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              "IF YOU LIKE GOLF" 
              online golf column 
              by 
              
              Chris Dortch 
                
              September 30, 2007
 From Larry White 
              to Lex Tarumianz to Larry McGill, players who formerly excelled on 
              the junior amateur circuit have shown their mettle in national and 
              international competition. It seems like only a short while ago 
              that all those players were competing with the flat bellies and 
              collegiate stars, but the relentless passing of time has carried 
              them into another level of competition, along with many other 
              players who seem to be adjusting just fine to their new status. 
               
              Just this summer Chattanooga’s Coy Mabry 
              finished second and Mike Jenkins finished third in the Tennessee 
              Senior Amateur played at his beloved Chattanooga Golf and Country 
              Club, and Chuck Jabaley won the Tennessee Senior Match Player 
              Championship after reaching the finals the year before.  
              Chattanooga, in fact, has been well 
              represented in the match play event; in 2007, three of the four 
              semifinalists (Neil Spitalny and McGill were the others) were all 
              from the area.  In addition McGill qualified to play in the 
              USGA Senior Amateur in August. 
              Jabaley, for one, has welcomed the 
              opportunity to compete for championships again. From his peak in 
              the early 1990s, when he won the Tennessee Open and reached match 
              play in the U.S. Amateur, Jabaley had fallen back as he found it 
              difficult to keep up with the younger breed that grew up hitting 
              titanium drivers and two-piece balls. 
              “Senior competition is much better for me,” 
              said Jabaley, who in addition to his match play victory finished 
              fourth in the 2007 state senior amateur. “I just can’t keep up 
              with the power game of these young guys anymore. At the state 
              amateur this year [at Nashville’s Belle Meade Country Club] a lot 
              of the younger guys were hitting 6- and 7-irons into the par 5s. I 
              never even went for a par five [in two]. You can compete with the 
              kids for a while, but it’s difficult.” 
              Jabaley has only recently returned to playing 
              serious tournament golf after sitting out the last couple of years 
              before he turned 55, the age at which amateurs can begin competing 
              as seniors. 
              “I enjoy having a chance to win again,” he 
              said. “If you get really nervous, you know you’re in the hunt. 
              Those butterflies are tough, but they’re fun. I only wish I’d have 
              played more tournament golf when I was 52, 53. Bobby Jones said 
              there’s golf and there’s tournament golf, and they’re not the 
              same.” 
              That’s definitely true, but many seniors I’ve 
              talked to in the last couple of years always mention the 
              camaraderie of senior golf. So in that regard it’s a bit different 
              than the grind of the state and national amateur circuit. 
              “Everyone is still as competitive as ever,” 
              Jenkins said. “No change there. But it’s done in a more relaxed, 
              friendly type atmosphere. That makes me enjoy it even more.” 
              Jenkins has long sacrificed his own game 
              while volunteering his time in golf administration, for the TGA 
              and the CDGA. But when he got closer to 55, he made a concerted 
              effort to focus on the aspects of his game that would enable him 
              to compete with his fellow seniors.  
              
                
                “I have been concentrating to two areas, driving it in the 
                fairway and my short game,” Jenkins said. “My short game has 
                always been the most consistent part of my game, and I have 
                noticed that can be a real advantage in senior competition. As 
                for fairways, even from slightly shorter tees in senior 
                competition, you can't score from the rough.” 
                
                --- 
                
                Congratulations are again in order for UTC’s golf team, which 
                this week ascended to No. 7 in the GolfWeek Division I 
                poll. Suddenly a program that had never even been ranked in the 
                top 100 is ranked in the top 10. That rapid rise on the strength 
                of solid performances in their own season-opening tournament and 
                the Carpet Capital at The Farm in Dalton, Ga. surprised even 
                coach Mark Guhne. 
                
                “Did it surprise me that we got ranked that quickly?” Guhne 
                said. “Yes. But that high? No. That was the plan. I didn’t take 
                this job to win a conference championship. I took it to build a 
                [national] program. 
                
                “I’ve always thought that in Chattanooga, you can build a 
                program that can be in the Top 25. There are good players here 
                and the resources, within the university and the community, to 
                get it done.” 
                   
              
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