Campus Insider Blog

Results for June 2009 See all blog posts >

OU hires Drouin; Texas Tech takes Robertson

Should the University of Georgia athletic department be contacting local authorities to see if they can have grand theft charges levied against their counterparts at the University of Oklahoma? Less than a week after luring Georgia assistant Ryan Hybl to take the Sooners head men's job, OU officials have done the same on the women's side, signing Bulldog assistant Veronique Drouin to be the women's head coach.

Veronique Drouin.jpeg"Veronique diligently prepared for the role of a head coach and demonstrated specific abilities to identify, recruit and develop the best and the brightest student-athletes in women's golf," said OU athletic director Joe Castiglione. "Her philosophy and history of developing young people in the classroom and on the golf course fits very precisely with our goals in athletics."

A Quebec native, Drouin was an assistant at UGa for three years and before that coached as a graduate assistant at Kent State for 2 1/2 years. A 2003 graduate of Kent State, she was the Mid-American Conference player of the year as a senior.

*****

Another job got filled today as well, as Texas Tech announced the hiring of JoJo Robertson as its women's coach. Robertson, an All-American at Oklahoma State and a two-time U.S. Women's APL champion, had been an assistant at Purdue the past five seasons.

Robertson hired at Texas Tech.jpeg"JoJo Robertson was one of the first names we heard in the beginning of our search for a women's golf coach," said Red Raider athletic director Gerald Myers at a press conference today. "As we proceeded through the search, her name kept coming up. Her background as a player and coach fit the criteria that we were looking for in a coach. We think JoJo will be a very successful women's golf coach for Texas Tech."

While Lucas Glover was winning the Open ...

Sorry for the silence on my end the last few days ... finally have dried out from Bethpage.

I talked to Clemson men's coach Larry Penley Monday afternoon, not long after former Tiger Lucas Glover won the U.S. Open title. Not surprisingly Penley was elated for Glover. So naturally, Penley was glued to a TV watching his former charge win the national championship, right?

Well sort of ... Penley was in the middle of teaching a summer golf camp back on campus. Some time before noon, he finally had everyone stop for an extended lunch and then got to retreat to the Clemson team room to watch Glover pull out the victory.

*****

The men's coaching carousel got into full swing this past week with a couple big jobs being filled. Nick Clinard goes to Auburn (leaving the UCF position open), and former Georgia All-American Ryan Hybl heads to Oklahoma.

Hybl's move comes with some interesting irony in that his football playing older brother, Nate, transferred from Georgia to Oklahoma and eventually was the Sooners' starting quarterback in the early 2000s. As was the case with Jan Dowling going to Florida, I'm surprised the OU athletic department didn't get somebody with some head coaching experience, but I think they made a solid choice in Hybl. He's very personable and should have success in the recruiting process.

Clinard's move to Auburn also makes a lot of sense. He had success with the Knights and is more than ready to make the transition to the SEC. The hard part about this move is what it does to UCF. It's a mid-major program that was starting to thrive but loses momentum now that it's leader is gone.

****

The opening that intrigues me most that's yet to be filled is at Houston, where the contract of Vince Jarrett was not renewed in May. Since then, a new athletic director (Mack Rhoades) has also been hired, which would suggest that the position might not be filled until after the magic July 1 date where coaches can begin to talk to high school seniors-to-be.

Under legendary coach Dave Williams, Houston was the dominant program in men's college golf for three plus decades. That it has all but collapsed in the last 15 years is pretty amazing to me. I wrote a feature on the program's sad fate a few years back, and since then the situation has gotten no better. Economics has been a big problem, in that funding for the program has been lacking. What's even more sad, however, is how the Cougar alumni who played during the glory days has essentially sat on its hands and watched the collapse. Today's recruits have no knowledge of Houston as a strong program, and with Fred Couples soon turning 50, it's last great PGA Tour player is also almost at the end of his career.

Just what the program can do, if anything, to right itself is an interesting point of debate. While there are plenty of good facilities in the great Houston area for the team to utilize, not having a true home course to call its own has put the team at a significant disadvantage. It will be interesting to see if any progress can be made by the next hire. 

SMU, Chattanooga latest to work on practice facilities

The arms race among college golf programs to build the newest, biggest, fanciest courses/practice facilities doesn't seem to have been curbed too much by a sagging economy. At least that's the impression I get from having my e-mail inbox the past week.

Officials at SMU announced last Monday that they had broken ground on the Payne Stewart Learning Center at Dallas Athletic Club. The Center, expected to be completed at the end of 2010, will consist of a teaching facility with two indoor hitting bays and state-of-the-art video swing analysis equipment; a team clubhouse that will include locker rooms for the men's and women's programs as well as a "Hall of Champions"; and a four-hole short-game course by Nicklaus Design.

The news came not long after Chattanooga's athletic department unveiled that it had also broken ground on a new player development facility for the Mocs' men's and women's programs. The project calls for a 10-acre, double-sided practice range with four auxiliary short-game practice areas as well as a three-hole practice course. The facility is being worked on in conjunction with The First Tee of Chattanooga with the first phase expected to be completed this fall.

Several programs continue to have facilities in the works or near completion. N.C. State's Lonnie Poole GC is set to open this fall. Ohio State already has the Scarlet Course but will have a 26,000-square-foot practice facility ready for the Buckeye men and women to use starting next January.

Nearly 30 amateurs in U.S. Women

FARMINGDALE, N.Y.--There's 15 amateur here in the field at Bethpage Black for the 109th U.S. Open, all either in college or just having finished up school. Still, that number paltry in comparison to the 29 amateurs (19 with college ties, nine still in high school and one mid-amateur) that have qualified for the U.S. Women's Open.

Here's the list of players competing at Saucon Valley CC in Bethlehem, Pa. FYI ... their average age is 18.5.

Ashleigh Albrecht, Kentucky (18)
Marina Alex, Vanderbilt (18)
Brittany Altomare, Virginia (18)
Meghan Bolger-Stasi (31)
Kathleen Ekey, Alabama (22)
Kaitlin Drolson, Pepperdine (19)
Lindy Duncan, Duke (18)
Yueer-Cindy Feng (13)
Mallory Fraiche, Arkansas-Little Rock (21)
Ani Gulugian (17)
Nannette Hill, Wake Forest (22)
Stefanie Kenoyer, Furman (20)
Alice Kim, UC Davis (19)
Kimberly Kim, Denver (17)
Jessica Korda (16)
Cindy LaCrosse, Louisville (22)
Alison Lee (14)
Tiffany Lua, UCLA (18)
Azahara Munoz, Arizona State (21)
Kristen Park (16)
Katherine Perry (17)
Candace Schepperle, Auburn (20)
Michelle Shin, Wake Forest (18)
Jennifer Song, USC (19)
Chelsea Stelzmiller, UC Davis (20)
Victoria Tanco (15)
Alexis Thompson (14)
Mariko Tumangan (15)
Allie White, Ohio State (19)

Florida hires Jan Dowling as women's coach

The men's coaching carousel finally started moving this past weekend with Charlotte taking the interim tag off Adam Pry on Friday and Ohio State naming Donnie Darr to replace the retiring Jim Brown on Saturday. Now, the women's side is beginning to see movement as the Florida just named Jan Dowling, most recently the assistant coach at Duke, to oversee the women's golf program in Gainesville.

Jan Dowling.jpgAt first blush, Dowling seems a bit of a surprise pick for the Gators job. A 2002 graduate of Kent State, the Branford, Ontario, native has just three years experience as an assistant (the first two at her alma mater) and none as a head coach (although she did an admirable job filling in for Dan Brooks last fall when he was missing in action due to illness).

At the same time, hiring young, up-and-coming coaches has been Florida athletic director Jeremy Foley’s modus operandi in recent years. According to the Florida athletic department, Dowling becomes the 12th different current Gator coach to enter her first season at UF with five or fewer previous years as a collegiate head coach. (Also on that list is football coach Urban Meyer and men's basketball coach Billy Donovan, both of whom have subsequently won two national championships.)

"Throughout this search, Jan Dowling's name kept coming up as a fast-rising coaching talent," said Foley. "She has solid credentials as a player and as a coach. Florida's had success developing young, gifted coaches, and Jan certainly fits that model. Jan loves coaching and loves the game of golf. She is confident that she can lead this program and recruit talented student-athletes to Florida. We believe that Jan will be very successful at Florida."

Two more collegians making their way to Bethpage

Scott Lewis, a rising sophomore at UC Santa Barbara, and David Erdy, a rising sophomore at Indiana are now in the field at the U.S. Open after Dudley Hart and Shingo Katayama withdrew from the tournament with back issues.

Lewis and Erdy are officially the 15th and 16th amateurs in the field, the most this decade. However, recent Duke graduate Clark Klaasen has said he is thinking of turning pro when he registers this week.

Alabama golf teams cited in NCAA report; placed on probation

The Alabama men's and women's golf programs were among 16 different sports teams at the Tuscaloosa, Ala., school that the NCAA put on three years' probation June 11 for major violations due to the misuse of free textbooks. The NCAA report noted 201 athletes obtained "impermissible benefits" by using their scholarships to obtain free textbooks for other students. In the majority of cases, the impermissible benefits were less than $100 and in some instances the student-athletes were unaware of any potential rules violation being committed. (To see a PDF version of the NCAA report, click here.)

The NCAA specifically noted that 22 student-athletes--none of them golfers--were, however, found to have committed "willful and intentional violations." These student-athletes competed on the Crimson Tide football, men's tennis and men's and women's track teams, and those teams will be forced to vacate any wins in which the student-athletes participated. (The football team will be forced to give up 21 wins from the 2005-06 to the 2007-08 seasons.)

The school also has been fined $43,900.

No specific golfers were named in the report and the NCAA accessed no other penalties to either of the golf teams. Also no coach was identified as having been involved in the matter or had knowledge that it was going on.

School ties at the U.S. Open

The USGA frequently gets creative with its pairings for the first and second rounds of the U.S. Open, often putting together a couple of threesomes that all played at the same college, among other things. This year, that creativity extended to the amateurs in the field. In the 7 a.m. group (first off in the 109th Open), Oklahoma State's Rickie Fowler will play with former Cowboys Casey Wittenberg and Bo Van Pelt (hopefully, for coach Mike McGraw's sake, Wittenberg won't convince Fowler that it's fine to leave school early).

Similarly, the 1:03 p.m. time Thursday has Clemson's Kyle Stanley playing alongside former Tigers Lucas Glover and D.J. Trahan. (For the entire list of tee times, click here.)

On the surface such pairings might not seem like a big deal, but considering how much more comfortable they'll likely make Fowler and Stanley feel, it could help these two amateurs as they try to make the cut at Bethpage next week.

Francis to leave UCLA and transfer to Arizona State

Heard yesterday from a reliable source that Philip Francis is going to leave UCLA after two seasons with the Bruins and will enroll at Arizona State for the next school year. I got confirmation this afternoon from UCLA men's coach Derek Freeman that indeed this is Francis' plan.

Philip Francis.jpeg"He wants to go home and be closer to his family," said Freeman. Francis grew up in Scottsdale, Ariz., not far from ASU's Tempe campus, and was home schooled by his family while in high school.

Because of Pac-10 rules regarding transferring to another school within the conference, Francis will have to sit out the 2009-10 season, becoming eligible to play in the fall of 2010 as a redshirt junior.

Rumors swirled last summer that Francis, 20, was considering this same move after he helped the Bruins win the 2008 NCAA title during his freshman season, but the former U.S. Junior champion decided instead to stay in Los Angeles for a second year. During this past spring, however, he began to discuss with Freeman his desire to leave. (A message had been left on Francis' cell phone earlier today but as of this post Francis had not yet returned the call for comment.)

During his two years at UCLA, Francis compiled a 73.76 average in 23 tournaments, posting one top-five finish (T-3 at the NCAA Central Regional last month) and four top-10s.

"I wish him well. He helped us win a national championship," Freeman said. "I think it was a tough decision for him. He loves UCLA, loves our program and loves what we do. But at the end of the day he just wanted to be at home."

(Photo courtesy of UCLA Sports Information Department)

Men's early, early top 10 for 2009-10

Sorry for the delay with this ... but here's my thoughts on how the men's side of things stacks up with less than three months until the first tournaments of the 2009-10 season.

Thumbnail image for Oklahoma-state-logo-latest.jpg1. Oklahoma State
NCAA finish: Qualified for Elite Eight, lost in quarterfinals to Georgia
Departing starters: Trent Leon
New recruits: None
Skinny: Even if junior-to-be Rickie Fowler jumps to the pros this summer, the depth back in Stillwater is enough to make the Cowboys the early favorite with All-American caliber players in Morgan Hoffmann, Peter Uihlein and Kevin Tway.

Thumbnail image for Washington logo 2008-09.gif2. Washington
NCAA finish: Qualified for Elite Eight, lost in quarterfinals to Arkansas
Departing starters: None
New recruits: Charlie Hughes, Larry Iverson III, Chris Williams
Skinny: The Huskies proved they were more than just Nick Taylor and four other guys, with Richard Lee and Darren Wallace stepping up in particular. Everybody’s back for the Pac-10 champs, giving them reason to think big in 2009-10.

Thumbnail image for Stanford logo 2008-09.gif3. Stanford
NCAA finish: 20th
Departing starters: Dodge Kemmer, Daniel Lim
New recruits: Andre DeDecker, Andrew Yun
Skinny: Conrad Ray needs to help the Cardinal get past a disappointing finish at nationals and move on. If he has a healthy Joseph Bramlett, along with an improved Steve Ziegler and talented young players in Sihwan Kim and David Chung, he shouldn’t have too much trouble. Yun could step right in and start as a freshman.

Thumbnail image for Arizona State logo 2008-09.gif4. Arizona State
NCAA finish: Qualified for Elite Eight, lost in quarterfinals to Texas A&M
Departing starters: None
New recruits: Darren Hupfer, Jin Song
Skinny: Randy Lein insisted that his team was better than they showed early in the spring, and with a victory at the West Regional, followed by reaching the Elite Eight at nationals, he seems to have been right. With everybody back, look for them to hit the ground running this fall.

Texas A&M logo 2008-09.gif5. Texas A&M
NCAA finish: National champions
Departing starters: Bronson Burgoon, Matt Van Zandt
New recruits: Ryan Blair, Ryan Kelley, Cameron Peck
Skinny: The Aggies lose their best player off the national championship squad (Burgoon) but get the No. 1 high school recruitin the country coming to College Station (Peck). Look for J.T. Higgins’ group to remain in the spotlight.

Thumbnail image for Georgia logo 2008-09.gif6. Georgia
NCAA finish: Qualified for Elite Eight, lost in semifinals to Arkansas
Departing starters: Brian Harman, Adam Mitchell
New recruits: Brian Carter
Skinny: It will be tough to replace Harman and Mitchell, but the Bulldogs did redshirt two players last year and have Will Kropp chomping at the bit to get into the line-up. UGa might not be as deep as in recent years, but the team will still be good.

Alabama logo 2008-09.gif7. Alabama
NCAA finish: 15th
Departing starters: Matt Hughes, Matthew Swan
New recruits: None
Skinny: The Crimson Tide turned what looked like it might be a “re-building” year into a two win, five top-five season. Sophomore-to-be Bud Cauley could contend for national player of the year and Hunter Hamrick, Hunter Slatton and Spencer Cole all had flashes of solid play during their first years.

Illinois logo 2008-09.gif8. Illinois
NCAA finish: 21st
Departing starters: None
New recruits: Ross Frankenberg, Jonathan Hauter
Skinny: The Fighting Illini are coming off a record breaking season, winning seven times and claiming their first Big Ten title in 21 years. It could be tough to top what they did in 2008-09, but with everyone returning, there’s no reasons to think they won’t have continued success.

Florida logo 2008-09.gif9. Florida
NCAA finish: 19th
Departing starters: Billy Horschel, Toby Ragland, Will Strickler
New recruits: Phillip Choi, Tyler McCumber, Tommy Chung Hao Mou
Skinny: The Gators lose a lot of experience, but have a roster full of junior All-Americans who on paper seem capable of filling the void. Whether we see that paper players come to life is the big question.

Duke logo 2008-09.gif10. Duke
NCAA finish: 14th
Departing starters: Clark Klassen, Michael Quagliano
New recruits: Brinson Paolini, Adam Sumrall, Julian Suri
Skinny: A talented incoming recruiting class is just want Jamie Green needed to help stabilize the Blue Devils program that’s been through a lot of transition over the past few seasons.

Thumbnail image for UCLA logo 2008-09.gif10a. UCLA
NCAA finish: T-23
Departing starters: Erik Flores
New recruits: Mario Clemens, Bobby Lange, Pontus Widegren
Skinny: The Bruins never seemed to click in 2008-09, but that doesn’t mean they don’t have talent. Gregor Main shinned as a freshman, and the threesome that arrive in Westwood this fall should help restock the UCLA line-up.

Subscribe today

Golf World

Subscribe >

Golf Digest

Visit Subscribe
2010 Pegboards
Give a Subscription to Golf World magazine as a Gift

Best Places to Play — Course Finder

Advertiser Events & Promotions

clubfitting
What equipment have you recently been fitted for: