U.S. Amateur Championship final: Nick Dunlap vs Neal Shipley for 2023 title

The 123rd U.S. Amateur Championship culminates with Sunday’s 36-hole title match at Cherry Hills Country Club. Here’s a look at what happened in Saturday’s semifinals and the background of the two finalists, who tee off 8 a.m. Sunday.

Semifinal Results

Nick Dunlap def. Parker Bell, 3 and 2 — Dunlap was down a hole early, but just as he did in his comeback win in the quarters, he owned the back nine, winning Nos. 9, 12 and 15 en route to the victory. Dunlap is now 29-2 in match play since 2021.

Neal Shipley def. John Marshall Butler, 2 and 1 — Shipley dropped two of the first three holes, won Nos. 4 and 5 to pull even, then was three down entering the 11th. He won five of the last seven holes, including a tap-in birdie on No. 17 to seal it.

The Finalists

Nick Dunlap

19, Huntsville, Ala.; No. 9 in the World Amateur Golf Rankings, No. 41 seed

Dunlap’s run this week should come as no surprise, considering he’s competing in his eighth USGA championship and fourth U.S. Amateur. A member of the 2023 USA Walker Cup Team, Dunlap’s already played in two U.S. Opens. He was an All-American as a freshman at Alabama, earning first-team All-SEC honors. He’s had a scorching summer leading into his performance at Cherry Hills, as he posted consecutive wins at the Northeast Amateur and North & South Amateur. Dunlap took down the world’s top-ranked amateur, Gordon Sargent, in the Round of 64 and beat local Connor Jones in the Round of 32. He cruised by Bowen Mauss (5 and 3) in the Round of 16, then he won over Jackson Koivun in 19 holes in the quarters.

Neal Shipley

22, Pittsburgh; No. 132 in the World Amateur Golf Rankings, No. 47 seed

Competing in his second U.S. Amateur, Shipley played three seasons at James Madison University before transferring to Ohio State for this past season. He’s been knocking on the door of a big tournament win this summer but hasn’t quite gotten there: He was runner-up in the Sunnehanna Amateur and the Trans-Mississippi Amateur, where he lost in a playoff, and also tied for second in the Dogwood Invitational and tied for third in the Pacific Coast Amateur. In addition to his comeback in the semifinals, Shipley gritted out close wins over Wenyi Ding in the Round of 64 (one up), Calum Scott in the Round of 32 (20 holes), Cooper Jones in the Round of 16 (3 and 2), and Andi Xu in the quarterfinals (2 and 1) by erasing an early deficit.

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