Jimmy Makloski (pictured) of Pueblo, Riley Arp of Fort Collins and A.J. Morris of Aspen are in the top 20 heading into Friday’s final round of three different First Stage tournaments.
Arp backed up his second-round 64 with a 4-under-par 66 on Thursday in St. George, Utah, where the top 24 finishers and ties advance. Arp stands in ninth place at 8-under-par 202. He’s made 13 birdies over the last two rounds.
Morris carded a 2-under-par 70 on Thursday in West Palm Beach, Fla, where the top 22 and ties will move on. Morris’ 4-under 212 total leaves him in 10th place.
And Makloski jumped up the scoreboard in Dayton, Nev., thanks to a 5-under-par 67 on Thursday that included six birdies. The former Ram shares 16th place at 4-under 212, with the top 22 finishers and ties advancing.
Four players with strong Colorado connections punched their tickets to the Second Stage last week: Wyndham Clark, former University of Colorado golfers Derek Tolan and Justin Bardgett, and Parker Edens of Greeley.
The Second Stage of Web Q-school will be held at five sites between Oct. 31-Nov. 7, and the Final Stage Dec. 7-10 in Chandler, Ariz.
Here are the scores for all the players with strong Colorado connections who are competing this week:
Dayton, Nev. Oct. 10-13 (Top 22 Finishers and Ties Advance to Stage 2)
16. Jimmy Makloski, Pueblo 72-73-67–212
St. George, Utah Oct. 10-13 (Top 24 Finishers and Ties Advance to Stage 2)
9. Riley Arp, Fort Collins 72-64-66–202
71. Nathaniel Goddard, Fort Collins 73-74-73–220
The Woodlands, Texas Oct. 10-13 (Top 24 Finishers and Ties Advance to Stage 2)
42. Former Coloradan Alex Gutesha 75-74-71–220
51. Jacob Lestishen, Lone Tree 75-76-71–222
West Palm Beach, Fla. Oct. 10-13 (Top 22 Finishers and Ties Advance to Stage 2)
10. A.J. Morris, Aspen 71-71-70–212
Pine Mountain, Ga. Oct. 12-14 (Top 22 Finishers and Ties Advance to Stage 2)
39. James Love, Denver 71
54. Cole Nygren, Longmont 73
The former Colorado State University golfer (pictured) made six birdies in a bogey-free round at SunRiver Golf Club, leaving him at 4-under 136 at the halfway point of the tourney. The top 24 finishers and ties after 72 holes will advance to the Second Stage of Q-school.
Meanwhile, A.J. Morris of Aspen fired a second straight 1-under-par 71 at a First Stage tournament in West Palm Beach, Fla., putting him in 13th place at a site where the top 22 finishers and ties will move on to Stage 2.
Morris carded four birdies and three bogeys in Wednesday’s second round and stands at 2-under 142, eight shots behind leader Oliver Goss of Knoxville, Tenn.
Two more First Stage tournaments are scheduled to begin on Thursday.
The Second Stage of Web Q-school will be held at five sites between Oct. 31-Nov. 7, and the Final Stage Dec. 7-10 in Chandler, Ariz.
Here are the scores for all the players with strong Colorado connections who are competing this week in 72-hole tournaments:
Dayton, Nev. (Top 22 Finishers and Ties Advance to Stage 2)
36. Jimmy Makloski, Pueblo 72-73–145
St. George, Utah (Top 24 Finishers and Ties Advance to Stage 2)
18. Riley Arp, Fort Collins 72-64–136
72. Nathaniel Goddard, Fort Collins 73-74–147
The Woodlands, Texas (Top 24 Finishers and Ties Advance to Stage 2)
49. Former Coloradan Alex Gutesha 75-74–149
55. Jacob Lestishen, Lone Tree 75-76–151
West Palm Beach, Fla. (Top 22 Finishers and Ties Advance to Stage 2)
13. A.J. Morris, Aspen 71-71–142
The three-birdie, two-bogey round leaves Morris in the top 20 at a tournament where the top 22 finishers and ties after four rounds will advance to the Second Stage of Q-school.
Morris (pictured) trails leader Oliver Goss of Knoxville, Tenn., by five.
Four players with strong Colorado connections punched their tickets to the Second Stage last week: Wyndham Clark, former University of Colorado golfers Derek Tolan and Justin Bardgett, and Parker Edens of Greeley .
Two more First Stage tournaments are scheduled to begin on Thursday.
The Second Stage of Web Q-school will be held at five sites between Oct. 31-Nov. 7, and the Final Stage Dec. 7-10 in Chandler, Ariz.
Here are the scores for all the players with strong Colorado connections who are competing this week in 72-hole tournaments:
Dayton, Nev. (Top 22 Finishers and Ties Advance to Stage 2)
38. Jimmy Makloski, Pueblo 72
St. George, Utah (Top 24 Finishers and Ties Advance to Stage 2)
52. Riley Arp, Fort Collins 72
60. Nathaniel Goddard, Fort Collins 73
The Woodlands, Texas (Top 24 Finishers and Ties Advance to Stage 2)
48. Jacob Lestishen, Lone Tree 75
48. Former Coloradan Alex Gutesha 75
West Palm Beach, Fla. (Top 22 Finishers and Ties Advance to Stage 2)
18. A.J. Morris, Aspen 71
Dillon Stewart of Fort Collins, part of the Colorado Junior America’s Cup team that recently finished fourth out of an 18-team field last month in Washington state, shot a 7-under-par 64 at Tiara Rado Golf Course to grab a one-stroke lead in the tournament.
The runner-up to Davis Bryant of Aurora in the 2017 Colorado Junior PGA Championship, Stewart (pictured) made eight birdies and one bogey in the opening round.
Former Brigham Young University golfer Justin Keiley carded the best score among the professionals on Friday, a bogey-free 65. He played his first eight holes in 6 under, then parred his final 10 holes.
Tied for third place at 66 are 2016 CGA Match Play champion Nathaniel Goddard, who finished third last year in Grand Junction; three-time RMO winner Monte Montgomery; and 2017 CGA Amateur champion Glenn Workman. Montgomery made two eagles in Friday’s round.
The tournament will continue through Sunday, with all the action at Tiara Rado for the first time this year.
For Rocky Mountain Open scores, CLICK HERE.
Clark (pictured), who will wrap up his college career at the University of Oregon in a couple of months, and Marshall tied for ninth place. The sixth- through 16th-place finishers are exempt for the first four events of the PGA Tour Canada season, then are subject to the first “re-shuffle”.
Clark, the 2010 CGA Amateur champion, was tied for the lead in San Jacinto through two rounds and carded scores of 66-69-74-72 for a 3-under-par 281 total. Marshall, a former University of Arkansas golfer, managed that same score after rounds of 71-70-69-71.
Meanwhile, Alex Gutesha, who grew up in Colorado, and Nathaniel Goddard of Fort Collins earned conditional status on PGA Tour Canada by finishing between 17th and 40th. Gutesha (71-71-73-74–289) placed 28th and Goddard (70-73-69-78–290), the 2016 CGA Match Play champion, ended up 33rd.
Last week, former University of Denver golfer Chris Gilman claimed medalist honors in the PGA Tour Canada Q-school tournament in Santee, Calif. Gilman will be exempt throughout the 2017 PGA Tour Canada season, which starts June 1.
Three more PGA Tour Canada Q-school tournaments will be held in the next two months.
— Greeley’s Edens Places Fourth in Dreamchasers Tour Event: In mini-tour action, Parker Edens of Greeley tied for fourth place on Thursday at the Dreamchasers Pro Golf Tour’s Lone Tree Championship in Chandler, Ariz.
The former Colorado State University golfer shot rounds of 69-68-69 for a 7-under-par 206 total, which left him four strokes behind winner Chris Tedesco of Gig Harbor, Wash.
Edens carded an eagle, eight birdies and a three bogeys over 54 holes.
Nick Mason (pictured) of Denver ended that streak on Sunday — with an exclamation point. And it didn’t stop with Mason claiming the title. The second- and third-place professional finishers — Jim Knous of Englewood and Nathaniel Goddard of Fort Collins, respectively — were also Coloradans.
Six years after Ben Portie of Westminster won the RMO, Mason prevailed by seven strokes in the 78th edtion of the tournament.
Mason, who has played in five PGA Tour events over the years — including the 2014 U.S. Open, shot 65-64-65 at the event held at both Tiara Rado Golf Course and the Golf Club at Redlands Mesa. That left him at 20-under-par 194 overall. He posted 20 birdies and one eagle (on the 13th hole Sunday), while making just two bogeys in 54 holes. The victory was worth $10,000.
Knous, who finished third last year in the RMO, moved up a spot this time, closing with a 68 for a 201 total.
Goddard, the 2016 CGA Match Play champion who just turned pro, checked in third at 203 after a final-round 67. Also at that figure was low-amateur Isaac Petersilie of Colorado Springs, the University of Denver-bound golfer who carded a 68 on Sunday. He prevailed by five over Taylor Montgomery in the amateur competiton.
Robin Bradbury of Superior, who just qualified for the U.S. Senior Amateur, claimed the title in the senior amateur division. After he tied Scott Sullivan and Owen Ellis with a three-day total of 6-over-par 220, Bradbury prevailed in a playoff.
This year marked the first time that Redlands Mesa was part of the RMO’s championship rotation.
For scores from the RMO, CLICK HERE.
]]>The tournament which for decades had been known as the CGA Stroke Play will now be called the CGA Amateur Championship presented by Webster Investment Advisors. The idea for the name change was the CGA tournament committee’s desire to designate major championships, in this case in the open-age division.
But while some things change for the event that dates back to the 1930s, others remain the same.
Most notably, the CGA Amateur this year will return to a site it has frequented more than any other over the last 40 years, before which CGA records of sites for the championships aren’t complete.
This year’s tournament will be held Aug. 4-7 at Boulder Country Club. It will mark the sixth time BCC has hosted the CGA Amateur since 1978. The next-most-visited course for the championship since ’78 has been Lakewood Country Club, which has hosted five times in that period.
In the new century, the CGA Amateur will have been contested at BCC three times in the last 11 years — in 2006, 2010 and 2016. In both ’06 and ’10, the title was settled in a playoff, with Pat Grady prevailing 10 years ago and Wyndham Clark claiming the title in 2010. In the latter case, it was a particularly notable championship as Clark was a 16-year-old when he won, and Jim Knous fired a course-record 10-under-par 60 in the final round to force a playoff.
As in previous years, next week’s CGA Amateur will be a 72-hole affair, with a starting field of 84 cut to the low 40 players and ties after two rounds.
The 2016 tournament will be somewhat unique in that, as of Friday, only one former champion was in the field, 2015 winner Chris Korte, a University of Denver golfer.
Among the others who are entered are 2016 CGA Match Play champ Nathaniel Goddard, who finished second last year in the CGA Am; 2016 U.S. Amateur qualifiers Kyler Dunkle and Colin Prater; 2016 CoBank Colorado Open low-amateur Jimmy Makloski; 2004 CGA Player of the Year Steve Irwin; 2015 U.S. Am match play qualifier Jake Staiano; and 2015 CGA Mid-Amateur winner Jon Lindstrom.
For Thursday’s pairings, CLICK HERE.
The Centennial State will host two 36-hole U.S. Amateur qualifying tournaments, Monday (July 18) at Fort Collins Country Club and July 25 at Columbine Country Club. Seventy-seven players are in the field in Fort Collins and 80 at Columbine. At each site, three spots into the 312-player national championship will be at state.
The 2016 U.S. Amateur will be contested Aug. 15-21 at Oakland Hills in Bloomfield Hills, Mich., a course that’s hosted six U.S. Opens, three PGA Championships and a Ryder Cup.
Among those in the field at Fort Collins CC are two 2015 U.S. Amateur qualifiers, Kyler Dunkle of Fort Collins and Steve Irwin of Arvada, who went to his second U.S. Am last summer. Also entered there are 2016 CGA Match Play winner Nathaniel Goddard of Fort Collins and runner-up Josh Seiple of Castle Pines; 2015 CGA Stroke Play champ Chris Korte of Littleton; and last year’s CGA Mid-Amateur winner Jon Lindstrom of Broomfield.
Meanwhile, on July 25 at Columbine, the competitors will include four-time U.S. Amateur qualifier Wyndham Clark of Lone Tree and Colorado State golfer Jake Staiano, who finished eighth in the stroke-play portion of the 2015 U.S. Am and advanced to the round of 64 in match play. Likewise set for Columbine are incoming University of Colorado golfer Spencer Painton, who also qualified for the U.S. Am last year; two-time U.S. Amateur qualifier Gus Lundquist; and 2013 qualifier and 2014 alternate Chris Thayer.
For July 18 tee times from Fort Collins CC, CLICK HERE.
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The now-22-year-old from Ptarmigan Country Club in Fort Collins lost 1 down to eventual champion Nick Nosewicz in the semifinals of the 2015 CGA Match Play, then held a four-stroke lead after 54 holes of the 2015 CGA Stroke Play only to finish second.
But on Friday, in the 116th CGA Match Play, the former Colorado Christian University golfer closed the deal by claiming the title at Lone Tree Golf Club. He played the last four holes in 2 under par to edge Josh Seiple of Castle Pines Golf Club 1 up and earn the trophy in the state’s oldest championship.
“This means a lot,” Goddard said after Friday’s marathon final. “Last year I was happy with (finishing) tied for third and second (in the two CGA majors), but if you come close you want to win it. You can only put yourself in that position so many times and then lose it before you start (wondering) if it will ever happen. It feels good that I didn’t collapse this time.
“There’s so much more pressure in this,” said Goddard (left and above), winner of five individual titles while at Colorado Christian. “It’s just me versus Josh. Knowing my history of collapsing in the Stroke Play last year (when he ended up three shots behind champion Chris Korte), that’s always in the back of my mind. So it feels good to end strong.”
For a match in which one of the competitors never led, Friday’s 36-hole final certainly was a doozy.
It was the 25th time since the Match Play was first contested in 1901 that the final has gone the distance — or to extra holes. But that’s become far more prevalent in recent summers as finals have gone at least 36 holes five of the last eight years.
This time around, the finale spanned about 10 hours and 20 minutes from beginning to end as a weather delay of more than two hours interrupted the match as the players were on or around the 23rd green.
But the wait was well worth it for Goddard, who won his first CGA title.
Though Seiple (left), a University of Mississippi golfer, never led in Friday’s final, the players were all square through 14 holes. But Goddard then won each of the last four holes of the first round — three with birdies — to go into the 18-hole break 4 up.
Seiple made some headway with birdies from 20 and 15 feet on the first and second holes of the second 18. “The second 18 after Josh won the first two holes, it was like, ‘Crap. I’ve got to get it into gear,'” Goddard said. Eventually, Seiple squared the match again with a par on the 32nd hole. Then after Goddard won the 33rd hole with a 20-foot birdie, the 20-year-old Seiple again pulled even on the 34th hole with a tough up and down for a birdie while Goddard three-putted for par.
But Goddard (left, with Seiple) again responded, this time by draining a 6-foot downhill birdie putt on the 35th hole to go 1 up yet again. And when he bombed his drive on the par-4 finishing hole to just in front of the green — and Seiple hit the lip of a fairway bunker with his second shot and had to get up and down for par, sinking a 4-foot putt — Goddard clinched the win with a two-putt par from 8 feet.
Though he never trailed on Friday, Goddard said he didn’t feel comfortable until his 1-foot par putt on the 36th hole found the bottom of the cup.
“I was like, ‘I could easily lose this. One mistake and it’s done,'” he said. “But my tee shots really helped me out down the stretch, and staying calm, keeping the nerves down and going through the whole routine.”
Though Seiple (left, with dad/caddie John Seiple) struggled some in the morning round, when he posted a 75, he rebounded with a 69 in the afternoon. Goddard, meanwhile, went 71-72.
“The morning I kind of started off rough,” said Seiple, whose stellar junior career was highlighted by a win in the prestigious Jones Cup Junior Invitational national title in December 2013 and qualifying for two U.S. Junior Amateurs. “I didn’t have much momentum or anything, I wasn’t hitting it well, wasn’t putting good. I got it going in the afternoon but it wasn’t enough. I just didn’t have my (best) stuff (overall) today and Nathan came down the end and closed it out good. Props to him.”
Indeed, Goddard definitely took a shine to the final four holes at Lone Tree this week. Including the stroke-play qualifying round, and despite not playing all four holes in several of his matches, he went a cumulative 13 under par on those four holes during the Match Play.
“I had a good game plan on those holes,” he said.
Though Goddard (left) plans to compete in the CGA Amateur at Boulder Country Club in August, he said he’ll likely turn pro late in the year and hopes to earn a spot on the PGA Tour-licensed Mackenzie Tour in Canada for 2017.
For Seiple, Friday marked his second runner-up finish in a state golf association championship since he returned to action after undergoing surgery on both his hips last year. He was also second in the Old Waverly Invitational, a Mississippi Golf Association event, in April. The CGA Match Play marked the first open-division CGA championship in which Seiple has competed.
“It’s a really good learning experience because obviously you don’t want this feeling again,” he said. “It’s good to keep putting yourself into contention. The more I do it, the more I’ll be prepared the next time I need to close it out.”
For the match-play bracket, CLICK HERE.
116th CGA Match Play Championship
At Lone Tree GC
36-HOLE FINAL
7. Nathaniel Goddard, Ptarmigan CC def. 8. Joshua Seiple, Castle Pines GC 1 up
SEMIFINALS
8. Joshua Seiple, Castle Pines GC def. 28. Ryan Schmitz, Colorado GC 19 holes
7. Nathaniel Goddard, Ptarmigan CC def. 3. Jake Staiano, Glenmoor CC 2 and 1
QUARTERFINALS
8. Joshua Seiple, Castle Pines GC def. 1. Nick Nosewicz, Meadow Hills GC 1 up
28. Ryan Schmitz, Colorado GC def. 45. Glenn Workman, Desert Hawk GC 4 and 3
7. Nathaniel Goddard, Ptarmigan CC def. 34. Andrew Romano, Colorado GC 3 and 1
3. Jake Staiano, Glenmoor CC def. 11. Kyler Dunkle, The Club @ Pradera 5 and 3
ROUND OF 16
1. Nick Nosewicz, Meadow Hills GC def. 17. Coby Welch, Jgac Club 5 and 4
8. Joshua Seiple, Castle Pines GC def. 9. Chris Korte, Lone Tree GC 7 and 6
45. Glenn Workman, Desert Hawk GC def. 29. Josh Thomas, Green Valley Ranch GC 4 and 3
28. Ryan Schmitz, Colorado GC def. 44. Jake Kelley, Columbine CC 1 up
34. Andrew Romano, Colorado GC def. 50. Clayton Crawford, Maroon Creek Club 19 holes
7. Nathaniel Goddard, Ptarmigan CC def. 23. Connor Klein, Lone Tree GC 1 up
3. Jake Staiano, Glenmoor CC def. 19. Hayden Nicholaides, Family Sports GC 2 and 1
11. Kyler Dunkle, The Club @ Pradera def. 6. Tristan Rohrbaugh, Ironbridge GC 2 and 1
ROUND OF 32
1. Nick Nosewicz, Meadow Hills GC def. 32. Michael P Tait, Raccoon Creek GC 3 and 1
17. Coby Welch, Jgac Club def. 16. Pierce Aichinger, Glenmoor CC 1 up
8. Joshua Seiple, Castle Pines GC def. 25. Isaac Petersilie, Colorado Springs CC 7 and 6
9. Chris Korte, Lone Tree GC def. 41. Jon Lindstrom, Lakewood CC 3 and 2
29. Josh Thomas, Green Valley Ranch GC def. 4. Christopher Thayer, Bear Creek GC 3 and 2
45. Glenn Workman, Desert Hawk GC def. 52. Behrod Keshtavar, Flatirons GC 2 and 1
28. Ryan Schmitz, Colorado GC def. 5. Jimmy Makloski, Pueblo CC 4 and 3
44. Jake Kelley, Columbine CC def. 12. Pierce Trumper, Fort Collins CC 2 up
34. Andrew Romano, Colorado GC def. 2. Steven Kupcho, Heritage at Westmoor 5 and 4
50. Clayton Crawford, Maroon Creek Club def. 18. Kyler Smith, Rifle Creek GC 2 and 1
7. Nathaniel Goddard, Ptarmigan CC def. 26. Billy Ramsey, Lone Tree Mens GC 6 and 5
23. Connor Klein, Lone Tree GC def. 55. Eric Oneth, Colorado Golf Club 2 and 1
3. Jake Staiano, Glenmoor CC def. 35. Justin Allenback, Walking Stick GC 6 and 5
19. Hayden Nicholaides, Family Sports GC def. 14. Drew Vance, Heritage at Westmoor 4 and 3
6. Tristan Rohrbaugh, Ironbridge GC def. 27. Josh Hill, Omni Interlocken Resort 2 up
11. Kyler Dunkle, The Club @ Pradera def. 22. Trevor McKune, Pinehurst CC 5 and 4
ROUND OF 64
1. Nick Nosewicz, Meadow Hills GC def. 64. Colin Prater, Broadmoor GC 20 holes
32. Michael P Tait, Raccoon Creek GC def. 33. Austin Burgess, Patty Jewett GC 5 and 3
16. Pierce Aichinger, Glenmoor CC def. 49. Thomas Roos, Spring Valley GC 4 and 3
17. Coby Welch, Jgac Club def. 48. Matthew Gutowski, Coal Creek GC 3 and 2
8. Joshua Seiple, Castle Pines GC def. 57. Ben Lyons, Commonground GC 3 and 1
25. Isaac Petersilie, Colorado Springs CC def. 40. Shawn Hughes, Fox Hollow GC 8 and 6
9. Chris Korte, Lone Tree GC def. 56. Bryan Rusin, Green Valley Ranch GC 3 and 2
41. Jon Lindstrom, Lakewood CC def. 24. Dylan Mitchell, Lakewood CC 6 and 5
4. Christopher Thayer, Bear Creek GC def. 61. Cole Cunningham, Valley CC 2 up
29. Josh Thomas, Green Valley Ranch GC def. 36. Jeff Chapman, Inverness GC 2 and 1
52. Behrod Keshtavar, Flatirons GC def. 13. Spencer Painton, Green Valley GC 19 holes
45. Glenn Workman, Desert Hawk GC def. 20. Alec Poorman, Flatirons GC 7 and 6
5. Jimmy Makloski, Pueblo CC def. 60. Jeff Oneth, Colorado GC 3 and 2
28. Ryan Schmitz, Colorado GC def. 37. Braden Bentley, Cheyenne Shadows GC 7 and 5
12. Pierce Trumper, Fort Collins CC def. 53. Brandon Ropp, Heather Ridge GC 3 and 1
44. Jake Kelley, Columbine CC def. 21. Bretton Krantz, Ptarmigan CC 4 and 3
2. Steven Kupcho, Heritage at Westmoor def. 63. Kurtis Lucas, Patty Jewett GC 3 and 2
34. Andrew Romano, Colorado GC def. 31. Jack Cummings, Omni Interlocken Resort 4 and 2
50. Clayton Crawford, Maroon Creek Club def. 15. Sam Marley, South Suburban GG 1 up
18. Kyler Smith, Rifle Creek GC def. 47. John Luoma, Colorado GC 5 and 4
7. Nathaniel Goddard, Ptarmigan CC def. 58. Austin John Duffy, South Suburban GC 4 and 3
26. Billy Ramsey, Lone Tree Mens GC def. 39. Shawn Mercer, Lake Valley GC 1 up
55. Eric Oneth, Colorado Golf Club def. 10. Zach Fowlds, Colorado GC 4 and 3
23. Connor Klein, Lone Tree GC def. 42. Alan Boyko, Commonground GC 6 and 5
3. Jake Staiano, Glenmoor CC def. 62. Brock Dowdy, Commonground GC 3 and 2
35. Justin Allenback, Walking Stick GC def. 30. Adam Pladson, Green Valley Ranch GC 4 and 3
14. Drew Vance, Heritage at Westmoor def. 51. Jacob Allenback, Walking Stick GC 6 and 5
19. Hayden Nicholaides, Family Sports GC def. 46. Will Matthews, Cherry Hills CC 4 and 2
6. Tristan Rohrbaugh, Ironbridge GC def. 59. Chad Gonzalez, Pinery CC 7 and 5
27. Josh Hill, Omni Interlocken Resort def. 38. Dylan Rottner, City Park GC 8 and 7
11. Kyler Dunkle, The Club @ Pradera def. 54. Roy Carlsen, Heritage at Westmoor 3 and 2
22. Trevor McKune, Pinehurst CC def. 43. Matthew Goddard, Ptarmigan CC 3 and 2
STROKE PLAY QUALIFYING
Steven Kupcho, Heritage at Westmoor 33-33–66
Jake Staiano, Glenmoor CC 32-34–66
Christopher Thayer, Bear Creek GC 36-31–67
James Makloski, Pueblo CC 36-32–68
Tristan Rohrbaugh, Ironbridge GC 36-32–68
Joshua Seiple, Castle Pines GC 31-38–69
Nathaniel Goddard, Ptarmigan CC 32-37–69
Nick Nosewicz, Meadow Hills GC 35-34–69
Chris Korte, Lone Tree GC 34-36–70
Kyler Dunkle, The Club @ Pradera 37-34–71
Zach Fowlds, Colorado GC 35-36–71
Drew Vance, Heritage at Westmoor 36-36–72
Pierce Aichinger, Glenmoor CC 34-38–72
Spencer Painton, Green Valley GC 36-36–72
Sam Marley, South Suburban GG 37-35–72
Pierce Trumper, Fort Collins CC 32-40–72
Connor Klein, Lone Tree GC 37-36–73
Trevor McKune, Pinehurst CC 34-39–73
Hayden Nicholaides, Family Sports GC 38-35–73
Dylan Mitchell, Lakewood CC 38-35–73
Bretton Krantz, Ptarmigan CC 36-37–73
Alec Poorman, Flatirons GC 37-36–73
Coby Welch, Jgac Club 34-39–73
Kyler Smith, Rifle Creek GC 38-35–73
Ryan Schmitz, Colorado GC 38-36–74
Billy Ramsey, Lone Tree Mens GC 40-34–74
Josh Hill, Omni Interlocken Resort 38-36–74
Isaac Petersilie, Colorado Springs CC 37-37–74
Adam Pladson, Green Valley Ranch GC 38-37–75
Jack Cummings, Omni Interlocken Resort 35-40–75
Josh Thomas, Green Valley Ranch GC 41-34–75
Michael P Tait, Raccoon Creek GC 40-35–75
Andrew Romano, Colorado GC 35-41–76
Shawn Mercer, Lake Valley GC 39-37–76
Jeff Chapman, Inverness GC 36-40–76
Shawn Hughes, Fox Hollow GC 41-35–76
Braden Bentley, Cheyenne Shadows GC 39-37–76
Justin Allenback, Walking Stick GC 37-39–76
Austin Burgess, Patty Jewett GC 39-37–76
Dylan Rottner, City Park GC 39-37–76
Jon Lindstrom, Lakewood CC 40-37–77
John Luoma, Colorado GC 36-41–77
Glenn Workman, Desert Hawk GC 39-38–77
Matthew Goddard, Ptarmigan CC 37-40–77
Jake Kelley, Columbine CC 39-38–77
Alan Boyko, Commonground GC 36-41–77
Will Matthews, Cherry Hills CC 42-35–77
Matthew Gutowski, Coal Creek GC 39-38–77
Thomas Roos, Spring Valley GC 39-39–78
Behrod Keshtavar, Flatirons GC 40-38–78
Clayton Crawford, Maroon Creek Club 41-37–78
Jacob Allenback, Walking Stick GC 40-38–78
Roy Carlsen, Heritage at Westmoor 35-43–78
Brandon Ropp, Heather Ridge GC 39-39–78
Ben Lyons, Commonground GC 36-43–79
Chad Gonzalez, Pinery CC 40-39–79
Bryan Rusin, Green Valley Ranch GC 41-38–79
Eric Oneth, Colorado Golf Club 41-38–79
Austin John Duffy, South Suburban GC 41-38–79
Cole Cunningham, Valley CC 40-40–80
Colin Prater, Broadmoor GC 36-44–80
Jeff Oneth, Colorado GC 39-41–80
Kurtis Lucas, Patty Jewett GC 40-40–80
Brock Dowdy, Commonground GC 42-38–80
Failed to Qualify for Match Play
Lamar Carlile, City Park GC 42-39–81
Gus Lundquist, Colorado GC 43-38–81
Ji Woo Jang, Jgac Club 40-41–81
Jonathan Doern, City Park GC 41-40–81
Harris Butler, Cherry Hills CC 40-41–81
Trevor Glen, Legacy Ridge GC 38-44–82
Subin Lee, Jgac Club 41-41–82
Andrew McCormick, Denver CC 43-39–82
David W Packer, Cherry Hills CC 44-38–82
Robin Bradbury, Heritage at Westmoor 43-40–83
Jack Cavanagh, Broadlands GC 40-43–83
Brian Engh, The Club @ Pradera 43-40–83
Andrew Cooper, Glenmoor CC 41-43–84
Steve Sullivan, Lone Tree GC 42-44–86
Neil Tillman, The Club @ Ravenna 40-46–86
Josh McLaughlin, The Olde Course 42-45–87
Ryan Keefe, CommonGround GC 38-49–87
Chase Federico, Elmwood GC 49-39–88
Kyle Huber, Perry Park CC 43-45–88
Michael Schroeder, Plum Creek GC 49-49–98