JEFFERSON – Asheboro golfer Sam Davidson has made a habit of runner-up finishes.
Davidson tied for second place in the North Carolina Amateur, a four-round event that ended Sunday.
The winner was UNC Wilmington golfer Walker Isley of Oak Island. Isley shot a 3-under-par 281 at Jefferson Landing.
Davidson, a rising senior at Guilford College, and Winston-Salem’s Davis Womble, a former college golfer for Wake Forest, finished at 1-under.
Davidson was also the runner-up in the Asheboro City Amateur earlier this month.
In the N.C. Amateur, Davidson shot rounds of 68, 72, 74, and 69. The final-round score was the best of the day Sunday.
Isley’s 64 in the first round gave him a four-shot edge on Davidson.
Yet Davidson entered the final round tied for fifth place before rallying to improve his position. He passed Connelly Springs’ Samuel Mace, who was tied with Isley to begin Sunday’s round.
Jake Clodfelter of Trinity missed the cut after rounds of 82 and 73.
JD Bass watches a tee shot on the ninth hole during Sunday’s final round of the Asheboro City Amateur at Pinewood Country Club. (PJ Ward-Brown/Randolph Record)
ASHEBORO – JD Bass took the lead after the first day of the Asheboro City Amateur and led each day to clinch the championship Sunday at Pinewood Country Club.
In winning for the third year in a row, Bass was in control of each of the three courses used.
Bass shot rounds of 67 (Asheboro Municipal Golf Course), 63 (Asheboro Country Club) and 67 for a 16-under 197 total.
That was good for a six-stroke victory on Sam Davidson (69, 65, 69—203), who also was the 2022 runner-up. Third place went to Joshua Spell (68, 69. 67—204), who finished in the same spot last year.
The only other golfer with a sub-70 round was Stephen Spencer, who shot 68 on Friday at Asheboro Municipal Golf Course and ended up tied for fourth place with Rob Elliott at 216.
Bass recorded an eagle in each round. Those came on par-5 holes (No. 7 on Friday, No. 12 on Saturday) the first two days before pulling that off on the par-4 10th hole Sunday.
Flight winners were David Elliott (first flight, 230), Bruce Quigley (second flight, 242), Eric Cox (third flight, 267) and Michael Thompson (super senior, 221). Thompson was a repeat winner in the division.
Here’s Ellen Griffin with stock-car driving legend Richard Petty, who was at the Randleman farm to pick up a child after a golf lesson. (Courtesy photo)
Former instructor created foundation for teaching, playing careers
RANDLEMAN – From what was farmland in Randleman to much bigger stages, Ellen Griffin helped grow the game of golf.
While that was decades ago, her legacy lives on.
“It’s unbelievable people still remember her,” said Charlie Griffin, her nephew.
Last week, Griffin was inducted posthumously into the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame at Raleigh Convention Center.
She was a golf instructor and helped form many initiatives involving women’s golf.
So many of the stories associated with Griffin revolve around her teaching venue with a Randleman address.
It was far from what would be considered a conventional set-up.
“It was pretty fascinating,” said Dot Germain, who became a golfer on the LPGA Tour. “She was turning this old farm into a golf facility. You would hit balls into the side of the barn.”
Former college golf coach Mary Beth McGirr also said the setting was different. But there was an appeal, largely because of Griffin.
“I would teach there in the summers,” McGirr said. “I kept coming back to the farm.”
Germain recalled that along with the golf clubs there were peacocks, turkeys, ducks, guinea hens and cows.
“Animals would follow her around,” Germain said.
Ellen Griffin enjoys time at her farm and golf instructional center in 1977. (Courtesy photo)
Griffin typically donned painter pants, a flannel shirt and a bucket hat.
“She was not a self-promoter,” Germain said. “She was one-of-a-kind.”
Charlie Griffin, now 72 and living in Washington, D.C, spent time on the farm during his teenage years. He saw what was happening with golf among the farm animals.
“She raised me in those very important years of high school,” he said.
He recalled what Ellen Griffin did on about 8 acres of land near N.C. 62. There were three holes and a sand trap.
“That’s where she set up her shop,” Charlie Griffin said.
She created an indoor hitting area and putting green.
Yet her influence was extensive, particularly on women’s golf.
McGirr credits Griffin with boosting her career, which included time as an award-winning coach at UNC Greensboro and an Atlantic Coast Conference Coach of the Year at Wake Forest.
“She was really my teaching mentor,” McGirr said. “She was wonderful. She had a way of weaving life lessons into golf. She had a gift. She was particularly gifted with the kids. She wanted to have a positive influence in their lives and she did.”
Part of what impressed McGirr was how Griffin was so steadfast in her teaching methods. And it didn’t matter if the student was from Randleman or a country club in Greensboro.
Much of Griffin’s background stemmed from her role as a physical education instructor at the Woman’s College of UNC (that became UNCG), where she spent nearly three decades. She had a fondness for golf.
“She was so forward-looking,” Germain said. “It was golf that she wanted to teach. I would say she was an expert on the basics.”
Germain first heard Griffin speak during a tournament at Duke. She later met with the instructor in Greensboro.
“She really liked to teach,” Germain said. “She taught the basics and I could watch her teach. She was fun and she was an expert. She was a teacher’s teacher.”
This golf lesson by Ellen Griffin, left, had a duck sitting nearby. (Courtesy photo)
Griffin’s influence came at a time when there was room for women’s golf to grow.
“That’s back when women didn’t have any status in the profession at all,” Charlie Griffin said.
She helped found the Women’s Professional Golf Association, the forerunner of the LPGA. Among many honors, she was named the 1962 LPGA Teacher of the Year.
Her instructional manuals were geared toward golf teachers. She spent time as educational director of the National Golf Association.
Page Marsh, the current women’s golf coach at North Carolina State, was one of Griffin’s former students. She pushed to have Griffin enshrined in the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame.
Griffin died in 1986 at age 67. She’s buried in Snow Camp on the grounds of Cane Creek Friends Meeting.
After Griffin’s passing, McGirr oversaw what became known as “The Farm” for several years to keep it as an instructional place for golf.
Griffin has been recognized for many achievements. She entered the Guilford County Sports Hall of Fame in 2014. This latest induction seemed like another level.
“It came out of nowhere for me,” Charlie Griffin said. “For it to happen again now in 2023, it’s pretty amazing.”
WILSON – An Asheboro golfer was among the contenders in the North Carolina Super Senior Four-Ball Championships last month.
Charlie Parks of Asheboro and playing partner Doug Owens of Albemarle placed third in the 65-and-older division at Wilson Country Club.
Parks and Owens had rounds 71 and 67 for a two-round total of 6-under-par 138.
That left them a shot behind the tandems of Surf City’s Gary Howze / Claremont’s Randall Sullins and Morrisville’s Preston Edmondson / Pinehurst’s Steve Fox among the 28 teams in the division.
Edmondson and Fox claimed the championship on the second playoff hole.
Caraway set to resume racing this weekend
SOPHIA – After a weekend off for the Easter holiday, racing resumes at Caraway Speedway with Saturday night’s card.
It’s Chatham County Night and Moore County Night at the speedway. Residents of those counties will be admitted for $8.
Racing is slated for the speedway’s regular division in addition to Southern Ground Pounders Vintage racing club.
ASHEBORO – Neel Ladde of Charlotte won the Junior Amateur golf tournament during the weekend at Asheboro Municipal Golf Course.
Ladde posted a total of 107 for 27 holes in the tournament that was reduced because of weather interfering. He had rounds of 36 and 71.
Second place went to Lexington’s Steele Fischer (38-78) with 116 and third place went to Eastern Randolph rising senior Connor Carter (41-76) with 117.
The 13-18-year-old age group had seven entrants, marking it the largest group in the tournament. Some golfers completed 12 holes before storms suspended play Saturday, so only the first nine holes were counted.
In the 9-11 tournament, Trace Fischer of Lexington won with 90 (52-38) as two nine-hole rounds were contested. Tucker McNeil of Seagrove was second with 107 (57-50).
The 6-8 class played four holes Saturday and five holes Sunday, with Anna Kathryn Skeen the winner (24-27) with 51 and Anika Ladde (26-29) next with 55.
U.S. SENIOR AMATEUR QUALIFYING: Steven Kidd of Liberty shot 81 in U.S. Senior Amateur qualifying last week at High Point Country Club’s Willow Creek course.
A 70 or better was needed to advance. The three advancing to the U.S. Senior Amateur from Aug. 27-Sept. 1 in Marion, Mass., are Ryan Fox of West End and Daniel Neveu of Pinehurst, both shooting 3-under 69s, and Hunter Rutter of Winston-Salem at 70.
Caraway Speedway card nixed by downpours
At Sophia, the “Crashin’ Hackett’s Night of Destruction” was called off Saturday night because of heavy rains, with the event rescheduled to be part of the Aug. 20 activities at the speedway.
Qualifying had started for Challengers when rain created issues. The racing card also was supposed to include Mini Stocks, UCARs, bus races and a demolition derby.
Rain checks from Saturday will be honored Aug. 20, which had been a scheduled off night at the track.