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Assassin wounds Pope at St. Peter's
Charles and Diana wed in royal splendor
First woman named to Supreme Court
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1981 Jodie Mudd
Jodie Mudd,
21, of Louisville, Kentucky, became the first golfer in 19 years to win
consecutive Amateur Public Links Championships. R.H. Sikes was the last
to win two in a row in 1961 and 1962. Mudd defeated 1981 Dixie Amateur Champion
Billy Tuten in the final, 3 and 2, on the Masters Course of the Bear Creek
Golf World in Houston, Texas.
Mudd beat the heat to keep the Public Links Trophy in the family for
the third time in the past six years. Brother Eddie won the Amateur Public
Links title in 1976. Roy Biancalana of Chicago, Illinois won medalist
honors with a superb 36-hole score of 138 under difficult weather conditions.
Mudd shot 141 to qualify easily for the match play. Biancalana exited
in the first round failing to Mike Miles of Cypress, California, 1 up,
in 19 holes.
Mudd had some close calls en route to the final. After eliminating Greg
Morrison of Richardson, Texas, 4 and 3, Mudd needed a birdie on the 18th
to square his second match with Mark Saatzer of St. Cloud, Minnesota and
then birdied the first extra hole to close it out. Next, Mudd was 3 down
after 10 holes to Doug Hixon of Crooked River, Oregon, but won four in
a row on the way to a 2 and 1 triumph.
He swept to a 3 and 1 quarter-final victory over David Anthony of Nashville,
Tennessee, and to a 2 and 1 semifinal decision against Danny Elkins of
St. Petersburg, Florida. Tuten, the 1979 Junior Amateur runner-up and
1980 Amateur Public Links semifinalist from Palatka, Florida defeated
Richard Dalpos of Lemont, Illinois, 3 and 2; Phil Arinno of Citrus Heights,
California, 2 up; Vic Wilk of Sepulveda, California, 1 up, 20 holes; Mark
Seki of Kahului, Hawaii, 6 and 4; and Andrew Soley of Cedar Lake, Indiana,
2 up.
Both Mudd and Tuten showed the strain of the heat and the competition
in the 36-hole final. Mudd, however, was 3 up at the lunch break and 5
up through 28 holes. Tuten managed to win two more holes, but he pulled
a birdie putt of five feet at the 15th, which cost him dearly.
The match was over on the 16th hole. In August, Mudd became the first
Amateur Public Links Champion since R.H Sikes to be named to the United
States Walker Cup Team. On a sad note, Mudd's father, Edward L. Mudd,
a member of the USGA Public Links Committee, passed away in Louisville,
not long after witnessing his son's victory in Houston.
The Chicago Team, led by Biancalana's stylish play, won the Warren G.
Harding Team Trophy, emblematic of the Amateur Public Links Team Championship.
Biancalana combined with Soley and Nicholas Zambole of Palatine, Illinois
for a 435 total, 19 strokes better than the 454 of the Houston Team. The
USGA received 4,318 entries, short of the record, 4,601 set in 1975.
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