“This place can be frustrating if you aren’t careful,” Pang said. “It looks like such an easy course on the scorecard, but once you get out here in the wind and you see the greens and the pin positions, it can get a little challenging.”
At just over 5,700 yards, the par-70 at Pacific Grove Golf Links is consistently an arduous task for competitors. Last year’s championship flight winner Brett Thawley, like Pang, was also the only player to finish below par.
“I just told myself to be patient and to keep chipping away,” Pang said.
PHOTO GALLERY

Wang, who began the day a shot back, went toe-to-toe with Pang nearly the entire round but succumbed to the sneakily-difficult 18th. His triple-bogey ended his chances at forcing a playoff but was still good enough to grab solo second place.
JJ West placed third for the second year in a row but moved up a spot to capture the Mid-Amateur title this time around. Firing 69 on day one, West was one of just seven contestants to break 70 over the weekend.

Greg Galasso
Humphrey’s 69 featured five birdies but bogeys at 17 and 18 proved costly.
Galasso defeated Humphrey with a par on the second extra hole, but he wouldn’t have been there without a clutch birdie at 18.
“The birdies at 8 and 9 really turned things around,” Galasso said. “The back nine was grinding but the birdie at 18 was the difference.
“It’s one of the coolest courses in Northern California,” Galasso said of the course referred to affectionately by locals as "The Poor Man's Pebble Beach."
“Regardless of playing conditions, it’s still PG. It’s awesome.”
Super Senior winner Charles Richesin posted 71-76 en route to his win – a narrow one-shot margin over Jim Williams. The Lodi resident bogeyed five holes on the back nine but executed the needed pars at 17 and 18 to hold on over Williams, whose closing 71 was the low round in the flight on Sunday.
Tying for first in the Net division were James Blair and Matt Brody, the latter of whom had the victory all-but wrapped up with a two-shot lead until the 18th green and its much-talked-about pin placement claimed another victim. He made a triple at the finishing par-4 while playing competitor Blair made bogey.



