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Catherine Cartwright, 17, of Bonita Springs, Fla., became the youngest
champion in the history of the U.S. Women's Amateur Public Links
Championship when she defeated Russamee Gulyanamitta, 3 and 1, at
the 6,146-yard par 72 Legacy Golf Links in Aberdeen, N.C.
"I was shaking, actually," Cartwright said of winning the match.
"I was in shock. Oh, my gosh, I won one."
Cartwright, a high school senior, and Gulyanamitta, who arrived
in the United States from Bangkok, Thailand, one month before the
championship, played some loose shots in the match but rallied to
provide a close contest.
The two players had tied as co-medalists in stroke-play qualifying,
shooting 4-under-par scores of 140 over 36 holes. To get to the
final, Cartwright eased through her morning semifinal match, defeating
Cindy Lee, Tempe, Ariz., 4 and 3. Gulyanamitta defeated Jamie Vannoy,
Carrollton, Texas, 5 and 4.
In their final match encounter, Cartwright won the third hole
with a par to go 1 up. Gulyanamitta drove into the rough on the
4th and 6th holes, losing both to pars.
She picked up a hole at the par-three 5th when Cartwright pulled
her iron shot into a water hazard, then won the 7th with a birdie
and evened the match at the 8th with a par when Cartwright three-putted.
Gulyanamitta moved ahead for the first time when she birdied the
12th hole and Cartwright bogeyed. But Cartwright birdied two of
the next three holes to take a 1-up lead, then won the 16th and
17th with pars to close out the match.
Cartwright became the youngest champion in history, edging Lori
Castillo, who was 18 when she won the 1979 U.S. Women's Amateur
Public Links.
With the victory, Cartwright gained an exemption to play in the
U.S. Girls' Junior Championship and an exemption into the 2000 U.S.
Women's Amateur Championship.
The Women's Amateur Public Links featured another record when
Michelle Wie, Honolulu, Hawaii, qualified for match play with stroke-play
qualifying scores of 74-76-150. At the age of 10, Wie became the
youngest competitor ever to qualify for a USGA women's amateur championship.
In the team competition, Becky Lucidi of Fallbrook, Calif., (74-77-151),
Angle Yoon of San Diego, Calif., (75-69-144), and Gulyanamitta of
Thailand, (71-69-140), representing Murrieta, Calif., sailed past
the second-place Miami, Fla., team. In counting the best two scores
for each day of stroke play, the team had a total of 283, seven
strokes ahead of the team from Miami. Twenty-nine teams were represented.
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