KANNAPOLIS — Russell Killough didn’t win the
championship, but the teen-age sensation made quite a bid for the title here
Wednesday.
Killough, an 18-year-old rising senior at
Independence High School in Mint Hill, beat all the club and teaching pros
except two while taking low amateur honors with a 206 for 54 holes at the
Kannapolis Country Club.
Killough, five strokes behind leader Jeff Lankford
of Mocksville when he started the third round, was 8-under-par for the day after
he made a dramatic eagle on the par-5 15th hole. That put Killough one stroke up
on Lankford and two ahead of Oak Island’s Steve Isley, who were playing No.
14.
Bogeys on the next two holes, however, knocked
Killough out of the running in a tournament that saw Isley edge Lankford on the
first hole of a sudden-death playoff for the title.
“I played well,” said the soft-spoken Killough.
“I’m kind of disappointed that I made those two bogeys coming in. I played
solid golf.I tried.”
The talented junior golfer made it clear that he
didn’t enter the tournament just to come close. His expectations were “to
try to win. I try to give it my all every tournament.”
Killough’s length off the tee and with his irons
impressed the older and more experienced golfers in the tournament. For example,
on the par-5, 530-yard 15th, which he eagled all three days, he was hitting his
second shot from 164, 195 and 158 yards. He had tap-in eagles the last two
rounds, including a five-incher after a great 9-iron shot on Thursday.
“I played that hole very well this week,” said
Killough with a grin and an understatement. “I just hit it close every time
and had tap-ins.”
His strongest point?
“I’d have to say my iron play. It helped me out
a lot this week and kind of made up for a bad putting tournament. I hit it
closer than I expected sometimes,” he said.
Killough could well be the next Tiger Woods, but he
modestly shakes off the comparison, saying Tiger is two levels above him.
Regardless, the 18-year-old sensation is special,
but father Paul isn’t surprised. He’s known it since his adopted son was
born in February of 1983 to friends of the elder Killough. Paul and wife Joan
are white.
“He didn’t have any parents. They kind of went
separate ways. We adopted him. We just fell in love with him,” said the
father.
The adoption took place at Fort Campbell, Ky., where
Paul Killough was serving in the military. It was also there that the army
chaplain told Paul that Russell was going to be something special.
“He said God told him that, and we believed him.He
was right. ... He said we needed to keep him. Our family really didn’t want us
to,” said Paul.
“I’ve got two great kids. My youngest son right
here, Matt, and Russell have been together since day one. He (Matt) just turned
16. He’s a great player himself. He just gets kind of overshadowed because
Russell’s older, and he’s probably a little better player and going to be a
great player,” said Paul, who is golf pro at Charlotte National Golf Club.
Matt, a 1-handicapper who played with Russell on the
Independence team this past spring, is Paul’s natural son.
Paul has been a golf pro for about seven years, but
not a Class A PGA pro like all the pros in the field this week.
“I just teach, and I’m in the business end of
it,” he explained.
Paul taught both Russell and Matt to play, but has
turned his sons over to Cabarrus Country Club pro David Ross in the last 14
months.
“He’s the most fabulous teacher I’ve ever
seen, period. He’s wonderful,” said the father.
Russell’s accomplishments include finishing second
at Grand Cypress in Orlando, Fla., in the International Junior Tour
Championship, where was 5 under par for 45 holes and eighth in the World Junior
Championship at Torrey Pines in California, where he was 6 under for 54 holes.
“He’s a quality player, Russell is. He’s got
goals set and knows what he wants to do,” said Paul.
Russell’s drives of 300 yards-plus this week
impressed both the pros who played with him and the awed spectators.
“People who say length doesn’t mean nothing,
they’re mistaken,” said Paul. “His length is phenomenal. And he’s very,
very accurate.”
n
HOST CLUB: Golfers were very complimentary this week
of both the course and the organization of the tournament.
“Alan Cress (head pro) and his guys have done a
wonderful job,” said general manager Jeff Austin, who made the 36-hole cut,
shot an 82 on the final day and was last on the money-winning list with $195.
“I think we had well over 30 members that
volunteered throughout the week to do everything from working parking lot duties
to rangering, marshalling and the scoring area. They enjoy it,” said Austin, a
Salisbury resident.
The former Corbin Hills pro referred back to the
three times Kannapolis hosted the PGA Tour Qualifying School’s first-stage
tourney.
“We have had guys here from all over the world,
several different countries and all over the different states,” said Austin.
“One thing about North Carolina, we’re hospitable.”
He added that Adelphia, the title sponsor of the
Carolinas PGA-sponsored event, made the $52,000 tournament a first-class event.
“With the money they brought to the table, it
afforded us to do it first-class across the board,” said Austin. “I think
our PGA guys that came in and played really appreciated it, too.”
n
Senior sports writer Ed Dupree covers golf for the
Post. Contact him at 704-797-4258 or edupree@salisburypost.com
.