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Men’s Pac-12 Golf Championships – Colorado Golf Archives https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf Sat, 29 Apr 2017 00:00:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/cga-favicon-150x150.png Men’s Pac-12 Golf Championships – Colorado Golf Archives https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf 32 32 Try, Try Again https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf/2017/04/29/try-try-again-2/ Sat, 29 Apr 2017 00:00:00 +0000 https://www.colo.golf/2017/04/29/try-try-again-2/ (APRIL 30 MORNING UPDATE: As of 10:15 a.m., still waiting for snow to melt at Boulder CC. Play will not resume until 11:30 a.m. — at the earliest.

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Snow wiped out Saturday’s action at the Men’s Pac-12 Championship at Boulder Country Club, but officials hope to resume play on Sunday, ideally completing a 54-hole tournament, down from the usual 72 holes.

A dozen players, including the indiviudal co-leaders Wyndham Clark (a Coloradan who is in his senior year at Oregon) and Carl Yuan of Washington, have not yet completed 36 holes. Everyone in the field needs to finish at least two rounds for the championship to become official.

With temperatures expected to reach the low 50s on Sunday, the second round will resume, possibly as early as 10 a.m. If the weather cooperates early enough, a third round — with a shotgun start — will follow.

Several inches of snow fell on the BCC course on Friday night and Saturday morning, and snow still covered much of the course as the sun was setting on Saturday.

The last time the Men’s Pac-12 Championship — then known as the Pac-10 — was shortened to 54 holes was in 1989 in Seattle.

Clark, the No. 1-ranked men’s college player in the nation, stands at 2 under par through 34 holes along with Yuan, a sophomore. Clark has claimed two individual titles so far this college season and won the 2010 CGA Amateur at Boulder Country Club.

Clark’s Oregon squad leads the team competition by three over Washington. The host University of Colorado is in sixth place.

For a wrapup of Friday’s play from the championship, CLICK HERE.
 

Men’s Pac-12 Championship
April 28-30, 2017 at Par-70 Boulder CC
Team Scores

1. Oregon +16
2. Washington +19
3. Stanford +26
4. California +31
4. Southern California +31
6. Colorado +33
7. UCLA +35
8. Arizona State +36
9. Arizona +41
10. Washington State +46
11. Oregon State +52
12. Utah +56

CU Individuals
6. Ethan Freeman +2 through 34 holes
10. Spencer Painton +5 through 36
25. Yannik Paul +7 through 36
42. John Souza +10 through 36
49. Wilson Belk +11 through 36
58. Victor Bjorlow +13 through 36

Also
T1. Coloradan Wyndham Clark, Oregon -2 through 34
67. Coloradan Kyler Dunkle, Utah +15 through 36

For live scoring from the Pac-12 meet, CLICK HERE.

 

UNC Men Third, Welch Fourth Individually: The University of Northern Colorado remained in third place through Saturday’s second round of the Men’s Big Sky Championship in Boulder City, Nev.

With a 33-over-par 609 total going into the final round, the Bears trail leader Sacramento State by 20 strokes.

Two UNC players are in the top 10 heading into Sunday’s final 18. Freshman Coby Welch (74-72–146) holds fourth place and teammate Joshua Matz (72-79–151) is seventh. Aaron Beverly of Sacramento State is setting the pace at 143.

Men’s Big Sky Championship
April 28-30, 2017 in Boulder City, Nev.
3. (out of 8 teams) Northern Colorado 306-303–609

4. Coby Welch 74-72–146
7. Joshua Matz 72-79–151
11. Andrew Romano 79-74–153
28. Li Chen 83-78–161
32. Sam Marley 81-82–163
 

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Right at Home https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf/2017/04/24/right-at-home-2/ Mon, 24 Apr 2017 00:00:00 +0000 https://www.colo.golf/2017/04/24/right-at-home-2/ Wyndham Clark is living the dream.

Back when the Colorado resident was in high school at Valor Christian and considering where to play his college golf, he entertained thoughts of one day being one of the top college players and/or top amateurs in the game.

“Especially walking through Oklahoma State’s Hall of Fame, you see all the guys who have received the Haskins Award and the Ben Hogan Award, and you imagine yourself doing that,” Clark said in a phone interview with coloradogolf.org last week. “But at the same time I’ve had a tough college career and I hadn’t been in the mix for that in the previous years. So it’s really humbling and exciting (to be in the running this year). I’d love to finish the year out well and at least give it a shot to potentially win, but even if I don’t it’s pretty awesome and rewarding for me just to be in the mix and considered one of the top players. It’s a pretty cool thing for me.”

When the Pac-12 Conference Championship is held Friday through Sunday (April 28-30) at Boulder Country Club, Clark could take the next step in a dream season with a strong performance in his home state. The two-time Colorado state high school champion is currently the top-ranked college player in the country, according to both Golfstat and Golfweek. And, he’s very much “in the mix” for the Haskins Award, which goes to the best college player in the nation, and the Ben Hogan Award, given to a men’s college golfer, taking into account all college and amateur competitions during the past 12-month period.

It’s quite a heady position for a player who transferred to the University of Oregon for his final season of college golf after not being included on Oklahoma State’s NCAA Championship roster last year. In his one year as a Duck, Clark has notched two individual victories (the first of his college career), three second-place finishes, one third, a fifth, a sixth, a 10th and a 13th. That’s it: Nine top-10s in 10 tournaments and nothing worse than a 13th-place showing.

“I have a really good atmosphere and great coaches. My transition to Oregon has been really great,” Clark (pictured) said in the midst of a visit to Las Vegas to work with Jeff Smith, his swing coach since July. “With the coaching I’ve gotten from (Oregon head coach Casey Martin) and having really good teammates that have helped me, it’s been a really positive atmosphere and I think that’s something that’s been really helpful to me since I’ve transitioned (from Oklahoma State). I’ve had a really good year and finally feel like I’ve started to play to my ability and talent level. It’s been a fun run.”

Oregon won the national championship last year before Clark arrived, and the Ducks currently are ranked among the top 10 teams in the nation.

“We were very fortunate to get the call from Wyndham (last) summer and he’s turned out to be our best player,” Martin, who’s played 43 events on the PGA Tour, said during the mid-season break late last fall. “He’s been an incredible blessing to the program because he’s an experienced guy and a great player.”

The Pac-12 Championship will be just the second college tournament Clark has played in his home state. He didn’t compete at all in Colorado while at Oklahoma State, but finished third in October in the inaugural Paintbrush Invitational at Colorado Golf Club in Parker.

“Pac-12s is a big deal even if it wasn’t in Colorado,” he said. “But having it in Colorado makes it that much more exciting and fun. It’s going to be great to see friends and family and be able to play a course I played before. So I’m really looking forward to it.”

By his own estimate, Clark has played Boulder Country Club about eight times, but some of those made for a memorable CGA Amateur (then known as the CGA Stroke Play) in 2010. It was at that tournament that Clark won as a 16-year-old, becoming the youngest champion of the event since 1971, when Bob Byman — who would win the U.S. Junior Amateur in 1972 and later a PGA Tour event — was also 16 but slightly younger.

Clark clinched the victory with a 30-foot birdie putt on the second playoff hole — No. 18 at BCC — defeating Jim Knous, who set the BCC course record with a 10-under-par 60 in the final round.

“Having some experience there definitely helps,” said Clark, now 23. “It’s a little bit of advantage, but you still have to hit the shots. It’s not like I’ve played it that much, but I have seen it in tournament conditions, so that counts for something.”

Outside of college, Clark has an impressive record both inside and outside Colorado. Besides the 2010 CGA Amateur, he won the 2009 CGA Junior Amateur and the two state high school titles. Five times, he’s qualified for the U.S. Amateur, advancing to the round of 32 last year. In 2014 at Oklahoma State, Clark was named the Big 12 Player of the Year and earned a spot on the U.S. Arnold Palmer Cup team. Currently, he sits No. 48 in the World Amateur Golf Rankings.

But now, after two or three more college tournaments, it will be on to the professional ranks for Clark. Having finished ninth in a PGA Tour Canada Q-school event last month, he’s exempt for the first four events on that circuit, which begins action on June 1, immediately after the men’s NCAA Division I finals conclude. He’s also hoping for potential exemptions on the PGA Tour or Web.com Tour.

“I’ve done that (amateur golf) for so long, and I’m kind of ready for the next stage,” Clark said. “This is what I’ve always dreamed of — to play professional golf. I’m really itching to turn pro and start that process. But at the same time, I enjoyed the last year and that in itself has been a transition, switching schools and everything. So I’m trying to enjoy it a lot before I turn pro. But I’m definitely looking forward to the next stage.”

With those plans, Clark eventually intends to reside in Scottsdale, Ariz., though he may be based in Las Vegas in his initial months as a professional. In the meantime, Clark said he’ll graduate from Oregon in June with a degree in General Social Science, geared toward business.

Clark is one of five Colorado residents expected to compete in the Pac-12 meet this weekend. For the host University of Colorado, there will be senior Ethan Freeman from Denver, junior Spencer Painton from Aurora and probably either senior Ryan Schmitz from Greenwood Village or sophomore Wilson Belk from Colorado Springs. In addition, Utah’s lineup will include sophomore Kyler Dunkle, the 2016 CGA Les Fowler Player of the Year.

As big an event as the Pac-12 Championship is regardless, it’ll be even moreso for the players who have grown up in Colorado.

“It’s a real fortunate thing for them, especially guys (from out-of-state schools) that are going to come back and play,” CU coach Roy Edwards said. “Our guys have been fired up since we announced it 2 1/2 years ago. There are only a few guys that will ever get this experience of playing (a conference championship) in their home state or on their home course. I think that’s a really cool experience.”

Clark, Freeman, Painton and Dunkle have each won at least one state high school title in Colorado.

“It means a lot being a Colorado kid and to come up and represent your state, represent your school and compete against some of the best teams and best players in the country,” said Painton, who transferred to CU in 2016 after two seasons at Kansas.

Besides Coloradans playing in the tournament, one head coach from a Pac-12 school has Colorado roots. Dustin White from Pueblo West, the 2006 winner of the Colorado Open and a U.S. Open qualifier that same year, is in his first season at the Washington State helm after previously being a WSU assistant. White played his college golf for the Cougars from 1999-2003.

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Men’s Pac-12 Conference Championship: Just the Essentials

When: April 28-30 (April 27 practice rounds). Tee times begin at 7:30 a.m. on April 28, 10 a.m. on April 29, and 8 a.m. on April 30.

Where: Boulder Country Club (7350 Clubhouse Rd., Boulder).
Admission: Free.

Format: 72 holes of stroke play: 36 on April 28 and 18 each on April 29 and 30. For the team competition, each school counts the best five of its six individual scores each day.

Boulder Country Club Course: 7,129 yards, Par-70.

Coloradans Expected to Compete: Ethan Freeman and Spencer Painton from the University of Colorado, along with probably either Ryan Schmitz or Wilson Belk; Wyndham Clark from Oregon; Kyler Dunkle from Utah.

TV: Taped coverage airing May 7 at noon on Pac-12 Network.

Defending Champion: Stanford, which has won the last three years. The Cardinal claimed the title by 29 strokes in 2016. Jon Rahm of Arizona State won the 2016 individual title as a senior and has since turned professional and won on the PGA Tour.

Where Did CU Finish Last Year?: Tied for sixth.

How Did Top Returning CU Player Fare in 2016?: Ethan Freeman (35th place).

CU’s Top Team Finish Since Joining Pac-12: Fourth in 2014.

CU’s Pac-12 Lineup: Senior Ethan Freeman; juniors Yannik Paul, Spencer Painton and John Souza; freshman Victor Bjorlow; and probably either senior Ryan Schmitz or sophomore Wilson Belk.

Honorary Starters: Prior to the first round on April 28, two former Big Eight champions from CU — Terry Kahl (1981) and Bob Kalinowski (1993 and ’94) — will serve as honorary starters and hit the first tee shots, a la the Masters.

Top 25 Nationally Ranked Teams in Field: Southern California (No. 1 by Golfstat and Golfweek), Stanford (No. 5 by Golfstat and No. 8 by Golfweek), Oregon (No. 8 by Golfstat and No. 10 by Golfweek), Arizona State (No. 22 by Golfweek), CU (No. 25 by Golfweek).

Top 10 Nationally Ranked Individuals in Field: Senior Wyndham Clark, Oregon (No. 1 by Golfstat and Golfweek); junior Sean Crocker, USC (No. 2 Golfstat, No. 4 Golfweek); senior Maverick McNealy, Stanford (No. 3 Golfweek, No. 4 Golfstat); freshman Norman Xiong, Oregon (No. 7 Golfstat, No. 8 Golfweek); sophomore Collin Morikawa, Cal (No 8 Golfstat, No. 9 Golfweek).

Players in Field in Top 50 in World Amateur Golf Rankings: 1. senior Maverick McNealy, Stanford; 8. junior Sean Crocker, USC; 9. sophomore Collin Morikawa, Cal; 13. Jared du Toit, Arizona State; 17. senior Rico Hoey, USC; 34. freshman Norman Xiong, Oregon; 48. senior Wyndham Clark, Oregon.

Stanford Coach Conrad Ray on Senior Maverick McNealy, the World’s Top-Ranked Amateur: “He’s almost at that stage where he’s in rare air. He’s tied with Tiger Woods and Patrick Rodgers for career wins at Stanford with 11. It would be neat for him to (do that) at the Pac-12s. It’s hard to put into words (what he’s meant to the program). It’s pretty neat to see him operate. He’s been a great leader for our team. He really flourishes within this environment; college golf at a really high level and high-level academics at the same time can coexist. They’re not mutually exclusive. He’s a great example of that. He’s a mechanical science and engineering major and he has a GPA north of 3.5. He’s doing great things and he’s a really good kid on top of it all. He’s very thoughtful and very humble to a fault sometimes when you talk to him. He’s had an immeasurable impact on our program, no question.”
 

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Showcase https://www.wpt-6.colo.golf/2017/04/19/showcase/ Wed, 19 Apr 2017 00:00:00 +0000 https://www.colo.golf/2017/04/19/showcase/ The competitive golf season for elite-level players is just getting started in Colorado, but one could easily make the case that the top tournament of the year in the state — based on quality of field — will conclude before the month of April is complete.

Some of the best amateurs in the world — a handful of whom could very well be competing on the PGA Tour within several years — will be on hand April 28-30 when Boulder Country Club hosts the men’s Pac-12 Conference Championship.

Don’t believe it?

Last year’s individual champion at the event was Jon Rahm of Arizona State, who in his rookie season on the PGA Tour has won the Farmers Insurance Open and posted three other top-five finishes.

Other past Pac-12 (or Pac-8/Pac-10) champions include Tiger Woods (Stanford), Phil Mickelson (Arizona State), Al Geiberger (USC), Dave Stockton (USC), Corey Pavin (UCLA), Paul Casey (Arizona State), Scott Simpson (USC) and Peter Jacobsen (Oregon).

As for this year’s field, it includes:

— The No. 1 player in the World Amateur Golf Rankings, Stanford senior Maverick McNealy. He’s one of six Pac-12 competitors ranked among the top 50 amateurs in the world. The others are USC junior Sean Crocker (eighth), Cal sophomore Collin Morikawa (ninth), ASU senior Jared du Toit (13th), USC senior Rico Hoey (17th), Oregon freshman Norman Xiong (34th) and Oregon senior — and Colorado resident — Wyndham Clark (48th).

— The No. 1-ranked college player in the nation — by both Golfstat and Golfweek, Clark, whose many successes include two college individual wins this season, along with two Colorado state high school titles and the 2010 CGA Amateur Championship. Clark is one of five Pac-12 players currently ranked among the nation’s top 10 collegians.

— The No. 1 team in the land, Southern California, along with two other top-10 men’s golf schools: three-time defending Pac-12 champion Stanford and 2016 national champion Oregon.

“(How big a tournament this is), that’s the message we’re trying to get out there for sure,” University of Colorado coach Roy Edwards said at Wednesday’s Pac-12 media day event at BCC. “Jon Rahm, a PGA Tour Rookie of the Year shoe-in guy, won the championship last year. There’s a number of those (kind of) guys this year. That’s something people need to know. And this is a fun environment to watch those players because they’re competing for their school and for a championship. It’s not just like they’re playing a recreational round out here.”

With admission to the Pac-12 Championship being free to the general public, Boulder Country Club officials said they wouldn’t be surprised if crowds reached into the “thousands”.

After an April 27 practice day — which is also open to spectators — the competitors will play 36 holes on April 28 and 18 holes each on April 29 and 30. Unlike most college tournaments, each school will feature six players, with the best five scores from those six each day counting toward the team total.

For CU, this will mark the first men’s conference championship it has hosted since 1972, when the Big Eight meet came to Boulder CC.

“It means a lot being a Colorado kid and coming up and representing your state, representing your school and competing against some of the best teams and best players in the country,” said CU’s Spencer Painton, an Aurora resident who won a 5A state high school individual title while at Regis Jesuit. “I’ve had some nice success here in the past (he was runner-up in the 2016 CGA Amateur at BCC) and it feels like home to me. I’ll have a lot of family and friends coming over. It’s going to be a pretty special week for the entire Buffs team.”

Certainly CU is treating it as a special week. The school is even bringing in two of the four CU players who have won individual conference championships to be honorary starters and hit the first tee shots on April 28 — not unlike what the Masters does. Former BCC head professional Terry Kahl (the 1981 Big Eight champion) and Bob Kalinowski (the ’93 and ’94 winner of the Big Eight meet) will do the honors. (The other individual conference champions from CU are Hale Irwin (1966 and ’67) and Keith Alexander (1954).

“It’ll be a special, unique touch to the tournament that all the participants will enjoy,” Edwards said.

Of course, the Buffs would like to make the weekend even more special by contending for a team title. CU hasn’t won a conference championship, team-wise, since 1968 in the Big Eight. The Buffs are currently ranked 25th in the nation by Golfweek and 32nd by Golfstat, but they suffered a significant blow this week when their all-time scoring leader, Jeremy Paul, announced he is going pro immediately.

“Jeremy was obviously a great player — one of the best in our history,” Edwards said. “At the same time, everybody has the ability to play well. We fully expect to perform at a high level. …

“We don’t go to any tournament expecting to finish worse than first place. At the same time, it’s not like ‘Ricky Bobby’ — if you’re not first you’re last kind of thing. We’re probably ranked around sixth in the league or so. We expect at home to play to a higher level than that. If we do our business we’ll be competitive on Sunday for a high finish, if not winning the tournament.”

Whatever the case, CU and Boulder Country Club hope a significant number of fans show up for the festivities. They’ve certainly made a point of making golfers around the state aware of the event.

“The CGA and the (Colorado) PGA have sent some stuff out about it, and we sent (informational) posters to every club within 50 miles of campus — 97 facilities,” Edwards said. “We’ve emailed every high school coach in the state. We’ve had a lot of print (ads). We’ve done a ton of stuff at our games — football basketball, lacrosse — and some radio stuff, online. It’s gotten out there pretty well.”

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Men’s Pac-12 Conference Championship: Just the Essentials

When: April 28-30 (April 27 practice rounds). Tee times begin at 7:30 a.m. on April 28, 10 a.m. on April 29, and 8 a.m. on April 30.

Where: Boulder Country Club (7350 Clubhouse Rd., Boulder).

Admission: Free.

Format: 72 holes of stroke play: 36 on April 28 and 18 each on April 29 and 30. For the team competition, each school counts the best five of its six individual scores each day.

Boulder Country Club Course: 7,129 yards, Par-70.

Coloradans Expected to Compete: Ethan Freeman and Spencer Painton from the University of Colorado, Wyndham Clark from Oregon, Kyler Dunkle from Utah and possibly one more CU player.

TV: Taped coverage airing May 7 at noon on Pac-12 Network.

Defending Champion: Stanford, which has won the last three years. The Cardinal claimed the title by 29 strokes in 2016. Jon Rahm of Arizona State won the 2016 individual title as a senior and has since turned professional and won on the PGA Tour.

Where Did CU Finish Last Year: Tied for sixth.

How Did Top Returning CU Player Fare in 2016?: Ethan Freeman (35th place).

CU’s Top Finish Since Joining Pac-12: Fourth in 2014.

Top 25 Nationally Ranked Teams in Field: Southern California (No. 1 by Golfstat and Golfweek), Stanford (No. 5 by Golfstat and No. 8 by Golfweek), Oregon (No. 8 by Golfstat and No. 10 by Golfweek), Arizona State (No. 22 by Golfweek), CU (No. 25 by Golfweek).

Top 10 Nationally Ranked Individuals in Field: Senior Wyndham Clark, Oregon (No. 1 by Golfstat and Golfweek); junior Sean Crocker, USC (No. 2 Golfstat, No. 4 Golfweek); senior Maverick McNealy, Stanford (No. 3 Golfweek, No. 4 Golfstat); freshman Norman Xiong, Oregon (No. 7 Golfstat, No. 8 Golfweek); sophomore Collin Morikawa, Cal (No 8 Golfstat, No. 9 Golfweek).

Players in Field in Top 50 in World Amateur Golf Rankings: 1. senior Maverick McNealy, Stanford; 8. junior Sean Crocker, USC; 9. sophomore Collin Morikawa, Cal; 13. Jared duToit, Arizona State; 17. senior Rico Hoey, USC; 34. freshman Norman Xiong, Oregon; 48. senior Wyndham Clark, Oregon.

Honorary Starters: Prior to the first round on April 28, two former Big Eight champions from CU — Terry Kahl (1981) and Bob Kalinowski (1993 and ’94) — will serve as honorary starters and hit the first tee shots, a la the Masters.
 

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