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Lee and Schultz earn U.S. Senior Amateur crowns
 
Sep. 6, 2007

ANDOVER, Kan. (AP) -- Stan Lee beat Sam Farlow 4 and 3 to win the USGA Senior Amateur title Thursday -- five days after his 55th birthday -- to become the tournament's youngest champion.

Lee, of Heber Springs, Ark., surpassed the previous record of 55 years, three months and 18 days, set by Bill Bosshard in 1991. "I cannot believe it," said Lee. "It is a dream come true. I'm still kind of pinching myself to see if this is real or not. What an honor to win a USGA event."

Lee took the early lead after Farlow, of Birmingham, Ala., three-putted the third hole at the par-71, 6,502-yard Flint Hills National Golf Club. Lee then built the lead to 2 up when Farlow couldn't get up and down from a bunker on the par-3 fourth, and extended his lead when he made a 15-footer for birdie on the sixth and Farlow couldn't match from 20 feet.

Farlow closed the deficit with a 15-foot par putt on the seventh hole, but Lee got it right back when he made a 60-foot birdie putt on the par-3 eighth.

"I knew when that putt went in that I was going to be hard to beat," said Lee, who played the PGA TOUR from 1976-80.

The match ended on the 15th hole when Farlow missed a 3-footer for par and then conceded Lee's 3-foot birdie putt, giving Lee his first national title.

Meanwhile in Sunriver, Ore., Anna Schultz beat Robyn Puckett on the second playoff hole Thursday to win the USGA Senior Women's Amateur championship.

Schultz, of Rockwall, Texas, had a 4-up lead through 12 holes at Sunriver Resort's par-71 Meadows Course. Puckett, of Irvine, Calif., then won four of the next five holes to pull even heading into the 18th.

Both players parred on the first extra hole before Puckett nearly hit her drive into the water on the left side of the par-5 No. 2. Her ball crossed the hazard line but she was able to hit it, and then punched out and hit a fairway wood into the water hazard fronting the green. After Puckett's fifth shot found the green, Schultz played the hole in regulation and was conceded her par putt for the championship.

"It's overwhelming," said Schultz, who was playing in her third USGA final. "I am so thrilled. I've wanted this for so long. This is what we work for and what we dream of. It's something everybody wants so badly."

It was the third time the championship needed extra holes since going to a match-play format in 1997.

Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved.