The Prestige final round to stream on Golfweek as College Golf Live launches

Sixteen of college golf’s premier programs square off next week in The Prestige, and Golfweek will livestream final-round coverage as part of College Golf Live’s 2020 Spring Series. Audiences can tune in at Golfweek.com/Prestige2020 on Feb. 19 from …

Prestige LogoSixteen of college golf’s premier programs square off next week in The Prestige, and Golfweek will livestream final-round coverage as part of College Golf Live’s 2020 Spring Series.

Audiences can tune in at Golfweek.com/Prestige2020 on Feb. 19 from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. PT to watch. Ten-time PGA Tour winner, three-time NCAA champion, and veteran golf commentator Steve Elkington will call the action alongside ESPN personality Ben Lyons, with analyst Will Haskett delivering onsite coverage.

This event promises to be a competitive tournament, featuring 2019 NCAA champion Stanford, NCAA runner-up Texas, final eight match play participants Oklahoma State (2018 NCAA champion) and SMU, along with NCAA finals teams Pepperdine and LSU (2015 NCAA champion).

The tournament perennially features professional golf’s future stars. Last year’s champion was current PGA Tour member Viktor Hovland, and past participants include Jon Rahm, Xander Schauffele, Gary Woodland, Brandt Snedeker, Luke Donald, Patrick Rodgers and Kevin Chappell.

In its 20th year, The Prestige presented by Charles Schwab will be played at the Greg Norman course at PGA West in Southern California’s Coachella Valley.

Below are the teams that will compete this year:

Prestige Golf Schools

College Golf Live

College golf: Bowden brothers committed to giving back to dad

After their father Bo was diagnosed with cancer, Jonathan and Daniel Bowden decided to use their platforms to give back.

Jonathan and Daniel Bowden got started in the game from the 100-yard marker. The goal was always to beat dad, a club professional who understood the value of a birdie putt.

The Bowden brothers were born 15 months apart and grew up virtually inseparable. Even now as thirty-something adults, they coach side by side at UNC-Wilmington, passing on the lessons taught by their father, Bo Bowden.

These days the Bowden brothers find themselves thinking more and more about those early years. When Daniel tells one of his players to grip the putter like a tube of toothpaste with its top off, he smiles. Dad’s illustration used to be kind of corny. Now it’s gold.

Brain cancer has a way of changing things.

Bo, 63, had surgery last summer to remove a tumor that was slightly smaller than a tennis ball on his occipital lobe. What started as a sore throat led to squamous cell carcinoma in his tonsils. Then it was lung cancer. The latest, and scariest battle to date, was found after a routine visit to the optometrist for glasses.

“There’s a chance he might not make it,” said the surgeon before heading back to take out the tumor.

Mercifully, everything went well. Bo is currently receiving immunotherapy treatments and doctors continue to monitor his lungs.

For a while, the Bowdens didn’t mention anything to their teams. After all, it was tough even communicating with their father about what was going on. Plus, they didn’t want to burden anyone. Daniel, 32, is head coach of the men’s program at UNC-Wilmington and Jonathan, 33, serves as an assistant for both the men’s and women’s teams.

UNC-Wilmington men’s and women’s golf teams. (UNCW)

Bo played golf at Georgia Tech with Larry Mize and met his wife, Marian, while working as an assistant pro at Valdosta Country Club. He helped Marian pick out a sweater for her dad, and well, the rest is history. Together they have three boys. Their youngest son, Spencer, is 27.

Jonathan and Daniel were third-generation college golfers. Their grandfather, Earl, played at Georgia.

Bo hasn’t been able to work for several years now as cancer has taken its toll. Marian works six days a week at Poor Richard’s bookstore in Easley, South Carolina, earning a modest wage. With bills piling up, Daniel got the idea to start a GoFundMe account to help ease his parents’ financial burden, raise awareness and hopefully donate to cancer research.

To date, the Birdies For Bo campaign has raised $4,684 of its $7,000 goal. Daniel is donating $1 for every birdie and $5 for every eagle that the men’s team makes during the season. Jonathan gives based on the women’s results. Several individuals have joined the effort as well as the University of South Florida team last fall.

“I’d love to see that take off,” Daniel said.

The men’s team opens its spring season at the John Burns Intercollegiate Feb. 20-22 in Hawaii. The women’s team got started last week at the UCF Challenge.

Bo Bowden’s legacy has been helping kids. Daniel described him as a feel-based instructor, making his mark on the game before the TrackMan era. The brothers grew up with a golf pro in the house, and at times took for granted all the information that soaked in naturally – from course management, to tournament prep, swing thoughts and club repair. It was all there for the taking.

The Bowden family has a heart for people, and the brothers have modeled a strong, selfless work ethic from watching their father.

“He never really capitalized financially off of his gift,” said Daniel. “He would just go out of his way to make people’s day.”

Now Bo’s sons are doing whatever they can to ease the burden.

Longtime women’s head coach Cindy Ho shares an office with the Bowdens and calls their energy and commitment to UNC-Wilmington’s golf programs remarkable. Neither of the brothers lets it show when they’d rather be miles away.

“They’re trying to be strong,” said Ho, “for their family, for their teams. You just want them to know that people are supporting them. That we’re behind them.”

Daniel, a former touring pro, said his father’s dream was to one day watch him compete at the Masters. They went often to Augusta thanks to Mize.

Coaching college golf came as a surprise to everyone. But the Bowdens view it as their calling in life, and they’re grateful for the man who laid the foundation. Now it’s all about giving back.

“He shared his gifts with us,” said Jonathan, “his communication, his love for the game and his teaching ability. Now we’re able to do something with it that’s meaningful.”

Pepperdine rises to No. 1 in the nation after closing rally to win Amer Ari

Pepperdine’s men came back from 12 shots down at the tournament in Hawaii for a second spring win that left them No. 1 in the nation.

When William Mouw poured in a well-timed eagle from 40 feet on the closing hole of the Waikoloa Kings’ Course in Hawaii, players standing 200 yards back in the fairway knew about it. It was an out-of-character moment (“Come on, baby!”) for the freshman born of a game-changing eagle.

“I’m trying to downplay it a little bit,” Pepperdine head coach Michael Beard said, laughing. “He went nuts.”

Mouw’s moment played a big role in an all-world comeback at the Amer Ari Invitational, setting up what Beard calls the biggest win in his eight seasons as Pepperdine’s coach.

Rallies unfold quickly in college golf. A few minutes before Mouw came through No. 18, Beard had stood in the fairway with freshman Dylan Menante as he pulled a 4-iron from 220 yards and stuck it to 6 feet to set up an eagle of his own. Two Pepperdine birdies followed before Mouw came through with the second eagle. Pepperdine counters played the hole in 6 under.

Scores: Amer Ari Invitational

“It was happening so fast I didn’t even really get a chance to see what other teams were doing,” Beard said of the finish. “It just felt like, who knows what’s going to happen at the end but we’re going to be pretty close.”

Remarkably, Pepperdine was 12 shots out of it entering the final round at Waikoloa. The Waves went 18 under in the final round, ended the week at 39 under and have now won two spring titles before many teams have even teed it up once. That makes three wins this season.

Pepperdine’s roster inspires big expectations, from Mouw and Menante on up to redshirt senior Sahith Theegala, whose recovery birdie on No. 18 (right after a double-bogey at No. 17) was just as important as the freshman fireworks.

Resumes are deep and heads level. Even when Pepperdine landed at No. 2 in Golfweek’s Preseason Rankings, Beard felt it would have no bearing on his team’s performance this season.

“I don’t get the sense that we’re going to fall in love with ourselves,” he said in September.

Asked to reassess after the Amer Ari win, Beard still feels that rings true.

“It’s always easier to get to the top than to stay there,” he said. “That’s something I’ve learned maybe not coaching, but just golf in general.”

Pepperdine has never been the No. 1-ranked program in the country – not even during a 1997 season that ended with the NCAA title – but the Waves rose to the top of the Golfweek/Sagarin College Rankings after the Amer Ari.

“It’s not like we’re going to practice every day to get to No. 1,” Beard said. “That’s not like an end goal for us. It’s more about trying to get to the national championship and then trying to find a way to get past that first cut and then get to match play.”

For Theegala, who redshirted last season with a wrist injury, the rise truly has been extreme. Pepperdine bobbed around the No. 100 position in the rankings when Beard was recruiting him. Now they’re No. 1. It’s a big moment for coach and player to share.

None of it happens overnight, of course, and that even goes for the schedule. The Amer Ari is a tournament start Beard has eyed for years. New teams don’t simply sign up. Pepperdine got in when a spot became available and two other teams turned it down ahead of them.

From here, the road is no less arduous, with starts at the Prestige, Southern Highlands and Western Intercollegiate coming down the pipe.

In creating this schedule, Beard looked down the line and saw the pieces were there.

“If they’re really competitive and see themselves as winners, I want to put them out there to push them to get better,” he said. “It was all just kind of a thought. If we’re really going to be good, if these guys’ resumes – if it’s as good as it looks on paper, we’ll see how good they really are if we can get a schedule where we’re playing against the best teams.”

Pepperdine’s 10 men do not break cleanly into an A squad and a B squad. Even the No. 10 player has competed in three tournaments this season. Sophomore Joe Highsmith, winner of the Sahalee Players Championship this summer and arguably the team’s most improved player, hadn’t missed a tournament until he failed to get through team qualifying for the Amer Ari.

Team qualifying is no picnic, and at least a couple spots in the roster for each event are up for grabs that way. A top-10 finish in a tournament guarantees a start the next week. Win, and you keep your spot for the next two events. Beard likes to reserve a coaches’ pick or two, as well.

“It kind of prepares them for when they turn pro because you have to bring your game every week,” Beard said of qualifying. “They’re getting some good time here to figure themselves out when they’re constantly having to perform and compete against others.”

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San Jose State’s Sean Yu earns PGA Tour start at Genesis Collegiate Showcase

San Jose State senior Sean Yu will take advantage of a PGA Tour start at this week’s Genesis Invitational.

PGA Tour starts are a coveted commodity for college players. San Jose State senior Sean Yu will take advantage of one at this week’s Genesis Invitational. Yu becomes the latest player to advance through the annual Collegiate Showcase and earn a spot in the tournament.

Yu, from Taiwan, teed it up at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California, (which hosted the 2012 NCAA Championship) on Monday along with a limited field of college players competing for a spot in this week’s Tour event there. His 1-under 70 was the best score of the day, leaving him two shots ahead of Kentucky senior Allen Hamilton and Texas senior Spencer Soosman.

“To be honest, I didn’t think that I’d ever get to where I am today,” said Yu, who transferred to San Jose State after one season at Cal. “It’s definitely a dream come true to play in a Tour event and to play at the Riviera Country Club. To play in the Genesis Invitational is definitely something that I never even dreamed of.”

On Monday, Yu played alongside Joseph Bramlett, this year’s Charlie Sifford Memorial Exemption recipient and a former Stanford player. Yu took it as a learning opportunity.

“I’m trying to go into every round learning as much as I can. That’s mainly what I’m focused on right now. Hopefully I can learn from the best players in the world,” Yu said.

Yu joins past winners Lukas Euler (2019), Scottie Scheffler (2018), Sahith Theegala (2017), Charlie Danielson (2016) and Will Zalatoris (2015), who also earned an exemption into the Genesis field.

In the fall college season, Yu won the Visit Stockton Pacific Invitational and finished second at the Alister MacKenzie Invitational. He is No. 105 in the Golfweek/Sagarin College Rankings.

Last spring, Yu made a name for himself as he made a run at the individual title at San Jose State’s own Western Intercollegiate played at Pasatiempo in Santa Cruz, California. He finished regulation tied with Stanford’s Isaiah Salinda, but ultimately lost on the fifth hole of a playoff.

[jwplayer HoWyYfvE-9JtFt04J]

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College golf blog: On the road to the NCAA finals

The Road to Grayhawk is a Golfweek blog that contains all current college golf news throughout the regular NCAA season.

The road all college golf teams hope to travel this spring ends at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Arizona, site of the NCAA Championship (May 29-June 3) and NCAA Women’s Championship (May 22-27).

Interested in all things college golf in 2020? Get the latest updates on this page. We’ll post all relevant news, recaps and links to scoring for major events here.

Follow Golfweek’s college writers on Twitter at @GolfweekRingler, @AdamWoodard, @GolfweekNichols and @Golfweek_Jules, and put a like on Lance Ringler’s College Golf Page on Facebook.

The Golfweek/Sagarin College Rankings can be found at these links: Men’s team | Men’s individual | Women’s team | Women’s individual

Raptor Course is tournament tested

February 10
For the first time, the NCAA has committed the golf championships to the same venue for consecutive years.

Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Arizona, has 36 holes, 18 of which represent the tournament-ready Raptor Course. The Raptor is No. 17 on the 2019 list of Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play in Arizona, and will serve as host site for not just the 2020 national championships but the two after that as well.

Read more about the Raptor Course as an NCAA venue.

Texas A&M holds off Florida late to win Sea Best Invitational

The Gators swept the top two spots on the leaderboard as freshman Ricky Castillo had a bogey-free 65 to win by three.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – For 15 holes on Tuesday, the Sea Best Invitational was a virtual deadlock between Texas A&M and the University of Florida.

The Aggies saved their best for the closing holes on the TPC Sawgrass Dye’s Valley Course.

Texas A&M, 20th in Golfweek’s rankings, placed all five starters inside the top 20 and at 13-under-par 827, defeated the Gators by two shots.

That two-shot difference was precisely the margin the Aggies had over Florida (ranked 38th by Golfweek) on the closing three holes of the Valley Course.

Led by Dan Erickson and Jimmy Lee, who played the last three holes at 1 under, with no bogeys, the Aggies shot 2 over as a team at Nos. 16, 17 and 18, while Florida was 4 over, with five bogeys and a double bogey.

“College golf tournaments come down to one or two shots so many times,” said Texas A&M coach J.T. Higgins. “We take pride in finishing strong and those holes were tough, especially [Nos.] 17 and 18 into the wind with tough pins.”

The Aggies negotiated those two holes at 3 over, while the Gators were 4 over.

“They finished strong and we didn’t,” Florida coach J.C. Deacon said.

Liberty finished a distant third at 1 over, North Carolina was fourth at 2 over and the University of North Florida fifth at 7 over. Florida and North Carolina are past team champions at the Sea Best Invitational, which is hosted by Jacksonville University.

The Gators swept the top two spots on the leaderboard as freshman Ricky Castillo had a bogey-free 65 to beat junior teammate John Axelsen (68) by three shots at 8-under 202. But another UF player didn’t appear on the board until Chris Nido in a tie for 32nd.

Contrast that with the Aggies’ depth: Walker Lee (68) and William Paysse (72) tied for third at 4-under 206, Erickson (68) tied for eighth at 2 under, Lee (69) tied for 12th at even par and Sam Bennett (69) tied for 19th at 1 over.

Erickson also took the team on his shoulders on the back nine. He was 2 over for the day through 11 holes, then birdied four of his next five.

Deacon was encouraged by his team’s performance, despite not coming through on the final holes. It was the first time the Gators had an under-par team score in a tournament since the 2019 NCAA regionals and it was their best finish since second in their own invitational earlier that season.

Florida had a dismal fall season, not finishing higher than seventh and shooting a cumulative 67-over par in four tournaments.

“I think we showed we’re a better team than that,” said Castillo, whose five birdie putts came on rolls of 8 feet or less.

“It was a step in the right direction,” Deacon said. “We’re disappointed we didn’t close better, but maybe the guys will use that to get even more p—– off.”

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Former Southern Miss golf coach Sam Hall dies at 86

Sam Hall, a Hattiesburg, Mississippi, native who did two stints as the head golf coach at Southern Miss and was accomplished player.

Sam Hall, a Hattiesburg, Mississippi, native who did two different stints as the head golf coach at Southern Miss, passed away Dec. 15 at the age of 86. Hall was an accomplished athlete in his own right, not to mention an accomplished golfer, whose name lives on in the Golden Eagles’ annual Sam Hall Intercollegiate, played at Hattiesburg Country Club.

Hall, born Nov. 27, 1933, lettered on the Southern Miss men’s golf team from 1955-58 and was the No. 1 player on the team all four years. His first stint as men’s golf coach at his alma mater came from 1969-70, and he returned from 1990-2000. He led the women’s golf program from 1992-97.

“Coach Hall is a legend in our university and our golf programs,” said Southern Miss men’s golf coach Eddie Brescher. “He is a man that touched the lives of so many people on and off the golf course. Personally, my family and I are indebted to Coach Hall for paving the way for Southern Miss Golf.

“To have the Hall name associated with our university and our golf programs is something we will forever honor. Our thoughts and prayers are with the Hall family during this difficult time.”

Hall has the distinction of being the only athlete in Hattiesburg High School history to letter in every sport that was offered. His career as an amateur golfer includes more than 300 tournament titles in a span of 50 years. He was a seven-time Mississippi Senior Amateur Champion and a Grand Masters champion in 2004-2005. Hall also competed in the Magnolia Classic on the PGA Tour 10 times and made the cut twice. He competed in the U.S. Senior Open seven times.

Hall was inducted into the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame in 2012, and will go into the Mississippi Golf Association Hall of Fame as part of the 2020 class.

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Pair of collegians soak up Korn Ferry Q-School experience, hoping for breakthrough

Both will have a decision to make if they finish the week among the top 40 and ties and thus lock in guaranteed Korn Ferry starts for 2020.

WINTER GARDEN, Fla. – For many of the players who enter Korn Ferry Tour Qualifying School, a PGA Tour career is a pipe dream. Chandler Eaton uses that phrase to describe a science outreach program he imagines one day developing with his dad Scott, who works as a computer scientist.

Eaton is a Duke senior majoring in environmental science. He and Kansas senior Andy Spencer are the only two amateurs in the 154-man final-stage field of Korn Ferry Tour Q-School. Both will have a decision to make if they finish the week at Orange County National among the top 40 and ties and thus lock in some number of guaranteed starts on the developmental tour for the 2020 season.

Regardless, Eaton plans to finish his degree at Duke. He arrived in Durham, North Carolina, with the goal of playing professionally but also knowing it may not be a sustainable way to live.

“I always worked like I was going to (play professionally), and I still know I’m going to be fine whatever I do,” he said.

KORN FERRY TOUR: Q-school leaderboard

Collegians at Q-School are received differently in men’s and women’s golf, probably because it’s not as popular a path for the men as for the women. Five of the top female players in the nation entered the LPGA Q-Series in October, and all five are headed to the Symetra or LPGA tours at the start of 2020. Stanford got dinged twice in that process, losing a pair of senior All-Americans in Albane Valenzuela and Andrea Lee.

Changes to the PGA Tour’s qualifying structure in 2013 made it much more difficult for a player to come straight out of college and onto the PGA Tour. Matthew Wolff, who won a Tour event 41 days after claiming the NCAA individual title, is the exception. The vast majority of players are funneled up through the Korn Ferry Tour.

Still, the women have the option to defer status they earn at their Q-Series. Eaton wouldn’t mind that route, if it were available to him. He won’t have to turn professional immediately if he does finish among the top 40, but he must do it relatively soon or risk getting lost in the reshuffle that happens after every four events once the 2020 season starts.

There aren’t many ways for an amateur to skip the pre-qualifying and first stages of Q-School, but Eaton got a pass straight to the second stage when he made the cut at the U.S. Open this summer. That was a life-changing week in itself.

“I got a lot of confidence in my game from that, but most importantly I just learned those guys are playing with so much pressure to make a living,” Eaton said. “They are so calm and relaxed and have so much belief in themselves, that was the biggest thing I learned. When things are going bad, just keep believing.”

Eaton and his family viewed this as an opportunity he may not get again. Duke coach Jamie Green agreed, likening Eaton’s situation this week to “playing with house money.”

Eaton becomes his first active player to go through Q-School. As he watches the process unfold, Green acknowledges that a deferment option (allowing a player to pick up the status he earned at the end of the college season without getting lost in reshuffles) would be the best of both worlds – at least from where he’s sitting.

“I think it’s awesome,” Green said of Eaton’s path to final stage. “A couple of people have asked me how I feel about it, and obviously we want the best team with the best players every semester we have a chance, but our team is based on individuals and we care about each one of those guys.

“If this is his dream job, I want him to get it.”

There are different ways to approach Q-School as a college player. Ohio State graduate Will Grimmer did this dance last year as a senior, but only made it as far as second stage.

“When you know that you’re in college and you’ve got a spring semester to fall back on,” Grimmer said, “I think that makes it a lot easier to go out and kind of free-wheel it this week versus guys that are pro and have been grinding out here for six to eight years and know if they don’t play well this week, they don’t have any starts and they don’t have a good alternative to fall back on.”

He’s at final stage as a professional this year.

Braden Thornberry made it to final stage a year ago as a senior at Ole Miss. He finished T-72, which didn’t earn him any guaranteed starts for the 2019 season, but turned professional before the spring season anyway. Thornberry is also back at final stage this week.

“I wouldn’t say there was less pressure last year, obviously there was another option,” he said. “Honestly, that probably made it a little bit tougher. You weren’t fully making up your mind either way, there’s that little bit of doubt – if I finish here what am I going to do. This year, it’s pretty clear cut.”

Spencer, the Kansas senior, played his way to this point from the pre-qualifying stage. After his junior season, the Prairie Village, Kansas, native sought advice from Matt Gogel, a former professional who was a fraternity brother of Spencer’s dad Jeff at Kansas. Gogel thought that, at the very least, the process would be great experience.

Spencer’s family, coach and teammates got on board. Q-School marks the first professional experience Spencer has had outside of the Watson Challenge, a professional event limited to players in Kansas City.

“There’s really no downside to playing,” Spencer said. “Obviously I want the best for my team at KU, but I thought if I was good enough to come out here and do this, might as well give it a shot. I’ve kind of taken the route that I have no pressure, just kind of play free.”

Asked what it would take to turn professional, Spencer said he had the top 40 circled. That would get him guaranteed starts next season.

“If I were able to do that, I’d have to weigh my options and make a pretty tough decision.”

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Substitution, .500 Rule likely to be big topics at college golf coaches convention

Substitution, NCAA regional seeding, the .500 rule and even an NIT-type tournament for college golf will be on the table in Las Vegas.

Next week, the college golf coaching community assembles in Las Vegas for the annual Golf Coaches Association of America and Women’s Golf Coaches Association national conventions.

The one topic that is certain to be discussed is the substitution rule. This past fall, it appeared that substitutions would be permissible during regular-season tournaments, however there was some confusion on exactly how it would work. That resulted in the following announcement being sent to coaches in August:

The Division I Men’s Golf Committee has delayed the implementation of substitutions for regular-season play until the 2020-21 season. The committee is fully supportive of substitutions for regular-season play and will confer with coaches during the 2019-20 season and at the GCAA Convention for implementation. 

How substitution will work when it is finally implemented next fall should be a hot topic in Las Vegas, especially considering that some coaches don’t support the idea.

A few questions must be addressed. For example, will teams be allowed to have individuals competing in the event and will that individual be allowed to be inserted into the lineup as a substitute? Or can a coach only substitute a player who has not yet played that event? Maybe an even bigger question is how substitution will figure into individual rankings.

San Jose State prepares for the 2019 NCAA Women’s Championship at the Blessings Golf Club in Fayetteville, Ark.

Also expect a discussion on NCAA regional sites. Seeding conversations will likely continue around the possibility of awarding hosting opportunities to top seeds, which rewards a team for having a good season.

There has been some chatter in the college-golf world that some coaches would like to see the.500 Rule eliminated in men’s golf. The .500 Rule requires a team to have a head-to-head won-loss record of 50 percent or higher against Division I teams.

The rule was first implemented for the 2007-08 season, and four teams did not meet the requirement that year. As a result, those teams – Arizona, Vanderbilt, Northwestern and Minnesota – all missed out on at-large berths into the NCAA postseason.

Since that initial year, only seven teams total have missed playing in the postseason. For the most part, coaches have figured out how to schedule accordingly.

On the women’s side, .500 Rule conversations continue mostly in the mid-major community. However, it’s doubtful this discussion has any momentum heading into Las Vegas.

My take on the .500 Rule remains unchanged. It has been good for the men’s game and I am in favor of it for both men and women, but it is not necessary.

Duke women’s golf coach Dan Brooks, left, shakes hands with Wake Forest women’s golf coach Kim Lewellen after setting pairings for the final match at the 2019 NCAA Women’s Championship. (AP Photo/Michael Woods)

If there’s another topic that should be discussed at the convention, it would be the addition of a postseason tournament – picture something like the National Invitation Tournament in college basketball.

Why? There are many schools investing in their golf programs, but the reality is many of those schools, which are mid-majors, can’t keep up and compete year after year with teams in the Power Five conferences.

On the women’s side the Power Five schools dominate the NCAA championships, to the tune of 90 percent of the field coming from the Power Five leagues in each of the past four years. It’s just below 80 percent for the past three years on the men’s side.

An NIT for college golf could be a good reward for a program that is investing in the sport. It could provide the opportunity to compete for a championship against programs that are both similarly sized and similarly funded.

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10 best men’s college players of the decade

Adam Woodard breaks down the top 10 male college golfers of the decade plus a few other honorable mentions.

College golf has increasingly become a window into the next generation of PGA Tour stars. It has helped tremendously that the NCAA Championship has been televised since 2014. That brought college stars right into golf fans’ living rooms, showing exactly the level of play that’s out there.

To reflect on the top college players of the past decade is to play a game of “remember them when.” The resumes are deep on these players, and each made a contribution to his team or his program that was beyond meaningful. These players raised the bar in college golf, and showed just how deep the talent pool is.

Here are the top 10 men’s college golfers of the decade followed by a few honorable mentions (in alphabetical order).

Top 10

Patrick Cantlay, UCLA

Patrick Cantlay during the 110th U.S. Amateur at Chambers Bay in University Place, Washington.

Cantlay spent 55 weeks as the No. 1 player in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, a record he held until Jon Rahm broke it in 2016. He turned pro in 2012 after his sophomore season at UCLA, but it was his freshman season that caught the nation’s attention. Cantlay won four events in the 2010-11 season, including the NCAA San Diego Regional, and finished second at the NCAA Championship, where he led the Bruins to match play. In two years Cantlay had 14 top 10 finishes and 24 rounds in the 60s.