Oklahoma, Oklahoma State take advantage of early wave to start the scoring at the NCAA Championship

Easier conditions led to lower scores on Saturday at the men’s national championship.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — After the first round of play at the 2022 NCAA Div. I Men’s Golf Championship, just seven players and zero teams were under par. Just 12 hours later the tale of the title race is vastly different.

In the second round’s morning wave alone there were nine players in the clubhouse under par on the day, as well as two teams.

Nobody was better than the top-ranked Oklahoma Sooners, who shot 5 under as a squad to move into first place on the team leaderboard. The boys from Norman were led by redshirt senior Chris Gotterup, who rose to T-6 on the individual leaderboard with a 4-under 66. The transfer from Rutgers was bogey-free through his first 14 holes, with his lone blemish coming on the par-4 15th.

“You know, I got off to a really good start compared to yesterday, when I got off to a really bad start,” explained Gotterup. “So that’s kind of what I talked about with coach, about getting ready to get off to a hot start and I did that. If you can get into a good spot early on this course, it’s a little stress-free. But if you’re in a bad spot, it can really get you.”

“To be honest with you, we started out not great and really kicked into high gear whenever we made the turn. We made some big birdies over here on 9, 10 and 11,” added head coach Ryan Hybl, who noted how Saturday’s second-round pin locations were more favorable compared to the first round. “Patrick Welch and Drew Goodman out front, they got some momentum going, (Chris Gotterup) just looked like he was playing kind of solid all day long, same thing with Logan (McAllister) as well. Just played really good golf all day.”

The Sooners’ not-so-friendly neighbors to the north in Stillwater had a solid round, as well. The Oklahoma State Cowboys were the second-best team in the morning, going 3 under as a team to climb into the top five. The Cowboys were propelled by senior Aman Gupta, who shot the low round of the morning at 5-under 65 thanks to a four birdie, bogey-free back nine.

“Hit it in the junk on No. 4 and made bogey, three-putted No. 5 and I was like, ‘Wow, I’m 5 over on the leaderboard right now, I better start doing something,'” said Gupta of his 2-over through five start. He proceeded to “stuff it'” on Nos. 7-11 where he made five consecutive birdies and added a pair on Nos. 14 and 15 as well. “It was just one of those things where as long as I trusted what I was doing and didn’t try to overthink it and just didn’t get too caught up in where I stood that it was gonna be a pretty good day, and it was really good.”

The star of the day was Wake Forest’s Alex Fitzpatrick, who was a late sub from the first-round lineup due to a stomach bug. He only played a few holes during Thursday’s practice round and didn’t feel like he could play a full 18 on Friday. After a couple days of rest, the senior was back in the lineup on Saturday and immediately made his presence felt with the week’s first bogey-free round, a 5-under 65 to match Gupta.

“I can’t say I feel 100% which I know is probably silly after the round I just played but still, I had had some food on the course my stomach still wasn’t feeling great, but felt like I needed to play and glad I got it worked out,” said Fitzpatrick of his round, which will assuredly be one of few without a bogey this week at the tricky track in the desert.

“I think your I discipline has got to be pretty good around here,” said Fitzpatrick, who missed just one fairway and used mostly irons off the tee. “I think a lot of guys will try to overpower the course with 3-woods and drivers. I mean, I didn’t hit a driver until No. 11.”

With Fitzpatrick’s 5 under not counting in the race for an individual title due to his first-round WD, Vanderbilt’s Cole Sherwood sits in first place at 3 under, followed by teammate Gordon Sargent and Gupta at 2 under. Gotterup and Liberty’s Kieran Vincent are T-4 at 1 under.

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Haskins Award: Finalists for men’s college player of the 2021-22 season

Meet the finalists in the running for men’s college player of the year.

The postseason is underway in college golf, and after last week’s NCAA Regionals, the NCAA Division I Men’s Championship field is set for May 27-June 1 at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Arizona.

With that championship field set, the race for the Haskins Award is wide open and white-hot. A handful of players have shone throughout the season as front-runners for the Haskins Award, which honors the player of the year in men’s college golf, as selected by college golfers, coaches and members of the college golf media.

The players are listed alphabetically. Players on the Haskins Award Watch List were selected by a panel of Golfweek and Golf Channel writers.

Golfweek/Sagarin Rankings: Men’s team | Men’s individual

College Performers of the Week powered by Rapsodo: Chris Gotterup, Oklahoma

Chris Gotterup went 20 under par to win the Puerto Rico Classic and lead Oklahoma to the team title.

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Chris Gotterup is the new No. 1 player in the Golfweek/Sagarin College Rankings after a 20-under performance at the Puerto Rico Classic that left him with his second consecutive individual title of the season. Gotterup closed out the fall by winning the East Lake Cup.

Gotterup, a fifth-year senior who transferred from Rutgers to Oklahoma for his final year of college eligibility, fired rounds of 66-64-66 at Grand Reserve Golf Club in Rio Grande, Puerto Rico. That left him with a four-shot victory and also earned him a spot in the PGA Tour’s Puerto Rico Open in two weeks.

The New Jersey native is Oklahoma’s leading scorer, and his rounds went a long way in helping the Sooners secure the Puerto Rico team title at an impressive 59-under par.

Gotterup didn’t have a bogey over the course of his final two rounds. His 54-hole total is the second lowest in program history, trailing only Abe Ancer’s 21-under total at the 2011 Desert Shootout.

“Chris played amazing all week just like he has been back home,” Oklahoma head coach Ryan Hybl said in a release. “We’re so proud of him for winning this week and securing the PGA Tour spot in two weeks down here on this course.”

Golfweek/Sagarin Rankings: Men’s team | Men’s individual
College golf blog: The Road to Grayhawk

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Oklahoma men break program scoring record at Puerto Rico Classic; Chris Gotterup earns PGA Tour exemption

Gotterup earned an exemption in next month’s Puerto Rico Open.

A handful of teams have staked a claim as the nation’s best in the early goings of the Spring college season, most recently the Oklahoma Sooners in Puerto Rico.

On Tuesday the No. 3-ranked Sooners broke a program scoring record in relation to par with their 59-under total at the Puerto Rico Classic. Oklahoma won its third event of the spring after a 20-under performance as a team in the final round at Grand Reserve Golf Club in Rio Grande, Puerto Rico. The squad also made a program record 80 birdies over the 54 holes of play.

“Just a great week all around for us,” said head coach Ryan Hybl after his 32nd win at the helm. “We have been excited just to get back on the road and this group has great chemistry. We had some great rounds all week long and we knew we had to keep the pedal down today. There’s nothing better than having the low final round and we’ll keep building from there.”

Georgia finished runner-up at 53 under, followed by Tennessee in third at 47 under. Purdue finished fourth at 46 under, with Michigan State wrapping up the top five at 41 under.

College golf blog: The Road to Grayhawk

Oklahoma senior Chris Gotterup claimed the individual title at 20 under, four shots clear of Georgia’s Maxwell Ford and Tennessee’s Bryce Lewis. The win also earns Gotterup an exemption in the PGA Tour’s Puerto Rico Open, March 3-6.

“Chris played amazing all week just like he has been back home,” Hybl added. “We’re so proud of him for winning this week and securing the PGA Tour spot in two weeks down here on this course.”

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Chris Gotterup sets the pace on opening day of the Jones Cup

Chris Gotterup mixed six birdies in with two bogeys to navigate his way to the top of a loaded field of collegians, juniors and mid-amateurs

There weren’t any particular fireworks to speak of in Chris Gotterup’s opening round of the Jones Cup Invitational on Friday, but a round of 4-under 68 at Ocean Forest Golf Club in Sea Island, Georgia was enough to leave the Rutgers junior with the reins on the opening day of the first major amateur event of 2020.

Gotterup mixed six birdies in with two bogeys to navigate his way to the top of a field loaded with the top collegians, juniors and mid-amateurs in the country. The Little Silver, New Jersey native got hot in the middle of his round, logging five of his six birdies from Nos. 6 to 14. A bogey at the par-3 15th condensed his lead from two shots to one.

Leaderboard: Jones Cup Invitational

Julien Sale, a senior at Arkansas State, opened with a birdie but immediately gave it back with a bogey at his second hole. He ended the day with 3-under 67, good for solo second.

Sale led the Red Wolves in scoring this fall as they charted a rise to the No. 39 spot in the Golfweek/Sagarin College Rankings.

Only seven other players broke par on Friday at Ocean Forest, making it a relatively tight squeeze at the top of the leaderboard. Perhaps none of those men has unfinished business at the Jones Cup quite like Davis Thompson, a St. Simons Island, Georgia native – and the University of Georgia’s leading scorer this fall. He opened with 2-under 70.

A year ago, Thompson was tied with Akshay Bhatia after 36 holes when torrential rain wiped out the final round. He and Bhatia went to the par-4 first hole for sudden death, but Bhatia made quick work of him when Thompson put his drive in the water and made bogey.

In the year since, Thompson has won an NCAA Regional, finished at the top of Western Amateur stroke play, won another college title and played the RSM Classic on the PGA Tour, finishing in the top 25.

The group of seven men tied for 10th at even includes several notables, among them U.S. Amateur runner-up John Augenstein, a Vanderbilt senior. Oklahoma senior Quade Cummins, winner of this summer’s Pacific Coast Amateur, is also on that number as well as 2018 Jones Cup champion Garrett Barber and U.S. Amateur semifinalist Cohen Trolio, a high-school junior from West Point, Mississippi.

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