 -5
21. Paul Woodbury, Lake City, SC, $1,175.00, *65-70-70-205 -5
21. Jonas Enander Hedin, Charlotte, NC, $1,175.00, *67-70-68-205 -5
21. Kevin O'Connell, Cary, NC, $1,175.00, *64-69-72-205 -5
21. Lanto Griffin, Blacksburg, VA, $1,175.00, *67-70-68-205 -5
27. Bruce Woodall, Yanceyville, NC, $1,080.00, *68-67-71-206 -4
27. Jake Scott, Strongsville, OH, $1,080.00, *70-67-69-206 -4
27. Chris Gallagher, Charlotte, NC, $1,080.00, *72-66-68-206 -4
30. James Sacheck, Fort Worth, TX, $1,000.00, *64-71-72-207 -3
30. Matt Short, Hudson, NC, $1,000.00, *69-67-71-207 -3
30. George Bryan IV, Chapin, SC, $1,000.00, *65-68-74-207 -3
30. Garland Green, Tazewell, VA, $1,000.00, *67-70-70-207 -3
30. Matt Eschenburg, The Woodlands, TX, $1,000.00, *70-68-69-207 -3
35. Adam Webb, Ridgeway, VA, $940.00, *68-70-70-208 -2
35. Eric Shriver, Durham, NC, $940.00, *69-69-70-208 -2
35. Crawford Reeves, Greer, SC, $940.00, *65-73-70-208 -2
38. Donnie Baucom, Orangevale, CA, $910.00, *68-68-73-209 -1
38. Daniel Stanley, Spartanburg, SC, $910.00, *72-65-72-209 -1
38. Michael Shrader, Midlothian, VA, $910.00, *67-70-72-209 -1
41. Jurrian Van der Vaart, Netherlands, $890.00, *67-70-73-210 E
42. Chris McCartin, Raleigh, NC, $870.00, *67-68-76-211 +1
42. Daniel Zimmerman, Middleton, WI, $870.00, *63-73-75-211 +1
42. Ethan Tracy, Charlotte, NC, $870.00, *69-69-73-211 +1
45. Sam Beach, Glen Allen, VA, $850.00, *69-69-74-212 +2
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