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

August 5, 2008
Adam Mitchell can’t
wait to get to the U.S. Amateur later this month.
Given the way the Georgia All-American and
former McCallie star has played the last few weeks, his enthusiasm
isn’t hard to figure.
Last month Mitchell won the prestigious
Porter Cup, placing his name on a trophy with David Duval, Phil
Mickelson and Ben Crenshaw. (But not, surprisingly, Tiger Woods.)
Buoyed with confidence after winning one of
amateur’s golf’s most important tournaments, Mitchell went to
Memphis Aug. 4 for U.S. Amateur qualifying and torched the North
Course at Colonial Country Club with rounds of 64-66. That was
easily the day’s low score as Mitchell claimed one of only two
spots.
Next comes a trip to famed Pinehurst, where
the U.S. Amateur will be played. And though school starts that
same week—“I’m going to have to figure that one out,” Mitchell
said—he’s eagerly awaiting the challenge.
“I’m really looking forward to the U.S.
Amateur,” Mitchell said. “It just seems like the Porter Cup has
brought my game to a whole new level. It’s pretty special to have
won a tournament against that great a field, that’s been won in
the past by Phil Mickelson, Ben Crenshaw.
“It’s also important for me to know that all
the hard work I’ve been putting in on my game has paid off. There
were some rough times—you always have to take a step back when you
try to get better—but now I’m starting to play really well.”
The scores prove as much. He did most of his
damage at the Porter Cup with an 8-under-par 62 in the first
round, and after sitting idle for a day because the second round
was postponed by rain, he followed that with a 66. He wound up
winning by three shots despite the almost constant presence of
rain.
It was during a two-hour rain delay on the
final day that Mitchell got a pleasant surprise. Mitchell’s father
Jim is almost always around whenever he plays, whether it’s as a
caddy or a spectator. But on the week of the Porter Cup, the elder
Mitchell had another obligation to his daughter, driving her
around on a tour of colleges in Cincinnati.
But when Jim Mitchell found out his son was
in the hunt at the Porter Cup, he caught a flight to New York for
the final round. He didn’t bother telling Adam.
“I looked up and saw a guy that looked like
my dad,” Mitchell said. “Then I said, ‘wait a minute, that is my
dad.’ I was stunned.”
Jim Mitchell had brought his camera and was
just planning on watching. Adam had other ideas.
“I wanted him to caddy for me,” “I was worn
out, just really tired. Having him on the bag definitely helped.”
Jim was also on hand at Memphis during U.S.
Amateur qualifying, where the heat made it a brutal, 36-hole
endurance test. And he’ll caddy for Adam in the U.S. Amateur.
“It’s been great to have him there with me,”
Mitchell said.
For the last two years, Chattanooga swing
instructor Zeb Patten has also been a part of Mitchell’s support
group. Mitchell credits his recent ascension to another level to
the work he’s done with Patten.
“We’ve worked a lot on the short game,”
Mitchell said, “and my chipping and putting have gotten so much
better. And my swing has gotten more consistent, too. It really
takes a lot of pressure off when you know you can get up and down
if you miss a green.”
Mitchell hasn’t missed too many greens the
last month or so. His irons have honed in on the flag. In that
first-round 62 at the Porter Cup, he had five tap-in birdie putts.
“It’s all about confidence,” Mitchell said.
“I know what I need to do to make the ball go straight. That’s
been the key.”
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