"IF YOU LIKE GOLF"

online golf column
by
Chris Dortch

August 13, 2008

The Tennessee Golf Foundation ought to just go ahead and start preparing a plaque for Derek Rende. At 21 years old, he’s all but earned a spot in the Tennessee Golf Hall of Fame.

It’s easy to make that statement after last week, when Rende, a junior on UTC’s nationally ranked golf team, won the Tennessee Amateur at Ridgeway Country Club in Memphis. Rende, who hasn’t shot higher than 69 in six competitive rounds since giving himself a little putting pep talk, has joined some fast company. The amateur victory gives him a rare double when coupled with his win in the 2007 Tennessee Open.

Only 12 players in history have won both tournaments. Mason Rudolph and Tim Jackson, both members of the Tennessee Golf Hall of Fame, have done it. Even the great Chattanooga amateur Lew Oehmig and his long-time running mate, Ira Templeton, never won both tournaments. Oehmig racked up eight amateurs in his career, but never the Open. And Templeton won the Open—in 1951, when it was played at Signal Mountain—but never the amateur.

“It’s truly a blessing,” Rende said after bagging the amateur by holding off a fast-charging Joe David with a birdie on the first playoff hole. Both men shot 14 under. “When I won the Open, it was surprising. To win the Amateur, too, when I hadn’t been playing well this summer … it’s pretty awesome.”

Rende has always been a solid ball striker, long off the tee and accurate with his irons. But this summer, his strengths had been going for naught, because his putter abandoned him. After playing poorly in the North-South Amateur and the Southern Amateur, Rende sat down and assessed the state of his putting.

“I didn’t really try anything new,” Rende said. “I practiced with a belly putter for like an hour. I quickly found out I didn’t like it.”

What Rende eventually decided was that his putting woes had nothing to do with the putter he was using, or the stroke he put on it.

“It was just a confidence thing,” he said. “I think I got to the point where I was afraid to three-putt.”

With that revelation, Rende suddenly started worrying less about the line of his putts and more about the speed. More specifically, he realized a putt would never go in if it wasn’t hit hard enough to get to the hole. No longer worried about three-foot come backers for par, Rende started rolling everything at the hole, and with plenty of pace.

Lo and behold, putts started dropping. It’s amazing how this stuff works, isn’t it?

Rende’s scores began to reflect his newfound confidence on the greens. At a 36-hole U.S. Amateur qualifier, he shot 65-68. Surprisingly, all that earned him was first alternate for the tournament, which will be played at Pinehurst. As disappointing as that was, Rende was still uplifted by his putting and filled with confidence when the Tennessee Amateur began.

Once again, Rende took it deep in the first round, shooting a 6-under-par 65. He followed that with a pair of 68s and was ahead of David by four shots heading into the final day.

David, who’s from Nashville, made a furious comeback with a final-round 65, good enough to tie Rende and force the tournament into extra holes.

Somehow it was fitting that Rende stood over a two-foot birdie putt to win the tournament at the first playoff hole, the par-5 18th.

“It was a tough little short putt, a real swinger for a two-footer,” Rende said. “But I felt pretty good standing over it.”

Rende, who keeps a notebook of ideas that have helped him on the golf course, won’t soon forget the lesson he put to good use in Memphis. And the confidence he draws from winning Tennessee’s two most significant championships will stay with him a while, too.

“There are a whole lot of guys, including me, who would love to have Derek’s golfing resume,” UTC coach Mark Guhne said. “But I don’t think he’s got any idea of what he’s accomplished.

“He has improved so much in the last two years, it’s incredible. He’s come from the point where the biggest thing he played in was the state high school tournament, and now he’s one of the top amateurs in the entire country. It’s been a lot of fun to watch.”

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