Forecaddie: With NCAAs on hold, Grayhawk must wait for its chance to shine

The Forecaddie writes instead of preparing to host the first of three NCAA championships, Grayhawk Golf Club sits while coronavirus rages.

Welcome to the college golf twilight zone.

Instead of spending the spring doubling down in preparation for conference championships, college golfers were packing boxes and headed home. The Forecaddie wasn’t surprised to hear many players say they hadn’t touched a golf club in days, the general consensus being that with no tournaments on the horizon, what is there to prepare for?

After tournaments began toppling like dominoes, it wasn’t long until the biggest fell. The NCAA announced March 12 that it would cancel all its winter and spring championships.

In Scottsdale, Arizona, where Grayhawk Golf Club was set to start a three-year hosting commitment for the NCAA championships, organizers were on pins and needles. Preparations – logistics, personnel, infrastructure – had been rolling for months. The cancellation was met with disappointment but understanding.

Del Cochran, captain of the club at Grayhawk, says college golf fans are in for a treat whenever the NCAA championships do arrive. Over the past several months, Cochran and a planning crew of at least 25 to 30 people have worked to iron out the nuances of hosting a major event – one that has its own unique stamp.

“If you do your job correctly, the enthusiasm grows, your event gains in stature and the excitement around it continues to increase so that by year three, you’ve got a different event than you started out with, just because you have a system in place with the marketing presence and with a community that is now beginning to support it,” Cochran said.

That said, Cochran hopes Grayhawk will still get its three-year hosting opportunity. The local commitment is there despite the fact that the two-week NCAA hosting block falls at the end of Scottsdale’s high season. Cochran expects Grayhawk will get some play back now that the tee sheet is empty at the end of May.

The college golf world will see Grayhawk again, but the seniors? There’s a much larger asterisk there.

The Man Out Front gives kudos to the NCAA for answering a most pressing question relatively quickly. Less than 24 hours after the NCAA postseason was canceled, the organization clarified that athletes competing in spring sports would get additional eligibility. It’s just that things have yet to get much clearer than that.

The Forecaddie’s head was spinning after scanning a memo sent to NCAA member schools acknowledging the extraordinary situation that left college seniors’ golf careers abruptly kaput. It would be appropriate, the NCAA wrote, to grant additional eligibility while it also recognized that several issues still need to be addressed, financial aid implications among them.

TMOF couldn’t agree more. For college seniors, it presents both a beacon of hope and an agonizing decision. At the very least, it’s an opportunity for closure. Gwk

This story originally appeared in Issue 2 – 2020 of Golfweek magazine. Click here to subscribe.

NCAA cancels all spring, winter championships due to coronavirus outbreak

Due to the coronavirus outbreak, the NCAA has cancelled all winter and spring championship events.

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The Duke women and Stanford men will have to wait another year to defend their 2019 NCAA golf titles.

On Thursday afternoon, in the wake of countless professional sports organizations and college conferences cancelling their respective tournaments and shutting down athletic competitions and practices due to the coronavirus outbreak, the NCAA followed suit.

The NCAA has announced the cancellation of not just March Madness – the Division I men’s and women’s basketball tournaments – but all winter and spring NCAA championship events.

The women’s golf NCAA Championship was slated for May 22-27, with the men the following week May 29-June 3 at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Arizona.

Per the NCAA release:

Today, NCAA President Mark Emmert and the Board of Governors canceled the Division I men’s and women’s 2020 basketball tournaments, as well as all remaining winter and spring NCAA championships. This decision is based on the evolving COVID-19 public health threat, our ability to ensure the events do not contribute to spread of the pandemic, and the impracticality of hosting such events at any time during this academic year given ongoing decisions by other entities.

Keep up with all the golf tournaments being cancelled and postponed here

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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.

NCAA announces course access changes ahead of three-year run at Grayhawk

In light of the championships receiving a three-year home, NCAA golf committees have announced changes to their open course access policy.

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The NCAA Division I Men’s and Women’s Golf Championships begin a three-year stay at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Arizona, this spring. In light of the championships receiving a permanent home – and a permanent host in Arizona State – at least for the short term, the NCAA has announced changes to its open-course access policy.

For the 2020 championships, the current access policy prohibits student-athletes and coaches from walking, playing or practicing at the championship finals course (i.e., practice facilities and any additional golf course at the venue) beginning Aug. 1 of the championship academic year. Any student-athlete or coach who is a member of the course – or competing in a sanctioned event at the course (such as through a USGA even or state amateur events) – is exempt.

A violation of that policy could result in sanctions listed under the NCAA misconduct provisions or disqualification for a team or an individual(s), with no substitution permitted.

That policy changes for the 2021 and 2022 championships, however. The NCAA will allow all schools to have access to Grayhawk beginning July 1 of 2020 and 2021 and continuing through April 30 of 2021 and 2022. No teams or individuals, including the host school, Arizona State, will be allowed at the site from May 1 through June 30 of 2021 and 2022.

It’s a move designed to limit the home-course advantage for the host teams. Any team that can get to the course throughout the allotted playing window can play it.

The 2020 NCAA Championships will be played May 22-27 (women) and May 29-June 3 (men). The 2021 dates are May 21-26 and May 28-June 2, and 2022 dates are May 20-25 and May 27-June 1.

This is the first time the NCAA has awarded one venue consecutive championships.

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