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Three weeks ago, Two-time Walker Cup member Lee
Williams made his long-anticipated debut at the Captain's Open
in Brewster, Mass.
Now, it's Michael Welch's turn.
Welch, who helped lead Johnson & Wales
(Fla.) to victory in the National Minority College Golf
Championship in 2004, will erase the amateur asterisk from his
name during the season-ending event at Granite Links in Quincy,
Mass, which, ironically enough, is Welch's hometown.
A two-time New England Amateur champion, Welch's
resume also includes appearances in the 2004 U.S. Amateur as
well as the 2003 and 2005 U.S. Public Links championships.
Although Welch's collegiate golf eligibility has
expired, he won't graduate from Johnson & Wales until
November, where he will receive a degree in sports entertainment
as part
of the school's golf management program.
The game of golf, perhaps more so than any other
sport, is an individual endeavor. The bulk of Welch's past,
current and future success lie squarely on his shoulders-No one
else's.
His progression through each plateau of the
game, however, can be reduced to a common denominator.
Following two successful seasons at Central
Connecticut State, where Welch led the Blue Devils to a
Northeast Conference crown and compiled several individual
victories, he transferred to the steadily-rising Johnson and
Wales University, which was in the early stages of a complete
overhaul, courtesy of Dave Adamonis, of Cumberland, RI.
.
Adamonis soon turned water into wine, so to speak, developing a
small, relatively obscure school into a national college golf
power, with Welch playing a leading role.
Spurred by Welch's arrival, Adamonis then lured
Jim Renner, this year's New England Amateur champion, from
golfing Mecca Oklahoma University. He was joined by John Stoltz,
who beat several Tour players to win this year's MET Open, and
Adam Scrimenti, the low individual in the National Minority
College championship.
Just last summer, the trio of Renner, Scrimenti
and Stoltz received exemptions onto the Tour through a
partnership between Adamonis and Tour Director Andrew Dearborn.
"There's great competition within the
team," said Welch, whose most recent crack at the pro ranks
resulted in an unsuccessful attempt to Monday qualify for the
Deutsche Bank Championship. "You're always playing for
something, which is great."
Recently, "something" has been
national titles. This spring, the quartet led J & W to a
dominating 28-stroke victory in NAIA National Championship,
trumping their victory in the 2004 National Minority College
championship. In July, they had four players advance to the U.S.
Public Links Championship, highlighted by Jim Renner's march to
the third round, where he fell to a buzz saw named Michelle Wie.
With NAIA All-Americans Renner, Scrimenti and
Stoltz less than eight months from gradution, Welch's
progression from the amateur to pro ranks figures to be the
first of several for the Johnson & Wales program.
Based out of North Miami, Fla., the school's
primary ties can be traced to New England. Renner, like Welch,
hails from Massachusetts and Stoltz is from New York. Adamonis
himself went to Providence College, and worked as an English
teacher in the Rhode Island school system for years.
Before he assumed the reigns as Johnson &
Wales' Director of Golf five years ago, he helped launch the
U.S. Challenge Cup in 1983. A junior circuit based in Rhode
Island, it conducts more than 40 events, and the Challenge Cup's
annual player of the year receives an exemption into the
prestigious Northeast Amateur.
Past alumni include current PGA Tour rookie
James Driscoll, Cleveland Tour young gun Mike Carbone, and Mike
Welch, who cultivated his game competing on the AJGA's rival
circuit.
The Challenge Cup "got my feet wet,"
Welch said. "It introduced me to a lot players I'm still
friendly with now. I always know someone. So I can talk to them
whenever. They helped me out with the decision [to turn pro],
what's going to change, how to prepare differently."
"He introduced me to tournament golf,"
Welch said of Adamonis. "And I'm still with him. He's meant
a lot."
In order to boost publicity for the Challenge
Cup, Adamonis and Bruce Vittner, who also taught at Johnston
Senior High School (RI), co-founded Bay State (1996) and Ocean
State Golf Magazines (1990). Both publications were managed by
Golf Publications, Inc., of which Adamonis is the President and
CEO.
"It was always exciting," said Vittner,
who fondly recalls spending many long hours preparing each issue
before and after school. "It was a little bit overwhelming
a few days before publication…I never would have been in the
golf publication business without him."
Bay State Magazine dissolved in 2000, once
Adamonis took the post at Johnson & Wales, but each issue of
Ocean State Golf continues to devote significant space to the
exploits of golfing prodigies such as Welch, who parlayed his
talents into a college scholarship.
Relocating to Florida drastically reduced
Adamonis' involvement in the Challenge Cup, which he passed on
to his son, Dave Adamonis, Jr., the current Executive Director.
With the foundation already in place, Adamonis
Jr. has elevated the Challenge Cup to new competitive heights,
and has managed to raise $90,000 for area charities in the
process.
Adamonis, Sr., however, again found success
through the use of his creative instincts.
Maintaining the proper balance between academics
with athletics, Adamonis has designed a golf management program
that maximizes individual growth-on and off the golf course. A
regular week during school includes a full slate of classes on
Tuesdays and Thursdays. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays call for
practice and/or tournaments.
The result:
Four Region XIV championships. Six NAIA
All-Americans in just four years. And two national championships
(NAIA and National Minority College).
From his inception of the U.S. Challenge Cup to
his development of a college golf powerhouse, Dave Adamonis
helped Mike Welch realize his golf aspirations-step for step.
The next step begins Wednesday.
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