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Anniston City Championship: ‘Ugly,’ in a Good Way

Ty Cole shakes hands with runner up Chad Calvert on Sunday after winning the Anniston City Championship at Cane Creek. (Photo by Joe Medley)
Ty Cole shakes hands with runner up Chad Calvert on Sunday after winning the Anniston City Championship at Cane Creek. (Photo by Joe Medley)

Anniston, AL – Playing with changes in his bag and changes in his life, Cole continues promising start to 2024 Calhoun County Tour with victory in Anniston City Championship.

By Joe Medley

Bear and Sons

CANE CREEK — Ty Cole acknowledges making life “changes” recently.

If his start to the 2024 Calhoun County Golf Tour indicates anything, the six-time and reigning county player of the year just might be finding a next level as he nears 49 years old.

Cole shot a 3-under-par 69 Sunday to finish at 5-under-par 139 and win the Anniston City Championship at Cane Creek.

He edged Chad Calvert, who chipped in from 25 yards on No. 18 to finish 70-72–142 and win a battle with John Rollins for second place.

Rollins finished 70-74–144 and tied with Jeremy McGatha for third.

Cole’s victory in the season’s first points event comes three weeks after he and Gary Wigington won the Calhoun County Team Championship at Silver Lakes. Cole’s biridies on two of the last three holes made the difference there.

Cole’s start to the season signals that he remains as much a threat as ever to win another county points title. He just might be more of a threat, if personal adjustments take a few more strokes off of his game.

“I played pretty good drunk,” he said. “It may be ugly, if I’m sober. It could get ugly. It could get silly good, being clear headed.”

Lots of golfers go out on the course with their best friends, be they playing partners, a comfortable iron and/or the “loose juice.”

Cole has a long-time playing partner in teammate Gay Wigington. Between them, they have 11 county player-of-the-year honors, and they’re always contenders in team events.

As for irons, Cole said the “jury is still out” on this year’s bag adjustments. If equipment changes run their normal course, he said, he’ll probably default to irons he replaced.

He wouldn’t be the first golfer to regularly bite the hook of buying new equipment in hopes of trimming strokes, though he says he bites that hook as often as he does “because I’m an idiot.”

As for a golfer’s liquid friend, Cole’s jury came back.

“I’ve made a lot of changes over the last few months,” he said. “I’ve quit drinking, so this is the first tournament I’ve played, as an individual, in probably 15 years that I’ve played sober.

“I just had some stuff happen, and it was time to quit. It’s time to lay it down, and it’s been great. It’s been eye opening. Just things are better.”

Cole’s 2024 start would say so, but check back later. It could get better.

“I knew the golf, when I got into pressure, that it may take awhile for me to get used to playing like that,” he said.

Like the rest of the field at Cane Creek this past weekend, Cole fought wind. He played Sunday’s round without Wigington, who started the final round a group ahead of Cole’s foursome.

Golf is a hole-to-hole, shot-by-shot temptation toward frustration, and Cole had his ups and downs. He shook off a double bogey on No. 10 well enough to birdie 12, 14 and 18.

He did it without an old friend … the liquid kind with the always flexible tee time.

“I’m really proud of how I fought, not really nerves, but just the uneasiness of not having that as a crutch,” Cole said. “Just get my mind out of it and just worry about hitting golf balls.”

Cole was one of six golfers who entered Sunday’s round one shot back of first-round leader Brennan Clay. Cole separated quickly by reaching 4 under par by No. 8, but Calvert and Rollins wound up locked in a battle for second.

Calvert made it moot quickly on No. 18. Situated 25 yards out, between the bunker and clubhouse, he holed in.

‘“I just got lucky,” he said. “It was going dead right, and it kicked left and, luckily, it rolled in.”

Ty Cole shakes hands with runner up Chad Calvert on Sunday after winning the Anniston City Championship at Cane Creek. (Photo by Joe Medley)
Ty Cole shakes hands with runner up Chad Calvert on Sunday after winning the Anniston City Championship at Cane Creek. (Photo by Joe Medley)
CHAMPIONSHIP FLIGHT
Player Rd. 1 Rd. 2 Total
Ty Cole 70 69 139
Chad Calvert 70 72 142
John Rollins 70 74 144
Jeremy McGatha 70 74 144
Brennan Clay 69 76 145
Andrew Brooks 70 75 145
Gary Wigington 74 72 146
Kevin Daugherty 73 74 147
Ott Chandler 74 73 147
Jeff Chapman 70 80 150
Blake Grissom 74 81 155
CHAMPIONSHIP B
Player Rd. 1 Rd. 2 Total
Dustin Travis 75 74 (35) 149
Hunter Carr 77 72 (37) 149
Bob Eaton 78 75 153
Landon Holley 80 77 157
Jamarcus Stokes 82 80 162
Cole McNeal 79 84 163
Daniel Black 83 81 164
FIRST FLIGHT
Player Rd. 1 Rd. 2 Total
Chris Reaves 84 77 161
Carson Chandler 87 76 163
Dre Davenport 84 81 165
Andrew Gunnells 84 82 166
Houston Black 85 86 171
Aaron Gregerson 88 84 172
Nathan Gilbert 93 80 173
Isaac Scroggins 105 107 215
Taylor Vera 89 WD
Jonathan Pate WD
Kyle Webb WD
CHAMPIONSHIP SENIORS
Player Rd. 1 Rd. 2 Total
Chip Howell 74 76 150
Greg Shultz 75 76 151
Ted Heim 82 78 160
John McKenzie 81 83 164
Doug Huie 83 81 164
David Sanders 78 88 166
David Fitzgerald 86 86 172
Rocco D’Gomez 87 89 176
Danny Stephens 90 94 184
Dennis Moyer 93 WD

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