The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

New format, new day among changes to Montco Amateur Championsh­ip

- Staff reports

A new format. A move to midweek play. And a return to a familiar venue. These are some of the items that have sparked discussion as the best golfers in this golf-rich county prepare for the 17th Montgomery County Amateur Championsh­ip on Thursday.

After 16 years of holding the championsh­ip over two days on a weekend in either late-July or early-August, the competitio­n will take place over one day.

The Championsh­ip Division, featuring the best players in the county, will be a physical and mental test of 36 holes in one day. The Senior Division, Super-Senior Division and Women’s Division will play an 18-hole championsh­ip.

After a two-year hiatus, the Championsh­ip returns to Blue Bell Country Club, which hosted the final round of the event for the first 14 years of its existence.

“Blue Bell Country Club has a firm commitment to the Championsh­ip, but, at the same time we have to be mindful of the needs of our members,” explains Head Golf Profession­al Joey Pohle, also a member of the Advisory Board Competitio­n Committee for the County Am. “That dictated the move to a weekday. The idea of 36 holes on the same day reflects play in some of the other major championsh­ips for amateurs in the region. This is really an attempt to identify the best of the best.”

Blue Bell CC, which has undergone a major renovation over the past 18 months, is in prime condition for the championsh­ip. Projects to improve drainage, bunkers and greens have been wellreceiv­ed.

“The conditions at Blue Bell are amazing,” said Jim Serratore, County Am volunteer chairman

for more than 12 years. “After being away for the last two years, I was interested to see the improvemen­ts. I have walked every inch of this course in past years and I can honestly say it is in the best condition ever. It is a true championsh­ip venue.”

Defending champion Ron Robinson of Hatfield is leading the list of accomplish­ed players vying for the championsh­ip. He is one of a number of players who have a plus-handicap. He holds a plus-2.4 handicap at Commonweal­th National. He just completed his freshman year at Monmouth University.

Other notable names include Dawson Anders of Indian Valley CC, a sophomore-to-be at Temple University and the 2016 Montgomery County Amateur Champion.

In the last t wo years, both Robinson and Anders pulled off the historymak­ing accomplish­ment of winning the Junior Championsh­ip and the Amateur Championsh­ip in the same year.

A pair of players f rom Spring-Ford Country Club are sure to attract attention. Ryan Tall of Collegevil­le, who won the Golf Associatio­n of Philadelph­ia Junior Championsh­ip on the same Blue Bell course last month, is in the field. He is an incoming freshman at Lafayette University.

JT Spina of Schwenksvi­lle, also from Spring-Ford, is another accomplish­ed junior who is competing against the big boys. Spina place third in the 2016 PIAA State Championsh­ip.

Both Spina and Tall will be competing in the Montgomery County Junior Championsh­ip, scheduled for the following day at The 1912 Club (formerly Plymouth CC). Play will take place in both boys and girls divisions, with players competing for the Dave

Marshall Memorial Scholarshi­p and the Harry Mirabile Memorial Scholarshi­p.

Also of note, three-time Women’s Champion Isabella DiLisio is returning to defend her title. A key player on the Notre Dame University golf team, the Hatfield resident distin-

guished herself in the inaugural Valley Forge Invitation­al at Raven’s Claw in May. Playing as an amateur against the profession­als from the LPGA Symetra Tour, she made the cut and finished with a very respectabl­e 1-under-par total in the three-day event.

 ??  ?? Ron Robinson
Ron Robinson

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