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Mandela first Black Leader of South
Africa
OJ Simpson charged with murder
GOP gains control of Senate
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1994
Wendy Ward, 21, of San Antonio, Texas, won the last two holes
and claimed a 2 and 1 victory over defending champion Jill McGill
in the final match at the 1994 U.S. Women's Amateur Golf Championship,
played at the Homestead's Cascades Course, in Hot Springs, Va.
Ward, a senior at Arizona State University and the runner-up
at the 1994 NCAA Championship, broke a deadlock when she sank
a 10-foot putt for birdie 4 on the 34th hole of the 36-hole match.
She then closed out the match on the next hole with a par 5 when
McGill, a 22-year-old senior at the University of Southern California,
from Denver, Colo., strayed into the trees with her 7-iron second
shot and didn't reach the green until her fourth.
"That was one of my worst shots all week," said McGill. "That
shot will haunt me. I just hit it thin."
In contrast, Ward has pleasant memories. "My putt on 16 was
the turning point," she said. "I felt Jill would make her putt
(for birdie) and I'd have to make mine to halve the hole. I had
played that hole well all week."
"Winning the Amateur was something for me to chase," she continued.
"What it means will probably not sink in until the long ride back
to San Antonio. Or maybe when I start reading some of the names
on the trophy."
Neither player held more than a 2-up advantage throughout. Ward
jumped in front at the start by winning the first two holes of
the morning round, and she held a 2 up advantage through 10 holes
before McGill won holes 12 and 14 to pull the match back to all
square.
McGill, who won the 1993 Women's Amateur, 1994 U.S. Women's
Amateur Public Links and was vying to become the first person
to win three USGA championships in a year's time, took a 2 up
lead by winning the first two holes of the afternoon round, but
Ward rebounded by winning three straight holes to go 2 up after
a birdie 4 on the ninth hole. McGill then won three holes compared
to Ward's one through the 14th, setting the stage for Ward's rally
down the stretch.
"My coach always has said I'm a back nine player," said Ward,
the 1994 PAC 10 Player of the Year and a first-team All-America.
A day before she proved it when it counted most. "And it helps
to have a lot of confidence when you're coming in."
McGill had a string of 1 6 straight competitive match play victories
snapped with the loss. She hadn't lost since the semifinal round
of the 1993 Broadmoor Invitational, in Colorado Springs, Colo.
She defeated Emilee Klein, of Studio City, Calif., in her semifinal
match, 1 up.
Ward had an easier time in her semifinal match, defeating Andrea
Baxter, of Eagle, Idaho, 7 and 5.
Of the semifinalists, all but Baxter was a member of the 1994
U.S. team for the Curtis Cup, which had been held just two weeks
earlier. All eight members of the Great Britain and Ireland team
played in the Women's Amateur and advanced to match play. The
highest finisher among the group was Lisa Walton, of Berkshire,
England, who lost to McGill in the third round, 2 and 1.
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