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Redding, Uwadia top seeds as North & South match play begins
Anita Uwadia (Pinehurst Resort)
Anita Uwadia (Pinehurst Resort)

By Alex Podlogar

PINEHURST, N.C. (July 10, 2018) – A year ago – almost to the day – Anna Redding was fighting tears.

She may not come right out and say it, but the idea of winning the Women’s North & South Amateur on Pinehurst No. 2 is something that Redding may want more than any other player in the field. The 2013 Girls North & South Junior Champion is playing her fifth Women’s Amateur, and a year ago, the Concord native came agonizingly close, falling in the championship final to Isabella Fierro in a match Redding led 2-up through eight holes.

“I’m really proud of myself,” Redding said, almost in a whisper, in the Pinehurst clubhouse following the final match last year. “I was just so close.”

But there is something about Redding and the North & South. She reached the semifinals in 2015, the quarterfinals in 2016 and the championship match in 2017. And on Tuesday in the second round of 116th playing of the longest consecutively running women’s amateur in the United States, Redding rebounded from a 6-over 77 in the first round to close with a staggering six birdies on the back nine of a treacherous No. 2 for a 3-under 68. That allowed her to finish in a tie for the lead with medalist Anita Uwadia at 3-over 145.

“For me, Pinehurst just feels like home,” Redding said Tuesday. “I’m from only a couple of hours away and my short-game coach is here (Pinehurst Golf Academy lead instructor Kelly Mitchum), so I’m always around No. 2. And, gosh, I’ve played here enough to know better than most where not to hit it. But it’s just so special here. It’s like my second home.”

Outside of two holes on Monday – Redding made triple bogeys on the 4th and 14th holes – Redding has been among the championship’s steadiest players in medal play. Despite shooting 77, she made three birdies to hold her round together, and entered Tuesday well inside the cut line for the Round of 32 and match play, sharing a tie for 20th.

She started fast in the second round, making a birdie on the first hole before giving the shot back on the second. And bogeys on 7 and 8 dropped her to 8 over for the championship.

But Redding caught fire on the back nine, making birdie on the next three holes, all of them from inside 12 feet. She made a 30-footer for birdie on the par-3 15th, then backed that up with another birdie on the par-5 16th. She closed in style on 18 with another birdie, this one from 10 feet, and walked off the course past the manual scoreboard as the leader in the clubhouse.

The only problem? Redding had come back from so far in the field the scoreboard operator was still scrambling to create a placard with her name, leaving, for the moment, an empty spot for the leader.

A putter boy trophy for Anita Uwadia

While Redding had the round of the day, there’s no doubt which player in the field has put together the two most consistent rounds of the tournament. South Carolina junior Anita Uwadia, originally from Newcastle, England, had rounds of 73 and 72 to tie Redding for the top spot, then promptly birdied the first playoff hole to win medalist honors and take the top seed into match play.

“I know it’s not technically a win because there’s a lot of golf left to be played,” Uwadia said, “but this feels great and really gives me a boost of confidence. Going into match play, I know I can play well on a course like Pinehurst No. 2. This feels really good.”

And she has the hardware to back it up. Uwadia’s reverence for No. 2 never seems far from her lips and was evident after winning the playoff.

“Just walking on the 18th green, you think about all the greats who have walked there before you,” she said. “Payne Stewart walked there, Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy – all the great players you can think of.“And now I’ve got my Deuce coin (for making a ‘2” on Pinehurst No. 2) and a Putter Boy. That feels really good.”

The notables

It was another tough day on No. 2, with the scoring average in the second round just a shot better than Monday’s first round at 79.0. Still, the field for match play boasts several of the tournament’s top players.Defending champion Isabella Fierro, of Mexico, made the cut on the number, shooting an 8-over 79 to finish with a two-day total of 13-over 155.

First-round leader Malia Nam had a 77 after her first-round 69, but still takes the No. 3 seed into match play.

Jaclyn Lee, who nearly won the NCAA Championship in May, finished in a tie for seventh at 7-over 149 following a 74 on Tuesday.

Jennifer Chang, of Cary, and one of the most decorated prep recruits of the last several years before signing with Southern Cal, also tied for seventh at 149 after a 73.

North Carolina senior Kelly Whaley, the daughter of the future President of the PGA, Suzy Whaley, is also tied for seventh after a 76. Suzy is not in Pinehurst watching Kelly because she is preparing for the inaugural U.S. Senior Women’s Open in Chicago this week.

Results: North & South Women's Amateur
WinCAStephanie LauFullerton, CA1200
Runner-upAustraliaGabriela RuffelsAustralia900
SemifinalsSCNatalie SrinivasanSpartanburg, SC700
SemifinalsAustraliaBecky KayAustralia700
QuarterfinalsHIAllisen CorpuzHonolulu, HI500

View full results for North & South Women's Amateur

ABOUT THE North & South Women's Amateur

The Women's North & South has drawn the top amateur women from around the country. Three rounds of stroke play followed by four rounds of match play will determine the Champion.

The 96 player field will be cut to a 16 player match play field and medalist honors. All stroke & match play rounds will be contested on Pinehurst No. 2. The top 16 players who qualify for match play will play two rounds a day until our champion is determined.

Nine of the last 12 North & South Women’s Amateur champions have drawn paychecks as members of the LPGA Tour. The equation is near perfect. Win the North & South Am, go on to professional success at the highest level.

North & South champions are among the legends of the game: Babe Zaharias, Louise Suggs, Peggy Kirk Bell, Hollis Stacey, Brandie Burton, Brittany Lang, Morgan Pressel and Yani Tseng.

Along with the Women's North & South, Pinehurst Resort & Country Club annually plays host to the Men's North & South, the Junior North & South, and Senior Men's and Senior Women's North & South.

View Complete Tournament Information

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