Ohio State golfer Maxwell Maldovan ranked in top ten of 2024 PGA Tour U rankings

Some good recognition here and a prelude to perhaps a big season for Maxwell Moldovan. #GoBucks

Ohio State rising senior golfer Maxwell Maldovan has landed at No. 6 on the 2024 PGA Tour U heading into the 2024 campaign.

The rankings are a partnership between the World Amateur Golf Ranking (WAGR) and PGA TOUR University. The rankings are based on the last two years of each golfer’s collegiate career. Eligible tournaments include NCAA Division-I men’s team competitions, official PGA TOUR tournaments, and select DP World Tour events.

Moldovan set Ohio State’s single-season scoring record for the third consecutive year and also received his second All-America honor. He had 10 Top 10 finishes and seven Top 5 finishes in collegiate events this past season and has qualified for each of the last two US Opens.

Something tells me we’ll be hearing more from Moldovan in the upcoming years.

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Ohio State golfer Maxwell Moldovan qualifies for Barbasol Championship

In case you missed it, Maxwell Moldovan will be representing Ohio State in a PGA Tour event this weekend. #GoBucks

Ohio State men’s golfer, Maxwell Moldovan shot a -7 under to finish in second place at the PGA Tour’s Monday qualifier earlier this week to qualify for this weekend’s Barbasol Championship. With the result, he is one of just four in a field of 65 golfers to make the cut at Boone’s Trace National Golf Club.

It’ll be Moldovan’s first official PGA Tour event when he tees off at Champions Course at Keene Trace Golf Club in Nicholsville, Kentucky, though he did qualify for both of the last two U.S. Opens. He will be joining two other Buckeyes — Ryan Amour and Bo Hoag — this week in the field.

Moldovan continues to build upon a stellar career. He set a single-season Ohio State scoring record for the third consecutive year and finished in the top 20 in 11-of-13 events this season. He had a whopping seven top-five finishes.

Join us in wishing Moldovan a great showing on tour this weekend in Kentucky.

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Contact/Follow us @BuckeyesWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Ohio State news, notes, and opinion. Follow Phil Harrison on Twitter.

Meet the amateurs to make the cut at the 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club

When the week started, more than 10 percent of the field was comprised of amateurs, and that number could’ve been higher.

When the week started, more than 10 percent of the 2023 U.S. Open field was comprised of amateurs, and that number could’ve been higher.

Sure, top-ranked Gordon Sargent is in the field, as well as No. 2 Michael Thorbjornsen and No. 9 Michael Brennan. In total, 19 amateurs teed it up the first two days at Los Angeles Country Club, but most of them are packing their bags after two days on the West Coast.

Only four amateurs earned weekend tee times and will vie for the low-amateur medal, which is awarded during Sunday’s trophy presentation at the conclusion of play.

Here’s a look at the amateurs who made the cut at the 2023 U.S. Open.

2023 U.S. Open field: Emiliano Grillo is among the last six golfers to make it in

The field for the 2023 U.S. Open is now set.

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The field for the 2023 U.S. Open is now set.

On Monday morning, the U.S. Golf Association announced three final exemptions as well as three alternates from final qualifying who are now a part of the 156-man field.

The 123rd U.S. Open starts Thursday at Los Angeles Country Club’s North Course.

With the additions of Emiliano Grillo, Pablo Larrazabal and Adam Schenk, there are 89 fully exempt players. Those three earned their spots when the Official World Golf Ranking was updated Monday with all three in the top 60.

Grillo (No. 43) will compete in his fifth U.S. Open. Pablo Larrazabal (No. 52) will play in his second U.S. Open. Schenk (No. 54) will also make his second U.S. Open appearance.

The final three spots went to golfers who were alternates coming out of the 13 final qualifying locations: Bastien Amat (a), Michael Kim and Maxwell Moldovan (a).

Amat, Kim, and Moldovan were all first alternates at their qualifiers. Moldovan had a marathon day, ultimately losing in a playoff in the Columbus qualifier on the 44th hole to Adam Schaake.

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Haskins Award: Final watch list for 2022-23 men’s college golf season

Check out who’s in the running for player of the year in men’s college golf in 2023.

The postseason is underway in men’s college golf, and after the NCAA Regionals, the NCAA Div. I Men’s Golf Championship field is set for May 26-31 at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Arizona.

With that, the race for the 2023 Haskins Award presented by Stifel is starting to heat up.

A handful of players have made their case 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.

If you fit one of the listed criteria, use this link to cast your vote.

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

Golfweek/Sagarin rankingsMen’s teamMen’s individual

Bring on the cold and wind: Ohio State’s Maxwell Moldovan thrives in it at the Jones Cup

There’s a reason that, in three trips to the Jones Cup, Maxwell Moldovan has always been in the mix.

Maxwell Moldovan spent the days leading up to the Jones Cup eyeing the weather in Sea Island, Georgia. Moldovan, a 19-year-old Ohio State sophomore, got excited by forecasted weekend conditions that probably made much of the rest of the field cringe. There’s a reason that, in three trips to the Jones Cup, Moldovan has always been in the mix.

For Saturday’s second round, a south wind switched directions and blew twice as hard, and the temperature dropped roughly 20 degrees. Moldovan’s game holds up well in those kind of conditions.

“We’re not strangers to wind at all, especially the cooler temperatures,” said Moldovan, an Ohio native.

On Saturday, only eight players broke par and many of the names on the top of the leaderboard backed up from low scores on Friday. Moldovan fired a 1-over 73 at Ocean Forest Golf Club, three shots higher than his first-round score. A triple bogey on No. 11 and a double bogey on No. 14 drove up his score but he offset those with five birdies – including a hole-out from a bunker on No. 17.

Leaderboard: Jones Cup

“I did feel like my round today was kind of a good example of what happens at the Jones Cup when the wind is up,” he said.

Moldovan plays a low ball flight, which works to his benefit in tough conditions. On days like Saturday, his mantra is just to keep it in play.

“You don’t always need to attack pins when the weather is like this,” he said. “If you can get it on the green and give yourself 20, 30, 40 feet, you’re picking up shots on the field.”

Moldovan finished 11th here in 2021 and eighth in 2020. Both finishes fell in the midst of a two-year winless drought that Moldovan cracked in July when he won the Southern Amateur by a record margin. His 20-under 72-hole total at Old Waverly Golf Club in West Point, Mississippi, shattered Justin Leonard’s winning record from 1993 by six shots.

Looking back on that stretch of golf, Moldovan maintains that all things happen for a reason.

“I’ve never let the tough finishes and tough weeks get to me more than a couple of days after and I’ve always tried to continue to work and push through them,” he said. “I worked really hard during that win drought and even though the results didn’t always show – I had some good tournaments in that stretch and I had some bad ones – although the results didn’t show, I knew I was getting better.”

Moldovan’s year took off after his Southern Amateur victory. He made match play at the Western Amateur and U.S. Amateur. He was seventh at the Maridoe Collegiate and third at the Windon Memorial – both college events – and scored a top 10 at the Patriot All-America Invitational to end the year.

In a year and a half as a college golfer, the venues have been thrilling for Moldovan. The Floridian, which annually hosts the Valspar Collegiate in the spring, has been his favorite. He finished runner-up there last year. Moldovan recognizes the fields are deeper than they were in junior golf too.

“Now with college golf, over half the guys are very capable of winning with a good week,” he said. “The competition makes everybody better, and the golf courses too.”

Moldovan enters the final round eight shots off the pace set by Palmer Jackson, a Notre Dame junior who has had rounds of 66-69 this week. A lot can transpire in the wind, and Moldovan hopes to keep it interesting on Sunday.

“I’m just going to try to take care of my business and make as many pars as I can, hopefully a few birdies go down,” he said. “… Ocean Forest is a place where shots can come and go really fast.”

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Maxwell Moldovan breaks 28-year-old scoring record in Southern Amateur runaway

For Maxwell Moldovan, the Southern Amateur title is a major breakthrough and the sign of a drought ending.

Justin Leonard, the 1997 British Open champion, has been a familiar presence on the Open broadcast all week. But Leonard’s name had another reason to enter the golf conversation this week. On Saturday, 19-year-old Maxwell Moldovan shattered the previous South Amateur scoring record that Leonard had held since 1993.

Moldovan won with a 72-hole total of 2-under 264 at Old Waverly Golf Club in West Point, Mississippi. Leonard’s winning Southern Am score in ’93 was 270.

For Moldovan, who is entering his sophomore year at Ohio State, it’s a major breakthrough and the sign of a drought ending.

“I haven’t won a major golf tournament in just over two years now,” Moldovan told the Southern Golf Association. “To put myself in a position to do that this week and to play the way I played yesterday and today, it feels incredible.”

Scores: Southern Amateur

Moldovan, from Uniontown, Ohio, was a highly touted junior. He was the AJGA’s Rolex Player of the Year in 2019 and was a two-time Ohio High School State Champion (2017, 2018) in addition to the 2019 Ohio Amateur champion. His freshman season with the Buckeyes was partially upended by COVID-19. Teams in the Big Ten didn’t compete until the spring season. Still, in eight starts this season, Moldovan averaged 71.5, the best on the team, and finished in the top 10 three times. That included a runner-up finish at the loaded Valspar Collegiate.

At Old Waverly, Moldovan strung together rounds of 64-68-65-67. He didn’t make a bogey in either of his final two rounds.

Since Ohio State bowed out of the postseason in May by failing to advance through the NCAA Tallahassee Regional, Moldovan has been busy. The Southern Am marks his fifth competitive start this summer. It’s his best result since finishing 11th at the Dogwood Invitational to start the summer.

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Two Ohio State men’s golfers set to compete in U.S. Amateur this week

Ohio State men’s golfers Maxwell Moldovan and Elis Svard will be competing in the U.S. Amateur out in Bandon, Oregon this week.

Two Ohio State men’s golfers are preparing to compete this week on the Dunes and Trail courses. Incoming freshman Maxwell Moldovan and graduate transfer Elis Svard were both selected by way of exemption status rather than qualifying due to COVID-19 concerns.

Moldovan has had quite the summer. Not only was he selected as the 2019 AJGA Player of the Year, but he’s played and showed well in just about every top amateur event. He rose to as high as No. 33 in the World Amateur Golf Rankings and led the US side to a victory in Junior President’s Cup in Australia this past December. Last summer, Moldovan advanced to the Round of 32 in the U.S. Amateur and the Round of 16 in the U.S. Junior Amateur.

For Svard he’s still getting acclimated to life as a Buckeye after an outstanding collegiate career at Cal State Monterey Bay before transferring to Ohio State. A three-time All-American, he won four times and posted 20 top-5 finishes. This past year, he was a finalist for the DII Jack Nicklaus Award after finishing in the top-10 in all six of his collegiate tournaments. The Sweden native recently won the Stockholm Amateur where he fired rounds of 68-66-66.

Stroke play begins on Monday and Tuesday with two rounds. The top 64 golfers will then advance to match play beginning on Wednesday. The winner will be crowned after a 36-hole match on Sunday with the GOLF Channel and NBC Universal’s Peacock alternating live streaming coverage beginning on Wednesday.

 

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North & South Amateur: Players to watch at Pinehurst

Here are a few of the top players to watch at the North & South Amateur at Pinehurst.

If you’re a competitive amateur player (looking at you, collegians), summer doesn’t feel like summer without tournaments to play. The summer season is almost like a rite of passage for players making their way on up to a career in professional golf, a path that many players in the North & South Amateur field this week likely are on.

The coronavirus pandemic wiped out several June events. Some, like the Sunnehanna Amateur, moved to new dates. The calendar truly kicked off at last week’s Rice Planters Amateur just outside of Charleston, South Carolina. It continues this week in Pinehurst, North Carolina.

Tournament directors reported unprecedented interest in their events and subsequently, above-average field strength. Nearly 100 more players sent in applications for this year’s North & South Amateur than last year, when the tournament offered players a chance to compete on Pinehurst a month before the U.S. Amateur landed there in August.

This year, it will be just the golf showcased at the North & South, but with a backdrop like Pinehurst, you don’t need a lot of extras.

“This was our communication to the players: This is going to be golf almost in its purest form,” said Brian Fahey, Pinehurst’s director of tournament operations.

Put the U.S. Amateur, the summer finale, in the category of “things that look a little different this year,” too. Among the exemption categories announced on June 17 were a handful of spots for top finishers at the summer’s top events. The North & South is one of those, so if the winner and runner-up at Pinehurst this week aren’t already qualified for the U.S. Am, they will be courtesy of their play here.

Below are a few names to keep an eye on in what turned out to be a loaded North & South field. The tournament begins with stroke-play qualifying on June 30 and July 1 to decide a 32-man match-play bracket. The final match will be played July 4.

The defending champ

Cooper Dossey

Dossey’s 2019 North & South victory reminded us what a strong match-play competitor he is. It also launched a period of exceptional golf for the Baylor senior, who has announced he’ll be returning to Waco, Texas, for a fifth year in the fall. After claiming the Putter Boy trophy, Dossey went on to qualify for the U.S. Amateur and log five top-10 finishes in six college golf starts.

Noah Norton, runner-up to Dossey at the North & South, returns this year, too.

The quarterfinalists

Cohen Trolio, Spencer Ralston, William Holcomb V

All three of these men were among the final eight standing at last summer’s U.S. Amateur. Ralston’s run we might have seen coming, considering that he had won the Players Amateur just a month earlier. But for Trolio, 17, and Holcomb, a senior at Sam Houston State, it was a get-to-know-you kind of week at Pinehurst. It’s hard to forget the sound bites from Holcomb, a man with big personality.

The local

Jackson Van Paris

The 16-year-old Pinehurst resident logged a big win this spring at the Junior Invitational at Sage Valley. Familiar ground should make up for the age difference between Van Paris and some of the older, more experienced players in the North & South field.

The sage

Ken Kinkopf

The 58-year-old is No. 3 in Golfweek’s Senior Rankings and a seasoned competitor. He tees it up frequently on the senior circuit and is the reigning North & South Senior champion.

Mr. 57

Alex Ross

At the start of last summer, Ross, who plays for Davidson, fired a mind-numbing round of 57 at the Dogwood Invitational, a tournament that was canceled this year in light of the pandemic. But Ross’ round won’t be forgotten any time soon (in fact, Edward Toledano, tournament chairman emeritus of the Dogwood, said it comes up every time the tournament committee gathers to talk about, well, anything).

Ross won a college tournament this fall and finished in the top 5 in two others.

The road warrior

Canon Claycomb

The 18-year-old arrived at Alabama in January, a semester early. He’s truly crossing the junior-to-amateur threshold this summer and has the distinction of playing the North & South with a fresh title under his belt. Claycomb won the Rice Planters Invitational on June 25.

Like many players, he’ll be burning up the highways driving to the events he can in his Ford F150 – a vehicle purchased on a whim outside Atlanta when the engine on his Cadillac exploded halfway between Tuscaloosa and Sea Island, Georgia, where Claycomb was driving to play the Jones Cup.

The Texans

Cole Hammer, Noah Goodwin, Travis Vick

Never count out Texas sophomore Cole Hammer, World No. 7 and 2018 Western Amateur champion, in match play. The same goes for Goodwin, now an SMU player who won the 2017 U.S. Junior. Hammer’s Longhorn teammate Vick defeated Goodwin at the North & South last year to advance to the quarterfinals, where he fell to runner-up Noah Norton.

The up-and-comer

Maxwell Moldovan

Moldovan, the AJGA’s Rolex Player of the Year in 2019, is headed to Ohio State in the fall to start his freshman year. A shining moment from Moldovan’s U.S. Amateur run last summer was knocking off Walker Cupper Stewart Hagestad in the Round of 64. Moldovan displayed a wizardry around Pinehurst’s tough and tiny greens that should come in handy again this year.

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U.S. surges to 9-3 lead after Day One of Junior Presidents Cup

Sparked by a series of ferocious comebacks, the U.S. opened up a commanding 9-3 lead at the 2019 Junior Presidents Cup.

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MELBOURNE, Australia – In 2011, Karl Vilips lived 10 minutes from Royal Melbourne and remembers attending the Presidents Cup on a rainy day to trek after Tiger Woods. Seven years later, Vilips, 18 and ranked No. 1 in the Golfweek/Sagarin Boys Junior Rankings, who was born in Jakarta to an Indonesian mother and Australian father and raised by his dad, Paul, in Perth, is back representing his country in the Junior Presidents Cup.

“This is really an unbelievable experience to come home and play here with the grandstands just days before the competition,” said Vilips, who has spent the past seven years developing his game in the U.S and is a Stanford University commit.

The only thing that could have made it better was winning two points on Day One of the Junior Presidents Cup, but that was not to be. The Australian tandem of Vilips and Joshua Greer lost both of their Sunday matches 2 and 1, including in the afternoon session when American Benjamin James (pictured above) buried a 60-foot birdie putt on 17 to seal the deal.

“Not much you can do about that,” Vilips said.

The U.S. side won four of six morning Four-Ball matches and claimed five of the six afternoon Foursomes matches to surge to a 9-3 lead. Seven of the 12 matches concluded at the 17th hole, with the U.S. team winning five of them. Four American players won both their matches Sunday: James, Vishnu Sadagopan, Maxwell Moldovan and Preston Summerhays.

Team USA celebrates after Maxwell Moldovan and Brett Roberts secured a full point at 18 for a 9-3 lead. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

The U.S. rallied to flip several matches, including halving two of the final three matches of the morning session after being 2 down with four holes to play. Canon Claycomb and Jackson Van Paris combined to birdie three of the last four holes to halve their match.

“That’s really the difference,” said Justin Leonard, the five-time Presidents Cup U.S. team member and 12-time PGA Tour winner who is serving as U.S. captain.

In the afternoon, Moldovan and Brett Roberts teamed to win 1-up over South Africa’s Jayden Schaper and Martin Vorster after trailing 2 down with 4 to go.

This is becoming old hat for Moldovan, the AJGA’s Rolex Player of the Year, who has been tabbed the Matchplay Ninja, and for good reason. He won the Polo Golf Junior Classic and went undefeated at the Wyndham Cup, which are both contested at math play, advanced to the Round of 16 in the U.S. Junior and knocked off Stewart Hagestad at the U.S. Amateur before falling to eventual champion Andy Ogletree in 19 holes. What makes him so tough in a match-play format?

“He’s always in play, never gets out position and makes a lot of putts and he gets in guys’ heads,” said Roberts.

When Moldovan made a 10-foot birdie putt on 15 to cut the deficit to 1 down, it breathed new life into the American duo.

“One down with 3 to go on this course a lot can happen,” Roberts said.

Moldovan knocked his approach to five feet at No. 17 to tie that match and the U.S. secured the full point when Vorster drove into trouble at 18 and the International team had to take an unplayable lie.

It took a search committee to find Martin Vorster’s drive at 18, but it was all for naught as they lost the hole and the match to the Americans. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

There are 12 Singles matches on Monday; it takes 12.5 points to win the Junior Presidents Cup. Leonard knows there is work still to be done for his team to retain the trophy, but he was more caught up in the experience these young competitors will always treasure.

“How do these kids go from this, playing one of the best golf courses in the world, to that next high school or junior tournament? It is going to be a little bit of a letdown,” he said. “The only difference between this and the actual Presidents Cup is that the grandstands aren’t full. Christmas for these 24 kids started on Dec. 6 in Melbourne and it’s been going on for four days now.”

Moldovan echoed that sentiment. “It’s been the best experience of my life, for sure,” he said.

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