Austin, TX
2024 NCAA DI men's golf championships: Schedule, how to watch
The 2024 NCAA DI men’s golf championship began with selections on Wednesday, May 1. The championship concludes March 24-29 in Carlsbad, California.
Click or tap here to see every team and individual qualifier.
2024 DI men’s golf championships schedule
Selection show for regional teams and individuals
- Wednesday, May 1 | 2 p.m. ET | Golf Channel
Regionals
- Monday, May 13-Wednesday, May 15
- The University of Texas Golf Club | Austin, TX (Texas, host)
- University Club | Baton Rouge, LA (LSU, host)
- UNC Finley Golf Course | Chapel Hill, NC (UNC, host)
- The Farms Golf Club | Rancho Santa Fe, CA (San Diego, host)
- Stanford Golf Course | Stanford, CA (Stanford, host)
- Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex | West Lafayette, IN (Purdue, host)
National championships
- Friday, May 24-Wednesday, May 29
- Omni La Costa Resort & Spa | Carlsbad, CA
How the championship works
Six 54-hole regional tournaments will be conducted to determine the 30 qualifying teams and six individuals (not on those qualifying teams) who will compete in the finals. Thirteen teams and 10 individuals (not on those teams) will compete at each of three regionals while the other three regionals will have 14 teams and five individuals (not on those teams). The low five teams and the low individual not on those teams will advance to the finals.
All 30 teams and six individuals will complete 54 holes of stroke play. Following 54 holes of competition, the top 15 teams along with the top nine individuals not on an advancing team will advance for one additional day of stroke play to determine the top eight teams for match-play competition and the 72-hole stroke-play individual champion. The top eight teams after 72 holes of play will be placed into a bracket thereafter.
The 2024 national championships will be hosted by the University of Texas at Austin and held at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa.
In team match-play competition, a total of five points will be available with one point being awarded for each individual match. Winning teams will advance to the semifinals and subsequently, the finals. The first team to win three points within the team match will advance, or in the case of the final match, be declared the national champion.
⛳️ Where Masters winners played golf in college
2024 DI men’s golf championships selections
West Lafayette Regional
Hosted by Purdue | Birck Boilermaker Golf Complex
Teams (seeded in the following order):
1. Vanderbilt
2. Arizona
3. Florida
4. New Mexico
5. Purdue
6. San Diego State [Mountain West Conference]
7. Mississippi State
8. Indiana
9. College of Charleston [Coastal Athletic Association]
10. Stetson
11. Colorado State
12. Southern Illinois [Missouri Valley Conference]
13. Tennessee Tech [Ohio Valley Conference]
Individuals (seeded in the following order):
1. Caleb VanArragon, Valparaiso
2. Hunter Thomson, Michigan
3. Cameron Huss, Wisconsin
4. Barend Botha, Toledo
5. Valentin Peugnet, Illinois State
6. Owen Stamper, Middle Tennessee
7. Alex McCulla, Illinois State
8. Ty Gingerich, Cincinnati
9. Luke Fuller, Western Kentucky
10. Ben Ortwein, Rider
Baton Rouge Regional
Hosted by LSU | University Club
Teams (seeded in the following order):
1. Auburn [Southeastern Conference]
2. Virginia
3. Texas Tech
4. Oregon
5. Duke
6. Ohio State
7. LSU
8. Louisville
9. Houston
10. South Carolina
11. Lipscomb [ASUN Conference]
12. Yale [The Ivy League]
13. Loyola Maryland [Patriot League]
14. Arkansas-Pine Bluff [Southwestern Athletic Conference]
Individuals (seeded in the following order):
1. Alex Goff, Kentucky
2. Max Sturdza, Florida Atlantic
3. Niilo Maki-Petaja, Louisiana Tech
4. Hugo Thyr, South Alabama
5. Archie Smith, Little Rock
Chapel Hill Regional
Hosted by North Carolina | Finley Golf Club
Teams (seeded in the following order):
1. North Carolina [Atlantic Coast Conference]
2. Alabama
3. Georgia Tech
4. East Tennessee State [Southern Conference]
5. Northwestern [Big Ten Conference]
6. Baylor
7. VCU [Atlantic 10 Conference]
8. LMU
9. Long Beach State [Big West Conference]
10. Clemson
11. Michigan State
12. Ball State [Mid-American Conference]
13. Howard [Northeast Conference]
Individuals (seeded in the following order):
1. Tobias Jonsson, Mercer
2. Walker Isley, UNCW
3. Nick Mathews, NC State
4. Conor Gough, Charlotte
5. Will Davis, Davidson
6. Spencer Oxendine, NC State
7. Erik Johansson, Campbell
8. Claes Borregaard, Kennesaw State
9. Justin LaRue, Longwood
10. Fred Roberts IV, High Point
Austin Regional
Hosted by Texas | The University of Texas Golf CLub
Teams (seeded in the following order):
1. Tennessee
2. Arkansas
3. Texas [Big 12 Conference]
4. Georgia
5. Wake Forest
6. Notre Dame
7. UNC Greensboro
8. Brigham Young
9. Utah
10. San Jose State
11. Grand Canyon [Western Athletic Conference]
12. Arkansas State [Sun Belt Conference]
13. Kansas City [The Summit League]
Individuals (seeded in the following order):
1. Gustav Frimodt, TCU
2. Luke Gutschewski, Iowa State
3. Hunter Bott, UTSA
4. Cooper Schultz, Kansas State
5. Kobe Valociek, Virginia Tech
6. Joseph Sullivan, Florida Gulf Coast
7. Erik Jansson, Jacksonville State
8. Justin Biwer, Colorado
9. Alexandre Vandermoten, Jacksonville
10. Peicheng Chen, St. John’s
Stanford Regional
Hosted by Stanford | Stanford Golf Course
Teams (seeded in the following order):
1. Florida State
2. Ole Miss
3. Illinois
4. Texas A&M
5. Stanford
6. UCLA
7. SMU
8. Missouri
9. Fresno State
10. UNLV
11. Augusta University [Southland Conference]
12. Liberty [Conference USA]
13. Sacramento State [Big Sky Conference]
14. Siena [Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference]
Individuals (seeded in the following order):
1. Enrique Dimayuga, Nevada
2. Ben Warian, Minnesota
3. Jakob Melin, San Francisco
4. Cole Rueck, Boise State
5. Joe Sykes, Idaho
Rancho Santa Fe Regional
Hosted by San Diego | The Farms Golf Club
Teams (seeded in the following order):
1. Arizona State [Pac-12 Conference]
2. Washington
3. Oklahoma
4. California
5. Oklahoma State
6. North Florida
7. Chattanooga
8. South Florida [American Athletic Conference]
9. San Diego [West Coast Conference]
10. West Virginia
11. Kansas
12. Wright State [Horizon League]
13. Seton Hall [Big East Conference]
14. Winthrop [Big South Conference]
Individuals (seeded in the following order):
1. Mahanth Chirravuri, Pepperdine
2. Tegan Andrews, Cal State Fullerton
3. William Walsh, Pepperdine
4. Brady Siravo, Pepperdine
5. Kevin Li, Seattle University
Championship history
Florida won last year’s title as the program’s fifth overall. Check out the full championship history below:
| YEAR | CHAMPION | COACH | SCORE | RUNNER-UP | SCORE | HOST OR SITE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | Florida | J.C. Deacon | 3 | Georgia Tech | 1 | Scottsdale, Ariz. |
| 2022 | Texas | John Fields | 3 | Arizona State | 2 | |
| 2021 | Pepperdine | Michael Beard | 3 | Oklahoma | 2 | Scottsdale, Ariz. |
| 2020 | Canceled due to Covid-19 | — | — | — | — | — |
| 2019 | Stanford | Conrad Ray | 3 | Texas | 2 | Fayetteville Ark. |
| 2018 | Oklahoma State | Alan Bratton | 5 | Alabama | 0 | Stillwater, Okla. |
| 2017 | Oklahoma | Ryan Hybl | 3.5 | Oregon | 1.5 | Sugar Grove, Ill. |
| 2016 | Oregon | Casey Martin | 3 | Texas | 2 | Eugene, Ore. |
| 2015 | LSU | Chuck Winstead | 4 | Southern California | 1 | Bradenton, Fla. |
| 2014 | Alabama | Jay Seawell | 4 | Oklahoma State | 1 | Hutchinson, Kan. |
| 2013 | Alabama | Jay Seawell | 4 | Illinois | 1 | Atlanta |
| 2012 | Texas | John Fields | 3 | Alabama | 2 | Pacific Palisades, Calif. |
| 2011 | Augusta State | Josh Gregory | 3 | Georgia | 2 | Oklahoma State |
| 2010 | Augusta State | Josh Gregory | 3.5 | Oklahoma State | 1.5 | Ooltewah, Tenn. |
| 2009 | Texas A&M | J.T. Higgins | 3 | Arkansas | 2 | Toledo |
| 2008 | UCLA | Derek Freeman | 1,194 | Stanford | 1,195 | Purdue |
| 2007 | Stanford | Conrad Ray | 1,109 | Georgia | 1,121 | VCU |
| 2006 | Oklahoma State | Mike McGraw | 1,143 | Florida | 1,146 | Sunriver, Ore. |
| 2005 | Georgia | Chris Haack | 1,135 | Georgia Tech | 1,146 | Owings Mills, Md. |
| 2004 | California | Steve Desimone | 1,134 | UCLA | 1,140 | Hot Springs, Va. |
| 2003 | Clemson | Larry Penley | 1,191 | Oklahoma State | 1,193 | Oklahoma State |
| 2002 | Minnesota | Brad James | 1,134 | Georgia Tech | 1,138 | Ohio State |
| 2001 | Florida | Buddy Alexander | 1,126 | Clemson | 1,144 | Duke |
| 2000 | *Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,116 | Georgia Tech | 1,116 | Auburn |
| 1999 | Georgia | Chris Haack | 1,180 | Oklahoma State | 1,183 | Minnesota |
| 1998 | UNLV | Dwaine Knight | 1,118 | Clemson | 1,121 | New Mexico |
| 1997 | Pepperdine | John Geiberger | 1,148 | Wake Forest | 1,151 | Northwestern |
| 1996 | Arizona State | Randy Lein | 1,186 | UNLV | 1,189 | Chattanooga, Tenn. |
| 1995 | *Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,156 | Stanford | 1,156 | Ohio State |
| 1994 | Stanford | Wally Goodwin | 1,129 | Texas | 1,133 | SMU |
| 1993 | Florida | Buddy Alexander | 1,145 | Georgia Tech | 1,146 | Kentucky |
| 1992 | Arizona | Rick LaRose | 1,129 | Arizona State | 1,136 | New Mexico |
| 1991 | Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,161 | North Carolina | 1,168 | San Jose State |
| 1990 | Arizona State | Steve Loy | 1,155 | Florida | 1,157 | Florida |
| 1989 | Oklahoma | Gregg Grost | 1,139 | Texas | 1,158 | Oklahoma State/Oklahoma |
| 1988 | UCLA | Eddie Merrins | 1,176 | UTEP/Oklahoma/Oklahoma State | 1,179 | Southern California |
| 1987 | Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,160 | Wake Forest | 1,176 | Ohio State |
| 1986 | Wake Forest | Jess Haddock | 1,156 | Oklahoma State | 1,160 | Wake Forest |
| 1985 | Houston | Dave Williams | 1,172 | Oklahoma State | 1,175 | Florida |
| 1984 | Houston | Dave Williams | 1,145 | Oklahoma State | 1,146 | Houston |
| 1983 | Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,161 | Texas | 1,168 | Fresno State |
| 1982 | Houston | Dave Williams | 1,141 | Oklahoma State | 1,151 | Pinehurst |
| 1981 | BYU | Karl Tucker | 1,161 | Oral Roberts | 1,163 | Stanford |
| 1980 | Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,173 | BYU | 1,177 | Ohio State |
| 1979 | Ohio State | James Brown | 1,189 | Oklahoma State | 1,191 | Wake Forest |
| 1978 | Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,140 | Georgia | 1,157 | Oregon |
| 1977 | Houston | Dave Williams | 1,197 | Oklahoma State | 1,205 | Colgate |
| 1976 | Oklahoma State | Mike Holder | 1,166 | BYU | 1,173 | New Mexico |
| 1975 | Wake Forest | Jess Haddock | 1,156 | Oklahoma State | 1,189 | Ohio State |
| 1974 | Wake Forest | Jess Haddock | 1,158 | Florida | 1,160 | San Diego State |
| 1973 | Florida | Buster Bishop | 1,149 | Oklahoma State | 1,159 | Oklahoma State |
| 1972 | Texas | George Hannon | 1,146 | Houston | 1,159 | Cape Coral |
| 1971 | Texas | George Hannon | 1,144 | Houston | 1,151 | Arizona |
| 1970 | Houston | Dave Williams | 1,172 | Wake Forest | 1,182 | Ohio State |
| 1969 | Houston | Dave Williams | 1,223 | Wake Forest | 1,232 | Broadmoor |
| 1968 | Florida | Buster Bishop | 1,154 | Houston | 1,156 | New Mexico State |
| 1967 | Houston | Dave Williams | 585 | Florida | 588 | Shawnee, Pa. |
| 1966 | Houston | Dave Williams | 582 | San Jose State | 586 | Stanford |
| 1965 | Houston | Dave Williams | 577 | Cal State L.A. | 587 | Tennessee |
| 1964 | Houston | Dave Williams | 580 | Oklahoma State | 587 | Broadmoor |
| 1963 | Oklahoma State | Labron Harris | 581 | Houston | 582 | Wichita State |
| 1962 | Houston | Dave Williams | 588 | Oklahoma State | 598 | Duke |
| 1961 | Purdue | Sam Voinoff | 584 | Arizona State | 595 | Lafayette |
| 1960 | Houston | Dave Williams | 603 | Purdue/Oklahoma State | 607 | Broadmoor |
| 1959 | Houston | Dave Williams | 561 | Purdue | 571 | Oregon |
| 1958 | Houston | Dave Williams | 570 | Oklahoma State | 582 | Williams |
| 1957 | Houston | Dave Williams | 602 | Stanford | 603 | Broadmoor |
| 1956 | Houston | Dave Williams | 601 | North Texas/Purdue | 602 | Ohio State |
| 1955 | LSU | Mike Barbato | 574 | North Texas | 583 | Tennessee |
| 1954 | SMU | Graham Ross | 572 | North Texas | 573 | Houston/Rice |
| 1953 | Stanford | Charles Finger | 578 | North Carolina | 580 | Broadmoor |
| 1952 | North Texas | Fred Cobb | 587 | Michigan | 593 | Purdue |
| 1951 | North Texas | Fred Cobb | 588 | Ohio State | 589 | Ohio State |
| 1950 | North Texas | Fred Cobb | 573 | Purdue | 577 | New Mexico |
| 1949 | North Texas | Fred Cobb | 590 | Purdue/Texas | 600 | Iowa State |
| 1948 | San Jose State | Wilbur Hubbard | 579 | LSU | 588 | Stanford |
| 1947 | LSU | T.P. Heard | 606 | Duke | 614 | Michigan |
| 1946 | Stanford | Eddie Twiggs | 619 | Michigan | 624 | Princeton |
| 1945 | Ohio State | Robert Kepler | 602 | Northwestern | 621 | Ohio State |
| 1944 | Notre Dame | George Holderith | 311 | Minnesota | 312 | Inverness |
| 1943 | Yale | William Neale | 614 | Michigan | 618 | Olympia Fields |
| 1942 | LSU/Stanford | Major J. Perry Cole/Eddie Twiggs | 590 | Notre Dame | ||
| 1941 | Stanford | Eddie Twiggs | 580 | LSU | 599 | Ohio State |
| 1940 | Princeton/LSU | Walter Bourne/Major J. Perry Cole | 601 | Ekwanok | ||
| 1939 | Stanford | Eddie Twiggs | 612 | Northwestern/Princeton | 614 | Wakonda |
| 1938 | Stanford | Louisville | ||||
| 1937 | Princeton | Oakmont | ||||
| 1936 | Yale | North Shore | ||||
| 1935 | Michigan | Congressional | ||||
| 1934 | Michigan | Cleveland | ||||
| 1933 | Yale | Buffalo | ||||
| 1932 | Yale | Hot Springs, Va. | ||||
| 1931 | Yale | Olympia Fields | ||||
| 1930 | Princeton | Oakmont | ||||
| 1929 | Princeton | Deal, N.J. | ||||
| 1928 | Princeton | Apawamis | ||||
| 1927 | Princeton | Garden City | ||||
| 1926 | Yale | Merion | ||||
| 1925 | Yale | Montclair | ||||
| 1924 | Yale | Greenwich | ||||
| 1923 | Princeton | Siwanoy | ||||
| 1922 | Princeton | Garden City | ||||
| 1921 | Dartmouth | Greenwich | ||||
| 1920 | Princeton | Nassau | ||||
| 1919 | Princeton | Merion | ||||
| 1916 | Princeton | Oakmont | ||||
| 1915 | Yale | Greenwich | ||||
| 1914 | Princeton | Garden City | ||||
| 1912 | Yale (fall)/ Yale (spring) | Huntingdon Valley/Ekwanko | ||||
| 1911 | Yale | Baltusrol | ||||
| 1910 | Yale | Essex County | ||||
| 1909 | Yale | Apawamis | ||||
| 1908 | Yale | Brae Burn | ||||
| 1907 | Yale | Nassau | ||||
| 1906 | Yale | Garden City | ||||
| 1905 | Yale | Garden City | ||||
| 1904 | Harvard | Myopia | ||||
| 1903 | Harvard | Garden City | ||||
| 1902 | Harvard (fall)/Yale (spring) | Morris County/Garden City | ||||
| 1901 | Harvard | Atlantic City | ||||
| 1899 | Harvard | |||||
| 1898 | Yale (fall)/Harvard (spring) | |||||
| 1897 | Yale | Ardsley Casino |
Austin, TX
APD SWAT responds to North Austin incident
AUSTIN, Texas — The Austin Police Department stated that SWAT was responding to “an incident” in the 9400 block of Grouse Meadow Ln. Sunday evening.
Officials first let the public know of the incident around 7:30 p.m.
ALSO: CapMetro Bikeshare service unavailable after fire at southeast Austin facility
The call came in around 5:30 p.m., and SWAT was activated at approximately 7:10 p.m.
Police stated that the call originally was reported as a robbery service after a robbery occurred a few days ago. A suspect reportedly assaulted someone inside an apartment at the address after returning there and forcing entry.
Both the suspect and the victim live at the apartment complex,
APD stated that they would provide more information in a media briefing. The time of the briefing is unknown.
CBS Austin has a crew on the way to the scene.
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This is a developing story and more information will be added as it becomes available.
Austin, TX
Carter Faith Debuts New Song “If A Man’s From Texas” In Austin | Whiskey Riff
A brand new one from Carter Faith.
Last weekend was a big one for country music. The ACM Awards took over Las Vegas, George Strait did a two-night run at Austin, Texas’ Moody Center, and Treaty Oak Revival took over Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium. While most people were in one location for the whole weekend, Carter Faith was jumping around as she was opening up for George Strait, and then had to jet over to Vegas for her ACM Awards performance of “If I Had Never Lost My Mind.”
The ACM Album of the Year nominee blew her performance out of the water and was riding a high all weekend as she had just announced a deluxe edition of her debut record, Cherry Valley Forever. Cherry Valley is filled with wild nights, heartbreak, growth, and lyrics that cut like a knife. The project turned a lot of heads here at Whiskey Riff, earning the title of the Best Debut Album of 2025 and landing at #15 on the 40 Best Country Albums of 2025. But beyond what we think here at Whiskey Riff, it turned heads by the big players securing a nomination for Album of the Year at the upcoming ACM Awards.
I am very excited to see how she expands on this sensational era, and she’s given fans a taste of what the deluxe record’s five additional tracks will feature by releasing “Ain’t Over Me Yet” in celebration of Cherry Valley Forever‘s announcement. Sonically, this tune fits perfectly into the Cherry Valley frame as Faith delivers the heartbreaking lyrics of meeting up with a former lover, knowing that the relationship is and has been over for quite some time. But she has a glimmer of faith that they might be able to turn things around and find that spark again. In the end, she ends up hurting her own feelings, having one night of pleasure.
Riding the high that release, Faith was on a roll of sharing new music, debuting a brand new song titled “If A Man’s From Texas.” Fitting to debut this one in Austin. The song is set to appear on Cherry Valley Forever, and, in true Carter Faith fashion, it’s a warning for women to watch out for boys who disguise themselves as men from Texas. The southern drawl might lure you in, but sure enough, you will see his true colors, and those Southern manners might be thrown out the door.
The upbeat tune has a slight Texas swing tempo that makes you want to dance, which is exactly what Faith does as she works the crowd, moving to every corner of the stage while delivering these catchy lyrics.
Cater Faith is on a roll, and I can’t wait to hear the studio cut of this one come July 24.
Check it out:
@heather2194 CHERRY VALLEY FOREVER TRACKS IN AUSTIN #CHERRYVALLEY #carterfaith #GEORGESTRAIT @Carter Faith ♬ original sound – Heather
And before you go, fire up “Ain’t Over Me Yet,” too:
Austin, TX
Arizona State softball falls late to Texas, faces do-or-die Game 3
Arizona State softball thrives with Red Mountain alum Brooklyn Ulrich
Arizona native Brooklyn Ulrich talks about her time growing up at Red Mountain and her journey to playing at Arizona State.
The Texas Longhorns refused to die, rallying late with a pinch-hit, two-run homer to overcome Arizona State, 4-3, in Game 2 of the Austin Super Regional Saturday night, May 23.
The Sun Devils have one more shot to beat the Longhorns and earn a trip to the Women’s College World Series, which would mark their first trip back since 2018. Game time on Sunday was still listed as TBD Saturday evening.
Arizona State catcher Samantha Swan, a native of nearby Georgetown, Texas, hit a go-ahead home run in the fifth inning, but the Sun Devils were unable to hold the 3-2 lead.
Each coach had a tough decision before the action began.
Arizona State’s Megan Bartlett chose to start Meika Lauppe instead of sending her ace, Kenzie Brown, back to the circle after a powerful performance in the Sun Devils’ Game 1 win.
Texas’ Mike White, albeit in a different position with his team’s season on the line, sent out his ace, Teagan Kavan for a second consecutive day.
ASU struck first when Brooklyn Ulrich doubled in Katie Chester in the top of the second inning.
Kavan appeared to run out of gas in the third inning as Taylor Windle doubled to lead off, and Kaylee Pond singled.
White replaced Kavan with Citlaly Gutierrez, but Swan drove home Windle, giving ASU a 2-0 lead.
Lauppe was able to keep Texas off the scoreboard through four innings, though she put runners on first and second with nobody out in the third before inducing a flyout and an inning-ending double play.
An error by third baseman Emily Schepp on a Kaia Altmeyer ground ball leading off the Texas fifth ended the night for Lauppe, who was replaced by Brown.
The Longhorns touched up the ASU ace with a double by Katie Stewart to knock in Altmeyer, and a game-tying base hit by Reese Atwell to score Stewart, but Brown struck out Leighann Goode to prevent further damage.
An inning later, leading by a run after the Swan homer, Brown allowed a one-out single to Ashton Maloney, retired Altmeyer on a fly to left, but then served up the pinch-hit blast by Victoria Hunter.
Gutierrez shut down the Sun Devils in order in the sixth and seventh innings.
Swan had two of ASU’s six hits, and Brown allowed three runs (two earned) on five hits with five strikeouts over her three innings of relief.
(This story has been updated to add information.)
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