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Trip Kuehne Ernest W. "Trip" Kuehne III (born June 20, 1972) is an American amateur golfer. He is most remembered for his defeat at the hands of Tiger Woods in the 1994 U.S. Amateur,〔("Woods' birdie vs. Trip Kuehne in '94 changed fate for both" ), Bill Nichols, ''Dallas Morning News'', March 24, 2004〕 and his subsequent refusal to turn professional in favor of a successful amateur career.〔("Amateur Kuehne a throwback in need of a break" ), Gene Wojciechowski, ESPN, April 11, 2008〕 ==Early achievements== Kuehne was born in Dallas, Texas. As a pupil at Highland Park High School in Dallas, he was coached by Hank Haney,〔("Kuehne prepares for final Masters" ), Alan Shipnuck, ''Sports Illustrated'', April 1, 2008〕 who later gained renown as Tiger Woods' swing coach after Woods and Butch Harmon split in 2002.〔("Woods-Haney Remains Solid" ), John Hawkins, ''GolfWorld'', October 26, 2007〕 Under Haney's tutelage he won back-to-back Texas high school golf championships, an achievement shared with Justin Leonard, Ben Crenshaw and Tom Kite.〔("A Trip of a Lifetime" ), Merrell Noden, ''Links Magazine''〕 At college, he enrolled at Arizona State University, where he was the roommate of Phil Mickelson.〔 He then transferred to Oklahoma State University, where he was All-American from 1994 to 1996 and won the 1995 Ben Hogan Award.〔("Chasing the Dream" ), Jeff Williams, ''Cigar Aficionado'', May/June 2001〕 But following his defeat at the 1994 U.S. Amateur, Kuehne found he was unwilling to make the sacrifices demanded in a professional golfer's life, and concentrated instead on a career in finance after graduating with an MBA in 1997.〔〔("Trip Kuehne following his own course" ), Bill Nichols, ''Dallas Morning News'', April 9, 2008〕
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