U.S. Mid-Amateur Golf Championship

The U.S. Mid-Amateur, often called the Mid-Am for short, is the leading annual golf tournament in the United States for post-college amateur golfers, organized by the USGA.

It was first played in 1981 at Bellerive Country Club in Creve Coeur, Missouri, near St. Louis. The Mid-Am was the first new USGA championship in 19 years, since the U.S. Senior Women's Amateur was added in 1962.

Qualifications for the Mid-Am are similar to those for the U.S. Amateur, except for the following:

The U.S. Mid-Amateur does not have a gender restriction, but there has never been a female champion. The USGA's analogous event for women only is the U.S. Women's Mid-Amateur, first played in 1987.

The USGA specifically intended the Mid-Am as a championship for post-college golfers who were not pursuing golf as a career, as virtually all golfers who pursue a professional career decide to do so no later than their early twenties. This was most likely a response to the fact that less than half of all U.S. Amateur qualifiers are 25 or older, and most older golfers found themselves disadvantaged in competing against college golfers who typically play much more often.

Like the U.S. Amateur, the Mid-Am consists of two days of stroke play, with the leading 64 competitors then playing a knockout competition held at match play to decide the champion. The profile of Mid-Am champions, with respect to age, is somewhat similar to that of U.S. Amateur champions before World War II. In that era, more top-level golfers chose to remain amateur, and the average age of U.S. Amateur Champions was higher.

While the list of winners is considerably less illustrious than that of the U.S. Amateur, one notable winner was Jay Sigel, a three-time winner of this event and a two-time U.S. Amateur champion who went on to play the Champions Tour. The winner receives an automatic invitation to play in the Masters Tournament.

Winners

  • 2014 Scott Harvey
  • 2013 Mike McCoy
  • 2012 Nathan Smith
  • 2011 Randal Lewis
  • 2010 Nathan Smith
  • 2009 Nathan Smith
  • 2008 Steve Wilson
  • 2007 Trip Kuehne
  • 2006 Dave Womack
  • 2005 Kevin Marsh
  • 2004 Austin Eaton III
  • 2003 Nathan Smith
  • 2002 George Zahringer
  • 2001 Tim Jackson
  • 2000 Greg Puga
  • 1999 Danny Green
  • 1998 John "Spider" Miller
  • 1997 Ken Bakst
  • 1996 John "Spider" Miller
  • 1995 Jerry Courville, Jr.
  • 1994 Tim Jackson
  • 1993 Jeff Thomas
  • 1992 Danny Yates
  • 1991 Jim Stuart
  • 1990 Jim Stuart
  • 1989 James Taylor
  • 1988 David Eger
  • 1987 Jay Sigel
  • 1986 Bill Loeffler
  • 1985 Jay Sigel
  • 1984 Michael Podolak
  • 1983 Jay Sigel
  • 1982 William Hoffer
  • 1981 Jim Holtgrieve

Multiple winners

External links