`Who Woulda Thunk?' An unlikely foursome wins the Pro-Am in Grand Blanc, and makes history in the process. LONNY GOLDSMITH STAFF WRITER r new me.icatio mes. Family festivities. ation Shaa rey Ze . • C oming into the event on Aug. 6, the women were just happy to be there. By the time they reached the 13th hole, they knew they could win. Lynda Thal, Anita Mellen, Marcia Auster and Nancy Ep- stein, along with Professional Golf Association star Frank No- bilo of New Zealand, won the 1997 Buick Open Pro-Am at Warwick Hills Golf Club in Grand Blanc. The event was the day before the weekend-long Buick Open began at the sub- urban Flint club. "It was the opportunity of a lifetime for a golfer," Mellen said. "We were in a situation of having to think what a pro would do in the situations we were in." The win was the first ever for an all-women team at the Buick Open Pro-Am. The foursome won the oppor- tunity to play by advancing through two qualifying tourna- ments — both were scrambles where each player hits their own shot, and then all play from where the best shot landed. The first tournament was at their own club, Tam O'Shanter in West Bloomfield; the second was at Oakland University's Khaki Cousins Golf Club in Roches- ter. "Mary Tamaroff Buick spon- sored the qualifier at Tam," Thal said. "The second qualifi- er was for foursomes that were sponsored by Buick dealers statewide." When the women won at the Oakland course, they were en- tered in the Pro-Am free of charge and given the use of a Buick courtesy car for two weeks. On Aug. 4, the group went to a Flint hotel for the pairing lot- tery, which is where decision- making started. "Each of us wanted to have a different pro for the tourna- ment," Thal said. The pros they wanted were Tiger Woods, U.S. Open champ Ernie Els, former Masters winner Fred Couples, and Nobilo. "By the time we got to pick," Thal said. "Nobilo was the last one left." Fate was on the foursome's side for the outing. Nobilo, they discovered, was 21st in the World Golf Rankings. They were classified as group number 21 for the Pro-Am. They shot 21-under par. "We got the best pro and cad- dy we could have hoped to have," Mellen said. "They were genuinely warm and enthusi- astic, and extended themselves to help us." The outcome of the event was in question until the 17th hole, when Auster made the putt that gave them the lead. "Frank told me afterwards that if one of the leaders had that putt to make in the last couple of holes on the final day, he wouldn't have done as well," she said. The women's husbands served as their caddies. For Ep- stein's husband, the opportunity was a chance to get back to his start in golf. "I started as a caddy, and I've been watching most of my life," Steve Epstein said. "Caddying for my wife was fun, and it was a good tournament atmos- phere." For Auster, the victory was the highlight of her golf ca- reer. "When you can walk 18 holes inside the ropes with a pro golfer, it doesn't get much bet- ter," she said. Even during the weekend tournament, Nobilo couldn't stop talking about the win. "Linda ran into the caddy of [pro golfer] Ben Crenshaw," said Auster. "And he said that Frank had been talking to everyone about what a great day he had." ❑ Tennis Team Wins To Advance The doubles team of Lauren Gottlieb-Ford of Farmington Hills and Glynette Gottlieb- Wolk of Bloomfield Hills were part of the Square Lake Racquet Club (SLRC) team that defeat- ed Sportsclub (West Bloomfield) 4-1 that gave SLRC the Unit- ed States Tennis Association state title at level 2.5 (beginner). The sisters defeated their op- ponents 6-0, 6-1. The competition was held at the Rochester Hills Tennis and Swim Club the weekend of Aug. 1-3. With the win, SLRC ad- vances to the Western Sectional USTA League Championships in Indianapolis. The sectionals start today and run through Sunday. The winning team advances to the national finals at the National Tennis Center in Flushing, N.Y. L