Chris Hartenstein wins Austin Senior by three
9/18/2016 | by AmateurGolf.com Staff
see also: View results for Austin City Senior, Morris Williams Golf Course
With rounds of 67-69 at the Morris Williams Golf Course Chris Hartenstein finished 8-under
AUSTIN, TX (September 18, 2016) -- With rounds of 67-69 at the Morris Williams Golf Course Chris Hartenstein has won the Austin Senior Championship. Hartenstein finished 8-under and three-strokes in front Gene Black.
On Sunday Hartenstein closed strong with three birdies in the final five holes to charge to the top of the leaderboard. Overall Hartenstein birdied five and bogeyed three.
In the first round Hartenstein put together a bogey-free 5-under day that included five birdies.
Black was 5-under in second place, first round leader Kevin Dahl and Wayne Smith shared third at 4-under while Jaime Beaman, Rob Ormand and James Gustafson were 2-under tied for fifth.
About the Austin City Senior

36 hole stroke play senior event held at one of the oldest and most historic city courses in Austin. Senior and Super Senior divisions.
Most Popular Articles

2025 PGA TOUR Q-School Guide: Sites, Scores, and Who Advanced
Dec 5, 2025Second Stage is complete and Final Stage awaits at Sawgrass — follow every Q-School leaderboard and the players still chasing
2025 LPGA TOUR Q-Series: Final Qualifying Stage FINAL SCORING
Dec 8, 2025Helen Briem earns medalist honors, 31 players headed to the LPGA next year
2025 PGA TOUR Q-School Final Stage: Ewart Leads Five New TOUR Card Winners
Dec 14, 2025A.J. Ewart topped Final Stage at TPC Sawgrass, leading five players who secured PGA TOUR membership for 2026.
Australian Open at Royal Melbourne: Preview, amateur bios, and how to watch
Nov 30, 2025Rory McIlroy headlines one of the championship's top fields in years - at least four amateurs will have their chance at gloryInside Gil Hanse’s Restoration of Baltusrol’s Upper Course: A Return to Tillinghast’s
Dec 11, 2025Renowned architect Gil Hanse reveals how he brought Baltusrol’s Upper Course back to life by honoring A.W. Tillinghast’s original
