Connect with us on - NEPGA Junior Tour
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Connect with us on - NEPGA Junior Tour
In this ISSUE Welcome by Jacy Settles … 2 Junior PGA Championship … 2 Junior Tour Players of the Year … 3 The Big “I” Junior Classic … 4 Rules with Ron Green, PGA … 5 Grip Check by Jim Salinetti, PGA … 6 The Remy Cup … 7-9 Photo Contest Winners … 10 Reasons to Smile … 11 Contact Jacy Settles Director of Jr. Golf Operations New England PGA [email protected] Phone: 508-869-0000 ext. 204 Fax: 508-869-0009 Junior Tour Results … 12 Connect with us on www.nepgajuniortour.com Welcome with Jacy Settles, NEPGA Director of Jr. Golf Operations & Player Development Dear NEPGA JR Tour Players & Families, Another successful NEPGA Jr Tour season is in the books! I want to thank all NEPGA Junior Tour players and their families for supporting the junior tour. Without you, our program would not be what it is today. As we enter the fall, don’t forget that we have a few events scheduled for the weekends. Also, I hope to have 2016 NEPGA Jr Tour Membership open for registration in December. Sincerely, Jacy Settles NEPGA Director of Jr. Golf Operations & Player Development 2015 New England Junior PGA Championship Brunelle, Ford Capture Victories Alec Brunelle of Salem, NH and Julia Ford of Shrewsbury, MA won the 2015 New England Junior PGA Championship presented by Under Armour and Genesis Networks Monday-Tuesday, July 6-7 at Marlborough Country Club in Marlborough, MA. By winning the boys’ and girls’ divisions respectively, Brunelle and Ford qualified for the 40th Junior PGA Championship presented by Under Armour and Genesis Networks, Aug. 3-6, at Miramont Country Club in Bryan/ College Station, Texas. Brunelle,16, posted a final-round 70 for a two-day total of 140 and a 5-stroke victory over David Rogers of Needham, MA. Ford, 17, had a final-round 77 for a two-day total of 147 and an 8-stroke victory over Katie Um of Portsmouth, RI. The Junior PGA Championship, Presented by Under Armour and Genesis Networks, is open to one boy and one girl champion from each of the 41 PGA Sections, champions of the nine PGA Junior Series events, select national junior tournaments conducted throughout the year and special invitees who have yet not reached their 19th birthdays as of the final round of the championship. The Junior PGA Championship has traditionally been a stepping-stone for many of today’s PGA and LPGA Tour professionals as well as current collegiate stars. Past Junior PGA Championship competitors who have gone on to successful professional careers include: Inbee Park, Luke Guthrie, Trevor Immelman, Cristie Kerr, Justin Leonard, Hunter Mahan, Michelle McGann, Phil Mickelson, Grace Park, Dottie Pepper, Jordan Spieth, Lexi Thompson, David Toms, Michelle Wie and Tiger Woods. 2 CONGRATULATIONS 2015 NEPGA Jr Tour Players of the Year! Boys Elite Tour: John Mikus Girls Elite Tour: Maria Oliva Boys 16-18: Sean McGadden Boys 14-15: Alexis Garcia Busa Boys 12-13: Colin McCaigue Boys 11 & Under: Noah LeClair Girls 14-18: Elise Keane Girls 13 & Under: Ellie de Andrade The NEPGA Jr. Tour Top Players of the Year were invited to play The Country Club on Friday, August 21, 2015. The top 2 boy players from the Elite Tour, top 3 players from the Boys 16-18, top 3 Boys 14-15, and top 4 Girls from the 14-18 divisions were invited and had a spectacular time. A special thank you to The Country Club staff for hosting! 3 CUMMINGS, THIBODEAU TAKE TOP HONORS AT 2015 MASSACHUSETTS BIG “I” JUNIOR CLASSIC Nick Cummings of Weston, MA and Lauren Thibodeau of Hampstead, NH won the 2015 Massachusetts Big I Junior Golf Classic on Monday-Tuesday, July 13-14 at The Country Club of New Bedford (North Dartmouth, MA) and The Bay Club (Mattapoisett, MA). By winning the boys’ and girls’ divisions respectively, Cummings and Thibodeau qualified Big “I” National Championship held at Prairie Dunes Country Club, Hutchinson, KS August 3 – 6, 2015. Cummings, 15, posted a final-round 70 for a two-day total of 143 and a 5-stroke victory over Nick Hampoian (North Reading, MA) and Matt Maloney (Dedham, MA). Thibodeau, 15, had a final-round 76 for a two-day total of 151 and a 2-stroke victory over Linda Wang of Fresh Meadow, NY. Other players from each division advancing to the Big “I” National Championship include: Nick Hampoian, Matt Maloney, Alejandro Soto (Newton, MA - 4th place two day total 149), Christian McKenna (Danvers, MA – 5th place two day total – 151), Anne Walsh (Jamaica Plain, MA Tied for 3rd two day total 155) and Catherine French (Dudley, MA – tied for 3rd two day total 155). Additionally, Matt Organisak (Sudbury, MA) and Brandon Gillis (Nashua, NH) both received exemptions into the National event based on performance at the National event last year. Overall, the New England PGA has a strong showing of players and we wish them good luck! More than 270 golfers competed in 5 qualifying tournaments around the state, with 63 earning spots in the state finals. The state tournament was sponsored by the New England PGA and the Massachusetts Association of Insurance Agents. The Trusted Choice Big “I” National Championship is one of the largest golf championships in the country with more than 2,000 boys and girls—ages 13 to 18—competing in over 100 elimination rounds throughout the United States. It is one of the most widely acclaimed junior golf championships in the U.S. On the national level the tournament is sponsored by the Independent Insurance Agents and Brokers of America (IIABA), and Trusted Choice. As junior golfers, current PGA Tour players Tiger Woods and Billy Andrade each won two Big “I” championships. Andrade captured back-to-back titles in 1980 and 1981. Woods won the prestigious tournament in 1990 and 1992, and claimed the Big “I” National Long Drive Championship in 1990 and 1991. In addition to Woods and Andrade, the distinguished list of current professional players who as juniors played in the Big I includes Phil Mickelson, Webb Simpson and Jonathan Byrd and Kevin Na. 4 The Scorecard: Playing by the Rules with Ron Green, PGA, NEPGA Director of Rules & Championships The Rules I would like to discuss this month are ones we receive questions about every year at our events. I would bet you may have had a reason to use one or both of these Rules yourself at some point. With that in mind I want to address a couple of Rules I think we can become better at using and understanding. Rule 3-3. Doubt as to Procedure This is a Rule that in the absence of a Committee member/Rules Official being readily available affords the player the opportunity to use different options covered by the Rules in proceeding with his play when he is in doubt of his rights or the procedure he must follow. It also helps the Committee to keep groups in place on the course and pace of play moving. Lets face it, this isn’t the PGA Tour; at our events we never can have enough Rules Officials or ways to communicate where we need them on the course in a timely manner. Rule 3-3 can help a great deal, I know as a player it is a pain to have to play two balls, but it certainly can be advantageous. One thing to remember Rule 3-3 is available to the player ONLY in stroke play. In match play, in the absence of someone from the Committee being available, you and your opponent must come to an agreement regarding the point in question and proceed. If you can’t agree on a course of action you as the player must play the ball in the way you feel is appropriate and refer the matter to the Committee as soon as possible, The Committee can then resolve the matter in question. This is all provided your opponent has filed a valid claim that he doesn’t agree with the procedure you chose. This is a perfect example of how the Rules differ in certain match play and stroke play situations. Back to our stroke play dilemma, the key to implementing Rule 3-3 is to follow the proper procedure. As a player: If you are doubtful of your rights or the correct procedure during the play of a hole, before taking any other action: ANNOUNCE to your marker or a fellow-competitor that you intend to play two balls. DECLARE which of the two balls you wish to count if the Rules permit. Play the hole out with the two balls. REPORT the facts of the situation to the Committee before returning your scorecard. Failure to report the facts to the Committee results in DISQUALIFICATION. Note: this part of the Rule was changed in 2008, prior to ’08 if a player scored the same with both balls he was not required to report it to the Committee. I know the question is always, “why do I need to declare which ball I wanted to count? Why would I ever play a second ball if I didn’t want it to count?” Let me see if I can give you an example. Your ball comes to rest in a large area containing mulch and flowers. You look at the “Notice to Competitors” and see a Local Rule stating relief is mandatory from all “Beautification Areas: Prepared areas containing flowers and identified with a Blue stake or line are deemed to be ground under repair from which relief is mandatory.” The nearest point of relief from the area your ball lies in would force you to drop directly behind a tree. You ask your fellow-competitor and he says he believes you MUST take relief from this area. You disagree, seeing no blue line or stake (remember stakes get moved sometimes) you believe that the area is not a prepared beautification area; that your ball lies ”through the green” and you are allowed to play it as it lies. Failure to comply with the Local Rule would result in a 2-stroke penalty. No member of the Committee is immediately available. At this point you would ANNOUNCE you are going to play a second ball, taking relief as required in the event the Committee deems the area where your original ball lies to be a “Beautification Area.” You would DECLARE that you want 5 the score with your original ball to count in the event the Committee deems the area to be through the green. You would then play out the hole with both balls. FYI- There is no stipulation as to the order the balls are to be played. At the end of the Round you would REPORT the facts to the Committee before returning your scorecard and they would give you their decision. If the Committee agreed with you that the area was “through the green’ the score with your original ball would count as the score for that hole. If they declared the area to be a “Beautification Area” your score with the second ball would count. If you were wondering if you would be penalized for playing from the area if it was declared a “Beautification Area” the answer would be NO. Because you were doubtful of your rights and proceeded under Rule 3-3 the Committee would not be justified in penalizing you. This scenario also helps to show the need for you to read and know what is contained on the Notice to Competitors/Local Rules prior to your round. The other Rule I want to review is a specific part of Rule 27. Rule 27-2. Provisional Ball PLEASE, speaking from my perspective as a Rules Official, I need you to say “PROVISIONAL BALL.” After we send one flying into the trees when we try to hit that tee shot a little harder on that long par 5, I know we assume that our fellowcompetitors or opponents know what we are doing, but “that’s not good I better hit another” doesn’t cut it. We all know it’s “not good,” just tell us that you are going to hit a provisional ball so that there is NO question as to what you are doing. Without those words, when that next ball is struck the original ball is lost, even if we find that it hit a tree and is now lying 300 yards from the tee in the middle of the fairway. As a fellow-competitor, if you have a doubt as to what a player is doing ask him, Are you hitting a provisional? That’s what makes golf the great game that it is, we try to help people avoid penalties. Reading Rule 27-2, will make everything you need to do when playing a Provisional Ball very clear. Two other things I will remind you of, first, be sure the provisional ball is identifiable as the provisional. I hate to say that on more than one occasion I have had a player play a provisional ball into the same area as the original ball, he found both balls, but was not able to identify which was which because they both had the same markings. Not good. Note: Before I took this job as a Rule s Official, when I used to play tournament golf, to make things easier, just in case I hit an errant shot, I always tried to keep a ball separated from all the others in my bag, it had unique markings that I never used on any of the balls I would use on a regular basis. I knew right where it was when I needed it. The second reminder is you must play your provisional before you or your partner go forward to search for the original ball. The purpose of Rule 27-2 is to save time and avoid the walk back to where we just played from when we can’t find the original ball. Once we get half way to where our original ball might be we aren’t going to save time by going back to play a provisional. In fact at that point we would be considered to be returning to put a ball in play under Rule 27-1. Stroke and Distance, the provisional ball option is no longer available. When has a player gone forward? It is a bit of a judgment call , but Decision 27-2a/1.5 in the Decisions on the Rules of Golf, tells us that if we have proceeded more than approximately 50 yards we have gone too far. Take your time and read these two Rules separately. Becoming familiar with them may help you save some strokes (Rule 3-3) and will certainly save you some time and needless walks back to where you last played from (Rule 272). Enjoy the rest of the 2015 NEPGA Junior Tour season! Grip Check with Jim Salinetti, PGA, NEPGA Junior Golf Committee Chairman Next time you watch a PGA Tour event do not focus on the players high swing speeds and long drives, but check out the way they hold the club. While everyone’s grip is unique, the best players hold the club with certain characteristics that define an excellent grip. Here are few things I like to see from my students: Make sure you are holding the club in your fingers. Many golfers hold the club with the palms of their hands. This makes it very difficult to hinge the club properly in the backswing. Your two middle fingers of your right hand should apply the most pressure. Whether you use an overlapping, interlocking or 10-finger grip, one fundamental stays consistent: When you have completed the left hand grip, the “V” formed by the thumb and forefinger should point to your right eye. The “V” formed by the thumb and forefinger of your right hand should be pointing at your chin. Hold the club like you are holding a bird. You would hold a bird in your hands with enough pressure so it does not fly away, but not so tight that you would injure the bird. Find that happy medium when gripping the club where you feel tension-free, while holding the club firmly enough to maintain your position throughout the swing. Golfers often make compensations in their golf swings based on poor grip fundamentals. Make sure your grip isn’t causing issues with your swing. Follow these tips or visit your local PGA Professional to square up your fundamentals. I guarantee it will help square up your clubface and lead to better golf shots! Jim Salinetti is the PGA Head Golf Professional at Winchester Country Club in Winchester, MA. He is currently the Chairman of the NEPGA Junior Golf Committee. Jim was an AJGA All-American and an NCAA Academic All-American while attending the University of Rhode Island. He competed on professional tours throughout North & South America for several years before becoming a PGA Professional. Feel free to reach out to Jim at [email protected] with any questions pertaining to junior and collegiate golf. 2015 International Junior Masters Q & A — With Alex Yun The New England PGA Junior Tour was well-represented at the 2015 International Junior Masters, which is the oldest international junior golf invitational in North America. “Yes, I was really thrilled to play. It was a different experience because I knew that tournament had a lot of international kids (Yun played with players from Canada, Mexico and Columbia), so kids I don’t usually see. And it was also an interesting format. It was two days of stroke play, then they put you into different flights for match play and I’ve never really played match play in a real tournament before.” Alex Yun, 16, competed on behalf of the NEPGA at the invitational, which was held at East Aurora Country Club in New York in late June. Yun, who competed in the Championship Flight, fired a two-day total of 155 (78-77) and moved on to the first match play round as the No. 17 seed in the tournament. A student and member of the golf team at Buckingham Brown & Nichols, Yun is a veteran of the NEPGA tour and recently tied for fifth at the NEPGA Junior Championship. He sat down with the NEPGA recently to discuss his experience at the 2015 IJM. How did you get involved with the IJM? “I’ve been playing with the NEPGA since I was a little kid, I was maybe eight or nine. I’ve played a lot of tournaments for the NEPGA and its been a great experience. I guess (the NEPGA) decided to send me to the IJM’s and I was very honored. It was an interesting experience.” That must’ve been a really cool feeling when you were told that. 6 Obviously, it has the Masters name. Did that add anything for you going into the tournament knowing it has that namesake? “Definitely. It sounded like the real Masters, to be honest. I didn’t really know much about the tournament until (the NEPGA) told me about it. Just hearing the name of the tournament made me really happy and I was very excited.” What are your future plans? “For the rest of the summer, I only have a couple more tournaments. I’m actually going to Ireland next week and playing in a tournament/camp called the Kerry Cup. That will be very interesting – I’ve never played golf in Ireland before. That will be awesome. After Ireland in late July, I’m playing in a tournament at Cyprian Keyes and then I have the Massachusetts Junior Amateur in late August. Great Golf. Great Weather. Great Finish. By Russ Held, Special to The Republican The fourth Remy Cup Matches were decided by the last putt on the final hole of competition on Saturday, an effort that allowed the Connecticut Section PGA junior team to retain the title. Team Connecticut rallied for a 9-9 tie against a fellow 12-player team from the New England PGA, just enough to be victorious and keep the cup. "This is such a great event and the venue today is just phenomenal,'' said NEPGA professional Jim Remy, for whom the matches are named. The Connecticut PGA team, which includes golfers from Western Massachusetts, had won the first three annual competitions. The outcome boiled down to a par made at the 18th hole by Noah Peterson of East Longmeadow. Peterson, who works in the bag room at the private Hampden club, needed only a two-putt from 20 feet to secure the final two points for the host squad. "It was fun to have that chance here; I like the team format,'' said Peterson, who competed at the matches for the second time. Peterson won the Connecticut Section Junior Boys Player of the Year honors this summer, while Angela Garvin of Feeding Hills won her third straight girls honor. "This is so fun, it's my third year but it still takes a little getting used to because we don't play in many team events,'' said Garvin, a third-time participant who will compete at the regional finals for the national Drive, Chip & Putt Championships. The Connecticut PGA's "victory'' keeps the cup local before the New England PGA hosts the 2016 event. "It has a Ryder Cup feel, for sure,'' Connecticut PGA junior golf director Sally Sohn said. "The kids love to be on Team Connecticut. They like the uniforms. They are representing something special and they all know each other so well. We have great team spirit.'' Peterson and teammate Tyler Hahn won 2.5 of a possible three points to secure the tie. Three points were at stake for each of the six matches. Single points were awarded for a win in the four-ball (front nine), foursomes (back nine) and overall (all 18 holes). Connecticut trailed 8-1 after completion on the first three matches, before Carter Swanson and Jake Avery and Matt Stafford and Peter Gehris teamed to win 5.5 of the next six points. Peterson and Hahn then finished it off, needing only a halve at the 18th hole cap the rally. Points leaders for Team New England included three -point sweeps by Nick Cummings and Dillon Brown and Julia Ford and Lauren Thibodeau. The competition was named in honor of Jim Remy, past president of the PGA of America and general manager and director of golf at Okemo Valley Golf Club in Ludlow, Vt. Remy became the first PGA of America President from the New England Section. He served in that role in 2009-2010. "When they name something after you . . . it's an unbelievable honor and at least I'm still kicking,'' Remy said. GreatHorse: The club, formerly known as Hampden Country Club, re-opened this spring after nearly three years of renovations that have totaled close to $50 million. The Antonacci family purchased the club at an auction during the winter of 2012. On-course re-design work was led by Brian Silva. The 26,000 square-foot clubhouse, designed in "mountain rustic style,'' sports majestic, westward views of the Pioneer Valley. Par played at 71, as the scheduled par-4 18th hole is currently playing as a 200-yard par 3. The competition marked the first outside tournament hosted by the private club . Boys yardage played at approximately 6,600 and the girls teed it up at 5,500. Click here for a look at the full leaderboard. Team photos on the following page. 7 The 2015 Remy Cup Saturday, September 12, at GreatHorse 8 The 2015 Remy Cup (continued) Saturday, September 12, at GreatHorse—Additional Photos A special thank you goes out to the GreatHorse staff for hosting, Jim Remy, and to all players and parents involved in making this a successful event. 9 NEPGA Jr Tour Photo Contest Winners Contest Winners Tour the TaylorMade Golf Tour Van at the Deutsche Bank Championship! Congratulations to following winners: Raffaele Bauer Abigail Taney Quinn Wilson! 10 Valeri Provides Reasons to Smile with Mark Chiarelli, NEPGA Jr. Golf Intern As a gentle breeze pushes across the patio at Cranberry Valley Golf Course, Robert Valeri gestures to his chest and smiles. “I make up a whole bunch of stories,” he says. “It’s a lot of fun.” Valeri, who is wearing a navy blue polo, roughly traces the outline of a scar running vertically down his chest, which he estimates is roughly a foot-and-a-half long. He says when people ask him about it – such as when he’s swimming – he’ll have fun creating elaborate, made up stories about the scar. That Valeri can joke about it now is a testament to both his character and his resilience. In early December, he underwent open-heart surgery which lasted eight hours and replaced a valve in his heart. Seven months later on a June afternoon, Valeri has just completed his second New England PGA Junior Tour tournament of the summer schedule when he shares his story. “I appreciate life a lot and I think about it often,” said Valeri, who turned 16 in August. “I’m easily motivated. All I want to be is successful in life.” Valeri was diagnosed with tetralogy of filo shortly after his birth, which is a congenital heart defect otherwise known as “hole in the heart.” At three months old, he underwent successful open-heart surgery and subsequently recovered well. As he grew up, the Arlington, Mass native received numerous angioplasties, which is a procedure that unblocks blood vessels, along the way and eventually began to suffer from congestive heart failure in which one chamber of his heart was working excessively more than the other to push blood through the chamber. It was determined that Valeri would need a valve replaced in his heart. But open-heart surgery was only “Plan C” for Valeri. “Plan A” was to have doctors attempt the surgery via entry from his thigh in 2014, while “Plan B” was to see if he was a candidate for an experimental valve. Neither materialized. So on Dec. 5, Valeri underwent “Plan C” at the Boston Children’s Hospital. “There’s no real ‘Plan D,’ he said. “It’s so, so tough. I woke up with seven IV’s in me, one was in my neck. That was awful … My heart was pumping throughout the procedure but I didn’t breathe once for eight hours. “I wasn’t really nervous, but it was tough.” But almost immediately following the procedure, Valeri’s optimism emerged. “I was just thinking that there’s a lot worse for people,” he said. “I’d much rather have open-heart surgery than fight in Iraq or something like that. I also thought about the opportunity that I have at (Children’s Hospital). Valeri said his recovery in the hospital lasted only four days, a remarkable time for this type of surgery. He said he watched “a couple days worth” of the popular television show “Breaking Bad,” and taught himself math as he simultaneously prepared for his school’s 11 midterms. His family was with him every step of the day, as his mother slept at the hospital all four days and his father visited after work every day. Overall, his recovery lasted a few months, as the procedure requires doctors to break all of his ribs. But he could always count on looking forward to sports, which have always been an integral part of his life. By the spring, Valeri had returned to the baseball field, where he was named the captain of his high school baseball team and was named the MVP of Arlington’s all-star Babe Ruth team. And as summer inched closer, so did the summer golf season. Valeri started playing golf three years ago and whittled his handicap from 24-plus last summer down to 11.2. He was the only freshman to make his varsity golf team at Arlington Catholic. Due to his condition, he fatigues easily. He was forced to stop playing hockey around the sixth grade, but excels in sports like baseball and golf. “The game of golf is in your hands, you control your destiny,” he said. “That’s one of the reasons why I like it, because it’s you versus no one else, just yourself … I just love golf.” Valeri said he can already feel his stamina improving since the December surgery. He’s upbeat and cracking off one-liners following his round at Cranberry Valley. He often flashes a smile. Later this season, he’ll fire an 82 at an NEPGA Junior Tour event at Hyannis Golf Club. His heart condition is something he must continue to live with. He’s had eight other surgeries in the past, and optimistically hopes he won’t need surgery for another 5-7 years. He hopes he won’t have to undergo open-heart surgery again until he’s into his mid-20’s. Yet according to Valeri, he’s lucky. “I always think about what I’ve gone through but then I always think about how people are much worse off,” he said. “I’m grateful for what I have even though its not good. There’s a quote that says if you have a house, a family and running water you’re already richer than 75 percent of the world.” As always, Valeri provides a reason to smile. Click HERE to view the results from these events: NEPGA Jr. - Blackstone National GC Blackstone National GC - Sutton, MA ELITE TOUR Trull Brook & Indian Ridge Jul 28-29 Trull Brook GC - Tewksbury, MA Indian Ridge CC - Andover, MA NEPGA Jr. - Candia Woods Golf Links 28-Jul Candia Woods - Candia, NH NEPGA Jr. - Twin Springs 29-Jul Twin Springs - Bolton, MA NEPGA Jr -Widow's Walk GC 29-Jul Widow's Walk GC - Scituate, MA NEPGA Jr.- Pease GC 30-Jul Pease GC - Portsmouth, NH NEPGA Jr Tour - Settlers Crossing 30-Jul Settlers Crossing GC - Lunenburg, MA NEPGA Jr. - Allendale 30-Jul Allendale - North Dartmouth, MA NEPGA Jr. - GC at Yarmouthport 31-Jul GC at Yarmouthport - Yarmouthport, MA NEPGA Jr.- The Ridge Club 3-Aug Ridge Club, The - Sandwich, MA ELITE TOUR Stow Acres GC 3-4 Aug Stow Acres CC - North - Stow, MA Stow Acres - South - Stow, MA Parent/Child - Marshfield CC 3-Aug Marshfield CC - Marshfield, MA NEPGA Jr.- Atkinson Resort 4-Aug Atkinson Resort & CC - Atkinson, NH 28-Jul Check out results from the entire 2015 NEPGA Junior Tour season at www.nepgajuniortour.com 12 Results Results Results Results Results Results Results Results Results Results Results Results Results NEPGA Jr. - White Cliffs White Cliffs CC - Plymouth, MA NEPGA Jr.- Blissful Meadows GC 4-Aug Blissful Meadows - Uxbridge, MA NEPGA Jr. - Reedy Meadow 5-Aug Reedy Meadows - Standard - Lynnfield, MA NEPGA Jr Tour - Easton CC 5-Aug Easton CC - South Easton, MA NEPGA Jr. Holden Hills CC 5-Aug Holden Hills CC - Jefferson, MA ELITETOUR - Wentworth Hills & Fall River Aug 5-6 Wentworth Hills - Plainville, MA Fall River - Fall River, MA NEPGA Jr - George Wright GC 6-Aug George Wright - Hyde Park, MA NEPGA Jr - Far Corner GC 6-Aug Far Corner Golf Course - Boxford, MA Boda Memorial Invitational 6-Aug Andover CC - Andover, MA NEPGA Jr. - Winchedon #2 7-Aug Winchendon - Winchendon, MA NEPGA Jr. - Meadow Brook GC 10-Aug Meadow Brook GC - Reading, MA NEPGA Jr. - Reservation GC 10-Aug Reservation Golf Club, In - Mattapoisett, MA NEPGA Jr. - Gannon GC #2 11-Aug Larry Gannon - Lynn, MA NEPGA Jr. - Bradford CC #2 11-Aug Bradford CC - Bradford, MA ELITE TOUR - Lebaron Hills & Plymouth CC Aug 12LeBaron Hills CC - Lakeville, MA 13 Plymouth - Plymouth, MA NEPGA Jr. Champ-Thomson CC 13-Aug Thomson CC - North Reading, MA 4-Aug Thank you for a successful and exciting 2015 season! 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