Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Fifty-seven just a number for Cahill

- ALEC LEWIS

OCONOMOWOC — Kevin Cahill arrives at the par-5, eighth hole and play is backed up. He’s tired and wants to sit. More specifical­ly, he wants to sit in the shade, a space occupied by a golf cart.

Luckily, the cart has an open seat.

As he walks over and takes that seat, the two golfers in the group playing behind him walk up to the tee. Cahill views them, wipes his brow and pops the question: “What are your ages?”

Ben Skogen, one of Cahill’s playing partner, is 22. Matt Tolan is 18. Tyler Church is 20. Add their ages up and they equal 60.

“The golf ball doesn’t know how old I am,” Cahill, 57, says

from a chair outside the Oconomowoc Golf Club clubhouse-post round.

With three rounds complete at the 116th Wisconsin State Amateur Championsh­ip, Cahill, who wasn’t sure he’d be able to walk an 18-hole round when he arrived at the first tee on Monday, is six shots back of Tolan.

Thanks to a 5-underpar 65 on Wednesday, Tolan is 6-under for the tournament. Eddie Wajda (206) and Jacob Michel (207) are 4-under and a 3under, respective­ly.

Cahill, who has bested all but 10 of the 156 competitor­s, has played well said caddie Hannah Schultz. Before Monday, she’d never caddied for him.

Before a Thursday four weeks ago, the day in which he suffered an subarachno­id hemorrhage (bleeding between the brain and certain tissues), Cahill never knew he’d need a caddie.

Walking to his Jeep that day from the the clubhouse at his home course of Merrill Hills, Cahill felt something in his head. “It hurt, like ughhhh,” Cahill said Wednesday while grabbing the sides of his face and pushing them together.

Cahill said he wasn’t scared because he’s “too stupid.”

“I’m not the smartest guy in the world,” Cahill said. “I should’ve gone to the emergency room then.”

But he didn’t. He drove home with his fiancée.

The following morning, a trip to Waukesha Memorial Hospital and ensuing CAT scan resulted in nurses hooking him up with multiple IV’s. They told him he was being admitted. Hours later, he was transferre­d to the intensive care unit.

“I was like, ah, shoot, I’m going to get my brain operated on,” Cahill said. “There goes my golf season.”

Cahill walked out of the intensive care unit a day later. Nurses said he was the first person they’d ever seen do that.

Two weeks later, he returned to his doctor’s office for another CAT scan. Everything was clear. Doctors said the hemorrhage was an anomaly, according to Cahill, and he’d be fine much of the rest of his life.

That meant a return to golf, the sport he’s played since his days as a youth at Kettle Moraine Golf Club.

Last year, Cahill advanced to the semifinals of the U.S. Senior Amateur at Old Warson Country Club in St. Louis. Up one with one to play, he ended up losing.

Cahill still thinks about the loss when he tees it up, and his club championsh­ip played two weeks ago — five days before his doctors told him he should. Admittedly, he struggled in the tournament, but the completed rounds gave him enough confidence play in this week’s event.

On Day 1, Cahill shot a 2-under 68. On day two, he shot a 2-over 72. By the eighth hole of Wednesday’s round, he was 2over, but then came the back nine and a birdie barrage.

Cahill hit the green from the rough on the par-4, 13th hole, but it rolled back off. He then chipped up, and smiled as he made a 15-foot par save. He’d found something with the putter on that green, which he put to use on the 14th, 15th and 16th. Then came the 17th and another birdie try.

He brought the putter back and sent the ball toward the cup, which sat nearly 50 feet away. And as it fell into the earth, Cahill looked up and smiled once more. It marked his third birdie in five holes.

Steps away, behind the 18th tee, was a bench. Like the eighth hole, Cahill was tired, so he sat.

Laughing as he stood, he how understood. His round was not complete.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States