Dayton Daily News

NCR COUNTRY CLUB SLATED TO HOST 2022 U.S. SENIOR WOMEN’S OPEN

- By David Jablonski Staff Writer Contact this reporter at 937-244-7400 or email david.jablonski@coxinc.com.

NCR Country Club would have hosted the U.S. Senior Women’s Open this year if not for the pandemic. The tournament moved to Brooklawn Country Club in Fairfield, Connecticu­t, where it will start today.

A year from now, however, the club in Kettering will get the tournament, adding to a long history with the United States Golf Associatio­n. The USGA announced Wednesday the event will be held Aug. 25-28, 2022, at NCR Country Club.

“We’ve obviously got a great history with NCR Country Club,” said Matt Sawicki, senior director of USGA championsh­ips, “having hosted four previous championsh­ips at NCR. This will be the fifth. First and foremost, it’s a wonderful golf course. It’s a tremendous test for the players. It will

require them to use every club in their bag. It provides the requisite test for crowning a national champion.

“But the second thing is the Dayton community. My sister’s a Flyer, so I know Dayton well. It’s a community that supports sports. You see that with everything that’s there. It’s really a community that

will engage the players. When you look at the golf course, when you look at the community, it’s a perfect fit for this championsh­ip.”

NCR Country Club hosted the 1986 U.S. Women’s Open, which was won by Jane Geddes in a playoff over Sally Little; the 1998 U.S. Mid-Amateur, which was won by John “Spider” Miller; the 2005 U.S. Senior Open, won by Allen Doyle; and the 2013 USGA Women’s State Team Championsh­ip, won by New Jersey. The course was also the site of the 1969 PGA Championsh­ip, won by Raymond Floyd.

NCR Country Club opened in 1954 with two courses, the North and South, which were designed by Dick Wilson.

At NCR, preparatio­n has already begun for the U.S. Senior Women’s Open.

“Last year, during the pandemic, we actually installed another set of tees,” said Jeff Grant, chief operating officer of NCR Country Club. “We call them our silver tees. They’re actually our forward set of tees, which our members are really enjoying. We did that in preparatio­n for something like this to make the course playable for all different levels.”

Grant is at Brooklawn this week to see this year’s tournament, which includes golfing legend Annika Sorenstam for the first time. This is the third year the tournament has been held.

The U.S. Senior Women’s Open was first held at Chicago Golf Club in 2018 and won by Laura Davies. It moved to Pine Needles Lodge in Southern Pines, North Carolina, in 2019 and was won by Helen Alfredsson. The 2020 tournament was canceled because of the pandemic.

“The nice thing about this tournament is the fans, the staff, the volunteers, the community can kind of get next to the golfers and talk to them,” Grant said, “and they’re just such a gracious group of golfers. They’re fun to be around. You recognize a ton of names.”

According to the USGA, the tournament is open to “profession­al females, and amateur females with a Handicap Index not exceeding 7.4, who have reached their 50th birthday as of the first day of the championsh­ip. The field will include 120 players, who will earn entry into the championsh­ip via qualifying at various sites nationwide or through an exemption category.”

Sawicki said the tournament was started because golf is a lifelong sport and they wanted to give a championsh­ip opportunit­y to women who want to compete past the age of 50.

“It was the right time to introduce the championsh­ip,” he said. “Our first three iterations of the championsh­ip have been wonderful. The communitie­s and clubs where we’ve hosted have universall­y supported it. The players have really enjoyed it as well. So we will continue upward in our trajectory as far as this championsh­ip is concerned.”

 ?? STAFF FILE ?? Arnold Palmer hits a drive on the 18th hole at NCR Country Club during a practice round at the 2005 U.S. Senior Open. NCR will host the 2022 U.S. Senior Women’s Open.
STAFF FILE Arnold Palmer hits a drive on the 18th hole at NCR Country Club during a practice round at the 2005 U.S. Senior Open. NCR will host the 2022 U.S. Senior Women’s Open.

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