Virginia Golfer September / October 2014 | Page 27

Junior Golf Spotlight Self-Reliance Buoys Brooks Fueled by increased autonomy and resulting confidence, northern Virginian Shannon Brooks has enjoyed a breakthrough season | by LISA D. MICKEY Shannon Brooks has progressed in the game due in part to a renewed mindset. STEVEN GIBBONS/USGA PHOTO ARCHIVES T he process of finding her own way has taken on a new meaning this year for Shannon Brooks of Vienna, Va.—literally and figuratively. When the teen got her driver’s license this spring, parents Jackie and Robert Brooks allowed their daughter to drive herself to practice. And when it was time to compete in the AJGA Junior at Bethesda, held Aug. 18-21 in Bethesda, Md., the rising high school senior was given the green light to drive herself to Maryland to compete in that event, where she posted a wire-to-wire eight-stroke victory. “Her mom and I felt it was important to let her find her own way,” says her father. “We were probably more scared than she was, but we wanted to let her take complete responsibility for her golf and learn how to coach herself.” And by the looks of things, Brooks has figured things out quite well this year. By late August, she was ranked No. 31 in w w w. v s g a . o r g the American Junior Golf Association’s Polo Golf Rankings. She’d also won the AJGA’s Jos. A. Bank/David Leadbetter Junior Championship in early August, and posted four other top-10 finishes in AJGA events. Through her AJGA ranking, Brooks also qualified to compete in the 2014 Wyndham Cup, an annual event that brings together the nation’s top 40 girls and top 40 boys for an East versus West team match play event. Brooks was 3-0 in the matches conducted in July. She and partner Anna Newell of Florida defeated a pair of Texans 2 and 1 in the first day’s encounter, including one player, Lakareber Abe, who advanced into the round of 32 at the 2014 U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship. Brooks and Newell won their second day match 5 and 3 over Abe and Kristen Gillman of Texas, the 2014 U.S. Women’s Amateur champion. And in her singles’ match, Brooks registered a 1-up victory against this year’s U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship semifinalist Hannah O’Sullivan of Arizona. Also in July, Brooks reached the round of 16 at the U.S. Girls’ Junior Championship, where she lost in 19 holes to eventual runner-up Marijosse Navarro of Mexico City, Mexico. FAST TRACK TO GROWTH BY TAKING OWNERSHIP Clearly, Brooks’ level of play was rising as her confidence accelerated along the freeways of northern Virginia and beyond. “I’ve had a good summer and it’s been better than I ever would have expected,” says Brooks, who turned 17 on Aug. 27, and will be a senior this fall at James Madison High School in Vienna. “I’ve grown a lot smarter with course management, and I’m playing really solid golf.” But that didn’t just happen. According to Jim Kardash, her swing coach of nearly eight years, Brooks’ 2014 performance is the residual effect of the work she put into her game in the off-season leading into this year. “She’s very gifted hitting the golf ball, but she’s really learned how to play the game,” said Kardash, the owner and PGA director of golf at Arundel Golf Park in Maryland. “She’s a very disciplined worker, and what you’re seeing now is the culmination of the work she’s put in.” Brooks made a commitment last winter to ramp up her preparation heading into 2014. She started working out, watched her nutrition, worked more intensely with Kardash, and prepared all aspects of her game for tournaments. She also tried to focus better on her course management and improve her putting. Brooks already knew she could go low. After all, she recorded her career-low score of 64 at age 14 at the 2012 Peggy Kirk Bell Girls’ Golf T Richmond Classic. That round included our nine birdies. But a real turning point this year came when she held her own against the nation’s top-ranked players at the U.S. Girls’ Junior. Brooks was the qualifying medalist in the championship’s sectional qualifier in Richmond in early July, but she headed to the event with limited experience in a match play setting. By the end of that head-to-head week, there was new gas in her tank for the rest of the summer. “It gave me the confidence to play so well in that round of 16 match because my opponent was one of the stronger players in the (continued on page 39) SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 | VIRGINIA GOLFER 25