The NIT draws one of the deepest fields in mid-amateur golf, but through 36 holes Nurski was the only player in the field to break par in each of the first two rounds. Rounds of 70 and 67 gave him a two-shot lead over longtime NIT participant Alan Coshatt (Birmingham, Ala.), who finished fifth last year and has had seven top-15 finishes in the last eleven years in this tournament.
Todd Burgan (Knoxville, Tenn.), who just turned 50 and recently qualified for the U.S. Senior Open, shot the low round of the day, a 67 that put him at solo fourth at one over par.
Four players -- Matthew Broome (Barrington, R.I.), Sean Rowen (Greenwood, Ind.), Stephen Behr (Florence, S.C.), and Carlton Woods Invitational champion Philip Lee (Nashville, Tenn.) -- tied for fifth at 2-over 215.
The 40-year-old Nurski is no stranger to being in contention for important golf titles. Last year he won his third Missouri Amateur championship to go along with two Missouri Mid-Amateurs, and last fall he made it all the way to the Crump Cup final at Pine Valley before finishing as the runner-up to Patrick Duffy. In the NIT, he was trending well, finishing T19 in 2017 and tied 7th last year.
The defending champion Clay Guerin (Hoover, Ala.) couldn't recapture the magic from last year and finished T50, tied with 2017 champion Matt Van Zandt (Houston, Texas).
Related: Guerin loses lead, wins Birmingham National Inv. in Playoff
60-year-old Tim Jackson of Germantown, Tenn., the two-time U.S. Mid-amateur champ who has won this tournament at least six times (most recently as a 56-year-old in 2015), finished in a tie for 26th. 2012 champion Patrick Christovich (New Orleans, La.) tied for 14th, and 2013 champ John Engler (Augusta, Ga.) finished T32.
![]() | |||
- USGA photo | |||
Related: U.S. Amateur Four-Ball headed to CC of Birmingham in 2022

