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Results for March 2011 Back to Campus Insider Index

This Week's Syllabus: March 31-April 6

FAB FIVE
My look at the top five teams in the country right now

MEN
Thumbnail image for Oklahoma-state-logo-latest.jpg1. Oklahoma State (Last week: 1)
One more event without Peter Uihlein in the line-up for OSU. Heard he gave Mike McGraw some lame excuse about playing in another  tournament in Augusta instead … rhymes with Pasters. Considering the Cowboys record without the U.S. Amateur champion, I'm not sure he'll be missed (said with sarcasm).
Next event: Insperity Augusta State Invitational, Forest Hills GC, Augusta, Ga., April 2-3 Read more

New No. 1 in women's D-I poll

For the first time since the preseason poll was released in late August, USC has claimed the No. 1 spot in the Golf World/NGCA women's coaches' poll. The Trojans victory at the Allstate Sugar Bowl, where they outpaced previous No. 1 Alabama, as well as their runner-up finish at the Battle at Rancho Bernardo Inn helped propel the squad to the top.

Here is the poll overall:


Women's D-I poll 4:4 issue.jpg
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Rice, Florida, Purdue players earn weekly honors

College Players of the Week: March 21-27

MEN (Tie)
Michael Whitehead.jpegMichael Whitehead, Rice
The senior from Sugar Land, Texas, claimed medalist honors at the Border Olympics, his first individual college title, in record-breaking style, shooting a final-round 62 at Laredo CC to set a school and course. Whitehead outpaced Arkansas' Sebastian Cappelen by two strokes overall, posting a 19-under 197.

"I have been hitting the ball really well for the past two years, but my putting has been much better this spring," said Whiteside, who has finished second three times this season and four in the last two years. "After so many runner-up finishes, I really wanted to win a tournament. And it is so much better winning this way, playing a solid round not having to hang on at the end. It feels really good."

Whitehead made 10 birdies during the final round, including a stretch of four holes in a row and another streak of three straight.


Andrews Echavarria.jpgAndres Echavarria, Florida
With a final-round 67 at the Nationwide Tour's Chitimacha Louisiana Open, the redshirt senior finished in second place, one stroke back of eventual champion Brett Wetterich. Echavarria played the Le Triomphe CC course in 12-under 272. Had he been a professional, the Colombia native would have earned $54,000.

The runner-up finish was the second top-20 performance Echavarria has had on the Nationwide Tour in 2011. Earlier this month he finished T-19 at the rain-shortened Bogota Open, which earned him the exemption into the Louisiana event.

Echavarria has a 71.67 stroke average this season for the Gators, having won the Gator Invitational in a playoff earlier this semester while posting five other top-20 finishes.


WOMEN
Laura Gonzalez-Escallon.jpegLaura Gonzalez-Escallon, Purdue
Playing in the Battle at Rancho Bernardo Inn, against a field that included six of the top 10 teams on the Golf World/NGCA coaches' poll, the sophomore from Belgium cruised to a six-stroke victory. A final-round 68 (the day's best score) gave her a seven-under 209 total to beat USC's Lizette Salas and UNLV's Therese Koelbaek.

Gonzalez-Escallon's 54-hole score outside San Diego was the season low for the Boilermakers, who also claimed their fourth team title of the season with a 15-over 879, seven strokes better than USC and eight lower than UCLA.

CI Podcast/Purdue's Devon Brouse

Devon Brouse.jpegThis week's guest is Purdue men's and women's coach Devon Brouse, who joined me after taking a red eye back from California after the Boilermaker women's team claimed the title at The Battle at Rancho Bernardo Inn. It was the team's third victory of the 2010-11 season, and second triumph in its last two starts, boding well for a squad that's looking to defend its NCAA title later this spring.

Here's a look at how the Purdue women have fared this season:

Purdue scores.jpg


This Week's Syllabus: March 24-30

FAB FIVE
My look at the top five teams in the country right now

MEN
Thumbnail image for Oklahoma-state-logo-latest.jpg1. Oklahoma State (Last week: 1)
The Cowboys pick up their fifth win of the season at the Duck Invitational and their second without Peter Uihlein in the lineup. Latest OSU "secret" weapon: Sean Einhaus, who has carded two top-10 finishes in two starts since playing in his first event of the season earlier this month. Mike McGraw's crew is starting to get some separation from rest of the NCAA title contenders
Next event: Administaff Augusta State Invitational, Forest Hills GC, Augusta, Ga. April 2-3 Read more

PGA Tour changes could impact collegians

I haven't seem the memo that the PGA Tour used to inform its players Monday, but I have read AP golf writer Doug Ferguson's story about the tour considering changes to how it distributes tour cards at the end of the year. If you haven't read the story, you better do so soon, because if I'm interpreting things properly, it could have a major impact on the access that college players who have just turned pro (whether via graduation or leaving school early) will have to the PGA Tour.

According to the Ferguson's story, the tour is exploring having the year-end Qualifying School, which currently offers the top 25 finishers and ties PGA Tour cards, only provide access to the Nationwide Tour. All PGA Tour cards would be awarded through play on the Nationwide Tour, thus requiring college players who recently turned pro to gain access to Nationwide Tour events in hopes of climbing up the Nationwide Tour money list, in hopes of earning PGA Tour cards.

In other words, the traditional path that college players have aspired to follow—finish up school in the spring and then earn a PGA Tour card at Q school that same fall—would no longer be an option.

The proposed changes would also create a series of tournaments at the end of the year where PGA Tour players who had not qualified for the FedEx Cup playoffs and other Nationwide Tour players would compete to secure PGA Tour cards for the following year.

If the proposal as being reported would actually happen, you could look at its impact on college golf in one of two ways:

* A bummer for the players
Getting your PGA Tour card "straight out of college" is already a difficult proposition, as many recent college All-Americans can attest. Still, a handful of players manage to do it each year (J.B. Holmes in 2005, Anthony Kim in 2006, Dustin Johnson in 2007, Rickie Fowler in 2009, Joseph Bramlett in 2010) and so squashing that "dream path" would be a huge blow. The most democratic route to playing the tour would be taken away (or at least delayed) under the new plan, making access even that much more difficult. For a sport where there is no "draft" that lets college players jump to the highest professional level of play, this would be a cruel reality for young aspiring players.

(A quick aside: with the PGA Tour heavily marketing all the great new young players and the excitement they bring to the game, along with the fact that several of them have won on tour this year, doesn't it seem rather strange that the tour would then make it that much harder for them to actually get PGA Tour cards? The answer to this likely lies in the fact the Nationwide Tour is in need of a sponsor in 2012 and by making the Nationwide Tour the real path to earning a PGA Tour card, it enhances the value to a new sponsor. Sad, though, they're playing with the livelihoods of the golfers to do this.)

* A boon for schools
If making the PGA Tour straight out of college becomes that much harder, chances are college golfers will think a lot more about the merits of turning pro early. A risky move for all but the most talented players becomes that much more risky, and the idea of sticking around to get that college degree to fall back on becomes more and more attractive. In turn, schools would seemingly be far more likely to see recruits play all four years in college.

That said, I also wonder if this current proposal might have the opposite effect in the short-term, that maybe it will accelerate the decisions being made by collegians right now as to whether to turn pro early or not. Judging from past experience, it will take a while before the PGA Tour actually adopts this plan (or any for that matter). By a while, I can't imagine it getting approved until the fall at the absolute earliest. Thus, I think this year's Q-school proceedings won't be affected. Perhaps, however, the 2012 Q school will be this totally different animal and thus players (for instance Morgan Hoffmann, who I haven't spoken too but given his play this year would seem like a possible candidate) might decide to get in while they know they can have a direct path to the tour.

There is one other thing to consider, a silver lining that might be made known in the not to distant future: perhaps the PGA Tour, as part of these changes, will also create a separate path for college players to have access to a small number of PGA Tour cards. Maybe this separate path will be revealed at a later date. I have not knowledge of this whatsoever; I'm merely speculating here.

Or maybe I'm just dreaming.

Week's best: Ancer tops AK's Okla. mark

MEN
Abraham Ancer.jpegAbraham Ancer, Oklahoma
While teammate Will Kropp wouldn't let the sophomore from Misson, Texas, have the spotlight all to himself during the final round of the Desert Shootout, the pair shooting school-record-tying 63s, Ancer's 21-under 195 total was six strokes better than runner-up Kropp, easily giving him medalist honors at Palm Valley GC in Goodyear, Ariz.

Ancer's overall score also gave him the Sooners' 54-hole school record all to himself. The previous OU mark was held by Anthony Kim, who shot a 203 at the TaylorMade/Waikoloa Intercollegiate in 2005.

"I'm incredible proud of the team," said Oklahoma men's coach Ryan Hybl, the Sooners outpacing Iowa State by 22 strokes after posting a 48-under 816 total, one off the school's 54-hole team record. "The boys played dominant. Abe was just a dominant force to be reckoned with."  

Ancer's performance was indeed dominant; he was 22 strokes lower than average 54-hole total of the 90 players in the field.


WOMEN
CKennedy75.jpgCasey Kennedy, Augusta State
The freshman from Cape May, N.J., made it back-to-back individual victories when she claimed medalist honors at the Administaff Lady Jaguar Intercollegiate March 14. Playing the team's home course, Forest Hills GC, Kennedy shot an 11-under 205, beating runner-up Paula Reto of Purdue by five strokes and third-place finisher Numa Gulyanamitta of Purdue by 12.

Kennedy made 17 birdies over 54 holes, including eight during a second-round 66

CI Podcast/Michigan's Lion Kim

Lion Kim.jpegThe Masters is less than a month away, and Michigan senior Lion Kim is starting to get particularly excited about the opportunity he's going to have to compete in the year's first major as one of the six amateurs in the field. Kim, the 2010 U.S. Amateur Public Links champion, talks about his pre-tournament trips to Augusta National as well as the difficulty of playing in college events this spring while knowing what's to come in April.

Here's a look at Kim's college record during the 2010-11 season.

Lion Kim record.jpg

This Week's Syllabus: March 17-23

FAB FIVE
My look at the top five teams in the country right now

MEN
Thumbnail image for Oklahoma-state-logo-latest.jpg1. Oklahoma State (Last week: 1)
As I wrote in Golf World this week, the Cowboys don't always play like the dominant program in the country, but when big titles are on the line, they tend to step up. Happened again at Southern Highlands this past weekend, when OSU made a great final-round charge to claim the title. Medalist Morgan Hoffmann gets the W in the box score for keeping the squad lurking the first two days, with saves going to Peter Uihlein and Kevin Tway for their help in closing the event on Sunday.
Next event: The Duck Invitational, Eugene CC, Eugene, Ore., March 21-22 Read more

Okla. State still riding high in men's poll

The No. 1 ranked teams in each of the men's coaches' polls remain unchanged from the previous spring ranking, with Oklahoma State, Chico State, Guilford and Oklahoma City all maintaining their top spots.

D-I men's poll 3:21 issue.jpg
The biggest mover in Division I edition of the poll is San Diego State, which jumped from 12th place to a share of sixth, thanks to victories at the USC Invitational and the Fresno State Lexus Classic. This is the highest the Aztecs have been ranked since the return of the Golf World polls in 2000-01.
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