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    Bubba Watson is known for doing things differently, like having a pink shaft in his driver, firing golf balls through water melons and being one quarter of the golf boy band “The Golf Boys.”

  • Golf Insurance Matters

    The latest article in our how to series turns the spotlight on some of the unexpected things that can happen at the driving range – from ricochets to self-inflicted injuries – and why it pays to be insured. With winter closing in and less daylight hours in which to hit the course the best place to keep swinging is at the driving range. The driving range is a great hangout for golfers of all skill levels and abilities. Given that your local driving range could be filled with hackers and heroes it’s not impossible that an innocent trip to whack some balls could end in disaster, injury or a sizeable legal bill.

  • La Reservae Golf Club, Costa Del Sol

    A new course designed by Cabell B. Robinson, La Reserva Club De Golf had only recently opened but I would never have guessed. On arrival it was obvious the course was in perfect condition. The opening hole at La Reserva is a straight par four with well designed bunkers and an attractive green – a good, if understated opener, but on the 2nd tee, however, the front nine opens up before you and you get an idea of the challenge that lies ahead. Set out in a small valley with wonderful changes in elevation, attractive contours and great scenery, the next eight holes weave back in forth in fantastic fashion.

  • Lie of the Land

    A caddie at The Old Course at St Andrews, Turnberry or Troon would tell you that it takes time to get to know the subtleties and nuances of links land and learn the bounce of the ball. Often slopes and natural features can funnel the ball towards the hole, squeeze extra yards from a drive or prevent a ball from going in a hazard.

  • Thorpenes Golf Club

    TA Hotel Collection, owners of Thorpeness Hotel and Golf Club in Suffolk, are seeking to attract more golf tourists to the county with the launch of a new trail combining real ale tours and classic seaside golf courses. Thorpeness Golf Club is already one of Southern England’s leading stay-and-play golf break destinations thanks to its 36-bedroom hotel, James Braid designed 18-hole course and location in the picture-perfect holiday village of Thorpeness; a Suffolk tourist hot-spot.

  • Golf Equipment

    Golf insurance specialists Golfplan offer their top tips for how to protect yourself from thieves targeting expensive golf equipment

Friday, December 27, 2013

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The USGA added 13 players to its roster of national champions in 2013, but some of our favorite stories of the year weren’t necessarily about the winning putt or the turning point in a match. This is the last in a six-part series that reviews some of the compelling stories that you might have missed in our 2013 championship coverage.

Lin McMillan never was much for cruises, anyway.

So when she received an email less than a week before the championship that she had earned entry into the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur, it didn’t matter to McMillan that she was on a cruise ship, far from a port of call.

“We left on Saturday and I got the email on Sunday,” said McMillan, of Palm Coast, Fla. “My boyfriend, (David Culver) said, ‘You’ve got to play in it.’ We were out in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.”
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It took a lot of doing, but McMillan got to the Women’s Mid-Amateur, and she made the most of the opportunity, reaching match play and winning one match before she fell in the second round to 2009 champion Martha Leach, 1 up.

If McMillan wasn’t so determined to play, she might have abandoned the odyssey from the ocean to Asheville, N.C.

She left the cruise ship two days after receiving the initial email, disembarking in Jamaica. She had already bought a plane ticket to Orlando so she could stop at home to pick up her clothes and clubs. Unfortunately, the ticket she purchased was for the wrong airport in Jamaica. She had to rebook and fly out of Kingston. She couldn’t fly directly to Asheville from Orlando, so she went into Greenville, S.C., and drove a van, the only rental option available, the rest of the way. She got a room – only one night was available – and figured she would sort out the rest of it later.

“I started wondering, can this be any harder?” said McMillan, who had been the first alternate out of the Orlando sectional. “I was just so happy to be able to come and play in the tournament, though. This is what golfers are about; you learn how to navigate through anything.”

McMillan has played in several USGA championships, including three in 2012 alone: the Senior Women’s Amateur, the Women’s Amateur Public Links and the Women’s Mid-Am.

“It was worth the trip to play in a USGA event,” she said. “I don’t care where it is; if I have an opportunity to play in it, I’m going to be there.”

McMillan qualified at Biltmore Forest Country Club as the No. 21 seed with rounds of 79-80, then captured her first-round match by a 4-and-3 margin. She faced a familiar second-round foe in Leach.

“We had played each other out at CordeValle in the Senior Women’s Amateur two weeks ago,” said McMillan afterward. “Neither one of us played our A game today, but our match was close, right to the very last putt. I parred No. 17 to get within one, and then I left my putt on the last hole straight in and short from 10 feet. She beat me on the 18th hole – and in the second round – just like two weeks ago. It felt like déjà vu.”

The Women’s Mid-Amateur extended McMillan’s golf schedule to a fourth consecutive week, since she was already planning to play the following week in the Eastern Senior Amateur in Aiken, S.C., followed by the Southeastern Women’s Amateur Team Championship and ending with the Southern Women’s Senior in Tuscaloosa, Ala., at the end of October.

“I’ve got to get home, get packed again and get back in the car,” McMillan said. “This gave me one more week that I wasn’t expecting.”

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