Neha Patil (Editor)

NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championships

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Location
  
United States

Month played
  
May/June

Established
  
1939

Par
  
70 (2016)

NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championships imgbleacherreportnetimgimagesphotos0036026

Course(s)
  
2016: Eugene Country Club, Eugene, Oregon

Length
  
2016: 7,014 yards (6,414 m)

Format
  
72-hole stroke play 8-team match play

The NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championships, played in late May or early June, is the top annual competition in U.S. men's collegiate golf.

Contents

The teams that win their respective Division I conference championshoips are given automatic spots in the regionals. A selection committee decides which other teams play in the regionals. The top teams in each regionals advance to the championship. In addition, the best player in each tournament from teams not qualified also advance to the next round as individual competitors.

It is a stroke play team competition, starting in 2009 the competition changed to a stroke play/match play competition with the top 8 teams after 54 holes of stroke play being seeded and concluding with an 8-team match play playoff. There is also an award for the lowest scoring individual competitor.

Many individual winners have gone on to have successful careers on the PGA Tour, including 1961 champion Jack Nicklaus, 1967 champion Hale Irwin, 1996 champion Tiger Woods, and three-time champions Ben Crenshaw and Phil Mickelson.

Results

Note: The NCAA was founded in 1906. The first championship sponsored by the NCAA was in 1939.

Pre-NCAA era, match play (1897–1938)

  • Team scores, individual scores, and course pars are not kept in official NCAA records before 1939.
  • NCAA era, stroke and match play (2009–present)

  • § Won via a playoff.
  • Non-American winners

    Americans had captured all of the titles from the tournament's inception, until James McLean of Australia won in 1998. Luke Donald of England won in 1999. Alejandro Cañizares of Spain won in 2003, followed by James Lepp (2005) and Matt Hill (2009), both from Canada, and Thomas Pieters of Belgium in 2012.

    Team titles

    The Intercollegiate Golf Association (later named the National Intercollegiate Golf Association (NIGA)) sponsored the annual tournament and awarded titles from 1897 through 1938. In 1939, the NCAA assumed tournament sponsorship and began awarding championship titles.

    Schools are listed by their current names, which do not necessarily match those used when schools won their titles.

    Individual champion

    The following men have won more than one individual championship:

  • 3: Ben Crenshaw, Phil Mickelson
  • 2: Dick Crawford, Dexter Cummings, George Dunlap, Fred Lamprecht, Scott Simpson
  • Individual champion's school

    The following schools have produced more than one individual champion:

  • 13 champions: Yale
  • 8 champions: Harvard, Houston, Oklahoma State
  • 7 champions: Princeton
  • 6 champions: Arizona State, Texas
  • 5 champions: Ohio State
  • 4 champions: Southern California
  • 3 champions: Georgia Tech, LSU, Michigan, Stanford, Tulane, Wake Forest
  • 2 champions: Florida, Georgetown, Illinois, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Purdue, San Jose State, UNLV
  • Winners of both U.S. Amateur and collegiate titles

    The following men have won both the collegiate individual championship and the U.S. Amateur. Only Jack Nicklaus (1961), Phil Mickelson (1990), Tiger Woods (1996), Ryan Moore (2004), and Bryson DeChambeau (2015) have managed the feat in the same year.

    References

    NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championships Wikipedia