Jourdan: As impending roster limits loom, college golf recruiting hangs in the balance

The writing was on the wall.

The writing was on the wall.

Rumors were rampant at junior golf tournaments across the country this summer of a storm brewing on the horizon. Many juniors in the Class of 2025 had been committed to their future homes for nearly a year, if not longer. On National Signing Day, however, not all of them are where they thought they’d be.

That’s because of impending NCAA-mandated roster limits in college golf. And the results are just beginning to rear its ugly face.

“I pushed my son to get out ahead of this,” one parent, whose son was committed to a Big 10 program for nearly a year before being told he would have to move on late this summer, told Golfweek. “But we know other kids who were not ahead of this, and I don’t know what they’re going to do.

College sports is in the midst of its largest change ever, one that is severely altering the landscape of college athletics. A preliminary approval granted by the U.S. District Court of Northern California last month for the pending $2.78 billion House vs. NCAA settlement means schools will be allowed to directly compensate players via revenue sharing. In addition, scholarship limits are being removed across all Division I sports that opt into revenue sharing.

As a part of that agreement, the NCAA plans to impose roster limits in each sport, beginning in fall 2025, which means current players and recruits have seen playing opportunities vanish in the blink of an eye.

The Class of 2025 is the first victim of the changes, but it’s likely to affect the Class of 2026 and current college players even more in the coming year.

Each school is likely to lose at least one roster spot, if not numerous. Add it all up, it means hundreds of student-athletes who are on rosters this year, or thought they were signing to join their dream school Wednesday, are going to have to find a new place to play in 2025 and possibly beyond.

“I think a lot of the coaches are not behaving like adults here and doing what is the right thing to do with the kids and let them know fast enough to make a decision,” said the parent, whose son is signing with a mid-major program Wednesday. “I don’t feel very bad for the coaches. I know they’re mad about it, but, you know, they could have called every kid in July and told them this is happening and they should look for another spot because they don’t know what they’re gonna be able to do.

“But they chose not to do that, and now they’re all mad.”

While some schools were informed over the summer about the potential changes, Golfweek has learned many still haven’t heard guidance about what number of roster spots they need to be at ahead of next season, and others only learned in recent weeks about what guidelines they would have to follow, leaving a mad scramble for coaches trying to decide what to do with commits and those on the current roster.

The new roster maximum in college golf is expected to be nine players, which is the number the Big 10 Conference is planning its 2025-26 rosters around. In the Southeastern Conference, that number is eight roster spots, meaning one playing opportunity for current and prospective athletes.

To satisfy Title IX requirements, that number could be even lower at other schools.

The elite junior golfers and players on current rosters won’t be affected by this change. However, elite players make up a minority of all Division I golfers, which is why this National Signing Day is unlike any other before it.

For example, on the men’s side, defending national champion Auburn has 10 players on its 2024-25 roster. Three of those players are seniors, but the Tigers are signing three players Wednesday, meaning they’ll be two over the SEC roster limit. That means tough decisions are coming, and Auburn is far from the only school that faces that reality.

It’s most Power-4 programs across the country.

The situation is more severe at other schools, like Oregon, which has 15 players (and only three seniors) on the roster. That means if every player who could return did in 2025, at least three of them wouldn’t be allowed on the roster because of the new limits.

Some mid-major schools that don’t opt into revenue-sharing won’t have roster limits, which is another wrinkle that hasn’t been ironed out quite yet. Ultimately, those programs could benefit from having the ability to have a larger roster.

Then you take into account recruiting classes, where again, the top players won’t have an issue finding a home. Past that, it’s all dependent on roster limits, meaning plenty of talented players are likely to be looking for a home on mid-major rosters.

Multiple coaches told Golfweek they aren’t focused on recruiting junior golfers this year or for the Class of 2026, instead focusing on the transfer portal to fill holes on their roster. If they even have any.

And the trickle-down effect continues. For individuals, this is one of the worst things to happen to college golf. For the sport in general and its depth, college golf is undoubtedly going to be deeper in future years because of the roster limits. The ceiling may not go up, but the floor is being raised where mid-major programs are going to get a boost and even lower-level Power 5 programs thanks to access to players they wouldn’t have had even a year ago.

Many student-athletes will end up with more playing opportunities thanks to roster limits, even if they’re not at their original or dream school. Instead of having to fight for a roster spot at a top-25 program, talented players can go to a mid-major school and play right away.

College golf is in as good of a place as it has ever been. The future of recruiting is hanging in the balance thanks to roster limits and fewer opportunities for junior golfers to get into the sport. The sport is going to look different as soon as next fall.

For those athletes who aren’t keeping up with the changing landscape, they could be left without a place to play. And it’s a reality many recruits were faced with ahead and on National Signing Day.

“I think my son is ending up at a better place, a better school, a better fit, a better golf program for him,” one parent said. “But I don’t think that’s going to be the case (for everyone).”

College golf signing day: Top men’s players, classes for Class of 2025

Here’s where the top players are headed.

Signing day is here, even if it’s unlike anyone before it.

The Class of 2025’s early signing period began Wednesday, meaning hundreds of student-athletes from across the country signed grant-in-aid agreements with schools. Grant-in-aid agreements have replaced the national letter of intent moving forward.

However, impending roster limits in college golf have shaken up signing day and like never before, leaving some players scrambling in the 11th hour to find a home. Most of the elite players haven’t dealt with issues, but elite players make up a small majority of all college golf signees, meaning a scramble has been occurring in the lead up to signing day.

On the men’s side, Vanderbilt is bringing in a spectacular class, with three top-20 players, including No. 1 Michael Riebe. Auburn, the defending national champion, also has a strong class, headlined by No. 2 Logan Reilly. Of the top-six schools in the rankings, five of them are from the SEC.

Here’s a look at the rankings for players and classes in the Class of 2025 (subject to change).

Top 25 players

  1. Michael Riebe, Vanderbilt
  2. Logan Reilly, Auburn
  3. Henry Guan, Oklahoma State
  4. Chase Kyes, Tennessee
  5. Kihei Akina, BYU
  6. Jackson Byrd, Clemson
  7. Bowen Mauss, Arizona State
  8. Carson Bertagnole, North Carolina
  9. Will Hartman, Vanderbilt
  10. Adam Villanueva, Texas
  11. Joshua Bai, Florida
  12. John Daniel Culbreth, Georgia
  13. Trevor Gutschewski, Florida
  14. Dan Hayes, LSU
  15. Jake Albert, Auburn
  16. Brooks Simmons, Texas
  17. Edan Cui, Stanford
  18. Jon Ed Steed, Vanderbilt
  19. Simon Hovdal, Texas Tech
  20. Joshua Kim, UCLA
  21. Will Gordon, Arkansas
  22. Liam Pasternak, Notre Dame
  23. Cole Stockard, Kentucky
  24. Mack Edwards, North Carolina
  25. Luke Smith, Tennessee

Top 10 Classes

  1. Vanderbilt: Will Hartman, Michael Riebe, Jon Ed Steed
  2. Florida: Joshua Bai, Trevor Gutschewski, Parker Severs
  3. Auburn: Jake Albert, Logan Reilly, Jack Roberts
  4. Texas: Brooks Simmons, Adam Villanueva
  5. Oklahoma State: Jaxon Bandelier, Henry Guan
  6. Tennessee: Chase Kyes, Luke Smith
  7. North Carolina: Carson Bertagnole, Mack Edwards
  8. BYU: Kihei Akina, Jackson Shelley
  9. Clemson: Jackson Byrd, Samuel Duran, Tip Price
  10. Notre Dame: Peyton Blackard, Liam Pasternak, Pavel Tsar

College golf signing day: Top women’s players, classes for Class of 2025

Here’s where the top players are headed.

Signing day is here, even if it’s unlike anyone before it.

The Class of 2025’s early signing period began Wednesday, meaning hundreds of student-athletes from across the country signed grant-in-aid agreements with schools. Grant-in-aid agreements have replaced the national letter of intent moving forward.

However, impending roster limits in college golf have shaken up signing day and like never before, leaving some players scrambling in the 11th hour to find a home. Most of the elite players haven’t dealt with issues, but elite players make up a small majority of all college golf signees, meaning a scramble has been occurring in the lead up to signing day.

On the women’s side, Duke is making a big splash on signing day, inking two of the top three players in the class in No. 1 Rianne Malixi and No. 3 Avery McCrery. Surfer-turned-golfer Scarlett Schremmer, No. 2 in the rankings, has settled on Texas A&M to play her college golf.

Here’s a look at the rankings for players and classes in the Class of 2025 (subject to change).

Top 25 players

  1. Rianne Malixi, Duke
  2. Scarlett Schremmer, Texas A&M
  3. Avery McCrery, Duke
  4. Eila Galitsky, South Carolina
  5. Elizabeth Rudisill, Vanderbilt
  6. Sarah Hammett, USC
  7. Madison Messimer, Tennessee
  8. Arianna Lau, Northwestern
  9. Sophie Han, Oregon
  10. Natalie Yen, Texas A&M
  11. Chloe Kovelesky, Wake Forest
  12. Brynn Kort, Texas A&M
  13. Pimpisa Rubrong, Arizona State
  14. Ryleigh Knaub, LSU
  15. Thanana Kotchasanamanee, Princeton
  16. Thapasit Thitikarn, Tennessee
  17. Anna Song, Stanford
  18. Kathryn Ha, Vanderbilt
  19. Athena Yoo, UCLA
  20. Kristina Xu, Columbia
  21. Kacey Ly, UCLA
  22. Matilda Bjorkman, Ole Miss
  23. Maye Huang, UCLA
  24. Katelyn Huber, Florida
  25. Yu-Chu Chen, Oklahoma State

Top 10 Classes

  1. Duke: Rianne Malixi, Avery McCrery
  2. Texas A&M: Brynn Kort, Scarlett Schremmer, Natalie Yen, Avery Zweig
  3. South Carolina: Eila Galitsky
  4. Vanderbilt: Elizabeth Rudisill, Kathryn Ha
  5. USC: Sarah Hammett
  6. Tennessee: Isabella Johnson, Madison Messimer, Thapasit Thitikarn
  7. UCLA: Maye Huang, Kacey Ly, Zoe Sprecher, Athena Yoo
  8. Wake Forest: Chloe Kovelesky, Chutimon Rujiranan, Ella Yokota
  9. Princeton: Thanana Kotchasanmanee, Luna Lu, Sarah Lim
  10. LSU: Ryleigh Knaub, Perla Sol Sigurbrandsdottir

Blades Brown, Gianna Clemente named AJGA 2024 Rolex Junior Players of the Year

What a year for the talented duo.

Blades Brown and Gianna Clemente were named Tuesday as the American Junior Golf Association’s 2024 Rolex Junior Players of the Year.

The Rolex Junior All-America Teams annually recognize the world’s premier junior golfers. The 2024 class includes 48 boys and girls, ages 13-19, from 19 states and three countries.

Brown, a 17-year-old from Nashville, Tennesssee, finished third at the AJGA Simplify Boys Championship in a field that included 18 of the top-20 players, highlighted by 2023 Rolex Junior Player of the Year, Miles Russell. He also made his PGA Tour debut this spring at the Myrtle Beach Classic. He also won medalist honors at the U.S. Junior Amateur, becoming only the third person to do so at the Junior and U.S. Amateur. He then placed second at the Junior Players.

Gianna Clemente of the United States plays her shot from the fourth tee during the final round of the Mizuho Americas Open at Liberty National Golf Club on May 19, 2024, in Jersey City, New Jersey. (Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images)

Clemente, 16, is now a five-time Rolex Junior All-American. She began the year with a top-10 finish at the Fortinet Girls Invitational and then tied for 11th at the Junior Invitational at Sage Valley. She also placed fifth at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur before winning the Mizuho Americas Open. Clemente was a semifinalist at the U.S. Girls’ Junior and made the Round of 32 at the U.S. Women’s Amateur.

Brown, Clemente and the 2024 Rolex Junior All-America Teams will be honored at the Rolex Junior All-America Awards Banquet on Saturday, Nov. 23, at the JW Marriott San Antonio Hill Country Resort & Spa.

United States dominates singles to claim 2024 Junior Presidents Cup title

The Americans have won all four Junior Presidents Cups.

Heading into Tuesday’s singles matches, the United States led by one point. By the end of the day, it was a dominating victory.

The Americans won the 2024 Junior Presidents Cup at Le Club Laval-sur-le-Lac in Canada with a dominant showing in singles. Of the 12 matches, the Americans lost only one of them. The Charley Hoffman-led team won six singles matches, halved five and held on to win its fourth straight Junior Presidents Cup.

Mimicking the Presidents Cup, the Junior Presidents Cup features two teams made up of the top 12 male junior golfers (12-18) representing the United States and another International team representing countries around the world excluding Europe. Junior players must be at least 12 years old and no older than 18 at the start of the event. These amateur players are chosen to be on the United States team based on the Rolex AJGA Rankings and the International team based on the World Amateur Golf Ranking.

It’s a two-day event, with a foursomes and four-ball session on Monday before all 12 players face off in singles Tuesday.

The United States led 6½-5½ after Monday, and Tuesday was a dominant showing in singles. Michael Riebe, Jackson Byrd, Will Hartman, Logan Reilly, Asher Vargas and Blades Brown each won their matches to retain the trophy.

In latest move for growth, U.S. National Development Program launches Junior State Teams

Seven states will participate in the initial phase

The United States Golf Association announced Wednesday the creation of a state team pilot program that will expand the pipeline for elite junior golfers into the recently created U.S. National Development Program (USNDP). Seven states will participate in the initial phase, with the goal of all states having a team by 2033.

The first seven participants are California (Southern), Colorado, Georgia, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Ohio and Tennessee. The program will come to fruition through close collaboration between the USGA, its allied golf associations, the PGA of America and relevant state junior programs.

“This first-of-its-kind state team program will serve as a critical part of the talent identification pathway for the USNDP and provide more opportunities for a diverse population of athletes to receive resources and guidance to compete at the highest levels of the game,” said Heather Daly-Donofrio, USGA managing director, of Player Relations and Development, in a release. “Additionally, the opportunity to represent their home state will incentivize each region’s best junior golfers to play more in-state competitions, ultimately strengthening the junior golf programming across the country.”

The seven selected states participating in this initial pilot program will each establish a committee consisting of representatives from major golf organizations within the state, including any AGAs and PGA of America sections. The state committees will oversee team selection criteria and the operation of the state program based on guidelines provided by the USGA. Team selection criteria will vary by state and may consist of a points structure, ranking or combination of other competitive factors. Selection criteria from all seven states will be published before the entry deadline of the first counting event of their 2024 championship season.

State team roster sizes will be calculated by elite junior participation in the state, ranging from a minimum of two boys and two girls to a maximum of 20 boys and 20 girls.

To be eligible to compete on a state team in 2024, a player must be a U.S. citizen. Each eligible player must be 13 years old by Jan. 1, 2025, have not reached their 19th birthday by July 19, 2025, and cannot be enrolled in college for the 2024-25 school year. An official Handicap Index is also required.

Announced in February of 2023, the USNDP is designed to ensure that American golf is the global leader in the game by focusing on six key pillars: talent identification, access to competition, national teams, athlete resources, player development, and relations and athlete financial support. The state team program will focus on creating a developmentally appropriate, aspirational pathway for athletes within each state to compete at higher levels of the game, including an opportunity to represent the United States as a member of the USNDP’s National Team led by former Pepperdine associate head coach Chris Zambri.

“The state team program will allow us to leverage the expertise and local knowledge of the regional and state junior golf programs to ensure that all golfers with the appropriate skill have an equitable opportunity to pursue their dreams,” Zambri said in the release.

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Team Europe runs away with Junior Ryder Cup title at Marco Simone

The Europeans ended a long losing streak.

On the eve of the 44th Ryder Cup, another trophy was handed out on the grounds that the golf world will focus on the next three days.

Team Europe ran away with the Junior Ryder Cup title, ending a streak of six straight losses to the Americans, winning 20½-9½ at Marco Simone Golf Club in Rome, Italy. The Europeans dominated singles, winning seven of the 12 singles matches and tying three others to claim 8.5 points on the final day.

Europe took a commanding 12-6 lead after winning all six fourball matches on Wednesday. The teams were tied at 6 after the first day of competition.

A 2014 Ryder Cup player, Stephen Gallacher, led the European squad while PGA past president Paul Levy captained the U.S.

2023 Junior Ryder Cup
European captain Stephen Gallacher holds up the trophy as European players celebrate on the 18th green after winning the Junior Ryder Cup ahead the 44th Ryder Cup at the Marco Simone Golf and Country Club in Rome on September 28, 2023. (Photo by Alberto PIZZOLI / AFP)

Nicholas Gross and Billy Davis were the lone Americans to win their singles matches on Thursday. Anna Davis, Billy’s twin sister, halved her match, as did Leigh Chien and Kylie Chong.

The first two rounds were held at Golf Nazionale in Rome before moving to Marco Simone for the final round. This was the first year the singles matches were held on a third day and at the site of the current Ryder Cup.

The U.S. now owns a 7-4-1 all-time record in the biennial competition. The team features six boys and six girls who are U.S. citizens and members of the high school graduating class of 2024 or younger.

6-foot-10 Tommy Morrison earns medalist honors at U.S. Junior Amateur

Tommy came to play.

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Coming into the week at the U.S. Junior Amateur, Tommy Morrison was one of the favorites.

And he’s standing out after the first two rounds of stroke play. Morrison, who’s 6-foot-10 and the second-oldest player in the field, shot 8-under over the first 36 holes to earn the top match play seed at the 75th U.S. Junior Amateur at Daniel Island Club in Charleston, South Carolina, on Tuesday. The rising sophomore at Texas finished one shot ahead of his competition.

“It means a lot,” said Morrison of medalist honors. “I want to win as many medals and trophies as I can. Any USGA medal is a good one.”

Earlier this year, Morrison competed with Tony Romo in the U.S. Amateur Four-Ball at Kiawah Island.

Andrew Gregory, 17, of Spartanburg, South Carolina, is one of five South Carolina natives in the field. He finished just one back of Morrison after shooting rounds of 66-70 for a two-day total of 7-under 136. Gregory, who will begin his freshman season at Liberty University in the fall, is playing in his third straight U.S. Junior Amateur. This is his first time advancing to match play. 

“There is always a chance,” said Gregory about the match-play format. “Just let the other person make all the mistakes and just keep it in the fairway. Don’t show any emotion. Just make pars all day and when birdies come, birdies come.” 

On Wednesday morning, there was a 14-for-7 playoff to determine the final match play spots. Then, the Round of 64 got underway.

Matches continue through Saturday’s 36-hole championship match.

Cooper Groshart, Megan Meng capture 2023 First Tee National Championship titles

Both winners were awarded with the Tattersall Cup in honor of event chairman Fred Tattersall.

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Megan Meng and Cooper Groshart of San Luis Obispo, California, won the girls and boys divisions of the third annual First Tee National Championship at Stanford Golf Course.

The event brought together First Tee’s elite golfers for an opportunity to showcase how the program has helped build the strength of character needed to play at the next level.

Meng, a 16-year-old senior from Pennington, New Jersey, has been involved with First Tee for more than 10 years. She finished the 54-hole tournament 5-under to win by five strokes. In the final round, Meng shot a tournament-low 66 – including a front nine 30 – to secure her victory.

In 2022, Meng won another marquee First Tee event, the PURE Insurance Championship pro-junior title, a PGA Tour Champions event held at Pebble Beach, shooting a 64 on Sunday. Meng is committed to play golf at Northwestern.

“Practice makes better, and practice definitely gets you where you want to go, so it’s all about how much time you’re willing to put in practicing on the course, but also make sure to have fun with it. Golf is a game for fun and spending time with your friends,” Meng said.

Groshart, 18, finished in the top 10 at the 2021 and 2022 First Tee National Championships before winning in this, his third and final attempt. He finished the tournament 4 over after shooting a final-round 71. Groshart recently graduated from San Luis Obispo High School and will play golf this fall at California State University, East Bay.

Like Meng, Groshart played at the 2022 PURE Insurance Championship, where he hit a hole-in-one on the iconic seventh hole during a practice round.

“This week I’ve just made a ton of friends and seen old friends I don’t get to see that often,” Groshart said. “This tournament feels like everyone is friends. Everyone is out here for a good time. We want to play some good golf too, but it’s a bunch of friends hanging out on the golf course.”

Both winners were awarded the Tattersall Cup in honor of event chairman Fred Tattersall. Two players from the First Tee National Championship field were also awarded a one-time exemption into the PURE Insurance Championship Impacting the First Tee, held at Pebble Beach Golf Links Sept. 16-24, 2023.

With this year’s national championship winners having already played in the tournament, the exemptions were passed to Alaythia Hinds of First Tee – Greater Sacramento, who finished second among the girls, and Sean Kwok of First Tee – Tri Valley, who finished fifth among the boys.

For the first time, the four lowest-scoring eligible players (two boys and two girls) from the national championship also earned admission into the PGA Tour’s new Pathways to Progression program, which aims to support talented golfers from backgrounds that are traditionally underrepresented in the sport.

The PGA Tour will announce the full roster for its Pathways program, including the four players who earned their spots at the First Tee National Championship, in the coming days.

“Congratulations to everyone who competed in the third annual First Tee national championship this week,” First Tee CEO Greg McLaughlin said. “Especially to Megan and Cooper. They represented First Tee with confidence and poise, and we look forward to seeing all that they continue to accomplish on and off the golf course. Thank you to Fred Tattersall for his ongoing support of this tournament and Stanford University for a memorable week.”

First Tee’s national championship is held annually at various college golf courses around the nation providing First Tee participants the opportunity to network with others from across the country and take in the college experience. Stanford University hosted the third annual Championship, following the previous two years at University of Notre Dame’s Warren Golf Course and Clemson University’s The Walker Course, respectively.

The field included 24 boys and 24 girls, ages 14-18, who were selected based on their golf skills and competitive golf experience including 15 competitors who are currently committed to play collegiate golf. Players came from 29 First Tee chapters across the country.

Meet Lincoln Rubis, an 11-year-old with 5 holes-in-one (three in a 22-day span) and the same childhood coach as Jordan Spieth

His scoring average in 2023 is 69.67.

Most babies sleep with a stuffed animal or a blanket. Lincoln Rubis cuddled with his plastic 7-iron.

Rubis, now 11, has been obsessed with golf from the moment his parents gave him his first set of plastic clubs at 18 months old. His father, Jon, said you could tell there was something special about Lincoln when he swung the club.

“I’m going, ‘OK, this is crazy,'” Jon said. “He could just swing it over and over again. He really took a liking to it.”

Fast forward 10 years, Lincoln and his family now live in the Dallas metroplex, and his love of golf has only grown. He has become one of the best junior golfers in the country. He has five holes-in-one, including three in a 22-day span a month ago. Lincoln also goes to the same childhood coach that Jordan Spieth did and has the same winning percentage as Scottie Scheffler on the Northern Texas PGA Junior Tour.

Not bad footsteps to be following.

Those are just a few of the amazing things Lincoln has accomplished, and he just turned 11 in January.

When he was 6, he got his first two aces within a month of each other. Fast forward five years, his tally is up to five holes-in-one, more than even some professionals have.

On Feb. 25, he was playing in a tournament at the Wigwam in Litchfield Park, Arizona, when he hit a pitching wedge from 101 yards to an island green. The ball one hopped, hit the flag stick and dropped.

“It was loud,” Jon said. “It just went bang.”

A week later, at Rock Creek Golf Club in Gordonville, Texas, Lincoln hit another ace, this one with a 9-iron from 113 yards. Jon was playing in a group behind and found out through a text message from other parents who were keeping score.

Then, 15 days later at Coyote Ridge in Carrollton, Texas, Lincoln played in cold temperatures with the wind chill below freezing in a tournament. On the uphill par-3 11th hole, Jon was standing next to the green and videoed Lincoln’s swing from the tee. He hit a 9-iron from 110 yards.

“It was blind for me because I was below the green, but the ball was tracking and I thought it was a good shot,” Jon said.

Jon shut off the camera as it landed and released. He couldn’t see the ball, but he knew it was a good shot. That’s when Lincoln started yelling and celebrating. Jon walked up to see the green, and he couldn’t see a golf ball.

“That’s when I knew it was in,” Jon said.

Three holes-in-one in 22 days, with two of those coming in tournaments. He won the latter at Coyote Ridge.

Speaking of tournament records, Scheffler, the six-time PGA Tour winner and second-ranked golfer in the world, won nearly 60 percent of his starts on the NTPGA during his career. So far, Lincoln has 27 wins in 47 events (57.4 win percentage) and has finished top two all but five times.

His scoring average in 2023 is 69.67. Lincoln is a bit smaller for his age and doesn’t hit the ball as far as some of his competitors, but he excels at finding ways to score and get the ball in the hole.

Last year, he tied for seventh at the U.S. Kids Worlds and also qualified for the Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals at Augusta National. He’s also sponsored by Titleist.

Then there’s the Jordan Spieth connection. Spieth’s first coach was Joey Anders, who teaches at Brookhaven. The Rubis’s are members at Brookhaven, and Anders has been teaching Lincoln at the same age he taught Spieth.

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Lincoln has even played some rounds with Shawn Spieth, Jordan’s father. As Shawn was getting ready for the PNC Championship last year, they played a couple rounds together.

“Shawn is so great, not only with Lincoln, but plenty of the junior golfers at Brookhaven,” Jon said. “It’s really cool.”

Last year at the Dallas Junior Golf Championship, a tournament that dates to the 1920s, Lincoln shot a 59. Jon is quick to point out the Ages 9-10 Division played about 4,200 yards, but no one had shot that low in the tournament’s history.

Most of Lincoln’s events now are played at 5,500 yards or close to, but a couple weeks ago, he and Jon, who’s a near-scratch golfer, went and played a course from 6,800 yards.

And what did Lincoln do? Knocked a wedge close for birdie on the final hole to beat his dad.

“I couldn’t have been happier,” Jon said. “I didn’t think he would beat me this early.”

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