Oregon State’s Bandon Dunes title a result of precision and patience

The Bandon Dunes Championship title is maybe the result of a new way of thinking in the Oregon State camp.

Oregon State junior Spencer Tibbits opened the final round of the Bandon Dunes Championship with back-to-back birdies at Pacific Dunes. It started a charge that ended with an eight-shot Oregon State victory on Tuesday, the Beavers’ third team title of the season. Fans across the country saw those birdies on a tournament livestream and Golfstat posted them nearly instantly.

Oregon State head coach Jon Reehorn only knew about them because he got a text from his brother.

“Spencer stuffed it on the first hole,” the first text read.

Then the follow-up, “Spencer stuffed it on the next hole.”

The pull to Golfstat can be strong for a college coach in the heat of a final round. Inhale, exhale, refresh, repeat. If the results are so readily available, why not access them? Reehoorn didn’t succumb because he wanted to honor the message he was sending his players. In fact, he didn’t look at live scoring all week at Bandon Dunes until the 16th hole on Tuesday, but that’s not particularly unusual for Reehoorn. He hardly lives and dies by live scoring.

“I wanted the guys to be about the process so if I was asking them to do it,” he said, “I needed to do it, too.”

Bandon Dunes Championship: Team Leaderboard | Individual

At the end of the day, Reehoorn was proud of his players’ precision – particularly with irons in their hands – and mental toughness. Oregon State took a six-shot lead into the final day and gradually pulled away in the final round for an eight-shot victory at 11 under. Washington (3 under) and Oregon (2 over) were the next closest teams. UCLA junior Devon Bling won the individual title at 5 under.

The Bandon Dunes title is maybe the result of a new way of thinking in the Oregon State camp. The Beavers won twice in the fall, including at their home event. Expectations went up.

“I think it just kind of meant a little too much for us the first two events and even for myself,” Reehoorn said. “The last 10 days in practice, I really just tried to get the guys to focus on their process, understanding what makes them play their best golf and be about that.”

The Bandon Dunes victory could revive Oregon State’s season. Ranked No. 26 after the fall, Oregon State dropped to No. 45 after finishing 17th at the Amer Ari in Hawaii and T-11 at the Prestige. With postseason approaching, it will offer a big boost, anyway.

Reehoorn hand-picked his entire lineup for Bandon Dunes, which is something he’s never done in more than a decade coaching. It was another move designed to make his team less fixated on results.

In the fall, everyone qualifies. A top-20 finish typically exempts a player into the lineup for the next event. But Reehoorn remembers playing college golf (initially, as a walk-on) at Washington State and struggling with that concept.

“I was a horrible qualifier. Once I got in the lineup, I never really left the lineup and my coach trusted in me so he just always kept me in there. That’s kind of always stuck with me.”

On the other hand, his mentor Matt Thurmond, the head coach at Arizona State (under whom Reehoorn coached during a stint as an assistant at Washington), decides every spot through qualifying. Reehoorn had tried to find a happy medium between those approaches.

“The reason we went with all picks was because I knew we needed to play well, but I also really felt like the guys needed to stop worrying about their score and just go play golf,”  he said.

Every man delivered at Bandon. Three players finished in the top 5 and all five starters were in the top 34.

Freshman Jackson Lake, who struggled to break into the lineup in the fall, delivered a tie for 18th in just his second time out as a starter. Reehoorn thought Lake might pan out like he once did – get in the lineup and never leave. Lake struggled to an opening 77 at last month’s Prestige but backed it up with rounds of 66-69.

“Once he did that, he’s become a guy we can count on and that’s been huge for us.”

As for Tibbits, a major factor for the Beavers, most of Tuesday was spent with a camera close by. Reehoorn thinks he played better because of it. The reigning Oregon Amateur champion qualified for the U.S. Open last summer and missed the cut at Pebble Beach by one shot.

“I think Spencer has a game that he can play on really difficult golf courses.”

Oregon State, as a whole, can do difficult things, too.

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Oregon State will take six-shot lead into final round at Bandon Dunes Championship

After two rounds at Bandon Dunes Resort’s Pacific Dunes Course, the Beavers lead the Bandon Dunes Championship by six shots.

Oregon State is on familiar turf this week in the Pacific Northwest. After two rounds at Bandon Dunes Resort’s Pacific Dunes Course, the Beavers lead the Bandon Dunes Championship by six shots. Oregon State, at 10 under, is the only team that has made it to double-digits under par at this point, but Oregon is close behind at 4 under.

Both teams posted 7-under 277 in the second round.

“Overall another really good job by the team today,” Oregon State coach Jon Reehoorn said. “We had some moments where we ran into some trouble, but they were not fazed by it and responded really nice.

“We’ve been in this position on a few occasions this year, and the message to the team will be to simply do what we do.”

Bandon Dunes Championship: Team Leaderboard | Individual

The Beavers won twice this fall, including at their own event at Trysting Tree Golf Club in Corvallis. This spring, Oregon State’s road has been as difficult as anyone’s. Starts at the Amer Ari and the Prestige preceded the trip to Bandon Dunes.

Oregon State is No. 45 in the Golfweek/Sagarin Rankings.

Sophomore Carson Barry, the reigning Idaho Amateur champion and a PNGA Amateur semifinalist, is 4 under through 36 holes and only one shot off the lead. He’s sandwiched by familiar names. UCLA junior Devon Bling, runner-up at the 2019 U.S. Amateur, is 5 under and among three players tied for first. That group also includes Utah’s Axel Einarsson and Seattle’s Nathan Cogswell.

UCLA is seventh in the team race at 10 over.

A five-man group at 2 under (T-7) includes San Jose State senior Sean Yu, who last month teed it up at the Genesis Invitational after earning an exemption in a Monday collegiate showcase. Yu eagled his opening hole on Monday, the par-5 12th. His 6-under 65 was the best score from any player in the second round.

Oregon State junior Spencer Tibbits is also part of that tie for seventh. Tibbits, who qualified for the U.S. Open last summer, finished no worse than T-3 individually in three full-field fall starts, including a T-1 at the Husky Invitational to start the year.

Tibbits most recently finished T-21 at the Prestige.

The tournament concludes on Wednesday, and the final round will be live-streamed on Golfweek.com.


BANDON DUNES CHAMPIONSHIP: Watch the final round LIVE on Tuesday, March 10. Part of College Golf Live’s 2020 Spring Series.


 

Event info, players to watch at the 2020 Bandon Dunes Championship

Everything you need to know for the 2020 Bandon Dunes Championship.

A pair of top-25 teams highlight the field bound for Oregon this week to tee it up at one of the most-popular destination golf resorts in the country.

The University of Idaho and Tom Doak’s Pacific Dunes course play host this week for the 2020 Bandon Dunes Championship, March 8-10. Defending champion Utah, No. 14 Washington, No. 23 UCLA and three more members of the Pac-12 lead the 14-team field.

Golfweek will livestream the final-round coverage as part of College Golf Live’s 2020 Spring Series. You can watch PGA Tour veteran Ricky Barnes and Ben Lyons call the final round at Golfweek.com/BandonDunes2020 from 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. ET.

Here’s everything you need to know for the Bandon Dunes Championship.

Men’s college rankings: Team | Individual

Where

Bandon Dunes Golf Resort, Pacific Dunes course. Bandon, Oregon.

Schedule

March 8-10. 54-hole tournament, 18 holes each day.

Field

Idaho, Oregon, Oregon State, Denver, Cal Baptist, Washington, Washington State, Seattle, San Jose State, Fresno State, Seton Hall, Northern Colorado, UCLA, Kansas, Boise State and Utah

Players to watch

Devon Bling, junior, UCLA

Loves the big moments at the best courses. Coming off a strong showing at the loaded Southern Highlands Collegiate where he shot 4-under 68 during the final round to finish third.

Noah Woolsey, junior, Washington

No. 14 Washington’s best player. Woolsey has four top-five finishes this season, including three individual wins.

Blake Tomlinson, junior, Utah

It’s a different course from last year, but the event’s defending individual champion returns with fond memories of his win in 2019.

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