The 59-year-old from Iowa, who has been one of the most accomplished amateur golfers in the post-World War II era not to have won a national championship, rallied to defeat Jerry Gunthorpe 1-up in Thursday’s 18-hole final of the 66th U.S. Senior Amateur Championship at the Country Club of Detroit.

Elliott, competing in his 36th USGA championship, never led until Gunthorpe failed to convert an 8-foot par putt on the 18th green. He now joins Chip Lutz and Paul Simson as the only players to have claimed the national senior titles of the U.S., Canada and Great Britain.

Earlier this summer, Elliott won the Senior Amateur Championship conducted by The R&A at Ganton Golf Club in England.

Elliot celebrates on the final green with his wife, Dalena. PHOTO: USGA.

He previously had won a pair of Canadian Senior Amateur titles, among his many accomplishments that also include victories in the prestigious Porter Cup and Terra Cotta Invitational as well as 15 Iowa state titles, three Iowa Amateurs among them.

He also joins Ed Updegraff (1981) as the only U.S. Senior Amateur champions from the state of Iowa.

“I guess it just hasn't sunk in yet. Just so much goes with that USGA title that maybe that's why I haven't won it in the past." - Gene Elliot.

Lately, the U.S. Senior Amateur has been claimed by players who have had distinguished careers, competitors such as Doug Hanzel (2013), Simson (2010, 2012), Lutz (2015), Sean Knapp (2017) and Jeff Wilson (2018). Elliott, the medallist in the 1999 U.S. Amateur who has competed in 15 U.S. Mid-Amateurs, fits into that category.

“That match was so tough that I am not sure, did I win?” said Elliott. “I guess it just hasn't sunk in yet. Just so much goes with that USGA title that maybe that's why I haven't won it in the past. It's just so important and so meaningful to win a USGA championship.

“I'm relieved. I'm very proud. I didn't do it by myself. I had a lot of help from a lot of different people, so it is a team win, really.”

Gunthorpe's tee shot on the 17th hole proved decisive in the match. PHOTO: USGA.

was hoping to continue the Michigan mojo that began with Michigan State standout James Piot winning the U.S. Amateur at Oakmont Country Club nearly three weeks ago and carried through the Taylor Little League team’s World Series championship last Sunday.

Right from the opening hole on another perfect weather day, Gunthorpe showed Elliott he was going to be a tough out, converting a 15-foot par putt to tie the hole.

It stayed close throughout with Elliott tying the match with a birdie on No.7. Gunthorpe and Elliott swapped winning birdies on Nos.9 and 10, and Elliott converted a five-foot birdie on the 130-yard 13th after losing the previous hole with a bogey.

When Elliott missed a 2½-foot par putt on the 16th hole to go 1-down, it appeared Gunthorpe might be poised to put his name on the trophy.

But a wayward drive to the right on the 524-yard, par-5 17th forced Gunthorpe to lay up, and his third shot came up 40 feet short of the flagstick. He left his birdie attempt five feet short and missed his par putt, and Elliott converted his two-footer for par to tie the match.

Another drive to the right on the 421-yard closing hole left Gunthorpe with a tricky approach that had to carry the right-greenside bunker. He caught it flush and the ball caromed over the green. His recovery stopped eight feet to the right of the flagstick. Elliott’s approach found the middle of the green, and he cozied the 27-footer to within a foot for a conceded par.

When Gunthorpe failed to force the first extra-hole match in a U.S. Senior Amateur final in 18 years, hats came off and emotions flowed from both players.

“Maybe a little nerves there where I couldn't get the putter to release,” said Gunthorpe of his two missed par putts on 17 and 18, his only two bogeys of the match. “I thought I put a good roll on [the long birdie attempt on 17]. Same thing with the second one [for par], but I might have missed my line just a little bit.”

Elliott hugged his caddie, Adam Hanson, then had a long embrace with his wife, Dalena. He also was congratulated by his short-game coach, John Traub.

It capped off a memorable week for Elliott, who went through a gauntlet of tough opponents, beginning with fellow Iowan and 2013 U.S. Mid-Amateur champion Michael McCoy in the Round of 32, when he converted an 18-foot par putt to force extra holes.

He defeated Hanzel, the top senior golfer in the World Amateur Golf Ranking (Elliott is No.2) in the Round of 16, Oakland Hills member and local favourite Tom Gieselman in the quarters and Craig Davis, who edged him in a playoff for the 2017 British Senior Amateur title, in the semi finals.

“We both played well. We both should hold our heads high. I said to him earlier, whether I won or lost I was probably going to cry. Just honoured to be in the final.”

And now with his name on a USGA trophy.