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Armstrong, Wise unlikely Western Amateur finalists

Dawson Armstrong and Aaron Wise were unlikely finalists - maybe even Sweet 16 qualifiers - when the Western Amateur teed off at Rich Harvest Farms last week. Then again, nothing much went as usual in the 113th playing of the prestigious championship put on by the Western Golf Association.

Armstrong earned the title on Saturday with a miracle bunker shot on the second hole of a sudden death playoff after eliminating two of the pre-tourney favorites - 2013 champion Jordan Niebrugge and this year's medalist, Robby Shelton - in previous matches.

Wise, barely past his freshman year at the University of Oregon, set the course record with a 64 in the stroke play portion of the five-day tournament and had to finish the event carrying his own bag the last six holes. His caddie, 2013 Western Junior champion Colin Morikawa, had to leave after 14 holes of the title match to catch a flight home to California.

"I knew Colin had a flight. That didn't make a difference," said Wise, who endured 72 holes of stroke play plus three matches and most of the fourth with Morikawa on his bag.

What did make a difference - and a huge one - was Armstrong's play in the clutch. A student at little Lipscomb College in Nashville, Tennessee, Armstrong was one-down going to the 18th hole of the championship match. He stayed alive with a hard-earned par because Wise 3-putted to lose the hole.

That sent the match to sudden death, and it ended dramatically at the par-5 second hole. Wise was safely on the green in 2 shots and facing a 25-footer for eagle. Armstrong, for the second time in the match, put his second shot into a greenside bunker. His caddie, for the first time in about five years, was his father Dale, a veteran of golf's mini-tours who played nine times in the PGA Tour's Qualifying School.

"When we got to the ball, my dad said that I'd hit a lot of great shots, but none had gone in," Armstrong said. His next one did, the ball diving into the cup after one bounce.

"I knew Aaron would make birdie. I knew it would have to be a lucky shot - and it was," Armstrong said. "As soon as it went in, the pain in my stomach went away. My stomach started cramping up on me as soon as we finished the first (playoff) hole."

"An incredible shot," Wise said. "There wasn't much I could do about that one. I had a putt for eagle to focus on."

He couldn't connect, though, and that brought an end to the tournament in which neither Niebrugge, the low amateur in this year's British Open, nor defending champion Beau Hossler were around at the finish. They, along with Wise and Shelton, will be back for the U.S. Amateur at Olympia Fields in two weeks.

Armstrong wasn't among the qualifiers for that one, but he was a giant-killer at Rich Harvest. His 2 and 1 win over Shelton in Saturday morning's semifinals was as big as his upset of Niebrugge in Friday's quarterfinals. Armstrong also had a big shot against Shelton, a chip-in for birdie at No. 13.

Wise had an easier time in the morning. He was 4-up on a fellow California resident Jake Knapp at the turn before putting him away 4 and 2.

• For more golf news, visit lenziehmongolf.com. Len can be contacted by email at lenziehm@gmail.com. Follow him on Twitter @ZiehmLen, and check out his posts at Facebook.com/lenziehmongolf.

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