CHURCHVILLE, N.Y. (FLX) — The stage was set and the stakes couldn’t have been higher Saturday for the 2025 Churchville Classic. Tying the largest field in FLX Tour history, 44 youngsters making up 22 teams teed it up under blue and sunny skies for the annual two-man scramble tournament. What followed will be remembered to historians as pure electricity.
“The fellas went low,” FLX Tour Co-Commissioner Matt Driffill said. “Between the weather, the scores, and the drama, this was arguably the best event overall in four years of doing this.”
The first group teed off at 7:30 a.m. and one of those teams, Tom Dieure and Alex “Dooley” Mikalajo, were the leaders in the clubhouse at -10. That first group finished in four hours flat, a notable improvement upon usual FLX Tour pace of play.
The next few groups followed suit, with the pre-tournament favorites, Sean Sawyer and Chris Miers, coming up 18 with a chance to take the outright lead at -11, but the pair of Young Men of the Year both smoked short putts, and finished their round tied at -10, with everyone in the gallery thinking of a potential playoff. More on that in a bit.
For the next hour, the groups on the slopes of 18 waited with awe and concern as the apparent tournament had disappeared. Not a soul was seen for more than 60 minutes until the next group showed up; John Laganello, Josh Valletta, Mike Mortillaro, and Jarred Schrader. The pace of play pause started to make sense.
While neither of these teams would sniff a podium, it should be noted that Laganello and Valletta had teed off on 15, and took their approach shots to the green on 13 by accident. That approach, reportedly, was one of the team’s best shots of the day, and they were seen high-fiving and celebrating before being informed that their actual target was about 200 yards northeast of where they were aiming.
More groups started finishing up, but the scoreboard became murkier and murkier as some Tour pros failed the basic cognitive test of reading the rule sheets, which sent the app scoreboard into a frenzy. All in all, the newly instituted paper scorecards proved fruitful in their debut, ultimately settling the discrepancies on the electronic version.
“We’ll be using pencil and paper, along with the app, for every major tournament going forward,” FLX Tour Head of Content and Rules Czar Joey Mortillaro said. “It’s unfortunate that some people still can’t read, but we’re working on that.”
The Tour’s Head of Numbers, Tim Dorsheimer, was watching the groups finish up. The unlikely duo of Shane Driffill and Josh Kowalski clocked in their score of -11 as they waited with anticipation to see if their score would hold. Ultimately, it wouldn’t.
On hole 18, in the final group, defending Churchville Classic champion Chad Christ sank what could only be described as a miracle birdie putt to force a tie at -11, and a one-hole playoff to determine the winner.
“That was arguably the most important shot in FLX Tour history,” Matt Driffill said. “We all remember when Dieure holed out on 18 for eagle in front of the gallery at last year’s Classic, but with the stakes and the drama, this was truly a defining moment.”
That highlight wouldn’t last long if Christ and his partner, FLX Tour newcomer Nick Kozak, couldn’t finish the job.
With the gallery following behind, Shane Driffill, Kowlaski, Christ and Kozak all teed up at hole 1 on Churchville’s west course. After a pair of respectable drives and approaches, the duo of Driffill and Kowalski each pushed their chips a little too far past the hole for comfort. Meanwhile, with the door open, Christ, with ice in his veins, nearly holed out his chip in for birdie, striking the pin and leaving a tap-in for par.
Kowalski missed the sloping downhill putt, and Shane nearly holed it out, but golf’s a game of inches, and these inches don’t lie. Christ’s tap in bogey was the swing of defeat as Kozak and the redeemer scored par, and the title of Churchville Classic champions.

“This one’s going to sting for awhile,” Shane Driffill said afterwards. “You dream of these moments growing up, and to get that close …” his voice trailed off.
“These trophies are pretty nice,” Christ said of the new hardware for the tournament. He and his teammate also won custom golf towels, and of course, the cash prize.
After the debacle that was the 2025 Grand Open, it was reassuring to fans, pros, and leadership to see that the ol’ boys in the FLX still know how to put on a function.
“I think we’ll be talking about that playoff hole for the rest of our lives,” Mortillaro said. “Jobby was out there spotting like it was the PGA. Dozens of fellas screaming, recording, rooting them on. We don’t like to use this word too often, but really it was special.”
Special indeed, and the Tour will look to carry that momentum forward for the rest of summer. The next event is the two-man best ball Genesee Invitational coming up at the end of August. Tour pros should be on the lookout for the registration form soon.
“We’re on to Genny,” Matt Driffill said.
2025 Churchville Classic results
| Rank | Tour Pro | Net Score | YMOTY points |
| 1 | Chad Christ | 61 | 44 |
| 1 | Nick Kozak | 61 | 44 |
| 2 | Shane Driffill | 61 | 42 |
| 2 | Josh Kowalski | 61 | 42 |
| T3 | Tom Dieure | 62 | 40 |
| T3 | Alex ‘Dooley’ Mikalajo | 62 | 40 |
| T3 | Sean Sawyer | 62 | 40 |
| T3 | Chris Miers | 62 | 40 |
| 5 | Dan Driffill Sr. | 63 | 36 |
| 5 | Jonathon Thorpe | 63 | 36 |
| 6 | Scott Stedman | 64 | 34 |
| 6 | Mike Petote | 64 | 34 |
| T7 | Tim Dorsheimer | 66 | 32 |
| T7 | Dan Riesenberger | 66 | 32 |
| T7 | Boston Siwiec | 66 | 32 |
| T7 | Mykola Prokopenko | 66 | 32 |
| T9 | Lou Englert | 67 | 28 |
| T9 | Eric Spanbauer | 67 | 28 |
| T9 | Brandon Moynihan | 67 | 28 |
| T9 | Brier Koroly | 67 | 28 |
| T9 | Mike Mortillaro | 67 | 28 |
| T9 | Jarred Schrader | 67 | 28 |
| T9 | Dan Graves | 67 | 28 |
| T9 | Nico Mattle | 67 | 28 |
| T13 | Matt Driffill | 68 | 20 |
| T13 | Zach Stedman | 68 | 20 |
| T13 | Mike Dimuro | 68 | 20 |
| T13 | Jasson Jobson | 68 | 20 |
| T13 | Joey Mortillaro | 68 | 20 |
| T13 | Ryan Netchke | 68 | 20 |
| 16 | Gene Ferrera | 69 | 14 |
| 16 | Ryan Wirth | 69 | 14 |
| T17 | Danny Driffill | 70 | 12 |
| T17 | Shane Partiss | 70 | 12 |
| T17 | Patrick Moynihan | 70 | 12 |
| T17 | Evan Santiago | 70 | 12 |
| 19 | Ben Annal | 74 | 8 |
| 19 | Jimmy Franz | 74 | 8 |
| 20 | Kyle Pierce | 75 | 6 |
| 20 | Nick Hawes | 75 | 6 |
| 21 | Chuck Pace | 78 | 4 |
| 21 | Nathan Wirth | 78 | 4 |
| 22 | Josh Valletta | 89 | 2 |
| 22 | John Laganello | 89 | 2 |
2025 Young Man of the Year standings
| Rank | Tour Pro | YMOTY Points |
| 1 | Dan Driffill Sr. | 78 |
| 2 | Chad Christ | 77 |
| 3 | Alex ‘Dooley’ Mikalajo | 76 |
| 4 | Shane Driffill | 70 |
| 5 | Mykola Prokopenko | 66 |
| 6 | Boston Siwiec | 65 |
| 7 | Matt Driffill | 62 |
| 8 | Dan Graves | 61 |
| T9 | Tim Dorsheimer | 59 |
| T9 | Zach Steadman | 59 |
| T11 | Mike Mortillaro | 57 |
| T11 | Ryan Netchke | 57 |
| T13 | Scott Stedman | 56 |
| T13 | Danny Driffill | 56 |
| 15 | Jonathon Thorpe | 54 |
| 16 | Shane Partiss | 51 |
| 17 | Eric Spanbauer | 50 |
| T18 | Nick Hawes | 48 |
| T18 | Chris Miers | 48 |
| T18 | Tom Dieure | 48 |
| T21 | Ryan Wirth | 47 |
| T21 | Brier Koroly | 47 |
| 23 | Nick Kozak | 44 |
| 24 | Josh Kowalski | 42 |
| T25 | Sean Sawyer | 40 |
| T25 | Dan Riesenberger | 40 |
| 27 | Evan Santiago | 39 |
| T28 | Brandon Moynihan | 36 |
| T28 | Dom Trento | 36 |
| T28 | Lou Englert | 36 |
| 31 | Mike Petote | 34 |
| 32 | Chuck Pace | 31 |
| 33 | Kyle Pierce | 29 |
| T34 | Joey Mortillaro | 28 |
| T34 | Jarred Schrader | 28 |
| T34 | Nico Mattle | 28 |
| 37 | Nathan Wirth | 26 |
| 38 | Brandon Burris | 24 |
| 39 | Gene Ferrera | 22 |
| T40 | Mike Dimuro | 20 |
| T40 | Jasson Jobson | 20 |
| 42 | Patrick Moynihan | 20 |
| 43 | Vaughn Rowell | 17 |
| 44 | Jimmy Franz | 16 |
| 45 | Josh Valletta | 10 |
| T46 | Ben Annal | 8 |
| T46 | Todd Horne | 8 |
| T46 | Michael Converse | 8 |
| T46 | Steve Nally | 8 |
| T46 | Kenny Rogers | 8 |
| T46 | Jesse Cramer | 8 |
| T46 | Brendan Milward | 8 |
| 53 | John Laganello | 2 |






