Joshua Lim, a junior at Carnegie Mellon University, and Weston Payne, a 31-year old from Menlo Park met on the first tee with two-day totals of 137, though under slightly different circumstances. And it was the San Francisco native Lim who secured victory with par at the par-5.
The first-round leader Lim was cruising along after posting 68 on Saturday in a round that featured six birdies, including five of his first eight holes. He got to 7-under with a birdie at 13 but was fully aware of the charge Payne was making just three groups ahead.
Payne’s day started with birdies on more than half of his first eleven holes, putting him at 6-under for the tournament. He dropped his only shot at 12 but bounced back with birdies at 13, 15, and 17 to close out a spectacular 64.
“I putted and chipped so badly yesterday so I wanted to do that better today,” Payne said. “I got up-and-down really well on the par-5s and the short par-4s.”
Payne made birdies on three of the four par-5s, as well as three of the four par-4s under 330 yards.
Meanwhile, Lim failed to grind out a par on 16 after missing the green right, which dropped him a shot back of Payne who was sitting in the clubhouse. He looked to rebound on the reachable par-5 17th and bombed a drive into the dirt down the left side.
Then he hit his tournament-saving shot.
“Honestly, that was the shot of the tournament for me there,” Lim admitted. “I pulled off exactly what I wanted to do. I knew if I could put myself in a good position and maybe give myself an eagle putt, it would relieve some pressure off the last hole.”
His approach landed just short of the narrow opening between the front greenside bunkers and skipped up to run past the hole, leaving himself a downhill 15-footer for the eagle he had envisioned.
He missed and settled for his 10th birdie of the weekend, but it was all he needed to get square with Payne.
A par at 18 led him back to the first tee where he would reach the greenside bunker in two, securing the win with a par.
Posting the second best round of the tournament was Jerry Ledzinski II, who carded a 67 on Sunday which featured a back-nine 31. He tied for third with UCLA commit Anton Ouyang.
SENIOR DIVISION

Sr champ Barsotti with Britton (L) and Boyns (R)
Boyns’s Sunday 71 was the best in the senior flight and included a 30-foot birdie on his final hole to post the clubhouse lead. He settled for a runner-up finish alongside Jeff Britton and his pair of 74s.
NET DIVISION
Marc Sanders came from three back and won the Net Division by two shots over John Scott Senz. Scott Henrikson’s first-round 73 put him in good shape for Sunday before an 82 left him with a three-way tie for the second place spot.
