This Division III powerhouse has added yet another national championship to its portfolio (this time setting a record)

“We just set the 72-hole scoring record for the national championship in Division III … and we only won by one.”

The Monarchs have claimed another crown.

The winningest men’s golf program in NCAA Division III championship history, Methodist claimed its record 14th national title Friday at Boulder Creek Golf Club in Boulder City, Nevada, firing a 72-hole D3 finals-record 21-under par to beat reigning champion Carnegie Mellon by a stroke.

“It’s tough to win,” coach Steve Conley told NCAA.com. “I mean, we just set the 72-hole scoring record for the national championship in Division III … and we only won by one.”

The previous 72-hole record was set by the Monarchs in 1998 at 9 under. That performance came during a run of six straight national titles, and nine in 10 years for Methodist. Starting with its first NCAA championship in 1990, the Monarchs added banners in 1991, ’92, ’94-’99, 2010, ’15, ’18, ’22 and ‘24.

All of those national championships were won under Conley, who started coaching at Methodist in 1988. Since then, Conley has been named D3 national coach of the year eight times. He’s a 17-time regional coach of the year, 25-time conference coach of the year, and in 2007 at 44 years old, he became the youngest coach ever inducted into the Golf Coaches Association of America (GCAA) Hall of Fame.

Along with 14 national titles, his program has produced 25 conference championships, nine D3 individual national champions and 58 All-Americans.

Senior Cooper Hrabak was the Monarchs’ low scorer in this year’s national finals. He shot 11-under par to finish a stroke behind medalist Michael O’Sullivan from Oglethorpe, closing his tourney and sealing the Monarchs’ win with a 25-foot birdie putt in a final round of 5 under.

Caleb Ryan tied for sixth at 6 under with two of the Monarchs’ nine eagles, Chase Walts tied for 17th at 2 under after carding a 66 with two eagles in Round 1, Aiden Spampinato tied for 24th at even par after a first-round 68 with a pair of eagles, and Cameron Cappuzzo tied for 71st at 10 over after shooting par in his last two rounds.

The Monarchs tallied 73 birdies in the national tournament, coming on the heels of their third straight USA South tournament title.

“These guys are like my brothers and I’m never going to forget this moment,” Cappuzzo, a senior, told NCAA.com after the championship. “It’s going to be tough to walk away from it but I’ll always have them with me.”

Capuzzo, Hrabak, Ryan and Walts were named to the GCAA All-America team, with Hrabak joining Monarchs Rob Pilewski, Chad Collins and Adam Horton as the program’s only four-year first-team honorees.

Methodist gets the job done with 17-shot victory at Golfweek D3 October Classic

Winning never gets any easier, and longtime Methodist coach Steve Conley will be the first to tell you that.

Winning never gets any easier. Steve Conley will be the first to tell you that, even as he closes in on 200 wins in his college coaching career.

At the Golfweek October Classic, Conley checked off career victory No. 159 as his Methodist team went 9 under for 54 holes at the Raven Golf Club in Sandestin, Florida, and won the team title by 17 shots. Part of it comes with familiarity – Methodist hosted the national championship here in 2013 and is a fixture at Golfweek’s annual Sandestin tournament – and part of it was revenge-seeking.

Earlier this month, Methodist let one slip away at the Tartan Invitational at Laurel Valley Country Club in Ligonier, Pennsylvania. The Monarchs had a big lead with nine to play, only to be overtaken by Emory.

“We’re playing great and Laurel is a tough track, we just kind of got sloppy on the back nine and Emory got hot,” Conley said. “It was a perfect storm.”

Methodist only had two days to shift the focus to Sandestin. Conley left his three returning first-team All-Americans – Andre Chi, Henry Angier and Cooper Hrabak – in the lineup while subbing in two other players and watched his men tidy up their games in another tough field. It’s not like his team doesn’t know what to do, Conley noted. Sometimes it’s just a lack of execution or confidence.

“We have a quality team, but there’s so many good teams in D3 now that you’ve got to be bringing it every week and you also have to be able to finish it,” he said. “Today I’m kind of surprised that we just kind of pulled away because they’re quality teams. My guys kept the pedal down. I think they didn’t want to see one go away like last week.”

Methodist’s 9-under total for 54 holes – which included a field-best round of 7 under on the final day – left them well ahead of Illinois Wesleyan in second. Lynchburg, which played the final round in 6 under, was another shot back in third and Emory was two shots behind that in fourth.

Cameron Cappuzzo, a Methodist senior, won the individual title at 10 under after bookending the tournament with rounds of 5-under 66.

Methodist's Cameron Cappuzzo (Golfweek photo)
Methodist’s Cameron Cappuzzo

Conley has led Methodist for over 30 years and won 13 national titles, most recently in 2022. D3 golf, like all divisions, has only gotten deeper in that time, forcing Conley to keep finding an edge. Conley says success always is going to lie with the players, but that over the years, he’s had to give them space to play the game more aggressively.

“I’ve had to allow them to be more aggressive in lots of places whereas before we would be a little bit more conservative,” he said. “I would also say just a little different mindset. I think the younger kids are just different than they were 10, 20 years ago. Be tough at times but also be very supportive. Just encouraging, that kind of thing. For me, in the right situations, we’ve got to be aggressive and we’ve got to be tough and keep battling.”

“The mindset I think is really the difference. If you’re not shooting under par on good days, you’re going to get beat. That’s what it really comes down to. And that’s that mentality, right?”

The flip side is that on bad days, Conley has to get his men to grind all the way to the end. The narrow loss at Laurel Valley drove that home.

Team culture has always been paramount for Conley. It doesn’t matter who’s in the bus, everyone has to be in it together. That’s particularly important on this year’s roster, which includes 10 men who have played in A-team events over the past two years. It’s unusual to have that depth, but it means that whoever tees it up for Methodist has to play hard.

“It’s a credit to the upperclassmen for setting the example and it’s a credit to all the guys on our team who buy into that,” he said. “It makes me proud as a coach that the guys are that way.”

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Methodist maintains perch atop Bushnell/Golfweek Division III Coaches Poll

Methodist widened its lead atop the Bushnell/Golfweek Division III Coaches Poll by receiving nine first-place votes for the latest edition of the poll.

Methodist widened its lead atop the Bushnell/Golfweek Division III Coaches Poll by receiving nine first-place votes for the latest edition of the poll. That kept them atop Illinois Wesleyan, which received one first-place vote and remained in the No. 2 spot.

Emory moved up two spots to No. 3 and Carnegie Mellon stayed at No. 4. Fifth-ranked Huntingdon slipped two spots despite a first-place vote.

Lower in the poll, there was considerable movement – like Wittenberg’s jump from No. 10 to No. 6 and Babson’s jump from T-23 to No. 9 after receiving one first-place vote.

Take a look at the full poll below, along with teams receiving additional votes at the bottom.

Rank University (First-place votes) Points Previous
1 Methodist (9) 296 1
2 Illinois Wesleyan (1) 279 2
3 Emory 274 5
4 Carnegie Mellon 268 4
5 Huntingdon (1) 266 3
6 Wittenberg 220 10
7 Greensboro 201 12
8 Washington & Lee 174 8
9 Babson (1) 171 T-23
10 Oglethorpe 142 15
T-11 Denison 133 9
T-11 Piedmont 133 7
13 York (PA) 120 NR
14 Sewanee 118 16
15 Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 115 14
16 Saint John’s (MN) 99 T-20
17 Gustavus Adolphus 96 NR
18 Guilford 89 6
19 NYU 85 22
20 Christopher Newport 81 11
21 Trinity (TX) 77 13
22 Willamette 67 NR
23 Redlands 55 18
24 Berry 48 17
25 Mary Hardin-Baylor 37 NR

Dropped From Ranking: Averett (No. T-20); Hampden-Sydney (No. T-23); McMurry (No. 25); UT Dallas (No. 19)

Others Receiving Votes: Rochester, 36; RPI, 30; Hampden-Sydney, 29; UT Dallas, 21; Aurora, 20; Kenyon, 20; Averett, 18; Trinity (CT), 15; McMurry, 14; Southwestern (TX), 14; Whitworth, 10; Otterbein, 8; Webster, 8; Gettysburg, 7; LaGrange, 7; Rhodes, 6; Lynchburg, 5; Texas Lutheran, 5; McDaniel, 4; Skidmore, 4; Wisconsin Eau-Claire, 4; Concordia (TX), 3; Birmingham-Southern, 2; Calvin, 2; Transylvania, 1; Whitman, 1.

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Carnegie Mellon takes over top spot in WGCA Division III Coaches Poll

In Division III, Carnegie Mellon claims the No. 1 spot with four first-place votes.

The Women’s Golf Coaches Association (WGCA) has announced the results of the most recent WGCA Coaches Poll. This is the second poll of the 2021 fall season.

In Division III, Carnegie Mellon claims the No. 1 spot with four first-place votes, while Methodist trails closely behind after also receiving four-first place votes. George Fox received one first-place vote to remain at No. 3, while Emory jumped three spots to No. 4 with two-first place votes. Williams College remains at No. 5 after receiving one first-place vote.

Rank University (First Place Votes) Points
1 Carnegie Mellon (4) 337
2 Methodist (4) 323
3 George Fox (1) 314
4 Emory (2) 288
5 Williams College (1) 266
6 University of Redlands 264
7 Centre College 235
8 St. Catherine 213
9 Washington and Lee 185
10 New York University (2) 183
11 Illinois Wesleyan 168
12 Pomona-Pitzer 165
13 Berry College 162
14 Mary Hardin-Baylor 148
15 Amherst College 131
16 Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 128
17 Christopher Newport 90
18 Carthage College 87
19 Chapman 76
20 Carleton College 74
21 Rhodes College 73
22 California-Santa Cruz 72
23 Bethel 70
24 Washington University in St. Louis 65
25 Texas at Dallas 61
Others Receiving Votes: York College of Pennsylvania (52); Gustavus Adolphus College (44); Grinnell College (40); Trinity (33); Hamilton College (31); Denison (27); Middlebury College (27); Rose Hulman Institute of Technology (21); Southwestern (19); Wisconsin-Whitewater (15); Sewanee: The University of the South (13); DePauw (11); California Lutheran (10); Saint Mary’s College (10); Oglethorpe (6); Hope College (5); Central College (3); Wisconsin-Stout (2); Whitman College (2); Wittenberg (1)

About the Women’s Golf Coaches Association

The Women’s Golf Coaches Association, founded in 1983, is a non-profit organization representing women’s collegiate golf coaches. The WGCA was formed to encourage the playing of college golf for women in correlation with a general objective of education and in accordance with the highest tradition of intercollegiate competition. Today, the WGCA represents over 650 coaches throughout the U.S. and is dedicated to educating, promoting and recognizing both its members and the student-athletes they represent.

Methodist starts fall season atop WGCA Division III Preseason Coaches Poll

In Division III, reigning NCAA champion Methodist University takes the No. 1 spot with nine first-place votes.

Another sign college golf is close? The Women’s Golf Coaches Association (WGCA) has released the results of the 2021-22 Preseason WGCA Coaches Poll.

In Division III, reigning NCAA champion Methodist University takes the No. 1 spot with nine first-place votes, followed by NCAA runner-up Carnegie Mellon University, who received two first-place votes.

George Fox University received one first-place vote to open the season at No. 3, with University of Redlands coming in at No. 4. Williams College rounds out the top five after receiving one first-place vote.

Take a look at the full poll below as well as a list of other teams that received votes.

Rank University (First Place Votes) Points
1 Methodist University (9) 320
2 Carnegie Mellon University (2) 312
3 George Fox University (1) 286
4 University of Redlands 277
5 Williams College (1) 262
6 Centre College 247
7 Emory University 224
T8 St. Catherine University 183
T8 Washington and Lee University 183
10 University of Mary Hardin-Baylor 160
11 Illinois Wesleyan University 143
12 Christopher Newport University 129
13 Rhodes College 119
14 Berry College 117
15 Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 114
16 York College of Pennsylvania 105
17 Bethel University 104
18 Washington University in St. Louis 89
19 University of Texas at Dallas 87
20 Pomona-Pitzer 81
21 New York University 77
22 University of California, Santa Cruz 68
23 Amherst College 64
24 Carleton College 63
T25 Denison University 48
T25 Trinity University (Texas) 48

Others Receiving Votes: Rose Hulman Institute of Technology (45); Southwestern University (38); Gustavus Adolphus College (36); Saint Mary’s College (36); University of Wisconsin, Whitewater (33); Middlebury College (26); Carthage College (25); DePauw University (17); California Lutheran University (15); Grinnell College (12); Oglethorpe University (12); Wittenberg University (9); Sewanee: The University of the South (3); University of Wisconsin-Stout (3); Whitman College (3); Calvin University (1); Huntingdon College (1)

Two-time defending NCAA champ Illinois Wesleyan starts season atop Bushnell/Golfweek Division III Preseason Coaches Poll

Illinois Wesleyan has won the past two NCAA Division III national titles, and the Titans still have the attention of Division III coaches.

Illinois Wesleyan has won the past two NCAA Division III national titles, and the Titans still have the attention of Division III coaches. The teams is ranked first in the Bushnell/Golfweek Preseason Coaches Poll after receiving eight of 10 first-place votes.

NCAA runner-up Methodist received another first-place vote and landed in second to start the season and the only other team to receive a first-place vote was Huntingdon, which landed fourth. Guilford landed in between.

Carnegie Mellon, Emory, Piedmont, Washington & Lee, Denison, and Trinity (TX) rounded out the top 10.

Take a look at the full poll below, along with teams receiving additional votes at the bottom.

Rank University (First Place Votes) Points NCAA Finish
1 Illinois Wesleyan (8) 220 Champion
2 Methodist (1) 211 2
3 Guilford 201 3
4 Huntingdon (1) 196 5
5 Carnegie Mellon 188 4
6 Emory 169 6
7 Piedmont 141 13
8 Washington & Lee 123 DNQ
9 Denison 121 7
10 Trinity (TX) 114 T-11
11 Christopher Newport 107 8
12 Greensboro 103 DNQ
13 Wittenberg 88 DNQ
14 St. Thomas (MN) 78 10
15 Redlands 72 DNQ
16 UT Dallas 68 DNQ
17 Averett 67 DNQ
18 Oglethorpe 60 DNQ
19 McMurry 59 DNQ
T-20 LaGrange 44 DNQ
T-20 Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 44 DNG
22 Hampden-Sydney 39 DNQ
23 Sewanee 37 24
24 Willamette 36 T-11
T-25 Concordia (TX) 34 DNQ
T-25  Mary Hardin-Baylor  34  18

Others Receiving Votes: Gustavus Adolphus, 29; Westminster (PA), 28; Rochester, 27; NYU 25; Saint John’s (MN), 24; Skidmore, 19; Trinity (CT), 17; Schreiner, 15; Wisconsin Eau-Claire, 14; Babson, 12; Webster , 11; Kenyon, 9; Centre, 7; Rhodes, 7; Aurora, 6; Hope, 5; Southwestern (TX), 5; Whitworth, 5; Gettysburg, 3; RPI, 3; Berry, 2; McDaniel, 2; Williams, 2; Birmingham-Southern, 1; California Lutheran, 1; Hamilton, 1; Nebraska Wesleyan, 1; Otterbein, 1.

Methodist women pull off comeback win at NCAA Division III National Championship

Methodist made up ground the final day to overtake Carnegie Mellon for the NCAA Division III national title.

Once again, Methodist’s women are the NCAA Division III national champions in women’s golf, having edged Carnegie Mellon on May 14 at Forest Akers West Golf Course in East Lansing, Michigan, to win their 14th national title.

The week – particularly the final round – was a battle for Methodist. The Monarchs had some ground to make up on the final day but started chipping away at Carnegie Mellon’s lead early. Methodist erased a four-shot deficit in the first six holes.

The team played the fourth and final round in 14-over 302, the best round of the day.

Full results: NCAA Division III Women’s National Championship

At 79 over for 72 holes, Methodist finished five shots ahead of Carnegie Mellon.

George Fox was third and Redlands rounded out the top 5.

Methodist claimed two players inside the top 3 individually as Ingrid Steingrimsen and Jillian Drinkard both tied for third at 19 over.

George Fox’s Makensie Toole was the individual medalist.