2013 Memorial Champion: Ron Halpern    

A Repeat Champion

We tried to Katch Kyle - and in the end a couple of us did.  Five of us posted positive points both days: Andy, Alan, Ron, Antony and Kyle.  Antony Sigona had a great round of +6 for a tournament total +7 and it looked like take one heck of a finish by Kyle to top that.  He tried - needing a par on #18, Kyle failed to get up and down from the right side trap and  ended with +5 overall.  So Anthony held the lead for a couple of hours.  

Then Ron Halpern turned in a 19 point round (+7 vs quota) on a gross 90 score - his second best round in the last two years.  That boosted his two day total to +10.  Ron has been on a tear lately - 11 of his 15 rounds in 2013 have been under 100 - last year he only posted double digits three times out of 25 tries.  

The key to Ron's win was a natural birdie on #15.  Those +4 points in the stretch boosted him past Sigona and into the Champion's circle.  Congratulations to our defending Champion, Ron Halpern.

See the Leaderboard here.  Cards from Round One and Round Two are also up.
  

Top Daily Scores

Round 1

Round 2

Points

Halpern

3

7

10

Sigona

1

6

7

Shearman, K

4

1

5




The Memorial

Rules to Play By
How It's Played:  The Memorial is scored under the modified and handicapped Stableford system.  Players receive a point “quota” based on their handicaps. The player with the most points over his quota after the 36 holes will be the winner. (The quota method is actually called the Chicago System and can be found on the USGA website under Tournaments - (link here).  Using this system The Memorial remains a handicapped event and all players, regardless of level, have an equal chance of winning the tournament.

How the Quotas are set:  Deduct your handicap from 36.  So if you're a 16, then your quota is 20.  Higher handicap players have lower quotas and therefore a good hole goes a long way toward the target.  Lower handicappers have higher quotas and so need better scores to earn enough points.

The Stableford Scoring we use puts a premium on a good hole and less of a reward on your normal number.  Double Bogies get 0.  Bogies get 1. Pars are worth 2 and Birdies 4.  And if you can get that elusive eagle; it's worth 8.  9 pars would be a great round, but get you only 18 points.  A spotty collection of double bogies with three birdies and an eagle would be worth 20  points.  The reward for saving a stroke is much greater than for a playing it safe - so shoot for that pin and be firm with the putts.

Memorial Champions

Past Champions

2012 and 2013 - Ron Halpern

2011 - Peter Ennis   2010 - Peter Ennis            2009 - Charlie Horgan   
2008 - Joe Valenti   2007 - Bruce Greenberg    2006 - James Walsh