With 11 State Amateur titles, Greg Sanders has already established himself as the best Alaska golfer in a generation.
Now Sanders, 61, is adding a national profile to his amateur resume that is unprecedented in the history of Alaska golf.
He finished as the runner-up Thursday at the U.S. Senior Amateur Championship at Oak Hills Country Club in San Antonio, Texas. Just two weeks before that, Sanders was at the historic Olympic Club in San Francisco, the oldest competitor battling in the field at the U.S. Amateur Championships.
And with his finish this week, Sanders received an exemption to play in next month’s U.S. Mid-Amateur in Scottsdale, Arizona.
In Thursday’s championship match, Sanders got down early and fell to Iowa’s Michael McCoy 3 and 2.

Still, the experience was an incredible one and marks the furthest an Alaskan has gone in a national USGA event in decades — perhaps ever.
“I can’t even describe it actually,” he said in a phone interview Thursday. “It’s disappointing today, I suppose. But at the same time, it’s pretty sweet to get that deep. I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to do that again. Everything just came together for me, so I was really happy about it.”
Sanders worked in Alaska for more than 35 years as a petroleum engineer and qualified for other USGA events during his younger years. But it was only in retirement that he was able to actually devote significant time to his golf game.
“I was never a factor, because I just wasn’t any good, honestly,” he said. “I think I have focused on my game a lot more than when I was working full time and I’ve kind of caught up to some of those guys I could never even touch in the past.”

This marked Sanders’ fifth time playing in the U.S. Senior Amateur, and earlier this summer he won his 11th State Amateur.
With his runner-up finish, Sanders also receives an exemption into the 2026 U.S. Senior Open, where he’ll be in a field with some of the sport’s more recognizable names.
“I’ve been really excited,” he said. “I could be teeing it up next to (three-time major champion) Padraig Harrington on the range.”
Sanders’ success has been recognized outside the state. He was recently profiled in Golf Magazine, the oldest player in the tournament alongside teenagers and 20-somethings.
The state isn’t without a small contingent of standout golfers. Danny Edwards was born in Ketchikan in 1951 and won five times on the PGA tour from the late 1970s to the mid-1980s.
But it’s difficult to develop a high-level game with just a few short summer months. Although Sanders still spends summers in the state, he also travels regularly and lives part of the year in Arizona.
“We know this as golfers in Alaska, it’s not fair,” he said. “Because if you’re going to a national tournament, you’re trying to compete with somebody who gets more time into it. So now I can actually get the time, and I’m trying to keep my body in shape so that I can still compete.”

With decades’ worth of rounds on Anchorage-area courses, Sanders has made plenty of friends. And as he continued to knock off players in the tournament’s match-play format, he started receiving more messages from people in the small but tight-knit Alaska golf community.
“I just feel like there was this great northern push in my direction,” he said. “It was really, really awesome. … I was playing two matches a day and winning. Dozens and dozens of people were following.”
The Mid-Am starts Sept. 13, wrapping up a whirlwind stretch of golf that also included a tournament at Pinehurst Resort in North Carolina.
“It’s been a crazy month for me,” Sanders said. “It’s pretty awesome and now I’m exhausted.”
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