Alabama unveils $47 million Crimson Reserve golf training facility: ‘It’s the talk of college golf’

“We hear the word ‘sick’ a lot.”

What do top recruits think of Alabama golf’s new practice facility?

“We hear the word ‘sick’ a lot,” cracked UA men’s golf coach Jay Seawell, referring to teenager-speak to describe something wildly impressive. So what’s so sick about Crimson Reserve, a $47 million project off that was constructed in under two years? Outdoors, the Crimson Tide men’s and women’s teams will have a 9-hole course and a large practice area for driving, short-game and putting. Indoors, the men and women will have separate lounges and locker rooms, hitting bays, swing technology and more.

UA Director of Athletics Greg Byrne, Seawell, women’s coach Mic Potter and other UA officials led a tour of the facility on Friday.

“It’s the talk of college golf,” Byrne said.

The indoor facility is 18,000 square feet, and houses coaches offices, workout facilities, and various areas for players, including hitting bays with swing technology, and mechanical putting greens controlled by a tablet that can be contoured different ways for slope effect. Garage-style lift doors open indoor hitting bays to the outdoor range, which will allow players to stay dry while hitting in rain or other weather conditions. Potter and Seawell both said it’s very uncommon for college programs to have a dedicated facility that isn’t shared with a country club or municipal club.

“Exclusive use doesn’t happen very often,” Potter said.

“It’s the greatest practice facility in the world, and I don’t think there’s a close (second),” Seawell said. “There’s a good place down in Augusta that wishes it was more like this.”

The walls are covered with photos of former Alabama golf greats, as well as group photos of championship teams. According to Seawell, some of those greats, including 15-time PGA Tour winner Justin Thomas, helped design the facility. Seawell said Thomas hasn’t seen the finished construction yet, and is looking forward to giving him the tour.

Here’s a look at more college golf practice facilities.

Photos: Crimson Reserve at Alabama

Tyler Lipscomb leads Alabama to victory at Blessings Collegiate Invitational

Lipscomb rolled in birdies in each of the first three holes as Alabama took the men’s team title at the Blessings.

Alabama’s Tyler Lipscomb finished off the second round of the Blessings Collegiate Invitational with a 20-footer for a crucial par. It was just a sign of things to come.

Lipscomb, a 2018 Rolex Junior All-American who’s now in his sophomore season with the Tide golf team, rolled in birdies in each of the first three holes, making the turn at 2 under and then cruising home to a team-best 72 as Alabama took the men’s team title, giving coach Jay Seawell’s team its first team event since the Shoal Creek Invitational in April 2019.

Davis Shore added a 73 while Wilson Furr pitched in a 74 for the winners at Blessings Golf Club in Fayetteville, Arkansas.

Kentucky’s Alex Goff struggled a bit, finishing with a 76 as he bogeyed No. 17 and then tripled No. 18, but he still took the individual title with a score 210.

Leaderboard: Blessings Collegiate Invitational

Host Arkansas had the hottest hand in the third and final round, combining for a score of one over on the day, but still finished three behind second-place Tennessee. The host Razorbacks were led by Julian Perico, who carded a one-under 71 while Tyson Reeder added an even-par 72.

Tennessee was the one team that appeared within range of catching Alabama and while Hunter Wolcott (71) and Bryce Lewis (72) shined for the Vols, the bottom half of the five-person team didn’t fare as well, with two players failing to crack 80. Wolcott finished in a tie for second in the individual scoring with a three-day total of 212, which tied Texas A&M’s Dan Erickson.

Jack Parrott of South Carolina fired a 70 to lead the Gamecocks, who finished fourth on the strength of a 4-over 282 on Wednesday.

In a final-hole blitz, Alabama extends lead to three at Blessings Collegiate Invitational

Alabama will take a three-shot lead into the final round of the Blessings Collegiate Invitational on Wednesday.

As soon as the fall college golf season became a reality in the SEC, Jay Seawell was thinking about competition.

“We’re going to compete as much as possible,” Seawell told Golfweek in September, shortly after Crimson Tide players had returned to Tuscaloosa but before the conference had announced its three-season schedule (of conference-only events).

“Scorebards, inner-squads, guys teeing it up in events, 54 holes even if it’s only 10 guys on our squad. I do think it’s very important to re-energize the competitive gene in them.”

Consider it energized. Alabama will take a three-shot lead into the final round of the Blessings Collegiate Invitational. The Tide went 6 under as a team on Tuesday at Blessings Golf Club in Fayetteville, Arkansas, jumping three spots up the leaderboard.

Leaderboard: Blessings Collegiate Invitational

“We made some putts today. It was great. Any time you play well, you putt well,” Seawell told Golf Channel at dusk after coming off the course as one of the final groups. “This place is so hard and pretty and it really does almost feel like a U.S. Open. You gotta be resilient.”

At Blessings, teams are playing all together in groups of five. Attitudes can go either way in that scenario, as Seawell pointed out. He had a meeting before the tournament to address it.

Alabama demonstrated their cohesion on the 18th green.

First, Davis Shore holed out from a bunker for birdie, his fourth on the back nine to end at 1-under 71. Then Thomas Ponder made a 30-footer for a closing birdie and a 71 of his own. Tyler Lipscomb completed the trifecta by making a 20-foot putt for par for the Tide’s best score, a 3-under 69.

Alabama also counted a 71 from Wilson Furr.

Without mixed-team pairings, Alabama won’t have any kind of look at what their chasers are doing on Wednesday as they try to finish off a team title – what would be the Tide’s first since the Shoal Creek Invitational in April 2019.

“That’s the great thing about golf,” Seawell said. “You don’t play defense anyway.”

Tennessee and Kentucky are right behind Alabama on the leaderboard. Tennessee swung from 8 under on Monday to 7 over on Tuesday and Kentucky slid a spot with a 1-over 289 in the second round – just one shot worse than its opening effort. They are second and third on the leaderboard, respectively, at 1 under and 1 over.

Kentucky’s Alex Goff leads the individual race at 10 under, a number aided significantly by his second-round 65. Goff made six birdies on the front nine (he started on No. 10), including four in a row from Nos. 2-5.

With men’s and women’s teams teeing it up at Blessings, there is also a program trophy to be awarded at the end of the week. Arkansas, the host, leads the race for that title with Alabama landing at No. 7, squarely in the middle of the pack.

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