COLUMBUS, OHIO (July 9, 2018) – A chance to make history and celebrate history serves as the backdrop for the 115th annual Trans-Mississippi Tournament which begins early Tuesday here at historic Brookside Country Club.
The oldest non-USGA national amateur tournament in the country will be the first ever held in Ohio, and the first in more than 100 years (Memphis Country Club 1915) to be held east of the Mississippi River in the Eastern Time Zone.
But the main reason for this week’s playing in new territory is to honor one of the greatest Trans-Miss champions of all time, Jack Nicklaus, who won his first Trans-Miss amateur title 60 years ago.
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Jack Nicklaus at the 1958 Trans-Miss
(Golf History Today photo) |
He encouraged the 100-plus players, including some of the best amateurs in the U.S., to have fun this week and keep the ball in the fairway.
On Monday, the players got their first look at Brookside course, the old school layout first built in 1928 by Charles Lorms. While cool in the morning, conditions in the afternoon were warm and humid with temperatures close to 90 degrees.
Practice rounds are underway from Brookside G&CC in preparation for #TransMiss18. Rd 1 of the 72-hole Championship begins Tuesday morning. Good luck to all the competitors! pic.twitter.com/dVUoNCD4qM
— Trans-Miss Golf (@TransMissGolf) July 9, 2018
But no rain allowed all the players to play 18 holes or practice as much as they wanted to before the start of the 72-hole stroke play event. The last two winners of the Trans-Miss, Will Zalatoris and Cameron Champ, have already turned professional and have played on the PGA Tour and various pro events.
Trans-Mississippi Executive Director Rob Addington, who has overseen the organization over the last five years as part of his director’s duties with the Texas Golf Association, said his group has worked hard to upgrade the field back to the glory days with a winners list that includes major champions Nicklaus, Ben Crenshaw and George Archer.
“We’re always looking for ways to expand the tournament and expand the reach of players who can play here,” Addington said. “We’ve been very pleased with the field we have attracted and continue to get good players.”
Further validating the event’s ascension, the 114th Trans-Miss Amateur at Prairie Dunes was dubbed 10th in the world and sixth in North America by the Scratch Players World Amateur Rankings. It’s the collection of strong players such as the one that will gather at Brookside that drives these high marks.
In both 2016 at The Olympic Club and 2017 at Prairie Dunes, the Trans-Miss Amateur received WAGR’s “A” ranking for strength of field. In addition to the past two years’ elite ratings, WAGR also considered the 114th edition last summer as the seventh-best field of the 37 tournaments that received an equal ranking.
Ben Schlottman, who led Auburn to a semifinal finish in the NCAAs before winning the North & South Amateur at Pinehurst this summer, enters the week 77th in the world ranking.
Also playing is LSU sophomore Jacob Bergeron, the 54th-ranked amateur in the world. He qualified for and played in the 118th U.S Open at Shinnecock Hills. So, too, did his college teammate Philip Barbaree, who carries the 110th spot in the rankings. Barbaree, an LSU junior, won the 2015 U.S. Junior Amateur and was runner-up that same summer at the 112th Trans-Miss Amateur at Flint Hills National.
As befitting the status of the renewed amateur tournament, 2019 U.S. Walker Cup Captain Nathaniel Crosby is expected to be in attendance for Friday’s final round and be talking and watching players for possible inclusion for ’19 team.

