"IF YOU LIKE GOLF"
online golf column
by
Chris Dortch

May 16, 2008
Adam Mitchell can
recall the exact moment his career as a college golfer rose to a
higher plane.
It was the fall of 2006, Mitchell’s sophomore
season at the University of Georgia. With the Bulldogs poised to
win the Schenkel Invitational, Mitchell, the former Chattanooga
McCallie star, stood in the fairway on the final hole of the
tournament and faced a decision.
“It was a par-five,” said Mitchell, who’s
making a triumphant return to Chattanooga this week in the NCAA
East Regional at Council Fire. “If you hit two pretty good shots,
you had a chance to get on the green. I remember I laced a 3-wood
right at the flag. It ended up about 10 feet from the hole.”
Mitchell drained the putt for eagle, Georgia
won the team championship, and Mitchell finished fourth
individually. There’s been little stopping him since. In his next
13 tournaments, including eight in this, his junior year, Mitchell
has finished ninth or better eight times, including ninth at last
year’s NCAA Championships and seventh in the recent SEC
Tournament, a showing that solidified his first-team All-SEC
status.
Mitchell’s remarkable consistency earned him
one of college golf’s highest honors recently when he was chosen
to represent the United States in the Palmer Cup, which pits
American collegians against their counterparts from Europe.
Mitchell will travel to Scotland for that Ryder Cup-style match in
late June and also play in the British Amateur the week before,
kicking off a summer of golf he hopes will help him notch another
career goal, playing for the U.S. Walker Cup team.
“That would be a great honor,” Mitchell said.
“But obviously there’s a lot of golf to be played before I can
achieve something like that. Right now, I just want to play one
tournament at a time, one shot at a time, and just keep on doing
what I’ve been doing.”
Mitchell has made it a habit of broadcasting
the elevation of his game in dramatic fashion. That eagle at the
2006 Schenkel tournament was a huge boost to his confidence and
clearly demonstrated to him and everyone else he could pull off
difficult shots in pressure-packed situations. As a junior player,
he opened the floodgates to his college recruitment with a record
12-under-par 60 in winning the 2004 Bubba Conlee Tournament. If
upper-major college coaches had questions about whether Mitchell
was capable of going deep, that little 60 answered them in a
hurry.
In ’04, Mitchell credited his work with a
sports psychologist for his improvement. Since he’s been at
Georgia, the short game has been the key to his impressive rise.
“I’ve been working hard on my chipping and
putting,” Mitchell said. “It gives you a lot of confidence to fire
at flags when you aren’t worried about being able to get up and
down if you miss a green.”
Another more dramatic event has also, in its
own way, helped Mitchell’s game. A cousin, with whom Mitchell was
very close, recently passed away at age 25. That jolted him to his
core.
“That kind of put golf into perspective,”
Mitchell said. “Golf is just a game. If you hit a bad shot, if you
make a bogey, it’s not the end of the world. You’ve still got
plenty of holes to make up for it.”
---
The careers of Mitchell and his Georgia
teammate, freshman Harris English, have mirrored one another. Like
Mitchell, English forged his reputation at a Chattanooga prep
school (Baylor). And like Mitchell, who nearly won the 2006
Tennessee State Open as an 18-year-old Georgia freshman, English
signaled his game was ready for the highest levels of amateur golf
with his play in a major state event.
When English won the Georgia Amateur last
July at age 17, he became the youngest player to do so since a
14-year-old Bobby Jones in 1916. A month after that English was in
Athens, trying to make the Bulldogs’ five-man traveling team.
English did that and much, much more. He won
his second tournament ever, the Brickyard Championship, with
scores of 65-71-68. To prove that wasn’t a fluke, he won his next
tournament, the Isleworth Invitational, with closing rounds of
67-66.
Just like Mitchell, English quickly showed he
wasn’t afraid to go low.
“Winning the Georgia Amateur gave me a lot of
confidence,” English said. “But I knew I had to step up my game.
There are so many great players at Georgia. If I wanted to get
into the top five, I had to play well.”
English has played better than anyone could
have hoped and has added to his trophy room collection. English was
voted the SEC’s Freshman of the Year, made the league’s
All-Freshman team and was also second-team All-SEC.
“Harris has been awesome,” Mitchell said.
“He’s come in here as a freshman and really played well. But you
knew he could compete. He’s just proven what we all knew.”
Like Mitchell, Harris says short-game work
has been a huge key to his development. He credits a little game
the Bulldogs call “Gauntlet,” with making short-game practice fun
and challenging.
“It’s a little nine-hole game,” English says.
“We spray paint spots on the course where you have to get it up
and down from. Par is two. If you shoot 3 over or less for nine
holes, you get to stop. If you go over that, you keep going. I can
remember one day I stayed out there all afternoon. But my short
game has gotten a lot better.”
English proved that at Council Fire in the
NCAA East Regional’s second round on Friday. English started on
the back nine and turned at 1-under. He then reeled off five back
nine birdies, including four straight from No. 4 through No. 7 to
shoot a 6-under-65.
By his own admission, putting problems this
spring have kept English from being as dominant as he was in the
fall, but those might have gone by the wayside on Friday. In that
birdie streak, he made a 10-footer at No. 4, a 30-footer at No. 5,
an eight-footer at No. 6 and a 20-footer at No. 7.
“I stopped worrying about whether it was
going to go in,” English said. “I just wanted to roll it toward
the hole, and trust my line.
“That worked pretty well.”
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