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Dowling collects another Connecticut Amateur title
Rick Dowling makes his winning putt (CSGA/Twitter photo)
Rick Dowling makes his winning putt (CSGA/Twitter photo)

The golf most of us play is a kind of karaoke version of the real thing. Off key, out of time, missing a few lyrics.

But the finalists in the Connecticut Amateur Championship inevitably shows us what the song should really sound like.

That certainly was the case Friday at Fox Hopyard Golf Club when Rick Dowling of Ridgefield defeated Waterbury’s Chandler Morris to win the championship for the second time, one up.

Dowling, the 2017 champion, built a 5-up lead late on the front side, at one point winning four consecutive holes, and then held on as Morris found his rhythm, winning the ninth, the 11th, 13th, the 15th and finally leveling the match with a 4-foot birdie at 17. On the final hole both laid up on a sometimes-reachable par-5. Dowling managed to get his, from 145, to the back tier where the hole was set. Chandler’s approach from 120 hit the slope in front of that tier and spun back, leaving him with a 50-foot putt. He putted it four foot but missed the second putt.

“Honestly, I wasn’t really thinking at the status of the match,” said Dowling about the evaporating lead. “I was trying to play it hole by hole, but I made a few poor swings on the back and couple of silly bogeys. Credit Chandler for coming back. What I’m proud of is that I played pretty even keel throughout the round and stayed with my approach to each shot.”

“Rick is both methodical and unflappable,” said Nick Taylor, Dowling’s partner in the Two Man Championship, which they’ve won for the past two years. “He has a plan and he sticks to it. He is a perfectionist.” A tenacious competitor, Dowling is nonetheless very softpoken, raisiing his voice only to his golf ball.

Morris’s theme had been “patience” all week, arguing that Fox Hopyard demanded it above all, and this afternoon he showed it.

“The course played tougher than it has all week,” he said of the 6912-yard, par 71 layout. “The wind picked up, the greens got more difficult with the traffic.” Morris said gauging the speed became tougher as the putting surfaces slowed with the rain. He three-putted both the 7th and 8th to go five down. “I got myself in kind of hole on the front but I hit a lot of good shots on the back. I came back. I hung in there. I’m happy with that.”

Every Amateur is a marathon. This one slightly less so for all of the competitors, but in particular for Dowling. First, the final was shortened to 18 holes after Tuesday’s four-hour-plus rain delay forced stroke qualifying for match play into Wednesday. Then, after the conclusion of Thursday’s play, semi-finalist Seth Egnasko of Wintonbury Hills, who was to play Dowling, withdrew due to a work-related emergency, leaving Dowling with a pass to the afternoon finals.

Morris played a semifinal against college teammate Finn Boynton in the "UConn bracket" semifinal. It was a match that went 17 holes and was tied as late as the 15th. He won 2 and 1. And it was a three-putt by Boynton on the 15th that turned that match. Hitting a wedge from a lie that left the ball below his feet, Boynton hit to the middle of the green and then watch his approach putt roll out 6 feet. “Fifteen was big,” said the UConn junior. “I made a bad decision there. I’ve played those last couple holes well and I felt good about the playing the last three. But that putt rolled out far more than I thought. It was disappointing.”

“They’re both really strong players,” said UConn coach Dave Pezzino, who followed the match. “They’ve played won another before [in stroke play] for starting spots in our matches. They’ll be a big part of our team going forward.”

As he left for the day, Boynton told Morris: “You've got to go out and win it now!”

“That’s the goal,” said Morris, and he almost made it.

For Richard Dowling III, the victory was sweeter for having father Richard Junior on the bag and his mother Nancy there—“I surprised him”—to give him a congratulatory hug.

Dad was moved to tears talking about Dowling’s win at Tashua Knolls in 2017, Tashua being the course where the father, once a 3-handicap, had played thousands of rounds.

“I’m very proud,” said the elder Dowling, moved all over again at what his son had accomplished. “But also congratulate Chandler, who played so well and came back like that.”

In the end that spirit holds the appeal of the Amateur, when golfers who don’t play for money nonetheless show us how good the game can be.

Results: Connecticut Amateur
WinCTRichard DowlingShelton, CT200
Runner-upFLChandler MorrisHobe Sound, FL100
SemifinalsCTSeth EgnaskoSouth Windsor, CT50
SemifinalsCTFinn BoyntonMilford, CT50
MedalistCTChristopher AyersWethersfield, CT25

View full results for Connecticut Amateur

ABOUT THE Connecticut Amateur

The Connecticut Amateur Championship is one of the nation’s oldest state amateur golf championships and is one of 19 championship tournaments conducted by the Connecticut State Golf Association. The challenging format tests the state's best amateur golfers over two rounds of stroke play to determine the low thirty-two match play qualifiers. Two rounds of match play each day culminate in a thirty-six hole final to crown the top amateur player in Connecticut.

View Complete Tournament Information

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