Oklahoma City, one of the winningest schools in college golf history, is dropping its men's and women's NAIA programs
The website for Oklahoma City University’s athletic department proudly touts the NAIA school as the “Home of Champions | 73 National Championships.” Nineteen of those come from its men’s and women’s golf teams, but they’ll no longer be adding to the total after this season following Friday’s announcement from the university president that the school was dropping the sport, effective at the end of the 2025-26 academic year.
“The decision to discontinue golf was not made easily, as the tradition and success of our golf teams is deeply valued and respected, as are the individuals who make up this year’s teams,” OCU President Kenneth Evans said in an email addressed to campus community. “However, we are in a turbulent time in higher education, with universities and colleges around the nation making difficult budgetary decisions. Unfortunately, the cost structure of golf practice and competition presents unique challenges.”
The Stars men’s golf team has won 11 national titles, more than any other program in NAIA history (the next closest is Texas Wesleyan with seven). The most recent came in 2018. The women’s program has won eight national titles, also the most of any NAIA program (British Columbia has seven), with the most recent coming in 2017.
This year’s men’s team (with nine players listed on the roster) is ranked fourth in the NAIA national poll at the end of the fall season while the women’s team, with seven players on its roster, is ranked 19th. Players have the option to transfer and be immediately eligible to compete at new schools this spring, or they could stay and compete for the Oklahoma City through the end of the 2025-26 season. According to Evans, team members who are classified as juniors or seniors in the spring semester who elect to stay at OCU “will see their scholarship offer honored as they work toward completion of their degree.”
“It’s just a crummy situation and it couldn’t have been handled much worse,” OCU men’s coach Blake Trimble told Golf Oklahoma, which reported the news on Friday. “Apparently it’s been in the works for a while, but I was never brought in for any financial discussions or asked to raise more money or given the impression the program was capable of being cut.”
Josh Gorzney, the women's coach, told Golf Oklahoma the budget for both golf programs was roughly $500,000. That including travel and partial scholarships for players.
Trimble and Gorzney are each in their third year with the program. Kyle Blazer, the men’s coach for 23 years who guided the team to its 11 titles and is a member of the Golf Coaches Association of America Hall of Fame, called news of the school’s decision “a gut punch.”
“That’s the most successful program at OCU and one of the most successful in NAIA history,” Blaser told Golf Oklahoma. “To just drop it like that is crazy. It’s awful.”
Trimble told Golf Oklahoma he was hopeful his players would stay and potentially claim one more national title for the school. It’s not an unprecedented accomplishment. In 2002, the University of Minnesota men’s golf team was set to be dropped only to rally that spring to win the Big Ten and NCAA titles, and caused the school to reverse the decision.