CCHS golfer wins Dixie Junior Championship
Published 9:28 am Monday, June 24, 2013
By Daniel Evans | Selma Times-Journal
Clanton’s Madison Sanders shot a tournament best 3-over-par 74 Tuesday to win the overall girls’ competition at the 52nd Annual Bud Burns Dixie Junior Championship.
Sanders had a one-shot lead after Round 1 and was able to widen that lead with two birdies and limited mistakes in her second round. Sanders, the only girl on the Chilton County High School golf team, shot 77-74 for an overall total of 8-over, 151. She won the 13-15 age group, as well as the overall girls’ competition.
For winning, she took home the trophy and an autographed picture from 2012 Masters champion Bubba Watson, a previous winner of the Bud Burns Championship.
“It was really fun, and I just want to thank my mom and dad for making it all possible and bringing me up here,” Sanders said, who birdied holes five and eight during the final round.
In the end, Sanders played so well that a double bogey on her final hole ended up being meaningless.
The Clanton native said it felt good to win the overall championship despite not even being in the older age group of participants.
“This was probably the first time,” Tommy Burns said when asked if a younger division participant had ever won the overall girls’ competition before. “That’s not unusual in golf. Once they get 15 years old, they can hit it so far, they can play.”
Sanders is not sure how many tournaments she has won through the years, but she knows how long she has been working on her game.
“Ten years,” Sanders said. “I played my first tournament when I was five in Auburn.”
Hope Bishop finished second overall, shooting 78-77 for a two-day total of 12-over, 155. She came into day two only one shot back of Sanders, but failed to birdie any of the holes and carded five bogeys or worse. Third overall was Katelyn Gilmore, who looked like she might make a run after a birdie on No. 1. Unfortunately, that was Gilmore’s lone birdie of the day.
“This is by far the best tournament. We’ve had our highest number of entries for the girls,” Burns said. “Twenty-eight girls played all the way from the tip of north Alabama to the Florida panhandle. It grew probably about 50 percent. It was just a great tournament.”
A short rain delay stopped play on Tuesday. Players were pulled off the course for about half an hour because of a thunderstorm nearby, causing tee times to be pushed back 30 minutes.
Players came from Tennessee, Florida and Georgia to take part in the tournament, with 125 total players competing in the boys and girls’ competitions combined.
“That’s the most we’ve had in probably six years,” Burns said referring to the number of entrants.