1900: Charles E. Orr, Pasadena GC, defeated SCGA President Charles E. Maud, Riverside Polo & Golf Club, 6 & 4 at Los Angeles CC. Twenty-nine players started the qualifying round after a rain delay.
1901 Walter Fairbanks of Denver and Los Angeles CC defeated Charles E. Maud, 5 & 4, at Los Angeles CC. Fairbanks rallied from 2-down with two to play and eventually needed 20 holes for his first-round win at his home course over William Fredrickson (who would become the tournament champion in 1906 and 1910).
1902 H. M. Sears defeated J. E. Cook, Los Angeles CC (who would serve as SCGA president from 1905-1911), 6 & 5 at Pasadena CC. Sears set a course record at LACC's Pico course with 79-83 - 162 in the qualifying round. It was the first time that rubber- covered balls were used; they got much attention from the press.
1903: Walter Fairbanks defeated Charles E. Maud, 2 & 1 at Los Angeles CC. Fairbanks set an 18-hole course record of 77 in qualifying. Robert E. Hunter (age 17) of Chicago set a 36-hole record of 158 in qualifying. Thirty-seven players entered the tournament.
1904: W.K. Jewett of Colorado Springs defeated William Fredrickson, 3 & 2, in a 36-hole match at Los Angeles CC. This was the first year without a qualifying round, following a British tradition.
1905: Walter Fairbanks won his third championship, defeating William Fredrickson, 5 & 4, at Los Angeles CC. A qualifying round was reinstated.
1906: William Fredrickson defeated A. B. Swift of Chicago and Santa Barbara, 3 & 2, at Los Angeles CC. Fredrickson defeated Nat F. Moore of Chicago to reach the finals.
1907: Sterling Liness, LACC, defeated Robert Hixon of Toledo and Pasadena, 5 & 3 at Los Angeles CC. The rain-softened course limited qualifying to one round, while high winds kept scores high (medalist Winsor Walton shot 86 and only one other play broke 90).
1908: 17-year-old Paul Hunter defeated another Chicago resident, Nat F. Moore, 5 & 4, at Los Angeles CC. It was the last championship at LACC's Pico Heights course. It was also the first of a record five SCGA Amateur titles that Hunter would capture; he remains the youngest champion in the tournament's 99-year history.
1909: Paul Hunter became the first person to successfully defend his title when he defeated Nat F. Wilshire, LACC, 11 & 10 at Annandale GC. Hunter was top qualifier of 58 entries and an easy winner of the first championship held on the new Annandale GC course at San Rafael Heights. T. W. Jacobs, Wisconsin state Champion won the driving contest with a 240-yard blast.
1910: William Fredrickson defeated Nat F. Wilshire, 1-up, after 36 holes at Annandale GC. Fredrickson needed 19 holes to win his semifinal match. Hugo R. Johnstone set a course record of 157 in qualifying.
1911: Norman Macbeth, LACC - designer of Wilshire CC and SCGA president in 1929 - defeated E. N. Wright, Annandale GC, 9 & 8, at Los Angeles CC in Macbeth's first Southern California event. Hugo Johnstone again set a course record with 153 in qualifying.
1912: E. S. Armstrong, Midwick CC, defeated M. A. McLaughlin, Annandale GC, 3 & 1, at Los Angeles CC. High winds made play difficult; it took Norman Macbeth 13 strokes to finish the first hole of match play (518 yards), in part because the wind blew the ball off the green. This also marked the first year that the field exceeded 80 players.
1913: Norman Macbeth prevented E. S. Armstrong from becoming the second back-to-back winner in a 37-hole match at Los Angeles CC. It was the first time the tournament was played at LACC's new location in Beverly Hills and the first time that the championship match had gone extra holes.
1914: Carleton Wright, Annandale GC, defeated Morris Phillips, Redlands CC, 2 & 1. Wright was 19 years old. This was the first SCGA Amateur held at San Gabriel Valley CC.
1915: E. S. Armstrong defeated Harold B. Lamb, California CC, 3 &1. This was the first SCGA Amateur held at Midwick CC (Armstrong's home course). Armstrong became the first person to win both the SCGA Amateur and California Amateur in the same year.
1916: Harold B. Lamb defeated Jack Neville of San Francisco, SFCC, 6 & 4 at Los Angeles CC. Neville had won the first two California Amateurs in 1912-13 (he would eventually win three more) and co-designed Pebble Beach Golf Links along with 1919 SCGA Amateur champion Douglas Grant.
1917: Windsor B. Walton, LACC, defeated R. Crane Gartz, Annandale GC, 8 & 6 at Midwick CC. Walton defeated SCGA President Ed Tufts, 5 & 4, in the first round
1918: R. J. Cash Jr., LACC, defeated Harold Lamb, California CC, 1-up after 36 holes at LACC. Lamb and Cash qualified 1-2 with scores of 159 and 160. Both cruised in their semi-final matches, Lamb winning 7 & 6 and Cash 10 & 9.
1919: Reigning California Amateur champion Douglas Grant, Burlingame CC, defeated Paul Gardner, 3 & 2 at Los Angeles CC. Grant, a player of international reputation,was spending winter in Southern California. With Jack Neville, he designed the famed Pebble Beach Golf Links, which opened in 1919.
1920 E.. H. Seaver, LACC, defeated J. F. Neville of San Francisco, SFCC, 3-2 at Los Angeles CC. Seaver, who had just won the Trans-Mississippi Championship, is the father of Charles Seaver (1934 SCGA Amateur champion - see separate box) and grandfather of Baseball Hall of Famer Tom Seaver.
1921. Dr. Paul Hunter, Annandale and Midwick, defeated Robert E. Hunter, Midwick, 6 & 4 in a 36-hole match at Los Angeles CC. Paul Hunter returns to the tournament as a physician and defeats his cousin in the final. Dr. Hunter qualified with a 144. He then played on the U. S. International Golf team (precursor to the Walker Cup) which defeated Great Britain.
1922. George Von Elm, Rancho CC, defeated E. H. Seaver, LACC, 5 & 4. Von Elm arrived from Salt Lake City with a big reputation for sterling tournament play. This marked the first time the tournament was held at Pasadena CC and Flintridge CC.
1923. Willie I. Hunter, Rancho CC, defeated E. S. Armstrong, Midwick, 2 & 1 at Midwick CC. Hunter (no relation to Paul) was 1921 British Amateur Champion and 1922 runner-up. He arrived at the newly rebuilt Midwick course by train the morning of qualifying.
1924. Paul Hunter defeated Willie Hunter, 2 & 1 at Annandale GC (Paul Hunter's home course). It was Paul Hunter's first tournament after getting married. The best match of the tournament was during the second round between Fred Wright, Flintridge CC, and W. W. Campbell, Los Angeles CC, which Wright won on the 26th hole. The field included five former champions among 130 entries.
1925. George Von Elm defeated Norman Macbeth, Wilshire CC, 12 & 10 at Los Angeles CC, the largest final-match margin in tournament history. Von Elm went on to win the 1925 Northern California Golf Association and California Amateur championships, making him the only man to win all three titles in the same year. The following year, Von Elm won the U.S. Amateur Championship.
1926. Paul Hunter defeated R. G. Cawsey, California CC, 10 & 9, to win his fifth SCGA Amateur crown, a record that still stands. It was also the second-largest margin in a final match. This marked the first time that the tournament was held at California and Brentwood CCs.
1927 George Von Elm defeated Paul Hunter, Annandale, 7 & 6. First time fans are charged to attend the tournament, $2 for the week. Five former champions in the field, including Von Elm who also won the 1926 National Amateur Championship. Rain delayed the final match one day, first time the event was held at Lakeside GC.
1928 Fay Coleman, California CC, defeated Charles 17-year-old Seaver, 6 & 4 at Midwick CC. In 1933 Seaver (whose father had won the 1920 SCGA Amateur) went on to win the Northern California GA and California Amateur and the following year won the SCGA Amateur.
1929. Gibson Dunlap, Riviera CC, defeated David Martin, California CC, on the 38th at Bel-Air CC. All of the "old guard" players were eliminated by the semifinals. Dunlap, a junior at UCLA, won on the second extra hole when a missed putt stymied Martin, who would come back to win the title two years later. The 38-hole final match is a tournament record.
1930. Fay Coleman defeated Russell Thompson, Oakmont CC, 3-2 at Midwick. This was Coleman's second SCGA Amateur title.
1931. David Martin, California CC, defeated W. L. (Wild Bill) Jelliffe, El Caballero CC, 2 up at Los Angeles CC. This marked the first time that the tournament was all match play with no qualifying round or medal play. The championship trophy was presented to Martin by Bobby Jones.
1932. Jack Gaines, Oakmont CC, defeated Harold Thompson, Oakmont CC, 2 & 1 before a record gallery of 1,000 at San Gabriel CC. Gaines was 2-down after 18 holes, but four birdies on the final 18 fueled his victory. Thompson defeated Joe Hunter on the 41st hole in their semifinal match
1933. Harold Thompson defeated Neil White, USC, 2 up at Brentwood CC. Thompson defeated Dave Martin, the 1931 SCGA and California Amateur champion, before facing White. White was defending state champion after beating Thompson in the 1932 state finals 3-2.
1934. Charles Seaver defeated Lynn Lardner, Brentwood CC, 7 & 6 at Bel-Air CC. Seaver (see separate story) was the son of 1920 champion E. H. (Everett) Seaver and father of baseball hall-of-fame pitcher Tom Seaver. Seaver was also just the second person to hold both the SCGA, NCGA and California Amateur titles having won the State in 1933. Lardner was Wisconsin State Champion in 1932.
1935. Harry Wesbrook, Annandale GC, defeated Gibson Dunlap, Oakmont CC, 2 & 1. Wesbrook never trailed in the tournament at The Los Angeles CC.
1936 Roger Kelly, LACC, defeated Gibson Dunlap, Oakmont CC, 3 & 2 at San Diego CC, the first time the event had been held outside of Los Angeles County. Kelly won back-to-back California Amateur titles in 1938-39 and became one of the finest amateur golfers ever; the Kelly Cup at Lakeside GC is named after him.
1937. Jack Gaines defeated Jimmy McHale, 7& 6 to win his second SCGA Amateur title. It was the first SCGA Amateur Championship played at Riviera CC. Gaines was also the 1935 California Amateur champion.
1938 Pat Abbott, Altadena Golf Course, defeated Guy Hanson, Lakeside GC, 5 & 4 at California CC. Abbot, who won the 1936 U.S. Amateur Public Links Championship, became the first public course players to win the SCGA Amateur; he won again in 1941.
1939. Frank Hixon, Midwick CC, defeated Pat Abbott, 2 & 1 at Annandale GC. Hixon, a survivor of infantile paralysis, would win a second SCGA Amateur title 19 years later at Wilshire CC.
1940 Smiley Quick, Cloverfield CC, defeated Ralph Evans, Brentwood CC, on the 38th hole at Lakeside GC. Evans defeated Pat Abbott, who was the heavy favorite to win the tournament, in a first round match. The field included 286 entries, up from 69 in 1939 and 86 in 1938.
1941 Pat Abbott, Flintridge CC, defeated Jim Clark, Lakewood CC, 3 & 2 at Oakmont CC. Clark defeated 1940 champion Smiley Quick 8 & 7 in semifinals. This was the first SCGA Amateur Championship at Oakmont.
1942 John Dawson, Lakeside GC, defeated Bruce McCormick, Oakmont CC, 10 & 8 at The Los Angeles CC in the most lopsided final since 1925. It was the first of four titles that Dawson would win in a 10-year span.
1943 Smiley Quick defeated Steve Tiberg, Annandale GC, 6-5 at Hillcrest CC. Quick defeated defending champion John Dawson 5 & 4 in semi-finals. Sectional qualifying introduced by Lakeside GC's Maurie Luxford, allowed a field of 503, largest in tournament history.
1944 Dawson again defeated McCormick, but this time the match went 37 holes. The tournament was played at Lakeside GC, which was each golfer's home course.
1945 For the second consecutive year and third time in four years, Dawson defeated McCormick, this time 4 & 3 at San Gabriel CC. McCormick went on to win the California Amateur Championship later in the year.
1946 Robert Gardner, La Jolla CC, defeated Dawson, 2 & 1 at Virginia CC. Gardner won the California Amateur the next year. Dawson defeated actor Forrest Tucker, 7 & 6 in the semifinals.
1947 Bruce McCormick, Lakeside GC, defeated Mac Hunter, Riviera CC, 1 up after 36 holes at The Los Angeles CC. Hunter, the son of 1923 champion Willie Hunter, went on to win the 1949 California Amateur and eventually become head professional at Riviera CC. His son, also named Mac, won the 1972 California Amateur.
1948 McCormick defeated Ray Sleppy, Palos Verdes GC, 1 up at Wilshire CC to win his second consecutive SCGA Amateur title.
1949 Jerry Douglas, playing on his home course, prevented a McCormick "three-peat" when he the two-time defending champion, 1 up, in the 50th renewal of the SCGA Amateur Championship at The Victoria Club.
1950 Jim Ferrie, Virginia CC, defeated a fellow club member, Del Walker, 1 up, at Oakmont CC. Fast play prevailed, as the two took a total of 5 hours and 10 minutes to play 36 holes on final day. Ferrie trailed until 32nd hole before rallying to win. Walker went on to become coach at Cal State Long Beach and a long-time SCGA committeeman.
1951 For the second consecutive year, Ferrie defeated Walker, this time 2 & 1, on their home course.
1952 Dawson became only the second person to win four SCGA Amateur titles when he defeated Bob McCallister, San Gabriel CC, 2 up at Hillcrest CC. Dawson was the oldest tourney finalist at 44 years old, while McCallister, who was graduated from Whittier High one week prior to the tournament, was 18.
1953 Fletcher Jones, Bel-Air CC, defeated Robert Morefield, LACC, 5 & 4, at The Los Angeles CC. Jones, who later became a successful automobile dealer, came to California to accept a basketball scholarship from USC, while Morefield was a golfer for UCLA.
1954 Ted Richards Jr., Bel Air CC, defeated Sandy Mosk Jr., Riviera CC, 3 & 2 at San Gabriel CC. Prior to joining Bel-Air, Richards had captured the U.S. Amateur Public Links Championship the year before.
1955 Jerry Steelsmith, Oakmont CC, defeated McCormick, San Gabriel CC, 2 & 1 at Annandale GC.
1956 Alan Geiberger, Montecito CC, defeated Dick Foote, Santa Ana CC, 9 & 8 at Santa Ana CC in a matchup of 18-year-old finalists. Two years earlier, Geiberger had lost to Bud Bradley in the finals of the U.S. Junior Amateur at The Los Angeles CC. In 1966, Geiberger won the PGA Championship.
1957 In the last SCGA Amateur to be played at match play, Verne Callison, Sacramento, defeated Geiberger, 1 up at Lakeside GC. Geiberger missed a 30-inch putt on the 35th hole to give Callison a 1-up lead, then had a 20-footer hit the cup and bounce away on the 36th which would have forced a playoff. It was sweet revenge for Callison, who lost to Geiberger in the quarterfinals of the 1953 California Amateur Championship.
1958 Frank Hixon (285), South Hills CC, defeated Bud Taylor (288), Red Hill CC. For the first time, the event was played as 72 holes of stroke play on four courses in four days, with the final round televised at Wilshire CC. The entry fee was raised from $5 to $10. Hixon won title 19 years before under match-play, the longest gap between titles.
1959 In a battle of former champions, Geiberger (281) defeated Richards Jr. (285) at Oakmont CC in the 60th annual SCGA championship. Geiberger, a senior at USC, claimed this title as his eighth consecutive amateur tournament championship.
1960 Ben Alyea (285), Fox Hills GC, defeated Ted Richards Jr. (286), Bel Air CC. Alyea won battle of UCLA grads at Brentwood CC.
1961 Ted Richards Jr. (285) defeated Gene Andrews (287) at The Los Angeles CC. Andrews was later named to the Walker Cup team.
1962 Larry Bouchey (282), Rio Hondo CC, defeated Richard Glover (285), Gilman Hot Springs CC at Virginia CC. Bouchey was a former professional baseball player and golfer, whose amateur status was reinstated.
1963 Bruce McCormick, San Gabriel CC, defeated Ted Richards Jr. by one shot at Hillcrest CC. McCormick set a tournament record score with his 72-hole total of 280.. It was McCormick's third SCGA Amateur title, a record exceeded only by Paul Hunter (with 5) and Johnny Dawson and Craig Steinberg (4 each). A record field of 580 players began qualifications, and juniors were allowed to play in the championship flight.
1964 Larry Brown (283), San Gabriel CC, defeated John McGlone (285) at San Gabriel CC.
1965 Richard Davies (285), Annandale GC, defeated James Gilbert (288), Singing Hills CC at Annandale GC. Davies won British Amateur Championship in 1962 and played on the 1963 U.S. Walker Cup squad, then didn't play in another tournament until this one. Gilbert was the No. 1 golfer on San Diego State team.
1966 John Jacobs defeated Kemp Richardson, on third hole of sudden death at The Victoria Club. Jacobs, another of the fine USC golfers, has become a major player on the Senior PGA Tour.
1967 Greg Pitzer, Riviera CC, (289) defeated Ted Richards (294) at Riviera CC. Earlier in the year, the SCGA board of directors decided to limit Southern California Amateur Championship to SCGA members only.
1968 Barry Jaeckel, Riviera CC, (281) defeated Greg Pitzer, Riviera CC, and Kemp Richardson, El Niguel CC, (287) at Lakeside GC. KTTV covered final day of tournament. Richardson was Pacific 8 Champion from USC. Bud Bradley withdrew from the tournament after 54 holes while trailing by two strokes to take his wife to the hospital for their baby's birth.
1969 U. T. Thompson III (281), Wilshire CC, defeated Kip Puterbaugh (287), La Jolla CC, at Hacienda GC.
1970 Gary Sanders (283), Los Coyotes CC, defeated Steve Cook (287) Los Alamitos CC at Oakmont CC.
1971 John Beetham, Yorba Linda CC, (282) defeated Alan Tapie, Rio Hondo CC (284) at Virginia CC.
1972 Mark Pfeil, Palos Verdes CC, (284) defeated Craig Stadler, La Jolla CC, (286) at Hillcrest CC. Pfeil was medalist in the 1972 California Amateur at Pebble Beach, won the 1972 Pacific Coast Amateur at Pauma Valley CC, played on the 1973 U.S. Walker Cup squad and won the 1974 Pacific Coast Amateur.
1973 John Richardson, El Niguel CC (144) defeated Ed Korylak, Rio Hondo CC, (146) at El Niguel CC. SCGA began regional qualifying to allow all members a chance to play. At age 52, Richardson was the oldest person to win the SCGA Amateur Championship.
1974 Jim Porter, Red Hill CC, (293) defeated Ted Richards (293) at Brentwood CC Porter, now the head golf professional at Red Hill, won on the fourth hole of sudden death over 51-year-old Richards.
1975 Lee Davis, The Los Angeles CC, (282) defeated Art Butler Jr., Glendora CC, (287) at Wilshire CC. Davis captained the USC golf team in 1966 and finished third in SCGA Amateur Championship in 1974. Butler's father (Dr. Art Butler) was a two-time finalist in state Amateur Championship.
1976 Tony Sills, Riviera CC, (287) defeated Joe Simpson, Stardust CC, (288) at California CC. The 20-year-old Sills finished third in 1975 and 1973. Simpson is the father of NCAA Champion Scott Simpson, who would later win 1987 U.S. Open.
1977 Doug Clarke, La Jolla CC, (287) defeated Brett Mullin, Riverside CC, Curtis Worley, Coronado CC, and Scott Simpson, Stardust CC, (288) at La Jolla CC. The l8-year-old Clarke sank a 15-foot put on the 72nd hole to avoid a four-way sudden death playoff at his home course. He won the 1976 Trans Mississippi Championship and was runner-up in the 1976 Junior World and USGA Junior Championships. Simpson was a two-time NCAA Champion.
1978 Brian Gaddy, Annandale GC, (284) defeated Mark Wiebe, Meadow Lake CC, (284) on the second hole of sudden death at Bel-Air CC. Gaddy's putting earned him the title as he sank a 12-footer on the 17th and a 10-footer on the 18th to tie, he then holed a 10-foot put on the first sudden-death hole and an 8-footer for the win. Gaddy also had a hole-in-one on the 194-yard 16th hole during the third round.
1979 Jeff Hart, Lomas Santa Fe CC, (288) defeated Brian Gaddy, Annandale GC, (291) at Hacienda GC. Gaddy had a quadruple bogey on the 16th hole of the third round. Ted Richards Jr. finished seventh with 295.
1980 Jon (Bud) Ardell, Bakersfield CC, (290) defeated Jeff Hart, Lomas Sante Fe CC and Don Bliss, Mission Viejo CC, (293) at Oakmont CC. Ardell captained the 1979 Stanford golf team.
1981 Greg Twiggs, West Coast Amateur Golf Association, (285) defeated Jeff Hart, Lomas Sante Fe CC, (286) at Stardust CC. Hart missed a 5-foot put on the final hole after Twiggs holed a 15-footer. Six former champions were entered in tournament.
1982 Mark Blakely, West Coast Amateur Golf Association, (284) defeated Duffy Waldorf, Calabasas Park CC, (285) at Stockdale CC. Waldorf carded a course-record 64 on final round (including a back nine of 29) to come from 10 strokes back. Blakely played out of a bunker on the final hole to win.
1983 David Hobby, Santa Ana CC, (285) defeated Greg Starkman, Hillcrest CC, Sam Randolph, La Cumbre CC, (286) at Santa Maria CC.
1984 Brad Greer, Mission Viejo CC, (285) defeated Sam Randolph, La Cumbre CC, (286) at San Gabriel CC. Randolph lost on the final hole, hitting into a bunker, then two-putting from 20 feet. Later that summer, he was runner-up in the U.S. Amateur (an event he won the following year)
1985 Brad Greer, Mission Hills CC, (274) defeated Brian Mahon, Rancho Bernardo CC, (286) at Virginia CC. Greer dominated the tournament with a record 274, surpassing Bruce McCormick's record of 280 set in 1963. His 12-shot-margin was six shots better than U.T. Thompson's spread in 1969.
1986 Dave Sheff, Newport Beach CC, (285) defeated Buz Greene, North Ranch CC, Dennis Iden, Old Ranch CC, Rob Geiberger, Montecito CC, Pat Duncan, Rancho Santa Fe CC, (286) at Hillcrest CC. Sheff avoided a five-way-playoff with a par on the final hole, after taking three shots to get out of a bunker on the par-three 16th hole.
1987 Greg Starkman, Hillcrest CC, (283) defeated Steve Lass, Glendora CC, (285) at Braemar CC. It was Starkman's seventh try at the title; he tied for second in 1983 but failed to make the 36-hole cut in 1986 when the tournament was held on his home course.
1988 Craig Steinberg, Braemar CC, (286) defeated Dave Sheff, Oakmont, and James Camaione, Crystalaire CC, (287) at Annandale GC. It was the first of four titles for Steinberg in a 10-year-span.
1989 Paul Stankowski, CBC Port Hueneme GC, (279) defeated Randy Drake, Glendora CC, (282) at Drake's home course. Stankowski, a junior at University of Texas El Paso, is a two-time winner on the PGA Tour.
1990 Pat Duncan, Rancho Santa Fe CC, (279) defeated Paul Stankowski (280) at Wilshire CC. Stankowski, defending champion and 1990 Western Athletic Conference champion, bogeyed three of the last four holes.
1991 Craig Steinberg, Braemar CC, (283) defeated Bob Clark, Bear Creek CC, (284) at Bel-Air CC. Tied prior to the final round, Clark led by three strokes before taking a triple-bogey on 15, then missed a 10-foot putt to tie on 18.
1992 Craig Steinberg, Braemar CC, (284) defeated Bob Clark (284) on the first extra hole of a playoff at Fairbanks Ranch CC. Steinberg's third title was made tougher on the final hole of regulation when he required two drops in a bunker to achieve an unimpeded swing. Clark came up short two inches in his second bid for the title when a tough pitch shot didn't find the flagstick during sudden death.
1993 Todd Demsey, La Costa CC and La Quinta Hotel GC, (284) defeated Craig Anderson, Pauma Valley, (285) at Brentwood CC. Demsey, the 1992 California Amateur champion, also won 1993 Pacific Coast Amateur at Shaughnessy CC in Vancouver and was a member of 1993 Walker Cup team.
1994 18-year-old Tiger Woods, Big Canyon CC, set a tournament record of 270 and defeated Mark Johnson of Helendale (275) at Hacienda GC. Woods set a course and tournament record of 62 in third round (breaking the tournament mark of 64 set by Duffy Waldorf in 1982). Woods went on to win Porter Cup, Western Amateur and U.S. Amateur. He was third youngest winner in history (behind Paul Hunter and Doug Clarke).
1995 Charlie Wi, Wood Ranch (280) who had won the 1990 California Amateur Championship the summer after he graduated from high school, became the 13th person to win both the California Amateur and SCGA Amateur when he posted a four-shot victory over Jim Lundstrom and Jorge Corral at Santa Ana CC. Corral had shot an eight-under-par 63 during the third round.
1996 Kevin Marsh, La Cumbre (278) survived a two-hole playoff to defeat 1990 SCGA Amateur champion Pat Duncan, Rancho Santa Fe, at Santa Maria CC. Marsh was a graduate of Pepperdine University; the following year he would serve as assistant coach as the Waves won the NCAA Division I team title.
1997 Craig Steinberg, Rancho GC (277), returned to Lakeside GC where he caddied as a youth and won his fourth SCGA Amateur Championship by one shot over California Amateur champion Jason Gore. Steinberg joined Paul Hunter (5) and Johnny Dawson (4) as the only player to win four or more SCGA Amateur titles.
1998 Greg Padilla of Del Mar CC (277) , a student at Arizona State University, rallied on the last day to post a two-shot victory over Mike Samoles, Mission Trails, Ed Cuff, Jr., Temecula, and Scott McGihon, Avondale. Cuff had won the California Amateur earlier in the summer.
1999 John Pate of Santa Barbara (287) birdied the final two holes on Industry Hills GC’s Eisenhower Course to win the centennial playing of the SCGA Amateur Championship by one shot over Scott McGihon. The win marked a breakthrough for Pate, whose younger brother, Steve, has won six PGA Tour titles. John had been runner-up in the 1995 California Amateur Championship but had never won a SCGA “major” until the big one.
2000 After twice coming close, Scott McGihon (280) finally won his first SCGA Amateur at Rancho Santa Fe Golf Club. The 32-year-old McGihon was the only player under par on the venerable Max Behr-designed and posted a four-shot margin over 1995 U.S. Junior Amateur champion Terry Noe and San Diego’s Darin Sullivan, who works as a cart attendant at Rancho Santa Fe.
2001 UCLA sophomore John Merrick scored two-stroke victory (280 total) at La Jolla CC over teammate Travis Johnson. Former champion John Pate registered the tournament's lowest score in the first round (66) to take an early lead, but Long Beach State's Steve Mena posted his second consecutive 69 in the afternoon round to assume the lead. In the third round, Merrick, who had moved into contention with a 67 after a first-round 74, shot a 70 and everyone else went the other way, leaving him with a three-stroke advantage. It proved to be a sufficient cushion for the final day. Reigning U.S. Mid-Amateur champion Greg Puga was in a group five strokes behind Johnson.
2002: USC sophomore Nico Bollini beat two other collegians, eagling the second hole in a three-hole playoff, to win 282 at El Caballero CC. Defending champion John Merrick and Michael Lavery came in second and third, respectively. Scott McGihon missed the 2001 cut at La Jolla, but tied for fifth at El Cab with 286 with Ron Won.
2003: UCLA junior Roy Moon came from behind to gain the lead with three holes left, winning by two strokes with a 6-under-par 282 at Torrey Pines GC’s South Course. Moon topped teammate Steve Conway, who after not breaking par his first two rounds, collected a pair of 69s in the last two. Defending champion Nico Bollini opened the tournament at 9-under par his first two rounds, but finished three off the lead for third. Mark Warman hit a wrong ball and was penalized two strokes, but still finished fourth at 2 under par. UC Irvine’s Mike Lavery shot a 75 in the final round, but managed to finish in the top five for the second straight year.
2004: Tim Hogarth won his fourth major amateur title (he is also the 1996 U.S. Amateur Public Links, 1999 California Amateur and SCGA Mid-Amateur Champion) with a 279 at Hillcrest CC and secured his first triple crown. He was the only player to shoot a sub-par score at 1-under. 2000 SCGA Amateur Champion and 2002 Mid-Am Champion Scott McGihon was three under par for the final two rounds but finished four strokes behind for second, while Steve Conway finished five strokes off for third, although he had an average score of 71.8 per round in five SCGA Amateurs since he graduated high school in 2000. Defending champion Roy Moon lead the pack with an opening 68, but fell and finished six strokes behind for fourth.
2005: Scott McGihon held off five young players to win his second championship with a four-round total of 279 (9 under par) at Tijeras Creek. McGihon was five strokes off the lead beginning the final round, but posted a 69 to finish. Brian Edick recovered from an opening-round 74 to fall short by just one stroke, and Erik Jarvey, who posted the lowest score in the first round (67), finished sixth. High school standout Cameron Tringale lost a three-stroke lead on his home course to finish third, while CIF-SCGA champion Brett Kanda, another high school standout, finished fourth. College player Greg Lopez finished fifth.