Finally a membership that pays for itself.

InsideGOLF Premium
News

Remaining in the U.S. Am? A junior star, a major champ’s son, and DIII underdog

Miles Russell watches a tee shot at the U.S. Amateur Championship on Friday at The Olympic Club in San Francisco.

Miles Russell watches a tee shot at the U.S. Amateur on Friday at The Olympic Club in San Francisco.

Getty Images

This is where it starts to get good, people. The 2025 United States Amateur is down to eight, and those four matches get underway on Friday afternoon at The Olympic Club in San Francisco.

And the remaining participants? It’s a solid group. First, here are the matchups (all times ET):

4:30 p.m. — Niall Shiels Donegan (Scotland) vs. Jacob Modleski (Indiana)
4:45 p.m. — Jimmy Abdo (Minnesota) vs. Jackson Herrington (Tennessee)
5 p.m. — Mason Howell (Georgia) vs. John Daly II (Arkanas)
5:15 p.m. — Miles Russell (Florida) vs. Eric Lee (California)

Where to start? It could be with Abdo, the 4,292nd-ranked amateur in the world, a rising sophomore at a small Division III school (Gustavus Adolphus College) in Minnesota.

Or maybe with Daly, the son of two-time major champion John Daly. Or perhaps Russell, who last year at age 15 became the youngest player to make the cut in a Korn Ferry Tour tournament. And then there’s Shiels Donegan, whose family relocated to the Bay Area when he was 3. This is essentially a home game for him, and it showed during one wild post-round interview on Thursday.

But first, let’s go back to Abdo, who has been the underdog this week.

He didn’t play tournaments until he was in middle school and admitted he wasn’t “anything special” in high school. As he slowly started to improve, he got into some bigger events. This was his first time trying to qualify for the U.S. Amateur. Now he’s in the quarters.

“I never felt like I was ready. Coming out of high school, I was never really recruited at all,” he said. “That kind of adds into this underdog story where no one really believes I’m capable of playing good golf like this. I know I am, and I’ve had that confidence even when I was in high school. I didn’t play in the state tournament lineup until junior year of high school, and in high school it’s not too hard to be in your top six. That just kind of proves I had to grind it out and keep working at it, and now I’m here.”

While it might be surprising for Abdo to make it this far, the same can’t be said for a few others, including Modleski (the 15th-ranked amateur), Russell (16th) and Lee (29th).

Russell, at just 16 years old, is the top-ranked junior amateur in the world. His list of accomplishments and accolades is longer than most in the field, and it includes things like surpassing Tiger Woods as the youngest winner of the AJGA Rolex Boys Player of the Year award, which he did in 2023.

On Friday afternoon, Russell will face Lee, a 20-year-old rising junior at Oklahoma State who not that long ago earned the winning point for the Cowboys in the 2025 NCAA National Championship.

That’s the final match of what should be four riveting ones, and it will give way to two semifinals matches on Saturday and one 36-hole final on Sunday.

You can catch Friday’s matches from 6-7 p.m. ET on Peacock and 7-9 p.m. on Golf Channel.

Related Articles

Rules
AI can now answer your golf-rules questions — with precision and authority
By: Alan Bastable
News
‘Say yes to golf’: This USGA program helps women level the playing field
By: Josh Sens
News
John Daly had a short putt. What followed ‘may be best thing you see’
By: Nick Piastowski
Instruction
How to practice like a member of the U.S. National Junior Team
By: Jessica Marksbury
Drivers
Inside the last-minute dash to get this Masters competitor's driver... from a museum
By: Jack Hirsh
Balls
'Failure's not an option': Augusta National chairman reaffirms club's rollback stance
By: Jack Hirsh
Features
Fred Couples revisits the 'divine intervention' that won him the 1992 Masters
By: Fred Couples
Lifestyle
He was Augusta National's superintendent, an innovator and mentor
By: Josh Sens
Lifestyle
How the World Handicap System stays steady even when conditions aren't
By: Josh Sens
was:
Exit mobile version