Janet Moore of Centennial won her record eighth CWGA Mashie Championship and Susie Roh of Denver her first, but they both have an impressive rate of success in the four-ball match play event.
Moore, a Colorado Golf Hall of Famer, has captured the title eight of the 23 times the tournament has been held. And Roh, her teammate, is now one-for-one after claiming the championship in her first time competing.
In Thursday’s championship flight final at Todd Creek Golf Club in Thornton, Moore and Roh scored a 3-and-2 victory over two college golfers who reside in Colorado, 2016 champion Gillian Vance from the University of Colorado and partner Jaylee Tait from Montana State University.
Moore put her team over the top with a 6-foot birdie putt on the 16th hole, while Vance missed a 5-footer that would have prolonged the match.
Moore has now won Mashie titles with three different partners “” six times with fellow Colorado Golf Hall of Famer Christie Austin, once with Moore competing with her daughter Sarah, and once with Roh. (The 2017 champs are pictured together at top and below, with Moore at left.) But Moore’s last Mashie title with any partner had been 2011.
“The strength of my game in Mashies is picking great partners,” Moore said with a laugh. “And I did that really well this time. Susie is a great player and held us in there the whole time. And she played great yesterday (at Saddleback Golf Club in the semifinals); she shot 68. I didn’t contribute on any hole until the very last hole.”
For Roh, a former professional who once won a mini-tour event and now is a very good mid-amateur player, it was her first CWGA championship of any sort. Meanwhile, it’s believed to be Moore’s 20th, with 15 two-person team titles complementing her five CWGA Stroke Play championships in the 1990s.
“I was really nervous the first day and Janet carried us (in the quarterfinals). Then we kind of flip-flopped (in the semifinals),” Roh said. “But every match we had was a grind.”
In the final, Vance and Tait won the first hole with Tait’s birdie, but they fell behind when Roh carded back-to-back birdies on holes 7 and 8. Roh gave her team a 3-up lead with a two-putt birdie on No. 14. Then after Vance and Tait won the 15th hole with a par, Moore ended things with her birdie on 16.
“We were both very consistent “” too consistent,” said Tait, the 2016 CWGA Match Play runner-up who was competing in the Mashie for the first time. “We birdied the first hole, then nothing after that. You can’t really win this with pars.” (Tait and Vance are pictured together, with Tait at left.)
Added Vance: “It was a long drought. But it was just fun to play with these women. We played with Janet last year (in the final), and it’s just always fun to play with them. I know they’re super good. It’s just a blast to be out here, honestly.”
In both the semifinals and the final, Moore, 52, and Roh, 43, defeated opponents made up of college players. But on Thursday, Roh often out-drove Vance, a former 5A state high school champion, and Tait, a former U.S. Women’s Amateur qualifier.
“Susie here can bomb it, so that was fun,” Moore said. “Her length is definitely a huge plus “” and she’s just a competitor, so she’s fun to play with.
“But (college opponents) come out and they get a little nervous that they’re going to get beat by an old lady. We have that advantage that we’re older and maybe can sneak up on them a little bit.”
But no matter the opponent, and no matter how many CWGA championships she has under her built, adding another puts a smile on Moore’s face.
“It’s very satisfying,” she said. “It’s fun to still be able to compete.”
The Mashie marked the first CWGA championship of 2017.
Champions of the other flights on Thursday were:
First Flight: Vickie Brown and Sally Lawrence
Second Flight: Mary Repetto and Carla Stearns
Third Flight: Kim Gould and Theresa Lange
Fourth Flight: Alison O’Connor and Pat O’Connor
Fifth Flight: Darlene Evans and Beckie Harkey
Sixth Flight: Bonnie Catalano and Pam Levkulich
Seventh Flight: Dee Riedel and Sharon Thiel
Eighth Flight: Maree Albright and Joyce Craig
Ninth Flight: Judy Jones and Teresa Smiley
Tenth Flight: Lesley Ackerman and Lori Maul
For results from all the flights, CLICK HERE.
]]>Chalk up another accomplishment for “Team Kupance.”
That’s the name Jennifer Kupcho and Gillian Vance of CommonGround Golf Course call themselves when they join up to compete in golf.
They not only qualified for the inaugural U.S. Women’s Amateur Four-Ball — held a year ago — but they advanced to the round of 32 before losing in 20 holes. Shortly thereafter, each of them won a 2015 state high school title, Vance in Class 5A and Kupcho her second straight in 4A.
And after a year of NCAA Division I golf for each of them — Kupcho at Wake Forest and Vance at the University of Colorado — they paired up again this week at the CWGA Mashie Championship. And, sure enough, they proved dominant while winning the Mashie in their first time competing in the tournament.
After prevailing in their previous matches in the four-ball match play event by 8-and-6 and 6-and-5 margins, the two clinched the title Wednesday by defeating two Colorado Golf Hall of Famers who have won six Mashie championships together.
Kupcho and Vance scored a 6-and-5 victory at the Club at Ravenna over Janet Moore and Christie Austin of Cherry Hills Country Club (pictured at left). The champions didn’t lose a hole Wednesday and were 4 under par through 13 holes.
“I started playing in the CWGA stuff probably when I was 10 or 12 — so about 40 years ago,” noted Moore, a five-time CWGA Stroke Play champion. “I’ve never seen anyone like (Kupcho). She’s in a different league altogether. She has great temperament, a world-class swing, she’s really powerful and she’s just a good kid, too. I think she’s going to do very well.
“It was a treat to play with both of them.”
Added Austin, a two-time CWGA Senior Player of the Year: “Jennifer is a special player, and it was obvious watching her today. The one hole she makes a mistake (the final one, where she hit the lip of a fairway bunker with her second shot), she finds a way to get up and down for a bogey. She is right up there with the best collegiate players in the country.”
For Kupcho, the CWGA Player of the Year in 2014 and ’15, the victory caps a month in which she’s qualified for the U.S. Women’s Open and finished sixth individually at the Women’s NCAA Finals while a freshman at Wake Forest. Wednesday marked her fifth CWGA title.
“I think we were just working together really well this week,” Kupcho, 19, said of her and Vance. “And today we ham and egged it really well.”
Vance (pictured at left and at top with Kupcho) collected her first CWGA championship on Wednesday.
“I’ve never played in this tournament before, so I thought it was really fun,” said the 18-year-old. “It was just a good idea after (the college season). It was much more fun than serious.
“But I didn’t realize it was my first CWGA title. That’s exciting.”
Kupcho made three birdies on Wednesday, including a 2-incher on the par-3 sixth hole, while Vance’s birdie came on the eighth hole, where she chipped in from about 50 feet.
Despite being underdogs, Moore and Austin were hoping the stars would align Wednesday and they could pull off the big upset. But they weren’t at their best, and Kupcho and Vance were on their game enough to continue to end matches early.
“We were optimistic that we would play great and they might struggle on a hole or two,” Austin said. “And if we could get 1 down or 2 down with three to go, funny things can happen in match play. Did we really think we could beat them? Probably 85 or 90 percent chance, no.
“But it was really, really fun to play them even though it was a tough loss.”
Said Moore: “We’re pleased with how we did. We would have liked to have played better today, but I’m not sure it would have made any difference — obviously. We just would like to have given them a little better match. It was a treat to watch them both.”
CWGA Mashie Finals
Wednesday at the Club at Ravenna in Littleton
Championship Flight
Championship — Jennifer Kupcho/Gillian Vance def. Janet Moore/Christie Austin, 6 and 5
Consolation — Shelly Edwards/Lisa Lee def. Lynn Zmistowski/Kim Sorkness, 2 and 1
First Flight
Championship — Sarah Hunt/Laura Stuto def. Vickie Brown/Sally Lawrence, 1 up
Consolation — Lynda McManus/Caitlyn Olson def. Karen Chase/Kim Wells, 1 up
Second Flight
Championship — LeAnna Rosenow/Patricia Swanson def. Meagan Arvidson/Laura Dunston, 2 up
Consolation — Kim Gosche/Leslie Keith def. Peggy Cox/Candace Meyers, 2 and 1
Third Flight
Championship — Sue Hartwell/Jean Miller def. Kate Connor/Melanie Lunsford, 6 and 4
Consolation — Pam Cortez/Sue Knutson def. Denise Garcia/Pam Thompson, 6 and 5
Fourth Flight
Championship — Wendy Atkinson/Patricia Sato def. Cathy Quesnell/Melinda Williamson, 1 up
Consolation — Paula Maes/Dana Smith def. Brenda Horn/Gwyn Wheeler, 19 holes
Fifth Flight
Championship — Rebecca Howard/Krista Overstreet def. Linda Loveland/Linda Powell, 1 up
Consolation — Sara Beinlich/Sylvia Reading def. Connie Brodt/Karen Leuschel, 3 and 2
Sixth Flight
Championship — Norma Bisdorf/Marla Straw def. Debbie Childs/Ellen Thomas, 3 and 2
Consolation — Darlene Evans/Beckie Harkey def. Doreen Tallman/Maria Erlinda Trujillo, 3 and 2
Seventh Flight
Championship — Janice Campbell/Claudia Gallegos def. Barbara DeGrand/Becky Hammer, 4 and 3
Consolation — Christy Tinsley/Kerri Williams def. Mari Johnson/Pamela Schmidt, 1 up
Eighth Flight
Championship — Claudia Svarstad/Rochelle Tisdale def. Cynthia Howard/Marsha Swoboda, 2 and 1
Consolation — Suzanne Elkins/Mary Smith def. Cheryl Berning/Janie Koontz, 3 and 2
Ninth Flight
Championship — Maree Albright/Joyce Craig def. Jan Place/Linda Schippers, 3 and 2
Consolation — Barbara Fagan/Connie Norkoli def. Susan Gaston/Pam Thompson, 4 and 3
Tenth Flight
Championship — Barbara Bender/Mary Graff def. Ann Motokane/Leigh Ann Post, 4 and 3
Consolation — Deanna Messerli/Sharon Thiel def. Harlene Bowman/Ronda Palsulich, 3 and 2
Eleventh Flight
Championship — Maureen Fujiki/Carol Iwata def. JoAnn Barbour/Kathy Berger, 4 and 2
Consolation — Thelma Benefiel/Jan Squires def. Kay Boyle/Barbara Goodfellow, 4 and 3
Tori Glenn picked up in the first CWGA championship of 2015 where she left off in one of the last of 2014.
Which is to say she won it.
The 20-year-old from the Ridge at Castle Pines North paired up with University of Colorado teammate Megan Haase of Flatirons Golf Course to defeat defending champions Rachel Sweeney of Lone Tree Golf Club and Megan McCambridge of Boulder Country Club 2 and 1 in Wednesday’s championship-flight final of the CWGA Mashie at Black Bear Golf Club in Parker. (The champions are pictured at left and below.)
It was the second straight year that the defending champs have lost in the finals as Sweeney and McCambridge beat 2013 winners Kathleen Kershisnik and Samantha Stancato last spring.
For Glenn, Wednesday marked her second victory in a CWGA four-ball event in the last 10 months. Last August, she teamed up with Christie Austin to capture the title in the CWGA Brassie, which features a four-ball stroke-play format.
And this week, Glenn proved equally adept at four-ball match play.
“For me, (these team tournaments) are a way to ease yourself into more competitive events where a lot of college players play,” she said. “And they’re just more fun. It’s good to have fun.”
This was a final full of notable nuggets. For the second straight year, the CWGA Mashie title match featured four college players. And this time around, each team included a Megan. And three of the four finals competitors work together on the player-services staff at the Omni Interlocken Golf Club in Broomfield (Glenn, Haase and McCambridge).
Glenn, the 2014 CWGA Match Play runner-up, made a birdie on the first hole to give her team a lead it would never relinquish. Haase parred No. 2 to go 2 up, and they were 3 up after four holes.
“It was real fun,” said Haase, a 21-year-old grew up in Spokane, Wash. “Both of us played pretty well — and we played well together.
“We were always at least 1 up so that was a nice little comfort zone. But even being there, it was a little nerve-wracking.”
On the other side, McCambridge and Sweeney (left) were left playing catch-up all day long.
“We were confident the whole time we could get back up, but we couldn’t get putts to fall,” said McCambridge, a junior to-be at Butler University in Indiana. “We’d win one hole, then halve several in a row. We were never able to get back to an all-square or 1-up position that we’re accustomed to.”
Despite Sweeney being the longest hitter in the finals, she and McCambridge can point to the par-5s as significant in their downfall on Wednesday. Two of the three holes in which neither made a birdie or better were par-5s, and both resulted in lost holes. Overall, Sweeney and McCambridge were a combined 6 over par on the par-5s.
“That was a big issue,” said Sweeney, a junior-to-be at Lewis University in Illinois. “Usually I can reach par-5s in two or at least get close. Off the tee, I didn’t really set myself up for a good look.”
After being 1 up at the turn, Glenn and Haase (left) expanded their lead with a best-ball par on the par-5 13th as Sweeney had a lost ball and McCambridge left her approach in a bunker, and both bogeyed.
On No. 17, Sweeney almost extended the match as a 40-foot birdie attempt just missed. But a 3-foot par putt by Haase closed things out.
“Overall, they both played well and we didn’t quite have enough to take care of business out there,” McCambridge said.
Haase credited Glenn with steady play throughout the week that kept the two Buffs advancing.
“Tori played really solid. I owe a lot to her,” Haase said. “I definitely struggled the first day. I got better the second day. And I got a lot better today. Tori helped me out and was encouraging. If she knows something (that will help), she’ll tell me. That just built my confidence up.”
CWGA Mashie Championship
At Black Bear GC and Heritage Eagle Bend
Championship Flight Final — Tori Glenn/Megan Haase def. Rachel Sweeney/Megan McCambridge, 2 and 1.
Championship Flight Consolation Final — Lisa Lee/Cathy Stypula def. Susan Jennings/Jessica Noffsinger, 1 up.
First Flight Final — Carol Henderson/Carla Stearns def. Theresa Lange/Ruth Van Zee, 3 and 1.
First Flight Consolation Final — Denise Cohen/Vicki Warren def. Brenda Cook/Lynn Larson, 3 and 2
Second Flight Final — LeAnna Rosenow/Patricia Swanson def. Mary Doyen/Vicki Porter, 1 up.
Second Flight Consolation Final — Melis Ward/Karen Williams def. Stephanie Stewart/Cheryl Wilkinson, 3 and 2.
Third Flight Final — Kim Gosche/Heidi Horner def. Cindy Lantz/Corrina Ruttkar, 19 holes.
Third Flight Consolation Final — Susan Schell/Cindy Speer def. Kelli Gopsill/Janine Lowe, 2 up.
Fourth Flight Final — Lori Gude/Paulette Jerpe def. Kay Geitner/Marie Schriefer, 3 and 2.
Fourth Flight Consolation Final — Chris Jansen/Janis Ward def. Juliet Miner/Peggy Puckett, 3 and 2.
Fifth Flight Final — Debbie Childs/Ellen Thomas def. Norma Bisdorf/Marla Straw, 6 and 5.
Fifth Flight Consolation Final — Deborah Beckman/Rebecca Howard def. Lyndon Lieb/Judy Maillis, 3 and 2.
Sixth Flight Final –Bonnie Catalano/Karen Moore def. Patti Godette/Kristi Samuelson, 3 and 1.
Sixth Flight Consolation Final — Anne Svec/Kris Van Bladeren def. Amy Ennis/Karen Leuschel, 1 up.
Seventh Flight Final — Linda Loveland/Linda Powell def. Dede Rushton/Laura Fischer, 6 and 5.
Seventh Flight Consolation Final — Amber Leis/Meredith Nelson def. Pam Godfrey/Julie Workman, 2 and 1.
Eighth Flight Final — Cheryl Burget/Janet Cott def. Suzanne Elkins/Mary Smith, 3 and 1.
Eighth Flight Consolation Final — Jaki Berry/Dee Riedel def. Gail Bilotta/Anne Mursch, 5 and 4.
Ninth Flight Final — Claudia Svarstad/Rochelle Tisdale def. Barbara Bostwick/Linda Brown-Stiller, 3 and 2.
Ninth Flight Consolation Final — Carol Casteel/Ronda Palsulich def. Mari Johnson/Pamela Schmidt, 3 and 2.
10th Flight Final — Sharon Colon/Cathy Reith def. Roben Deines/Susan Elliott, 2 up.
10th Flight Consolation Final — Maree Albright/Joyce Craig def. Audrey McEwen/Susan Wagner, 4 and 3.
11th Flight Final — Jan Place/Linda Schippers def. Donna Jones/Patricia Moore, 4 and 3.
11th Flight Consolation Final — Thelma Benefiel/Jan Squires def. Denise Bassett/Billie Dahlbach, 3 and 1.
It took 6 1/2 hours and 25 holes, but Allie Johnston and Claudia Davis gained their first lead in the title match of the CWGA Mashie Championship at about 3:45 p.m. on Wednesday at Heritage Eagle Bend Golf Club in Aurora.
That coincided exactly with the time when the teenagers became champions of the four-ball match play competition, the CWGA’s first championship of the year.
Davis, a senior-to-be at Arapahoe High School, made a 3-foot birdie — draining her third consecutive pivotal putt — to give herself and Johnston a marathon 25-hole victory in their final against two other teenagers, Kathleen Kershisnik of Columbine Country Club and Patricia Lee of Lone Tree Golf Club.
“I still kind of feel like we should be playing,” said Johnston, a Rock Canyon High School graduate who plays out of Red Hawk Ridge Golf Course. “It was really fun. Mostly I think we were all just wanting to finish and eat.”
Davis (pictured above at left with Johnston), winner of the 2011 CJGA Tournament of Champions, waited until the end to make her major contributions. She made a 10-foot par putt on the 23rd hole to extend the match, holed a 35-foot birdie from behind the green on the 24th hole that Kershisnik matched with a 20-foot birdie of her own, then stuck her tee shot on the decisive 164-yard par-3 seventh hole 3 feet from the flag and won it with another birdie.
“I kind of lost my tempo and my swing for a few holes, but when it really counted, I felt like I stepped up and contributed and helped my teammate,” said the 17-year-old Davis. “It was just exhilarating to make the putt that you know counted to push it to the next hole.”
Kershisnik and Lee (pictured at left), who will play college golf at Wyoming and Georgetown, respectively, could have ended it on the 18th hole, but Lee left a 3-foot par putt short and the match was extended. It was one of several short putts that cost the team as Kershisnik missed a 2-footer on No. 9 and a 4 1/2-footer on No. 14.
But on the extra holes, both teams flourished on the greens. On No. 2, Johnston made a 15-foot birdie and Lee put a 7-footer right on top of her. On No. 4, Lee kept the match going with a 5-foot par. On 5, Davis drained her crucial 10-footer for par. And on 6, both Davis and Kershisnik made bombs. Then Davis closed it out with her 3-foot birdie on No. 7.
“I’m a little frustrated because it was kind of all for nothing in the end,” said Lee, a graduate of Highlands Ranch High School. “We both made crucial putts. We didn’t give any shots away so that’s a bonus, but we lost so that sucks.
“It could have been over a long time ago, but we didn’t give up, so that was good. (Davis) hit a really good shot on 7.”
While a 25-hole match is unusual, Kershisnik played one almost as long last year in the CWGA Junior Match Play, falling in 24 holes to Mikayla Tatman in the quarterfinals.
“All four of us played really well (on Wednesday), but obviously it’s not nice to be on our end,” said Kershisnik, who finished second in a playoff last month at the 4A state high school meet as a Regis Jesuit senior. “We got a few putts rolling (at the end), but it was a little frustrating because we had them around the hole a lot , but we couldn’t get them to fall” earlier in the match.
It was the second CWGA championship for Johnston, who earned CWGA Junior Player of the Year honors in 2011 after dominating the CWGA Junior Stroke Play, winning an AJGA event and qualifying for two USGA championships. The 18-year-old, runner-up in the 2012 5A state tournament, will be playing her college golf at Texas-San Antonio.
Davis, meanwhile, won an CWGA title for the first time. And it was a championship match she won’t soon forget — one in which the biggest lead for either team was 1-up.
“That was crazy,” the golfer from Glenmoor Country Club said. “It was a lot of fun. We really fought. I feel like it was equal. Both teams were trying really hard to just make that one extra shot count.
“I honestly didn’t know when it was going to end. (The scene on the 25th hole is pictured at left.) I thought we might play another 18 out there.”
In the end, Johnston and Davis prevailed in the championship flight of an event that featured 200 players and 13 flights overall. The championship flight included three players who are in the Colorado Golf Hall of Fame — Kim Eaton, Janet Moore and Lynn Zmistowski.
“I felt like there’s a lot of great players here, and to have two (teams) of juniors fighting for first place is really special,” Davis said. “I’m proud of myself and my teammate.”
CWGA Mashie Championship
At Heritage Eagle Bend GC in Aurora
Championship Flight
Allie Johnston, Red Hawk Ridge GC and Claudia Davis, Glenmoor CC def.Kathleen Kershisnik, Columbine CC and Patricia Lee, Lone Tree GC, 25 holes
Championship Flight Consolation
Janet Moore, Cherry Hills CC and Sarah Moore, Cherry Hills CC def.Laurie Steenrod, Saddle Rock GC and Lisa Stone, Saddle Rock GC, 2 and 1
First Flight
Vickie Brown, Broken Tee GC def. Sally Lawrence, Broken Tee Englewood def Ruth Van Zee, Canongate Colorado GC and Jessi McVay, Commonground GC, 2 and 1
First Flight Consolation
Kim Gosche, CommonGround GC and Sue Davis, Saddle Rock GC def. Danielle Atkinson, The Pinery CC and Robyn Asbury, The Pinery CC, 3 and 2
Second Flight
Brenda Cook, The Links GC and Marie Driessen, Pinery CC def.Debra Bolke, Saddle Rock GC and Cathy Neistat, Saddle Rock GC, 1 up
Second Flight Consolation
Marti Alter-Cudlip, Denver CC and Beth Hudson, Meridian GC def Mary Jo Deming, Lakewood CC and Sheryl Larsen, Lakewood CC, 2 and 1
Third Flight
Karen Leuschel, Coal Creek GC and Laura Wetzel, Coal Creek GC def. Jenny Elliott, Broken Tee GC and Nina Dulacki, Broken Tee GC, 1 up
Third Flight Consolation
Jeanine Wasielewski, West Woods GC and Darlene Evans, West Woods GC def. Leanna Rosenow, West Woods GC and Patricia Swanson, West Woods GC, 2 and 1
Fourth Flight
Cathy Weber, Perry Park CC and Chris Leger, GC at Heather Ridge def. Debra Shultz, Saddle Rock GC and Mary Repetto, Broken Tee GC, 5 and 4
Fourth Flight Consolation
Krista Overstreet, Glenmoor CC and Jennifer Jacobsen, Glenmoor CC def. Vicki Porter, Commonground GC and Amy Tomlinson, CommonGround GC, 2 and 1
Fifth Flight
Carlene Decker, Kissing Camels and Denise Cohen, Kissing Camels def. Cindy Lantz, CC at Castle Pines and Sharee Merullo, Castle Pines CC, 3 and 2
Fifth Flight Consolation
Patti Godette, Red Hawk Ridge GC and Juliet Miner, Bear Dance GC def Sharon Berglund, The Pinery CC and Barbara Davis, Pinery CC, 3 and 2
Sixth Flight
Theresa Lange, Canongate Colorado GC and Kim Gould, Saddle Rock GC def Jane Anhold, Lakewood CC and Barbara Mcgrath, Lakewood CC, 5 and 4
Sixth Flight Consolation
Jeanette Ali, CC at Castle Pines and Linda Sinsar, CC at Castle Pines def. Jane Anhold, Lakewood CC and Barbara Mcgrath, Lakewood CC, 1 up
Seventh Flight
Debbie Childs, Lone Tree GC and Ellen Thomas, Canongate at Blackstone def. Pat O’Connor, Collindale GC and Irene Stein, Collindale GC, 3 and 2
Seventh Flight Consolation
Karen Bergert, West Woods GC and Mary Smith, Fox Hollow GC def. Patricia Cahill, Patty Jewett GC and Lita Van Cleave, Patty Jewett GC, 2 and 1
Eighth Flight
Laura Laux, Applewood GC and Joann Smith, Foothills GC def. Kimberlee Powelson, Valley CC and Carol Kishiyama, Valley CC, 1 up
Eighth Flight Consolation
Doris Hug, Heritage Eagle Bend GC and Connie Norkoli, Heritage Eagle Bend GC def. Paula Maes, Pradera GC and Billie Dahlbach, Plum Creek GC, 8 and 7
Ninth Flight
Barb Dearing, The Links GC and Cathy Quesnell, Red Hawk Ridge GC def. Nancy Peters, The Courses at Hyland Hills and Marlene Drew, The Courses at Hyland Hills, 23 holes
Ninth Flight Consolation
Dolly Moreno, Broken Tee GC and Jo Honeyman, Overland Park GC def. Jane Videtich, The Links GC and Karen Hendrickson, The Links GC, 20 holes
Tenth Flight
Anne Svec, The Courses at Hyland Hills and Kris Van Bladeren, The Courses at Hyland Hills def. Pat Latta, The Courses at Hyland Hills and Laura Fischer, Willis Case GC, 4 and 3
Tenth Flight Consolation
Linda Brown-Stiller, Broken Tee GC and Cathleen Ryland, Broadlands GC def. Sandra Schnitzer, Murphy Creek GC and Bunny Ambrose, Meadow Hills GC, 2 and 1
Eleventh Flight
Jan Squires, West Woods GC and Jaki Berry, West Woods GC def. Marilyn Hollman, Buffalo Run GC and Cheryl Miller, Riverdale GC, 5 and 4
Eleventh Flight Consolation
Roben Deines, Buffalo Run GC and Susan Elliott, Riverdale GC def. Jan Shoemaker, Twin Peaks GC and Sharla Gambrell, Sunset GC, 3 and 1
Twelfth Flight
Marcia Hall, Overland Park GC and Susie Goldberg, Overland Park GC def. Pamela Ortell, Heritage Eagle Bend GC and Debby Wishmier, Heritage Eagle Bend GC, 20 holes
Twelfth Flight Consolation
Phyllis Finlay, Eagle Vail GC and Marilyn Everett, Heritage Eagle Bend GC def. Jo-El Freyer, Denver CC and Jan Lee Heath, Spreading Antlers GC, 2 up