Ghim, Meth advance to Public Links final

TOMMY DAHLIK
Associated Press

NEWTON, Kansas (AP) — Faced with adversity for the first time this week at the U.S. Amateur Public Links Championship, a feeling of hopelessness nearly overtook 18-year old Doug Ghim in the semifinals.

The future Texas Longhorns golfer trailed for the first time at the APL and faced a three-hole deficit against Oklahoma senior and Sterling, Kansas native Michael Gellerman with six holes left.

Luckily he had someone who knew perfectly how to ease his troubles — his dad, Jeff, who was caddying for him.

Ghim was able to rally back at Sand Creek Station Golf Course and clinch a berth to the finals with a win on the 18th hole. He’ll face Byron Meth in the 36-hole finals. Meth advanced with a 6 and 5 semifinal win over Jess Bonneau.

“It really was difficult,” Ghim said. “It took everything out of me. At one point I thought it might be too late. But my dad, thankful he was there. He kept pushing me. He kept reminding me that I wasn’t out of it and that I’ve been playing well and there is no reason I cannot play well the last couple of holes.”

After Gellerman took the 3 up lead after the 12th hole, Ghim responded with a win on the 13th. He parlayed the momentum into a birdie on the 14th to cut Gellerman’s lead to one.

On the par 4 16th, both players struggled. Ghim’s approach shot missed the green and he faced a difficult chip that rested against the collar.

“Not really sure how the ball was going to come out,” Ghim said. “So I played it conservatively. Didn’t want to knock it way by and give Michael a free run at par and give him a little bit of hope.”

Ghim’s chip settled 8 feet from the hole. After Gellerman missed a lengthy par attempt, Ghim drained his putt to even the match.

“I knew if I didn’t make it, 17 and 18 would be very difficult,” Ghim said. “Thankfully it went in.”

On 18, Gellerman missed the green right while Ghim stuck a 164-yard 6-iron into a howling wind to 10 feet. After Gellerman missed a par attempt, he conceded the birdie to Ghim for the victory.

Meth, a golfer at Pacific, didn’t have quite the dramatic finish against the 43-year old Bonneau. He started with two birdies and kept the momentum going en route to a dominating win.

Once Meth got the lead, he never backed off.

“I try not to give them any ground,” Meth said of when he gets a lead. “Pick my spots, make aggressive swings and smart targets and then take it from there.”

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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