"IF YOU LIKE GOLF"

online golf column
by
Chris Dortch

June 11, 2010

Seconds after Oklahoma State’s Kevin Tway missed the putt that allowed Augusta State to win an improbable national championship at The Honors Course last Sunday, a celebratory melee was touched off, with players, coaches, fans and family exchanging hugs and high fives all around.

In the middle of the celebration was UTC coach Mark Guhne, who over the years has befriended Augusta State coach Josh Gregory and his players. It was only natural that Guhne and Gregory became friends. Both have taken their programs to the mountaintop—remember the Mocs’ No. 1 rankings in September 2008 and September 2009—despite the odds being stacked against them.

“We’re good friends,” Guhne said. “And our players are good friends. We’ve gotten close to all of them. If his kids or mine are on the road in the summer, playing in some amateur event, we support each other. If one of his players is at the Southern Amateur and I’m there, and he needs something, he knows all he has to do is ask.”

Of course Guhne wishes his team’s long-standing goal of playing for the national championship in its hometown had been realized. But in watching Augusta State win the national championship, he came away with renewed vigor that anything is possible.

“I wish the season started tomorrow,” Guhne said. “It can be done. We can compete. That’s what’s neat about college golf over any other sport. Football and baseball are sports where I would think you’d have to have more resources to compete.

“In golf, as long as you have adequate funding, you can make things happen, because there are a lot of kids out there who want to work and get better so they can do special things like this.

“It was bittersweet not being here [to compete], but getting to watch Josh and the boys all week was fantastic.”

Much was made over a perceived David and Goliath match-up for the national championship, but no coach or player among the 30 teams that competed at The Honors thought of Augusta State as a lightweight. Guhn placed the Jaguars in a group of five teams—Oklahoma State, Stanford, Oregon and Washington were the others—that stood out above the pack in college golf this season.

UTC has been there, as evidenced by those No. 1 rankings. Any coach will tell you that the only ranking that matters is the final ranking, and that’s true. But if the Mocs had what it takes to ascend to No. 1 for a day, a week or a month, they are more than capable of doing what Augusta State did.

That’s especially true now that the NCAA has switched its format to 54 holes of stroke play and three days of match play.

Chances are good had the tournament remained at stroke play, Oklahoma State would have won the last two national championships. The Cowboys led by 13 shots after stroke play in 2009, only to lose to Georgia in the first round of match play. Last week, they overtook second-round leader Florida State and were the top qualifiers in stroke play, by four shots.

Match play brings an element of unpredictability to the tournament. Teams that have one or two players who make a lot of birdies but who derail themselves in stroke play with one bad hole a round can be dangerous in match play.

Guhne is more excited about the future than ever, because he knows Augusta State is built just like his program.

“We take kids who nobody heard of from Georgia, then recruit a couple of international kids,” Gregory said. “We play with a chip on our shoulder, maybe because our kids thought they got overlooked. They work hard to try and prove that people were wrong about them.”

UTC does the same thing, except it mines Tennessee for those players overlooked by SEC schools. Add in the occasional player from Sweden or England and you’ve got a team.

Augusta State’s starters included three former Georgia high school players, an Australian and the big Swede Henrik Norlander, who took it to Oklahoma State’s Morgan Huffman in match play.

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As usual, the Honors Course was a great tournament venue. Heavy rains early in the week and the lack of wind made the course a bit easier than it might have otherwise played, but it was still a great test, and it once again produced a worthy champion. There’s probably not a better story behind any NCAA champion in any sport this year.

It’s certain the NCAA will want to return to The Honors again, and sooner than the 14 years it took from the first time the tournament was played there. The question is, when?

In the meantime, The Honors will continue the mission begun by the late Jack Lupton and continue to be a host venue for significant amateur championships. Next up is the 2011 U.S Senior Women’s Amateur. And in 2014, the Southern Amateur will make its third appearance at the course.

Like Lupton, I’m still hoping the USGA will one day see fit to bring the Walker Cup to The Honors. That would be the ultimate tribute for a man who gave so much support—financial and otherwise—to amateur golf in general, and the USGA in particular.

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