Palmer Cup: Newbie pros return to compete in college golf’s Ryder Cup

Four players at the Arnold Palmer Cup have already crossed the threshold from amateur to pro golf. The team event makes a nice final hurrah.

Allyson Geer, together with her husband Nick, is hosting family Christmas this year at their house back in Michigan. She’s the only player in this week’s Palmer Cup who will return home to that responsibility.

Thankfully, Geer, who recently completed her four-year career at Michigan State, is getting a major assist with the cooking.

Geer’s mom Andrea is “four days deep” into making lasagna, traditional fare for the Geer family. Italian heritage means it’s real-deal lasagna, too. Homemade noodles and everything.

“It’s a very secret family recipe,” Geer explains.

Geer is in Florida competing at the Arnold Palmer Cup, a Ryder Cup-style event for college golfers. Geer, however, has left that stage behind.

There wasn’t a lot of noise mid-summer when Geer turned professional. She entered the Michigan Women’s Open field in late June without the usual “a” next her name and eventually her name was dropped from the World Amateur Golf Ranking. Geer has since set up an LLC for a budding professional career and spent the summer working with Backswing Golf Events. She’ll plan to enter LPGA Q-School in 2021.

“I’m just kind of enjoying this time to be a pro and a little bit of a gypsy before I start the real gypsy life,” she said.

Turning pro meant giving up her return trip to the Augusta National Women’s Amateur. Truly, her 2019 turn in the field will be a once-in-a-lifetime memory. Still, the time felt right.

Geer’s partner on Tuesday afternoon in mixed foursomes for the Palmer Cup just returned from Augusta. John Augenstein garnered some airtime in November as he battled Andy Ogletree for low-amateur honors. Augenstein finished 72 holes at 3 over, three shots behind Ogletree in that race.

The next day, Augenstein announced he would forego the remainder of his fifth year at Vanderbilt in favor of turning professional.

“All semester coming back to school, there was always a good chance that I was going to turn pro after the Masters,” he said. “It’s hard to sometimes explain, but it just felt like it was the right time.”

It’s atypical for “newbie” pros to tee it up in the Palmer Cup. Traditionally, these co-ed college matches – which pit 12 Americans against 12 international players – happen in the summer. The 2020 competition was scheduled for Lahinch Golf Club in Ireland in July, but like just about everything else, the Golf Coaches Association had to improvise in pushing them right up against the holiday and relocating them to Bay Hill in Orlando. They also allowed players to compete who had already turned professional, like Geer and Augenstein.

“I decided to play this week because it’s an honor to make the team. . . . I’m thankful for making the team and being able to play,” Augenstein said, “and so I wanted to honor my acceptance of playing the tournament. Also it gives me some competitive golf to see where I’m at going forward.”

He’ll next play the American Express, the PGA Tour event in Palm Springs, California, in late January on a sponsor exemption.

Geer and Augenstein lost their fourball match on the opening day of the Palmer Cup, but redeemed themselves with a win in mixed foursomes on Tuesday afternoon.

Zach Zediker and Jaime Jacob
Zach Zediker and Jaime Jacob

Four groups behind them, former Delta State player Zach Zediker and former Cal State San Marcos player Jaime Jacob paired against Yuxin Lin and Angelina Ye. Jacob was excited to hit short irons into greens for a change thanks for Zediker’s length off the tee, and Zediker liked his partner’s prowess on approach shots.

Zediker turned professional in September and Jacob did so in early November. Both have already cashed their first checks as working golfers.

Traditionally, select players are chosen to represent non-Division I golf at the Palmer Cup. Neither Zediker nor Jacob, who both competed at the NCAA Division II level, take that responsibility lightly.

“People don’t think those are big shoes to fill, but they’re big shoes to fill,” Jacob said before pointing out that Zediker had gotten it to 5 under through 15 already this week. “I think walking into this people kind of discount us for that. … We are nothing to let your guard down on.”

When she arrived at Bay Hill and opened the suitcase full of gear she received for the week, she was blown away. Jacob is close friends with other women who have competed on the Palmer Cup – former Arkansas player Alanna Uriell, who played in 2018 and Ann Parmeter, a former Dallas Baptist player who edged Jacob for selection to last year’s team.

Parmeter gave Jacob the rundown before the week of what to expect, but none of that did it justice.

“If I’d known this was what I was walking into, I probably would have started crying when I found out,” she said.

It’s a rare opportunity to represent your country on a national team. When Zediker learned he’d made the team, he couldn’t wait to break the news to his dad.

“Not everybody gets to do this,” Zediker said.

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Days after Masters glory, Andy Ogletree and John Augenstein have plans to turn pro

The only two amateurs to play the weekend at the Masters have both announced that they will begin pro careers immediately.

Andy Ogletree and John Augenstein put on a memorable 35-hole battle in 2019 for the U.S. Amateur title at Pinehurst Resort. Weeks later, they teamed in foursomes at the Walker Cup for the victorious Americans. More than a year after that, they were the only two amateurs standing on the weekend at the Masters.

Now, they’re on their way to professional careers.

Ogletree, the 22-year-old who had a standout four-year career at Georgia Tech, earned low amateur honors at the Masters with his 2-under performance for four rounds. He announced on Nov. 19 that he would turn professional and pursue a PGA Tour career. Augenstein, the 23-year-old who came back for an extra semester at Vanderbilt this fall, announced a similar decision on Monday.

Augenstein returned to Vanderbilt this fall to take advantage of an extra season of eligibility after the COVID-19 pandemic shortened the 2019-20 season in March. He teed it up in two of three fall tournaments with the Commodores, and his college golf swan song turned out to be his runner-up finish at the Vanderbilt Legends Collegiate in October.

The Owensboro, Kentucky, native had secured his spot on the end-of-fall Haskins Award Watch List and was fourth in the PGA Tour University standings, a new ranking that helps collegians launch a pro career.

“First of all, I am very excited for John as he embarks on his new journey as a professional golfer,” Vanderbilt head coach Scott Limbaugh said in a school release. “John’s decision did not catch any of us by surprise. As he has been throughout his career, he was very transparent with all of us from the beginning that this could be a possibility. John is physically and mentally ready and prepared to start this new chapter in his life.”

Ogletree, of Little Rock, Mississippi, revealed his decision to turn professional on Nov. 19, an announcement that corresponded with him signing on with Rock Sports Group for management.

“My amateur golf career was an absolute blast and last week at the Masters is the perfect way for it to end,” Ogletree said. “I’ve had so much fun, met so many great people and have so many incredible memories, but it’s time for me to test my game at the next level, against the best of the best.”

“The game has taken me to so many special places already. I cannot wait to see where it will take me in the future.”

Ogletree played in three PGA Tour events this year and two majors – the U.S. Open in addition to the Masters. His best finish in those five pro starts came at the Masters, where he was 34th. Ogletree was ranked No. 4 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking when he turned professional.

Ogletree begins his professional career with five sponsors: Titleist, International Golf Logistics, Peter Millar, New South Ford in Meridian, MS, and Southern Pipe & Supply, also in Meridian.

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Masters: John Augenstein authors a surge for the amateurs before a stumble

John Augenstein made a statement for the amateurs on Friday at the Augusta National.

Before arriving at Augusta National for the 84th Masters, John Augenstein had certainly done his homework. The 23-year-old, who returned this season for a fifth year at Vanderbilt, made five scouting trips to Augusta, Georgia.

Augenstein, of Owensboro, Kentucky, sought tips from Webb Simpson, with whom his caddie William Kane is a friend, and Justin Thomas, another Kentucky native. He practiced shots from every kind of non-flat lie you could find.

And early in the Masters, it showed.

At one point on Friday, Augenstein was 6 under and only two shots off the lead. He only made it through 12 holes of his first round on Thursday, and came back Friday morning to play the remaining six holes. Right out of the gate, he made eagle on No. 13.

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Augenstein faced 215 yards to the green on No. 13 and choked a 4-iron. He caught it a little thin and watched it roll back to a collection area near the green, leaving an easy chip – which he holed.

“Obviously you never know you’re going to make it, but I felt pretty good about getting it up and down and just kind of came off right and caught the right edge and went in,” he said.

The Vandy star cruised home with pars for a 3-under 69 that set up Friday afternoon’s surge.

Augenstein rolled right into his second round. Starting on the 10th, he made three bogeys on the back nine. A bogey on No. 5 and a double-bogey on No. 7, however, provided a major setback. After one final birdie on No. 8, Augenstein signed for a 72.

Oh, what could have been. But also, what still might be.

Augenstein was still 1 under through 36 holes, and by mid-afternoon Friday, was the only one of the six amateurs under par. That had him inside the projected cutline.

Even after the completion of his first round, Augenstein was preparing for the golf course to become more and more difficult. And Augenstein has never shied away from difficult things. He is a player known for his toughness in a head-to-head format, which is exactly what got him to Augusta. He won five of six matches at the 2019 U.S. Amateur, losing only to Andy Ogletree.

“It’s going to be warm this afternoon and no rain for the next three days it looks like,” Augenstein said of Augusta National in the short break between his first two rounds. “So I would imagine it gets a little tougher each day. Pleased with how I played but left some out there but also made a couple.”

In preparing to play the Masters, Augenstein told Golfweek he didn’t really have a major revelation.

“It’s a big golf course that ideally, you kind of want to hit it as far as you can on most holes,” he said. “I think it bodes well for me, a pretty long player. Everybody is pretty long nowadays.

“In the fairway is obviously a premium at all times, being able to control the ball going into the greens is very important.”

Augenstein works with instructor Matt Killen, who has much experience preparing players for Augusta. For the past several months, the two have focused primarily on shot shaping. It’s something Augenstein loves to do.

“It’s just been good practice because I think it’s going to bode well for me when I’m there,” he told Golfweek before Masters week. “On top of all of that it is golf and at the end of the day, I feel very prepared for what I’m getting ready to go into. But by the same token, it’s all about getting the ball in the hole in as little shots as possible.”

Yet to be determined? Whether Augenstein will get a chance to make a little more noise over the weekend.

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For Masters first-timers, the lack of a Par 3 Contest doesn’t diminish a week at Augusta National

Amid a year of lost traditions, the par-3 course at Augusta National will be awfully quiet on Wednesday. First-timers took it in stride.

Amid a year of lost traditions, the par-3 course at Augusta National will be awfully quiet on Wednesday afternoon. Normally, Wednesday is the day players let loose, put a significant other on the bag – or track down tiny caddie bibs for their kids – and hit a few trick shots around the par-3 course on the northeast corner of the property.

Lanto Griffin is playing his first Masters this week after qualifying courtesy of his 2019 Houston Open win. He started thinking about Masters Wednesday shortly after.

“It’s weird, the Par 3 Contest and having – skipping the ball over the water on 16, all those things are things that you sit back and watch during Masters week,” he said. “It’s going to be weird not having that, but at the same time you’re at Augusta National playing for a green jacket.”

Griffin would have used Wednesday as a tribute for a man who became like a second father to him growing up. Stuart Swanson was among those to step in after Griffin’s father passed away in 2001 and helped him pursue his dream.

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“We threw a party at my home course after the Houston Open about a week and a half later and I actually presented Stu with a caddie bib and gave it to him,” Griffin said. “He was going to caddie for me there. That’s not going to be possible but luckily with making it to the Tour Championship…I’m going back there in April.”

While Griffin’s path back to Augusta National in 2021, that’s not the case for an amateur. There are six of them in the field this week at Augusta, living a dream week.

John Augenstein, a fifth-year senior at Vanderbilt, is one. Like Griffin, he would have put someone special on the bag for the Par 3 Contest: his dad Drew. The elder Augenstein will be on the grounds at Augusta National this week regardless, as Augenstein’s coach. Augenstein brought his mom Susan, too, who didn’t get to be on site during the U.S. Open.

“That would have been a really cool experience getting one of my parents out there to caddie,” he said. “I think they’re more excited than me even.”

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John Augenstein hadn’t made many plans for the Par 3 Contest otherwise. His caddie for the tournament, William Kane, is a friend of Webb Simpson’s and there was talk of Augenstein joining Simpson’s group.

“Obviously it’s an incredible tradition that the Masters has,” he said. “It really is unfortunate that I’m not going to be able to experience it the first time.”

It’s perhaps the only disappointment there is about this week. Augenstein made five trips to Augusta National in preparation for the Masters. He took in the history with each trip, saw the Crow’s Nest (he won’t stay there during tournament week), the champions locker room and the clubhouse. He got the lay of the land – where his locker is, where to eat breakfast – and he studied the course.

There wasn’t a big revelation regarding the latter.

“In the fairway is obviously a premium at all times, being able to control the ball going into the greens is very important,” he said.

Augenstein has been polishing what he has, not necessarily learning new shots. He took note of all the sidehills, downhills and uphills and discovered where he’d need to shape the ball one way or another. Augenstein works with instructor Matt Killen, who has much experience preparing players for Augusta.

“Our practice plans, for eight to 10 months I’d say, have been very centered around large, curving shots,” he said. “Whether I’m in trouble and I need to hook an iron 35 yards or hit something over a tree, under a tree, around a tree, whatever it is. Really, really working on distance, shape and height.”

Andy Ogletree, the man who defeated Augenstein in the final match of the 2019 U.S. Amateur, had an easier time, perhaps, getting to Augusta National as a student at Georgia Tech. On Monday of Masters week, he relayed memories of the annual trip the Yellow Jackets got to take the Augusta. It was always a perfect morning, and one in which the first few holes passed in a fog.

Ogletree’s Par 3 Contest plans won’t come to fruition this year, but he referenced a scenario in which he would rotate family members through the afternoon, if it had happened.

“I have two brothers, so maybe let one of them caddie for three holes, the other caddie for three holes and my dad caddie for three holes or something,” he noted Monday.

For James Sugrue, the 2019 British Amateur champion, the Par 3 Contest was earmarked for his dad.

Sugrue will play the Masters, much as he did the U.S. Open, without much of a cheering squad. As it stands, his father Michael won’t even be on the grounds because his travel from Ireland to the U.S. was deemed non-essential.

Regardless, it’s Augusta National, and Sugrue will soak in the full experience. He had never seen the course until this week and planned a single night’s stay in the Crow’s Nest, the lodging typically reserved for amateurs on property.

“In my practice I’ve been doing a lot of practice on side lies and downhill and uphill and every sort of a lie but a flat lie,” Sugrue said.

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Nation’s top amateurs head back to Maridoe Golf Club for Southern Amateur

Maridoe Golf Club is hosting a field of high-level amateurs at the Southern Amateur this week.

Maridoe Golf Club in Carrollton, Texas, has become something of a golf oasis in the midst of this pandemic. The club took it upon itself to demonstrate how golf could safely be played and proceeded to stage two fundraising events with a stout field of amateurs and pros – dubbed the Maridoe Samaritan Fund Invitational (and MSFI2.0) – then created the Maridoe Junior Invitational for the nation’s top up-and-coming players.

The Southern Amateur already was on the calendar for July 15-18, and it got an added boost June 17 when the U.S. Golf Association announced that the winner and runner-up would receive exemptions into the U.S. Amateur field, if they hadn’t already qualified for it.


Southern Amateur: Tee times and scoring


As a result, the field of 156 players includes some of the best college players and juniors in the nation. The 54-hole event begins Wednesday with a cut to the top 66 players and ties after the first two rounds.

PGA Tour events are the only tournaments with featured pairings. We present the four most stacked groups at the outset of the Southern:

12:50 p.m., No. 1: Quade Cummins, Cooper Dossey, Austin Eckroat

Impressive resumes here for some of the Big 12’s best. Oklahoma’s Cummins is the reigning Pacific Coast Amateur champ, and remains so for another year after that tournament was canceled for the summer. Baylor’s Dossey won the North & South Amateur in 2019, but came up two match-play victories short of a title defense earlier this month at Pinehurst. Eckroat, finished T-4 at the first MSFI event and finished as the low amateur that week.

12:50 p.m., No. 10: Phillip Barbaree, Preston Summerhays, Noah Goodwin

Three USGA champs with a unique bond make up this group. Barbaree, an LSU senior; Goodwin, an SMU junior and Summerhays, a high school senior committed to Arizona State, are all past champions of the U.S. Junior, with Summerhays being the defending champ. Goodwin won in 2017 and Barbaree in 2015.

All have been busy this summer but particularly Barbaree, who teed it up on the amateur circuit two of the past three weeks.

1:20 p.m., No. 1: John Pak, John Augenstein, Pierceson Coody

John Pak played perhaps the craziest schedule of all last summer, teeing it up six times in a 10-week stretch. More than perhaps any other player, he truly played his way onto the U.S. Walker Cup team with his summer performance. Pak is toning it down this summer, playing only the Southern, the Western Amateur and the U.S. Amateur and otherwise camping out in Tallahassee, Florida, where he attends Florida State.

Walker Cup teammate Augenstein won his last college start (the Desert Mountain Intercollegiate in March) on the strength of an opening 63 and also won the G-Rock Open (something like a rogue state open) at the start of June.

As for Coody, a member here, he’s already won a major amateur event at this venue. The Texas junior defeated Paul Gonzalez (also in the Southern field) by two shots almost exactly a year ago to win the Trans-Miss Amateur.

2:30 p.m., No. 1: Trent Phillips, Cole Hammer, Joe Highsmith

All three of these men land among the top 100 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking, with Hammer at No. 8, Phillips checking in at No. 36 and Highsmith at No. 92.

Hammer is a native Texan, and comes off a disappointing missed cut at the North & South. Highsmith beat his Pepperdine teammate Dylan Menante in the second round of the North & South, only to fall in the quarterfinals to eventual champion Tyler Strafaci. Phillips, a Georgia junior, is making his first major start since the Southern Highlands Collegiate. He won the Ka’anapli Collegiate Classic last fall.

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Pepperdine’s Sahith Theegala wins 2020 Ben Hogan Award

Pepperdine senior Sahith Theegala won the 2020 Ben Hogan Award, men’s college golf’s top honor.

Pepperdine senior Sahith Theegala didn’t have the senior season he expected due to the coronavirus pandemic, but maybe that’s a good thing.

The Pepperdine senior won the 2020 Haskins Award on May 8 and on Tuesday added another prestigious trophy to his collection: the 2020 Ben Hogan Award.

Theegala, the top-ranked college player on the Golfweek/Sagarin ranking, was named a finalist for the annual award given to the nation’s top men’s college golfer in April alongside Vanderbilt senior John Augenstein and Florida freshman Ricky Castillo.

Theegala, the first golfer from Pepperdine to be nominated for the Ben Hogan award, won the Southwest Invitational and the Alister MacKenzie Invitational and had four more top-10 finishes in the shortened 2019-20 season.

Along with his win of this year’s Ben Hogan Award, Theegala will play in the 2021 Charles Schwab Challenge.

Castillo is the No. 2 ranked player on the Golfweek/Sagarin ranking and Augenstein sits at No. 7.

All three golfers were first-time finalists and met the criteria for the award after each players’ performances over the past 12 months of competition were considered. This year’s college golf season was cut short due to the COVID-19 pandemic, so only competitions between May 21, 2019 and March 12, 2020 were considered in determining a winner.

Other winners of the Ben Hogan Award include Jon Rahm, Patrick Cantlay and Rickie Fowler.

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Three finalists named for 2020 Ben Hogan Award

A long list of distinguished college golfers that made up the Ben Hogan Award finalist list has now been trimmed to three names.

Typically, the end of April means conference championships and gearing up for the postseason. But with college golf prematurely over, due to the coronavirus pandemic, late April means gearing up for awards season. A long list of distinguished college golfers that made up the Ben Hogan Award finalist list has now been trimmed to three names.

Pepperdine senior Sahith Theegala, Vanderbilt senior John Augenstein and Florida freshman Ricky Castillo are the remaining candidates for the award, given annually to the top men’s college golfer taking into account all collegiate and amateur competitions over the past 12 months. This year’s season was cut short due to the COVID-19 pandemic, meaning that all tournaments played between May 21, 2019, and March 12, 2020, were considered.

Augenstein was the runner-up at the 2019 U.S. Amateur. In his final college season, he notched a victory at the Desert Mountain Intercollegiate and had two other top-five finishes, including a runner-up showing at the Nike Golf Collegiate.

Theegala, back for his redshirt senior season after sitting out last year with a wrist injury, finished an abbreviated season as the top-ranked college player in both the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings and the Golfstat individual rankings. He advanced to match play at the U.S. Amateur and Western Amateur.

An impressive freshman campaign from Castillo included back-to-back tournaments victories at the Sea Best Invitational and Florida Gators Invitational. In all, he posted a 70.14 scoring average over seven events.

Augenstein and Theegala become the first golfers from their respective schools to be named finalists for the Ben Hogan Award. Castillo is the first Florida player since Matt Every won in 2006, and is also looking to become only the second freshman ever to win the award. Oklahoma State’s Rickie Fowler remains the only player to accomplish that feat in 2008.

The Hogan Award winner will be named in June but the traditional 2020 Ben Hogan Award dinner will not be held due to the pandemic. The 2020 recipient earns the first invitation into the PGA Tour’s 2021 Charles Schwab Challenge and will be honored during that week’s festivities.

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50 days until 2020 Masters: Here’s a look at players making their Masters debut

Cameron Champ and Matthew Wolff are among the PGA Tour stars making their Masters debut in April at Augusta National Golf Club.

Seventeen-year-old Abel Gallegos of Argentina shot a final-round 67 at Mayakoba’s El Camaleon Golf Club in January to win the Latin America Amateur Championship. With the trophy, Gallegos received a coveted invitation to the 2020 Masters.

In his first time playing the Latin American Amateur Championship, Gallegos finished at 4 under and beat runner-up Aaron Terrazas of Mexico by four strokes.

The teen says watching countryman Angel Cabrera win a green jacket in 2009 is one of his earliest memories of watching the Masters on TV. Cabrera sent Gallegos a congratulatory text after his win in the LAAC.

Here’s a look at the players who will make their Masters debut at Augusta National Golf Club during Round 1 on April 9, 2020.

Abel Gallegos

Abel Gallegos of Argentina poses at the ceremony for the Latin America Amateur Championship at El Camaleon Mayakoba Golf Course on January 19, 2020. (Photo by Enrique Berardi/LAAC)

Men’s college golf: Five teams, players to watch in the spring

Breaking down the five teams and players to watch this spring as the college golf season tees it up again.

For many of you, it’s winter, which means the long-awaited first round of golf of 2020 is far in the distance thanks to cold temperatures and snow on the ground.

That’s not the case for college golfers, as the spring season begins with the best of the best teeing it up across the country over the next few weeks with their eyes on the ultimate prize: May’s NCAA Championship in Phoenix.

If you weren’t following the men’s game last fall, you missed quite the show. No team nor player has separated themselves from the pack, meaning the race for the national title is up for grabs.

Here are five teams and players to watch this spring.

MORE: Five women’s teams, players to watch
RANKINGS: Men’s Individual | Men’s Team

Five teams to watch

Oklahoma primed for another title run

The 2017 national champions are back at the top and there’s no reason to believe we won’t see Oklahoma back in match play at this year’s NCAA Championship in Phoenix. Head coach Ryan Hybl has the Sooners at No. 1 entering the spring for the first time in program history, led by seniors Quade Cummins, Garett Reband and Thomas Johnson. This team has experience, a deep roster and unfinished business after a quarterfinal exit at last year’s NCAA Championship at the hands of rival Texas.

Can Georgia Tech keep winning?

One of the most talented rosters in the country resides in Atlanta, and we’re seeing that talent flourish this season. Georgia Tech won its first event of the fall at the Carpet Capital Collegiate and tied Baylor for first at the Olympia Fields/Fighting Illini Invitational. The Yellow Jackets also took down Cal, UCLA and Duke en route to the title at the Cypress Point Classic. It’s the last go-around for a senior-driven team, led by 2019 U.S. Amateur champ Andy Ogletree, Luke Schniederjans and Tyler Strafaci. But don’t forget about junior Noah Norton and sophomores Ben Smith and Connor Howe, who complete a well-rounded team that proves it has what it takes to win in both stroke and match play. Now, they just have to carry that ability into the spring.

SMU Mustangs no longer a dark horse

After a tumultuous year in 2019, SMU – the 30th seed out of 30 teams – went on a joyride at the NCAA Championship, winning a playoff against Clemson to place in the top eight and qualify for match play. Jason Enloe’s team is back, ranked No. 12 in the country, and boasts arguably one of the nation’s best 1-2 punches with juniors Noah Goodwin and Mac Meissner. Watching the Mustangs last season, the team had something you just couldn’t put your finger on, an “it” factor that a lot of teams don’t have. Last year, they trashed expectations and earned a seat at the table. This year, they’re ready to feast.

Wake Forest ready to reclaim No. 1

If there’s a word to describe this year’s Wake Forest team, it’s confident. The Demon Deacons spent time at No. 1 earlier this season, but the men from Winston Salem, North Carolina enter the spring season at No. 6. Head coach Jerry Haas has just one senior on this year’s team in Eric Bae, but don’t let that fool you. The team has seen impressive production from juniors Marco Steyn and Parker Gillam, who has the nation’s lowest score of the year with a 60 in the opening round at the White Sands Intercollegiate, where he went on to take first place. Sophomores Alex Fitzpatrick and Eugenio Chacarra, as well as freshman Mark Power, have also been key for a Wake Forest squad that hasn’t finished worse than fourth all season.

Texas Tech not slowing down

Win. Win. Win. Fourth. That’s how Texas Tech started the fall, and there’s no signs of slowing down from head coach Greg Sands’ squad. The Red Raiders had at least two players in the top five of each of their three stroke play events, including two different winners in Sandy Scott and Andy Lopez. Their third win of the season came at the Big 12 Match Play, where they dominated one of college golf’s best conferences and proved to be a menace of a match play opponent. With six events this spring before the Big 12 Championship, it’s unlikely to expect Texas Tech to keep winning at the rate displayed last fall. But if anyone can do it, it’s Texas Tech.

Five players to watch

Adrien Pendaries, Duke

Meet the top-ranked player in the Golfweek/Sagarin Men’s Collegiate Individual Rankings, and for good reason. Adrien Pendaries finished in the top seven in three stroke-play tournaments for Duke and boasts a 5-1 fall match-play record for the Blue Devils. Not only is he No. 1 in the rankings, he also leads the nation in par-4 scoring (3.84).

Though he’s still chasing that elusive first win of the season, Pendaries’ consistency to always be in the mix and his match play chops make Duke a dangerous postseason team (especially with the ACC Championship moving to match play).

Peter Kuest, BYU

All eyes will be on BYU’s Peter Kuest this spring after a blistering hot fall campaign. The senior was Mr. Reliable early and often for the Cougars with wins at the William Tucker Intercollegiate and Nick Watney Invitational in addition to a top five and top ten. Pendaries may be No. 1 in the rankings, but Kuest isn’t far behind. In fact, he’s first in the country in scoring (67.93), eagles (nine) and par-5 scoring (4.33).

John Augenstein, Vanderbilt

John Augenstein set high expectations for his senior season after a runner-up finish at the 2019 U.S. Amateur this summer, and he hasn’t disappointed, earning two top-five finishes among strong fields at the Nike Golf Collegiate and Crooked Stick. His experience not only at the U.S. Amateur, but also at last year’s NCAA Championship, will be key for No. 34 Vanderbilt if they have any shot at making a run at a title.

Cole Hammer, Texas

The highlight of the fall for the former No. 1 in the World Amateur Golf Ranking (now No. 2) came with an appearance at the Houston Open in October. In no way is that a knock on Hammer’s college season, which features two top 10s in four events. Instead, expect to see a lot more this spring from the sophomore star, who earned consecutive T-1 finishes around this time last year as a freshman. In fact, Hammer and the Longhorns return to the site of the first of those top finishes at the Southern Highlands Collegiate, March 1-3 in Las Vegas.

Jonathan Brightwell, UNCG

The senior from Charlotte, North Carolina started the season on fire with a T-4 finish at the Badger Invitational and followed that with consecutive wins at the Rod Myers Invitational and Wolfpack Fall Intercollegiate. He cooled off towards the end of the fall with T-10/T-11 finishes, but Brightwell has proven he belongs in the conversation as one of the best players in the country.

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Know their names: These top players will drive amateur golf in 2020

The following names are likely to appear in amateur golf headlines in 2020. Their path to the top of amateur golf is worth following.

In most cases, players have a limited window in which to make waves in amateur golf. Juniors and college players generally use amateur events – from the Western Amateur to the Augusta National Women’s Amateur to the U.S. Amateur and U.S. Women’s Amateur – as a platform to launch them into long and successful professional careers.

Even if amateur golf is transient for the top players, there’s still time to develop a rooting interest for these men and women. The following names – some highlighted individually, and some highlighted in clusters – are likely to appear in headlines on the biggest stages in 2020. Their growth and their path to the top of amateur golf is worth following. Here’s the background.

Emilia Migliaccio, top-ranked U.S. female

Emilia Migliaccio during a Curtis Cup practice session in December. (Photo: USGA/Steven Gibbons)

Migliaccio’s last act before returning to Wake Forest for her junior season was to represent the U.S. at the Pan-American Games. The team won gold that week in Lima, Peru, and so did Migliaccio, which made her the first American, male or female, to win a gold medal in golf at either the Pan American Games or the Olympics since the event was reintroduced to the games in 2015.

It’s fitting that Migliaccio is the top-ranked American in the World Amateur Golf Ranking (at No. 7) entering 2020. It’s also fitting that it’s a Curtis Cup year. Someone like Migliaccio, who shines in a team setting, would be an excellent leader for a U.S. squad looking to win on foreign soil. Migliaccio stands to figure in to all conversations surrounding women’s golf in 2020, from college golf to the Augusta National Women’s Amateur.