Saint Leo University can point to plenty of good play this week at Green Valley Ranch Golf Club as a big reason why the Lions won their first Men’s NCAA Division II national golf title on Saturday. But it should not be lost that the foundation for the championship was laid in a phone call from one French Canadian to another last year.
When Hugo Bernard couldn’t play golf for the University of Tennessee because of NCAA issues, it was fellow Quebec amateur Joey Savoie — a golfer at Saint Leo (Fla.) — who placed a recruiting call to his friend that ended up paying handsome dividends.
As Bernard recalls, “(He said) for DII we’ve got a pretty good program, so if you come maybe we’ve got a shot at nationals.”
Truer words were never spoken as Bernard not only won the DII individual national title as a freshman this week, but he helped Saint Leo claim the team championship — with the help of teammates Savoie and Ryan Gendron (both juniors), Liam Ainsworth (a senior) and Griffin Clark (a sophomore). The top-seeded Lions defeated Chico State (Calif.) in Saturday’s title match, 3-2.
“You know what? It turned out good,” said Savoie (below). “Me and Hugo have played a lot of junior golf and amateur golf together. He’s a good rival, an amazing player obviously. When it didn’t turn out for Tennessee, I gave him a call. ‘Why don’t you come to Saint Leo? If you’re not eligible for DI, why don’t you come play for us? We can have the French Connection and do something good.’ It turned out great, especially this week. He came out strong.”
Added Bernard: “We predicted (the national title) at the beginning of the year. It’s a good feeling because we are two good friends. We’re both pretty happy about it.”
After winning the individual national title on Thursday, Bernard went 2-0-1 in his three medal-match play performances on Friday and Saturday. In Saturday’s final, Bernard was three strokes down to Chico State’s Alistair Docherty after two holes and things were all square through nine. But on the first three holes of the back nine, Bernard picked up five strokes on Docherty, who hit his approach left into the hazard on 10 and pulled his tee shot out of bounds on 11 — resulting in two straight double bogeys — then Bernhard birdied 12 while Docherty made a three-put par.
When Docherty’s tee shot went OB on 11, he was upset with Bernard.
“I don’t know,” Bernard said when asked about the reason. “I just started walking after he hit it out of bounds. Maybe he was a little pissed about it.”
Bernard (left) ended up beating Docherty by seven strokes (69-76). Docherty, who had won both his quarterfinal and semifinal matches, shot a 6-over-par 42 on the back nine of the final.
Chico State, which claimed seven team titles this year including one at GVR in September, actually won two of the first three matches on Saturday, with Lee Gearhart completing a 3-0 record in medal-match play and Justin Wiles also prevailing. But seven-stroke victories by both Gendron and Bernard made Saint Leo a virtual lock for the title as the Lions were in very good position had things gone to the tiebreaker of team aggregate. But it didn’t come to that as Clark defeated Chico’s Kelley Sullivan in the fifth and final match.
“It’s amazing,” said Savoie, who went 2-1 in medal-match play despite a loss on Saturday. “We battled so hard this week. We established a record (for 54 holes of stroke play in the DII Finals, at 26 under par). In match play, you never know what will happen if you’re the first seed. We got our biggest rival Lynn (in the semifinals, prevailing by one stroke in a tiebreaker), which was almost a preview for today. It feels great to get it done. It was the goal the whole year.”
The entire match play bracket went according to form, with the higher-seeded team winning all seven matches.
Saturday’s victory was just Saint Leo’s third team win in 12 tournaments this season. Only Bernard and Ainsworth have captured individual titles this season for the Lions.
“It’s pretty amazing,” Saint Leo coach Chris Greenwood said of the run to the title. “To be the first in school history is unbelievable.”
Championship Match Results
Saint Leo 3, Chico State 2
Justin Wiles, CS, def. Liam Ainsworth, 76-77
Ryan Gendron, SL, def. Matt Hutchins, 70-77
Lee Gearhart, CS, def. Joey Savoie, 72-75
Hugo Bernard, SL, def. Alistair Docherty 69-76
Griffin Clark, SL, def. Kelley Sullivan, 71-74
To read about Bernard claiming the NCAA DII individual title on Thursday, CLICK HERE.
The men’s tourney — and the women’s DII finals at CommonGround Golf Course — were part of the NCAA Division II National Championships Festival in which titles in six sports (M&W golf, M&W tennis, softball and women’s lacrosse) were decided.
For results from the men’s tournament at GVR, CLICK HERE.
In Friday afternoon’s semifinals, Saint Leo and fellow Florida school Lynn University finished regulation play with each team winning two matches and halving another. The tiebreaker in such an event is total number of strokes for the teams, and Saint Leo prevailed — by a single shot. The Lions posted an even-par 360 total, while Lynn had 361.
That keeps Saint Leo in the running for its first NCAA DII men’s golf title.
In Saturday morning’s title match at GVR, the Lions will face Chico State (Calif.) in a battle of the top two ranked teams in Division II. (Chico State came in No. 1, according to Golfstat.) Chico State defeated third-seeded Florida Southern in the other semi, 4-1.
The Chico State-Saint Leo match will begin at 9 a.m. on Saturday at GVR.
After Saint Leo and Lynn split their first four individual matches Friday, the Lions trailed through 15 holes of the fifth and deciding match. But SLU’s Ryan Gendron squared things up with a par (vs. a bogey) on No. 16, then put himself (and Saint Leo) ahead with another stroke-gaining par on 17. But Lynn’s Jose Andres Miranda prevailed by one stroke on the 18th hole with a par to see the team match finish 2-2-1. But, by the narrowest of margins, Saint Leo prevailed in the tiebreaker.
Saint Leo earlier beat Wilmington 3-2 in the quarterfinals. Winning both their quarterfinal and semifinal matches Friday for the Lions was Joey Savoie. NCAA individual champion Hugo Bernard of Saint Leo halved with Wilmington’s Ryan Rucinski at 2-under 70 in the quarters, then beat Lynn’s Elliott Whitley 69-74 in the semis.
Winning both their quarterfinal and semifinal matches for Chico State were Lee Gearhart, Matt Hutchins and Alistair Docherty.
In all six matches on Friday, the higher-seeded team prevailed. In the quarterfinals, Saint Leo defeated Wilmington 3-0-2, Lynn beat Barry 3-2, Chico State overcame West Florida 3-1-1, and Florida Southern took down California Baptist 3-2.
While Saint Leo has never won a DII men’s golf national title, Chico State has one to its credit, but that came 50 years ago, in 1966.
To read about Saint Leo freshman Bernard claiming the NCAA DII individual title on Thursday, CLICK HERE.
The men’s tourney — and the women’s DII finals at CommonGround Golf Course — are part of the NCAA Division II National Championships Festival in which titles in six sports (M&W golf, M&W tennis, softball and women’s lacrosse) will be decided.
Tickets for the DII National Festival are $5 per person per day, or $15 for an all-session pass for the week. Tickets purchased at one site will be valid at all other competition sites.
For more information on the Spring Sports Festival, CLICK HERE.
For results from the men’s tournament, CLICK HERE.
]]>
Freshman Hugo Bernard and junior Saint Leo (Fla.) teammate Joey Savoie — both Canadians — stand 1-2 on the individual leaderboard after Wednesday’s second round of the DII nationals, and the individual portion of the event will conclude with Thursday’s third round.
Then again, if things continue as they have been, Bernard might run away with the championship. The freshman, who led after round 1, expanded his advantage to four strokes on Wednesday by firing a 6-under-par 66, leaving him at 13-under 131 overall. He made seven birdies in round 2, giving him 15 for two days.
Savoie backed up his first-round 69 with a 66 Wednesday to trail Bernard by four. Savoie carded seven birdies in the second round. Another stroke back, at 136, is South Carolina’s Limestone College’s Griffin Brown (69-67).
Not surpringly, in the team competition, Saint Leo leads the way — by 11 strokes over top-ranked Chico State (Calif.). The Lions are 25 under par for two rounds.
At the men’s DII finals, the format calls for three rounds of stroke play, followed by two days of medal-match play. The individual champion will be determined after the first three rounds. The top eight teams after 54 holes of stroke play will advance to the medal-match play portion of the championship.
The men’s tourney — and the women’s DII finals at CommonGround Golf Course — are part of the NCAA Division II National Championships Festival in which titles in six sports (M&W golf, M&W tennis, softball and women’s lacrosse) will be decided.
Tickets for the DII National Festival are $5 per person per day, or $15 for an all-session pass for the week. Tickets purchased at one site will be valid at all other competition sites.
For more information on the Spring Sports Festival, CLICK HERE.
For scores from the men’s tournament, CLICK HERE.
]]>
Yes, it was that long ago — the spring of 1969, to be exact.
But next week that will change, and in a big way. Not one, but two NCAA Championship Finals tournaments will be held in the Denver metro area as both the men’s and women’s Division II events come to town.
The DII men will compete May 17-21 at Green Valley Ranch Golf Club in northeast Denver, home of the CoBank Colorado Open Championships. And the DII women will be at CommonGround Golf Course, which is owned and operated by the CGA, from May 18-21.
An NCAA golf final was last held in Colorado in 1969 when The Broadmoor hosted the Division I men for the fifth time in 17 years. The finals for the Division I women, or the tournaments for either gender in Division II or III have never before come to Colorado, though there have been various NCAA Regionals.
Next week’s national tournaments, part of the NCAA Division II National Championships Festival in which titles in six sports (M&W golf, M&W tennis, softball and women’s lacrosse) will be at stake, will be hosted by Metro State and the Denver Sports Commission.
The men’s NCAA DII finals at Green Valley Ranch May 17-21 will feature 108 competitors — 20 teams and eight individuals. The format will be three rounds of stroke play, followed by two days of medal-match play. The individual champion will be determined after the first three rounds. The top eight teams after 54 holes of stroke play will advance to the medal-match play portion of the championship. The men’s DII finals have utilized a medal-match play format since 2011.
The women’s Division II finals at CommonGround May 18-21 will include a field of 72 golfers — 12 teams and 12 individuals. They’ll all play 72 holes of stroke play.
Tickets for the DII National Festival will be $5 per person per day, or $15 for an all-session pass for the week. Tickets purchased at one site will be valid at all other competition sites.
For more information on the Spring Sports Festival, CLICK HERE.
Though no one from Colorado schools qualified for the NCAA DII finals — the University of Colorado-Colorado Springs’ Colin Prater was the closest, losing out in a playoff at the DII regionals — the fields will be formidable, though the players may not be as recognizable as the top Division I college golfers.
Men’s Finals at GVR
But keep in mind that individual winners of the men’s DII national title have included two-time U.S. Open champion Lee Janzen (1986, from Florida Southern), CBS analyst Gary McCord (1970, from Cal-Riverside), Briny Baird (1994 and ’95, from Valdosta State) and four-time European Tour winner Jeev Milkha Singh (1993, from Abilene Christian).
More close to home, Cheyenne, Wyo., product Josh Creel won the 2012 title, playing for Central Oklahoma after transferring from the University of Colorado.
While 2015 champion Nova Southeastern won’t be back to defend its team title — nor will individual champ Sam Migdal, who was a senior at Central Missouri last year — the top three ranked teams (according to Golfstat) at GVR will be No. 1 Chico State (Calif.), No. 2 Saint Leo University (Fla.) and No. 3 Lynn University (Fla.).
John Coultas, a sophomore at Florida Southern, is the top-ranked Division II player in the nation, according to Golfstat.
Here are the team and individual qualifiers for the DII men finals at GVR:
Teams
St. Thomas Aquinas
Southern New Hampshire
Concordia (New York)
Wilmington (Delaware)
Le Moyne
Central Missouri
Southeastern Oklahoma State
Bellarmine
Tiffin
Central Oklahoma
Lynn
Saint Leo
Florida Southern
West Florida
Barry
Chico State
Oklahoma Christian
Dallas Baptist
California Baptist
Brigham Young-Hawaii
Individuals
Blaze Hogan, Mercyhurst
Tyler Maiman, West Chester
Talon Supak, Illinois-Springfield
Bryce Burke, Arkansas Tech
Richard Mansell, Nova Southeastern
Griffin Brown, Limestone
Brandon Lee, Sonoma State
Calum Hill, Western New Mexico
Women’s Finals at CommonGround
At the women’s DII finals at CommonGround, Indianapolis will be back to defend its team title. Also in the field will be five-time national champ Rollins College (Fla.) and four-time winner Nova Southeastern (Fla.). Rollins is the top ranked women’s team in DII, according to Golfstat. Nova Southeastern is fourth and Indianapolis 10th.
No former individual national champions are in the women’s field at CommonGround. Here are the team and individual qualifiers for the DII women’s finals:
Teams
Augustana (South Dakota)
Northeastern State
Missouri Western State
Indianapolis
Grand Valley State
Findlay
Nova Southeastern
Rollins
Saint Leo
Tarleton State
Dallas Baptist
West Texas A&M
Individuals
Daniela Martinez, Central Oklahoma
Caroline Fredensborg, Arkansas Tech
Rachel Gray, Concordia-St. Paul
Ali Green, Ashland
Kasey Frazier, Wheeling Jesuit
Anastasia Carter, Southern Indiana
Felicia Leftinger, Florida Tech
Paloma Vaccaro, West Florida
Elaine Wood, Montevallo
Erica Wang, California Baptist
Audrey Meisch, Oklahoma Christian
Sterling Hawkins, Academy of Art