By Jim Owczarski Sports Editor Published Jul 30, 2012 at 11:00 AM

HIGHLAND PARK, Ill. – Donald Ross has confounded, as well as anointed, the game's greatest players for a century, his classic designs hosting all of the country's most prestigious championships.

One of those championships, the Western Amateur, returns to one of his routes this week at Exmoor Country Club in Highland Park, a northern suburb of Chicago, a mere mile from the shores of Lake Michigan and less than 30 miles south of the Wisconsin border.

Once a traveling championship, the tournament returned to its Chicago roots in 2009 after 38 years at Point O'Woods Golf and Country Club in Michigan. In its 110 years, Ross designs have been played 17 times, including Exmoor in 1952 and 1904.

The Western Amateur is one of the top amateur tournaments in the world, along with the U.S. Amateur and the British Amateur. It is five days of competition, beginning with two rounds of stroke play followed with a cut to the low 44 and ties.

Then there is a third round of stroke play – 36 holes – with a cut to the low 16. Next, two rounds of match play to determine the final four, who square off on championship Saturday.

Wisconsin will be represented by University of Wisconsin players Thomas O'Bryan and Zach Balit, along with Mequon native Jordan Niebrugge, who will be a freshman at Oklahoma State University this fall.

"The Western is one of the best tournaments of the year and if you're not excited to be playing in then you probably shouldn't be playing," O'Bryan said. "It's one of the most prestigious amateur tournaments you can play in and I cannot wait. I am so excited."

The tournament is one of golf's most grueling tests, physically and mentally.

"It's definitely one of the tougher in the nation," said Niebrugge, who will be competing in his first tournament.

It's why the list of champions includes Tiger Woods, Justin Leonard (twice), Phil Mickelson, Chris DiMarco, Scott Verplank, Hal Sutton (twice), Curtis Strange, Ben Crenshaw, Andy North, Lanny Wadkins, Tom Weiskopf, Jack Nicklaus, Chick Evans and Francis Ouimet.

Runner-ups include Gil Morgan, Jay Haas, David Ogrin, Curt Byrum, Rocco Mediate, Craig Perks, Ben Curtis and Patrick Cantlay.

Perhaps more impressive, however, is the list of stroke play medalists who did not go on to win that year's tournament – a testament to the vagaries of match play.

Camilo Villegas (2002), Jason Gore (1993), Len Mattiace (1987), Scott Verplank (1984), Mark O'Meara (1980) and Tom Kite (1970) all ended stroke play as the No. 1 seed only to fall in the matches.

It's an impressive leaderboard, built up over 100 years of competition. What's just as special, however, is the invitation. Not all amateurs get in, especially with an ever-increasing international contingent to choose from.

"These are our major championships in amateur golf – the Western Amateur and the U.S. Amateur are the two biggest events in amateur golf and you need to play well and you want to play well," said Patrick Rodgers, the world's third-ranked amateur and a sophomore at Stanford University who will be a tournament favorite. "This is where you want to be peaking."

Once in the field, making it through stroke play can be considered an achievement in itself. In the tournament's history, 28 alumni of the Sweet 16 have gone on to win major championships. Only nine of them actually won the Western Am, however.

Players with that hole on their resume include Tom Watson, a four-time Sweet 16 participant, Corey Pavin (three times), Bob Tway (three times), Fred Couples (two times), Tom Lehman (two time) and Davis Love III (two times).

"If you get into match play, all you need to do is have a streak of holes in each round where you play really well and pick up a couple holes on someone," O'Bryan said. "If you can do that, and you get three or four up with five, six holes to play, the match is basically over and you've just gotta finish the job, make a couple of pars coming in and you've got it. That's my goal."

Despite the long odds at making match play, O'Bryan enters the tournament with confidence. The Aurora, Ill. native is coming off a tie for 26th at the highly competitive Illinois Open and even more impressively, a match-play appearance at the U.S. Amateur Public Links at the Soldier Hollow Golf Course at Wasatch Mountain State Park in Midway, Utah.

To reach the bracket of 64, O'Bryan tied for 44th in stroke play. He then lost to Anton Arboleda 6 & 4.

"I actually volunteered at the Pub Links in 2007 when it was at Cantigny (in Wheaton, Ill.), and I made it a personal goal to eventually get there," said O'Bryan, who finished tied for 28th at the Big Ten Championships.

"The main thing that (Wisconsin) coach (Michael) Burcin and coach (Bryant) Odom have really been encouraging is having a solid game plan off every tee – driver, 3-wood, 3-iron – and if you're going to hit driver is it really going to benefit you and put you in a good spot. If there's a risk, is it a risk you play?

"I developed a game plan like that, stuck to it the whole week and played pretty god the first two rounds. The first day (of match play) I played a guy who played really well. I was really nervous. I got on that first hole and I was shaking a little bit. It took me a few holes to settle down and by that point I was five down after six. It was a little bit of a rough start, but I played a lot better at the end of it. I feel good about how I did."

Exmoor will require the creation of a similar game plan. It will play to a par of 72, but Ross's famed cross bunkers and sloped green complexes will require precision off the tee and with irons. Driver may not always be the best play, but accuracy and putting will assuredly be.

It's a reason that whoever the favorite may be heading in, and whoever may be the No. 1 seed after stroke play, has his work cut out for him.

"The goal is to make it to the top 16, and once you make it through that the tournament is totally separate," said Rodgers, who made the Sweet 16 last year. "The medalist in stroke play has gotten beat in match play more times than not, so it is certainly a challenge. The tournament re-starts."

While O'Bryan brings some recent experience into the event, Niebrugge may be one to watch for. The youngster is the defending Wisconsin State Open champion, a title highlighted by a final round 67.

He shot a 66 to win the WIAA Division I state high school championship and this summer he has finished third in the AJGA Rolex Tournament of Champions and sixth in the Foot Joy Invitational.

"My main goal is to play well," Niebrugge said. "You have to approach every tournament like you're going to win it and expect to win it and believe in yourself that you belong. I'm hitting the ball pretty good right now so it's all about making putts. Whoever is going to make the most putts is normally up there on the leader board."

It's no wonder he joins a Cowboys program in the fall that has produced the likes of Tway, Verplank, Rickie Fowler, Charles Howell III, Bo Van Pelt and Peter Uihlein.

Balit is a somewhat unknown, as the native Canadian transferred from South Carolina to Wisconsin and was eligible to play in the second semester. He competed in four tournaments for the Badgers, including a tie for 42nd at the Big Ten Championships, but has four years of eligibility remaining.

But, name recognition and pedigree matters not if you can get through stroke play.

"Once you get into match play, it's anyone's tournament," O'Bryan said.

Jim Owczarski is an award-winning sports journalist and comes to Milwaukee by way of the Chicago Sun-Times Media Network.

A three-year Wisconsin resident who has considered Milwaukee a second home for the better part of seven years, he brings to the market experience covering nearly all major and college sports.

To this point in his career, he has been awarded six national Associated Press Sports Editors awards for investigative reporting, feature writing, breaking news and projects. He is also a four-time nominee for the prestigious Peter J. Lisagor Awards for Exemplary Journalism, presented by the Chicago Headline Club, and is a two-time winner for Best Sports Story. He has also won numerous other Illinois Press Association, Illinois Associated Press and Northern Illinois Newspaper Association awards.

Jim's career started in earnest as a North Central College (Naperville, Ill.) senior in 2002 when he received a Richter Fellowship to cover the Chicago White Sox in spring training. He was hired by the Naperville Sun in 2003 and moved on to the Aurora Beacon News in 2007 before joining OnMilwaukee.com.

In that time, he has covered the events, news and personalities that make up the PGA Tour, LPGA Tour, Major League Baseball, the National Football League, the National Hockey League, NCAA football, baseball and men's and women's basketball as well as boxing, mixed martial arts and various U.S. Olympic teams.

Golf aficionados who venture into Illinois have also read Jim in GOLF Chicago Magazine as well as the Chicago District Golfer and Illinois Golfer magazines.