Dayton Daily News

Centervill­e grad wins prestigiou­s Western Amateur golf tournament

Marissa Wenzler calls it the biggest victory of her career.

- By David Jablonski Staff Writer

Golfers often celebrate victories by jumping in the closest water hazard. Marissa Wenzler’s family threw her in the family pool in Centervill­e.

After a long drive from Park Ridge Country Club in the northweste­rn suburbs of Chicago, Wenzler arrived at her family’s home with the Women’s Western Amateur trophy Saturday. Her family couldn’t attend the tournament because it was hosting a family reunion the same day. They told her to keep the trophy in the car when she got home because they had a surprise for her.

The surprise was an unexpected dip in the pool, which added another memorable moment to the greatest golfing week of

Wenzler’s life. She won a Division I state championsh­ip as a senior at Centervill­e in 2018 and competed at the NCAA championsh­ip meet with the Kentucky Wildcats this spring but had never won a tournament as prestigiou­s as the Western Amateur, which has been held every year since 1901.

Wenzler clinched the victory on the second hole of a sudden-death playoff, making a 4-foot putt for par and then watching as Oklahoma State sophomore Maddison Hinson-Tolchard missed a putt that would have sent the match to a

third playoff hole.

“It’s so weird to look back at it now,” Wenzler said Tuesday, “and think about everything that I was feeling and think- ing and my heart rate and nerves everything. she missed her putt, I was in shock. I was preparing to go to hole three. She’s a really

putter. Then she it and I was like, ‘Wait, what just happened?’ I just was so emotional. So many good tears. It was great.”

Wenzler played well all week. She had the lowest score in stroke play, shooting 8-under (67-69—136).

Then Wenzler had to win four matches to advance to the championsh­ip. She defeated Western Kentucky University junior Sarah Arnold 5&4, University of Tennessee senior Mikayla 3&2, Purdue University junior Kan Bunabodee 1 up University of Virginia sophomore Jennifer Cleary 2&1.

Wenzler credited her per- formance to the work she done on the mental the game.

“I started to realize, especially this past summer,” Wenzler said, “you get to a certain level and obviously you’re going to find ways to get bet- ter in physical aspects of the game and tweak a few things, but it gets to a point where the mental aspect has to be identical to the physical. It’s very hard to practice the mental side of golf because it’s such a gray area. I don’t love gray areas, so it was hard for me to take that step, but I definitely have become more

in talking about how I’m feeling.”

Wenzler said she did a bet- ter handling her nerves at the tournament, and not worrying about her own expectatio­ns helped her focus on why she was there.

“I’m here because I love golf,” Wenzler said, “and I’m here to compete because that’s what I love to do. If it ends up bad, that’s just how it You’ll go to the next week

you’ll play and you’ll learn from it. So that was a really big thing: to kind of play free and to a good plan when

get nervous, because obviously you are going to get nervous in You can’t just turn it off.”

Wenzler’s boyfriend, Conor Stolly, an Alter grad, for her throughout the tournament. Often her brother, Ryan Wenzler, a former Wright State golfer who made his PGA Tour debut in 2018 is now preparing for the Korn Ferry Tour Q-School, often caddies for her was at the family reunion.

“Nobody from my family could come,” Wenzler said, “and I was like, ‘Ryan, wouldn’t it be funny if I won with Conor on the bag? That’d

You’d be fired.’ It was obviously a joke. And then it we were like, ‘Oh my gosh, this is crazy.’ (Stolly) doesn’t golf, but he was very at reading putts, and I think he helped a lot with calming me down. He was really positive the whole week for someone who’s not used to walking 36 holes in a day.”

Wenzler was the No. 37 prospect in the class of 2019, according to the American Junior Golf Associatio­n, when she started her career at Kentucky. She posted a 73.18 stroke average in events as a freshman. That was the second-best mark on team and the best single-season mark in school

When the pandemic shortened Wenzler’s freshman season in the spring of 2020, she returned to her home course at NCR Country Club in Kettering and then returned to tournament golf months later.

Wenzler won the Metropolit­an Amateur Championsh­ip at Wetheringt­on Golf & Country Club in West Chester last summer and also won the Heritage Classic in Shepherdsv­ille, Kentucky.

As a sophomore at Kentucky, Wenzler saw her stroke average rise to 75.7 in 10 events, but she played her best at the of the season, tying for 59th at the NCAA Championsh­ip. She hopes that performanc­e and the victory at the Western Amateur leads to success when she returns to the U.S. Women’s Amateur Championsh­ip at Westcheste­r Country Club in Rye, New York, from Aug. 2-8.

Wenzler knows she’ll have the support of her family even

there’s not surprise next time.

“It was just cool to have that support immediatel­y right I got she

“My immediate family has always been for me and is my biggest support in the whole world. To have all of them there, it meant so much to me.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHARLES CHERNEY PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Marissa Wenzler holds the trophy after winning the Women’s Western Am on Saturday at Park Ridge Country Club in Park Ridge, Ill.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY CHARLES CHERNEY PHOTOGRAPH­Y Marissa Wenzler holds the trophy after winning the Women’s Western Am on Saturday at Park Ridge Country Club in Park Ridge, Ill.

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