U.S. AMATEUR FOUR-BALL

Jersey Teens Blake, Pasternak Oust Medalists After Surviving Playoff

By David Shefter, USGA

| May 19, 2025 | Edison, N.J.

Jersey Teens Blake, Pasternak Oust Medalists After Surviving Playoff

Momentum is one of those tangibles that’s difficult to quantify. One minute it’s there, the next it can be gone. But when the wave is rolling in your favor, it’s a wonderful circumstance.

New Jersey teenagers Barnes Blake and Liam Pasternak discovered how much having a little adrenaline can work in their corner. They each were awoken by pre-dawn alarms – Pasternak at 5 a.m. and Blake 30 minutes later – on a cool and blustery mid-May morning just hoping to find some form and survive a 12-for-2 playoff at Plainfield Country Club to garner a precious match-play spot in the 10th U.S. Amateur Four-Ball Championship.

Four holes and some 2½ hours after the playoff commenced at 7 a.m., they were the last side in the draw, facing stroke-play medalists and top seeds Zach Capps and Brent Whitehead, a pair of 35-year-old Wofford College graduates who live in Atlanta, Ga., in the Round of 32.

Blake, 19, a member at stroke-play co-host Echo Lake Country Club, in nearby Westfield, and a rising junior at Georgetown University, and the 18-year-old Pasternak, a Morristown, N.J., resident and University of Notre Dame signee, used those four holes as fuel to produce a 3-and-2 victory.

The other playoff survivors, Oklahoma City, Okla., residents Conrad Walcher and Dustin Wigington, also enjoyed similar momentum, knocking out 2019 champions and No. 2 seeds Scott Harvey and Todd Mitchell, 2 and 1.

Six of the top eight seeds from stroke play were eliminated, including the top three. Besides the aforementioned decisions, third-seeded Joseph Deraney and Jonathan Bale fell in 20 holes to Maryland residents Carson Looney, 18, of Bethesda, and Hunter Powell, 32, of Gaithersburg.

“It was honestly the best warmup you can get,” said Blake, who a week ago advanced out of local U.S. Open qualifying in Connecticut. “Just being under the gun that early and having to hit all the shots in the bag. We felt we were riding on that momentum. Super warmed up. We came out of the gates pretty hot with a nice birdie on [Hole] 1.”

Blake, the 2022 Metropolitan Golf Association’s Junior Player of the Year, and Pasternak, who made match play in the 2022 and 2024 U.S. Junior Amateur, built a 3-up lead thru five holes and never let their opponents get closer than 2 holes down the rest of the match. It didn’t hurt to have a crowd of some 50 providing vocal support.

It also came a day after the side failed to make a single birdie in its final stroke-play round at Plainfield (4-over 74) after opening with a 4-under 66 at Echo Lake, where Blake owns the course record.

“We both have played in [multiple] USGA championships,” said Pasternak. “We’ve played in big tournaments, so we’re ready to go out and keep winning and maybe make it to the end. It’s nice to stay in your own bed, but the biggest difference is the home crowd. I think that [support] was helpful to us.”

Wigington, who at 51 is 20 years older than his partner, took the attitude that the side was playing with “house money” entering the Monday morning playoff. Despite facing one of the two sides to play in all 10 U.S. Amateur Four-Balls, the side told themselves that the past champions were the ones with the tough draw. They kept things tight until consecutive birdies on 12 and 13, and a winning par on 14 provided the Oklahomans a 3-up cushion.

Tyler Mawhinney (left) and Will Hartman formed a chemistry through the U.S. National Junior Team and now as U.S. Amateur Four-Ball partners. (USGA/Simon Bruty)

Tyler Mawhinney (left) and Will Hartman formed a chemistry through the U.S. National Junior Team and now as U.S. Amateur Four-Ball partners. (USGA/Simon Bruty)

“Well, I played at Wichita State, and I saw the Illinois State bag [of Todd Mitchell], so I was motivated,” said Walcher of the past Missouri Valley Conference rivals.

Top juniors Tyler Mawhinney, 17, of Fleming Island, Fla., and 2025 Vanderbilt signee Will Hartman, 18, of Charlotte, N.C., figured to be one of the pre-championship favorites, given their national pedigree. Mawhinney won last year’s Canadian Amateur and then made a run to the final 16 at the U.S. Amateur. Hartman reached the semifinals of the 2023 U.S. Junior Amateur. Both have been on the U.S. National Junior Team as part of the USGA’s National Development Program since its inception a year ago.

Both were friends before joining the USNJT, but they consummated their four-ball partnership during the team’s match against Australia last July at SentryWorld in Wisconsin, where they found chemistry as a side.

They got things rolling on Sunday with a 3-under 67 and carried that momentum into their 2-and-1 win over Josh Fickes and Brandon Grzywacz. Winning Nos. 6 and 7 with birdies kick-started the side on Monday and another solid three-hole birdie stretch from No. 10 was enough to put them in the final 16.

“Tyler definitely carried me through it a little bit today,” said Hartman, who planned to hit the practice range on Monday afternoon to straighten out his driver. “I hit a few good shots, but he did a lot of the heavy lifting. I’m glad I had him out there. We’re a good team and we’re going to be hard to beat.”

A quick trip to the Plainfield practice area on Sunday afternoon seemed to do wonders for Robbie Ziegler. After struggling in the final round of stroke play, the 34-year-old from Tualatin, Ore., found a good swing thought that worked wonders on Monday. Ziegler and partner/fellow University of Oregon alum Zach Foushee, 30, of Lake Oswego, Ore., played 7-under golf over 13 holes in a 7-and-5 win over Mark Baker and Kurt Watkins. It was the fourth-largest margin of victory in championship history; there have been three 7-and-6 decisions.

“It was really impressive from Robbie,” said Foushee, a realtor who birdied the first hole from 10 feet and watched his partner heat up. “He did not miss a shot today.”

But last year’s record-tying medalists are fully aware that one great match doesn’t necessarily translate to further success. The duo shot 126 in qualifying at Philadelphia Cricket Club, only to be sent packing in the Round of 16. This year, they didn’t get into the field until a couple of weeks ago when the medalists from their qualifying site, Reid Hatley and Jake Koppenberg, withdrew due to the latter’s new job.

So this unexpected gift, along with being young parents – Foushee will become a first-time father in four weeks and Ziegler has a 17-month-old son – doesn’t have the duo popping any champagne corks just yet.

“We’ve been here before,” said Ziegler, a marketing representative for a major golf apparel company. “We know how hard it’s going to be. The farther you go, the better the teams are going to be…We’re just soaking it in. Back to reality here soon.” 

Jack Larkin Jr. (left) and Zach Healy had the comeback of the day, rallying from 2 down with two to play in a 20-hole victory in the Round of 32 at Plainfield Country Club. (USGA/Simon Bruty)

Jack Larkin Jr. (left) and Zach Healy had the comeback of the day, rallying from 2 down with two to play in a 20-hole victory in the Round of 32 at Plainfield Country Club. (USGA/Simon Bruty)

Reigning U.S. Mid-Amateur champion Evan Beck, 34, of Virginia Beach, Va., continued his quest for a second USGA title in eight months, as he and partner and Dan Walters, 40, of Winston-Salem, N.C., rolled to a 5-and-4 win over University of Cincinnati teammates Ryan Ford and Connor McNeely. The 2022 Four-Ball semifinalists won six of the first 10 holes and cruised home.

A possible Wake Forest quarterfinal is looming as 2022 champions and Deamon Deacons Chad Wilfong, 44, of Charlotte, N.C., and Davis Womble, 31, of Winston-Salem, N.C., produced a 3-and-2 win over Payne Denman and Brett Patterson. Should Beck, a Wake alum, and Walters, a former Wake assistant coach, win their Tuesday morning match, and Wilfong/Womble do the same, they would square off in the final eight.

But the inaugural champions and No. 6 seeds, Nathan Smith and Todd White, were ousted by 2018 runners-up Marc Dull, 39, of Lakeland, Fla., and Chip Brooke, 49, of Altamonte Springs, Fla., 2 and 1. Dull also was a finalist in the 2015 U.S. Mid-Amateur.

What’s Next

Match play continues on Tuesday with the Round of 16 and quarterfinals, beginning at 7 a.m. EDT. The semifinals and 18-hole championship match are scheduled for Wednesday, with the matches set for 7 a.m. and 7:20 a.m., and the final set for 1 p.m. Admission is free and the public is encouraged to attend.

Notable

  • The 12-for-2 playoff lasted four holes and 2½ hours, with New Jersey teenagers Barnes Blake and Liam Pasternak edging 1979 U.S. Junior Amateur champion Jack Larkin Sr. and 2021 U.S. Mid-Amateur semifinalist Hayes Brown for the final spot in the draw with a par on the 13th hole. Larkin, at 63, was the oldest player in this year’s field.

  • Of the 32 sides qualifying for match play, 22 were comprised completely of mid-amateurs (25 and older). Three 17-year-olds advanced: Tyler Mawhinney, Edan Cui and Nicholas Logis. The oldest to get through was 57-year-old Todd White, who won the inaugural U.S. Amateur Four-Ball with Nathan Smith.

  • Five international players qualified for match play. Jonathan Bale, of Wales, a former Louisiana Tech golfer is partnering with 2019 U.S. Mid-Amateur runner-up Joseph Deraney, of Tupelo, Miss., while Brandon Kuntz, of Canada, is partnering with Ball State teammate Carter Smith. University of Toledo golfers Bence Botenyi and Bence Kotel both hail from Hungary, and Long Beach State senior Charlite Forster is from England.

  • The son of Plainfield Country Club pro Scott Paris, Jack Paris, is serving as a caddie for Drew Stoltz, a PGA Tour Radio/podcast personality, who is a past two-time runner-up with Drew Kittleson. The Scottsdale, Ariz., resident does a weekly show (“Gravy and The Sleeze”) with two-time USGA champion Colt Knost as well as the “Sub-Par” podcast.

  • Kittleson and Stoltz, the only side to play in multiple U.S. Amateur Four-Ball finals, saw their run end in a 1-down defeat to Kurtz and Smith. Smith hit a brilliant approach on 18 to 2 feet for a winning birdie in what was one of the best shots of the day.|

  • There were mixed results for two USGA champion legacies. Jack Larkin Jr., the son of 1979 U.S. Junior Amateur champion Jack Sr., and his partner Zach Healy rallied from 2 down with two to play to defeat Stephen Hale and Weston Payne in 20 holes. But Dalton Melnyk, the son of 1969 U.S. Amateur champion and former golf broadcaster Steve Melnyk, wasn’t so fortunate with his partner, David Denham. The side lost to teenagers Kush Arora and Edan Cui, 1 down. Arora, a lefty, is a rising junior at Stanford University, and Cui will play for the Cardinal this fall.

Quotable

“I think it gives you an advantage mentally to go out there and get through a playoff. You feel like you’ve got a free roll.” – Dustin Wigington

“It was a grind. The golf course is not getting any easier. It’s blowing again. The thing that we talk about, especially in playoffs (extra-hole matches) is birdies don’t win playoffs, [but] bogeys lose them. Another thing we talk about is TIPs, tap-in pars. The second playoff hole was a little more than a tap-in (3 feet), but Carson was right in front of me [for par], so no TIP.” – Hunter Powell after a 20-hole win with partner Carson Looney

“When you are in a playoff, you have all that adrenaline and if you succeed, it’s like all the nerves of the day are already out the window. At least for me, I was standing over my shot on one fairway [in the match], saying let’s go hole this. I was ready to go perform on the first hole.” – Liam Pasternak on taking the momentum from the four-hole playoff into the side’s opening-round match

“Coach [Chris] Zambri and Coach Tiff [Joh] have been great resources and they’ve given us opportunities that we wouldn’t have been able to have without them. We’re grateful for them.” – Will Hartman on what it has meant to be part of the U.S. National Junior Team since 2024.

“I think I am more prepared to play these types of [championship] golf courses. Those events definitely helped me get ready for this [U.S. Amateur Four-Ball]. – Tyler Mawhinney when asked about the momentum he’s gained from his late-summer performances of 2024 that included the Canadian Amateur victory

David Shefter is a senior staff writer at the USGA. Email him at dshefter@usga.org.