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SC Golfers Headline Sea Pines Junior Heritage Field

Hilton Head Island, SC — The Sea Pines Junior Heritage is taking place February 5-6, 2011 inside The Sea Pines Resort on Hilton Head Island. The 36-hole, stroke play event will consist of 45 boys and 33 girls from across the globe. Saturday’s round begins at 9 a.m. on the Ocean Course and Sunday’s round begins at 8:30 a.m. on the Harbour Town Golf Links.

The field is headed up by defending boys champion and winner of the 2010 U.S. Junior Amateur Jim Liu. He made history by being the U.S. Junior Amateur’s youngest champion and is currently ranked #9 by Golfweek Junior Rankings.

A number of notable commitments have also been made by South Carolina natives. Stephen Behr from Florence, is a high school senior who will attend Clemson University in the fall. He is ranked #18 by Golfweek and is the winner of the 2010 SCGA Junior Championship. Leesville resident Cody Proveaux is a high school junior ranked #24 by Golfweek. He is expected to attend Clemson in 2012. He is the 2010 AJGA Polo Golf Junior Classic Champion. A total of 9 boys from South Carolina are currently in the field including Hilton Head Island resident Matthew Rushton.

A total of 5 girls from South Carolina are in the field, led by Goose Creek native Katelyn Dambaugh. The high school sophomore was the runner-up at the 2010 U.S. Girls Amateur. McKenzie Talbert from North Augusta and Columbia native Collins Bradshaw have committed to play. Also in the field is Rika Park, a high school senior currently living on Hilton Head Island.
The Sea Pines Junior Heritage began as a small local scholastic event in the mid-1980s. In 1989 the tournament expanded and golfers from all over the South participated. Today the event is regarded as one of the top 10 junior events in the nation. Past boys champions include: Charles Howell, III, Sean O’Hair and Kyle Stanley. Paula Creamer, Candie Kung and Virada Nirapathpongporn are all past girls champions.

For more information about the Sea Pines Junior Heritage, please contact Assistant Tournament Director Andy McMillen at (843) 671-2448 or by email at andy@heritageclassicfoundation.com .

Angela McSwain, Marketing Director
Heritage Classic Foundation
The Heritage – The Players Amateur
71 Lighthouse Road, Suite 4200, Hilton Head Island, SC 29928
tel: 843.671-2448 fax: 843.671.6738
www.heritageclassicfoundation.com

Struggles are nothing new to Andrew Yun.

ZACH VAN HART

zvanhart@islandpacket.com | 843-706-8123
He spent much of 2007 revamping his swing and much of Sunday slugging through a round that tested his fortitude. But a year’s worth of struggles produced a weekend to remember, as Yun defeated Julian Suri on the second sudden-death playoff hole to win the Verizon Junior Heritage on a sunny Sunday at Harbour Town Golf Links.

Despite a 3-over-par 74 in the final round, Yun’s first-round lead stood up for a monumental title. The same was true for girls winner Marta Silva Zamora, who fired a 4-over 75 but won anyway by two strokes.

On a pristine day at famed Harbour Town, the leaders stumbled but never tumbled and showed mettle down the stretch.

For 16-year-old Yun, it was a breakthrough victory. The Chandler, Ariz., resident endured a self-described terrible ’07, one that forced him to reconnect with his former coach in Seattle, where Yun moved from in 2006. Yun, playing in his third Junior Heritage, couldn’t suppress a grin after Saturday’s 4-under round or Sunday’s gritty performance.

“To win any tournament is a big deal, especially one like the Verizon Junior Heritage,” he said. “It came after such a bad slump. It’s like I was reborn again.”

Yun made few mistakes but struggled putting. He finally broke through on the par-3 17th, sinking a 25-foot putt for birdie – his only of the round. Yun gave the stroke back with a bogey on No. 18, setting the stage for his playoff against Suri.

Coincidentally, Yun and Suri also tied here last year, finishing in seventh place. This time, their gridlock forced them to return to the par-4 No. 1 for the tournament’s first playoff since 2005. After both parred the hole, they moved to the 332-yard ninth. Both players ran into trouble immediately. Yun landed in the left rough, 100 yards from the pin, his path deterred by nearby trees.

But Suri had bigger issues, his ball laying inches from a tree trunk in brush right of the fairway and his path to the green completed obstructed. Later describing his lie as a bad break after his tee shot ricocheted off a tree, Suri needed two strokes to punch out to the fairway and carded a double bogey.

After a risky line-drive 5-iron put him in a back bunker, Yun eventually sank a 2-foot bogey putt to preserve the win.

On the girls side, Silva scrambled all day – including a four-putt double bogey on a par-3 – but closed with three of her best holes of the round, parring Nos. 7-9.