Brandon Holtz played his first-ever USGA championship at the Mid-Am in September, but it won’t be his last. The 38-year-old from Indiana won the tournament at Scottsdale’s Troon Country Club with a 3-and-2 victory over his final-match opponent, 28-year-old Jeg Coughlin III. With the win, Holtz will get an exemption into next year’s U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills and (likely) an envy-inducing invitation to the Masters in April. The Masters has traditionally extended an invitation to every U.S. Mid-Amateur champion since 1989.
For Holtz, a 38-year-old realtor and former college basketball player at Illinois State, the opportunity to compete on Augusta National’s hallowed grounds is a dream come true. Holtz played pro golf on the mini tour circuit for six years before being reinstated as an amateur in 2024.
“I kept my pro card for a while just because I liked to play for cash, and it got to the point where I just wasn’t playing any events anymore, so decided to get my amateur status back last year,” Holtz told the USGA.
On this week’s episode of Subpar, Holtz expressed his excitement about having the chance to tee it up at Augusta with his father on the bag after the two have spent the last two decades attending the Masters as patrons.
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“It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, right?” Holtz told Subpar hosts Colt Knost and Drew Stoltz. “Hopefully not, but, you know, let’s be a little bit more realistic. Yeah, he’s on the bag. I think the plan is, my brother might be on the bag for the U.S. Open and then hopefully get that invite to the Masters and my dad is definitely on the bag.
“My dad won two [Masters] tournament badges for life in 2004,” Holtz continued. “He won the lottery back when they opened it up to everything, so we’ve been going down there for 20 years. It makes it a little more special just because we understand how special it is. So just, you know, walking the grounds and say, oh, what’s behind that rope, what’s in that building? We’re gonna find out this year.”
Which hole is Holtz most looking forward to playing? A hint — it’s not the ones you’d expect.
“The ones I like to watch are No. 2 and No. 6,” he said. “No. 2, for the bigger hitters having that opportunity to hit it on No. 2 green and just because the green’s crazy, but you can also kind of see how downhill that actual hole is. A lot of people don’t realize how undulated and how hilly that place actually is. But I really wanna, [on] No. 14, [see] how crazy that green is. I just wanna go take a bucket of balls and hit chips as many times as I can around that thing because it’s, I’ll tell you what, from the bottom to the top, I think it’s about eight feet.
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